Fireblade SP

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Discussion

Rawwr

Original Poster:

22,722 posts

234 months

Saturday 18th March 2017
quotequote all
So, I have my test ride booked for 10:30am tomorrow. Went up to have a nose around it and fiddle with its buttons today and it's TINY. It even feels smaller than the 600RR, yet still manages to maintain pretty much the same riding position as my current 2014 Fireblade.

The biggest problem is that the SP can't take a pillion because of the non-structural tail section, whereas the RR can, as you'd expect.

Pretty sure I'm going to walk away from there tomorrow having placed an order but I really don't know whether it'll be SP or RR.

spareparts

6,777 posts

227 months

Saturday 18th March 2017
quotequote all
Rawwr said:
So, I have my test ride booked for 10:30am tomorrow. Went up to have a nose around it and fiddle with its buttons today and it's TINY. It even feels smaller than the 600RR, yet still manages to maintain pretty much the same riding position as my current 2014 Fireblade.

The biggest problem is that the SP can't take a pillion because of the non-structural tail section, whereas the RR can, as you'd expect.

Pretty sure I'm going to walk away from there tomorrow having placed an order but I really don't know whether it'll be SP or RR.
spareparts said:
Did 100 miles on the new Blade SP this morning. Epic road bike. Noticeably better power with far less inertia compared to the outgoing model. Super slim. Like a 600. Initial tip in is instant, and adaptive Ohlins and electronics allow her to be super stable under hard braking coming back down the gearbox - QS excellent, only use the clutch pulling away from a stop. Easy to ride her exceptionally hard and fast, despite fractional power deficit. Sounds great on the standard pipe. Build quality also a step up and better than the pre-production show bikes. Fantastic. 1st deliveries due mid-April.


It can easily take more power, although it may not make it significantly faster on any given road. I'm looking forward to see what the Sports Kit/Race Kit can do with the SP2 later this year.

spareparts

6,777 posts

227 months

Saturday 18th March 2017
quotequote all
The adaptive Ohlins of the SP provides big stability under braking with minimal dive. You just stamp on the clutch lever several times under heavy braking and le the QS allow seamless shifts, then the Ohlins and seamless TC help you get on the gas very quickly. Ultra efficient fast road bike.

Biker's Nemesis

38,651 posts

208 months

Saturday 18th March 2017
quotequote all
Rawwr said:
So, I have my test ride booked for 10:30am tomorrow. Went up to have a nose around it and fiddle with its buttons today and it's TINY. It even feels smaller than the 600RR, yet still manages to maintain pretty much the same riding position as my current 2014 Fireblade.

The biggest problem is that the SP can't take a pillion because of the non-structural tail section, whereas the RR can, as you'd expect.

Pretty sure I'm going to walk away from there tomorrow having placed an order but I really don't know whether it'll be SP or RR.
Do you take people on the back? just go for the Sp.

Rawwr

Original Poster:

22,722 posts

234 months

Saturday 18th March 2017
quotequote all
I do. Possibly too much.

bogie

16,382 posts

272 months

Saturday 18th March 2017
quotequote all
Rawwr said:
I do. Possibly too much.
Then get a spare bike as well, that's better for pillions...something completely different to the Blade smile

...and get the SP

Rawwr

Original Poster:

22,722 posts

234 months

Saturday 18th March 2017
quotequote all
I can't flaw the logic.

R1 Dave

7,158 posts

263 months

Sunday 19th March 2017
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Have you considered an R1M? All the gizmos of the SP but you can easily get pillion pegs and a seat for it (the carbon seat unit and datalogger antenna can be easily removed)

Rawwr

Original Poster:

22,722 posts

234 months

Sunday 19th March 2017
quotequote all
Rode it. Loved it. Bought it. F*ck pillions.

mckeann

2,986 posts

229 months

Sunday 19th March 2017
quotequote all
Have you considered a ZX10RR biggrin

Rawwr

Original Poster:

22,722 posts

234 months

Sunday 19th March 2017
quotequote all
Have you considered putting my balls in your mouth?

mckeann

2,986 posts

229 months

Sunday 19th March 2017
quotequote all
Not since the last time in 2007. I can still taste them

Rawwr

Original Poster:

22,722 posts

234 months

Sunday 19th March 2017
quotequote all
A salty treat anyone can enjoy biggrin

mckeann

2,986 posts

229 months

Sunday 19th March 2017
quotequote all
I don't think treat is the word I'd use.

Rawwr

Original Poster:

22,722 posts

234 months

Sunday 19th March 2017
quotequote all
Experience?

graeme4130

3,828 posts

181 months

Sunday 19th March 2017
quotequote all
I saw they had a demo in my local dealer when I popped in there last week. Had a sit on it, and it's tiny and feels more like a 600 when you're not moving. Not sure it's something i'm in the market for, but interested to see what it's like and they've offered to let me borrow it for a day to try

Rawwr

Original Poster:

22,722 posts

234 months

Sunday 19th March 2017
quotequote all
On the move, the riding position is very similar to the old Blade. It's by no means uncomfortable. I was pleasantly surprised smile

podman

8,861 posts

240 months

Sunday 19th March 2017
quotequote all
Rawwr said:
Rode it. Loved it. Bought it. F*ck pillions.
biggrin

Congrats...

R1 Dave

7,158 posts

263 months

Sunday 19th March 2017
quotequote all
Nice. Congratssmile

If you were desperate to carry pillions could you buy a standard tail unit to fit on passenger days?

Rawwr

Original Poster:

22,722 posts

234 months

Sunday 19th March 2017
quotequote all
You'd need a subframe first...