Yamaha XSR900 Abarth
By Ross Sharp - 13 Apr 17
Out on the road I was quickly reminded just how good the XSR900 is. Since the initial launch the suspension has been tuned for the weight forward positioning of the ace bars. But the rest is still the same great package. Our run was relatively short so I wasn't able to muster much more insight than outlined on my first outing but one thing did stand out - riding modes. I forgot that it's only the traction control that resets itself after each ride, my bike had been left in A mode. Which on the right roads and at the right speeds could be classed as sporty, but bimbling along at the back of the pack with bodyweight predominantly on my weak wrists taming the sharpened throttle response through a mile of cable freeplay was an arduous task.
I pulled in at the first photo stop feeling slightly dejected. Maybe the super early flight and recent workload had taken its toll. Maybe I'm just not cut out for riding relatively quick road bikes. Then I realised my error, flicked the mode button to initiate the standard fuel and ignition map and tried again. Completely different. It was like I'd swung my leg over another motorcycle. The grin returned as Sardinia's roads switched back and forward along the jaw-droppingly beautiful coast. The CP3 engine works everywhere with plenty of torque from low down and maintains surge right until you slam into the limiter. Ratio selection isn't particularly crucial as the well balanced triple will spool-up quickly and pull hard should a corner prove tighter than it appeared on entry. Given the bar position and the Sardinian road builders' penchant for hairpins I avoided the tall gears and leant on the engine for braking. Brakes are as you'd expect from radially mounted four-pots, sharp. I didn't grace the lever with more than a couple of digits, nor much force. And as for reporting how sticky the Bridgestone Battlaxxes were with the traction turned off...I'm not the man for such a job. The bigger boys from the fast magazines were doing that up the road ahead of me. But what the XSR 900 did exceptionally well was instil confidence allowing me to keep the gap to a minimum without feeling close to my skill limit. The run back to the hotel was good old fashioned fun, bolstered by a sonorous soundtrack. In the right hands this is an exceptionally capable bike and after seeing the grins attached to such hands when we returned confirmed that the XSR900 Abarth is more than just a smart paint job. Only 100 of the 695 bikes are coming to the UK and half of those have been snagged already. In fact across Europe it only took 2 hours for 100 bikes to slapped with pre-order deposits after Yamaha pressed go on the marketing machine. If you're quick and follow suit there's a chance of securing a bike along with an Abarth experience and factory tour. If you don't enjoy that you need to see a doctor. So what about the car? Well, someone from Abarth left a bunch of motorcycle journalists alone with a handful of their cars, keys in the ignition - oh dear. I pulled the long straw and got the whiz-bang Fiat 595 Pista, with 180bhp, trick differential, boost gauge with switchable modes, massive brakes and carbon fibre bucket seats. The go-kart reference is made far too often in relation to hot hatches, I've owned a few and driven a good few more. The Pista is something else! The diff is incredible and I'll give a tenner to anyone who can crash one on a normal road, it seems someone at the factory forgot to translate the word understeer into Italian. I won't go into details but suffice to say I don't think they'd lend us one again. If you can persuade your local Fiat dealer to lend you one, chew their arm off. More Yamaha road tests can be found in the Bike Shed Archive Find your local Yamaha dealer on Facebook | Instagram UK or Europe | Web Ross' Gear Helmet - Hedon Heroine Racer Jacket - Helstons Heat Boots - Icon Elsinore Jeans - Resurgence Gloves - Alpinestars Oscar Rayburn https://oldbikeshed.wpengine.com/2016/02/10/yamaha-xsr900-custom-fun-for-grown-ups/