Katana 600 first bike?

Message
Author
User avatar
Ninja Geoff
Site Supporter - Gold
Site Supporter - Gold
Posts: 2980
Joined: Mon Jul 25, 2005 10:55 pm
Real Name: Geoff
Sex: Male
Years Riding: 7
My Motorcycle: 2006 Kawasaki Ninja 650R
Location: Leyden, MA

#11 Unread post by Ninja Geoff »

swatter555 wrote:I think Katanas are pretty heavy and cumbersome for a new rider, but they are not terrible beginner bikes.
I concur. If the weight was centered lower, they'de be pretty decent. They're gutless as far as inline 4's go. Not to say they're a BAD bike, just not as fast as a GSX-R 600. I think even the Kat 750 is slower than the GSX-R 600 as well (straight line. Twisties it's GSX-R FTW vs Kat), but don't quote me on that one. But I'm pretty sure tha Kat would be more comfortable.

I sat on a 03ish Kat 600 at the dealer, and I must say, I rather liked it except for the fact that the 1986 GS700E i sat on felt LESS top heavy than it. BUT I only got to try the GS, not the Kat, so I may be wrong in this assumption.
[img]http://img38.imageshack.us/img38/3563/41350009.jpg[/img]

User avatar
DivideOverflow
Legendary 1000
Legendary 1000
Posts: 1318
Joined: Wed Mar 23, 2005 3:19 pm
Sex: Male
Location: Florida, USA

#12 Unread post by DivideOverflow »

A big problem with the katanas is the difficulty to control them in slow-speed maneuvers as a beginner due to their weight orientation. They tend to want to tip more than a lot of other bikes.

The reasons for the GS500, EX500 being recommended are their predictable powerband, their manageable weight, and their availability. Not to mention, they should be cheaper on insurance.
2008 BMW K1200S
2003 Z1000 - For Sale
1979 KZ650B - Work in progress
2005 Ducati SS 1000DS - sold :'(
1994 VFR750 Interceptor - sold
1984 VF700F Interceptor - sold
2004 Hyosung GV250 - sold

roscowgo
Legendary 750
Legendary 750
Posts: 972
Joined: Mon Jan 30, 2006 7:30 am

#13 Unread post by roscowgo »

I have and started street riding on a 600 kat 1992 version. Like these fellas said, its not the fastest sportbike, or the best handling.

It is however, no matter what they call it, still a sportbike. Though bigger heavier, and more top heavy than the others. Up to speed, eh big deal, handles nice, plenty of power for me, and always puts a grin on my face.

Having said that, if you ride a gixxer every day, then hop on a katana its going to feel slow and cumbersome. if you ride an s-10..then its gonna knock your socks off.

Kats are also dipped in plastic. and that plastic crap is spensive when you decide to let the bike take a crunch nap in the driveway. its a doable beginner bike i suppose, but i would reccomend something like the others here have, gs500, the littler ninjas, maybe even go and do some serious sittin on other types, standards, dual sports, etc...

stallion114
Rookie
Rookie
Posts: 4
Joined: Thu Apr 20, 2006 3:47 pm

#14 Unread post by stallion114 »

What about the SV suzuki series. I like the GS after reading about it, and i think it looks a 1000 times better then the EX nijas. The only problem is there is not to many GS500s available used. Remember, i dont want to spend to much, because if i were to say buy a new bike, i would want full coverage on my investment, if its a 2000 dollar bike, i dont be as stressed if it gets bashed up a little bit.

User avatar
swatter555
Legendary 300
Legendary 300
Posts: 435
Joined: Sun Jun 05, 2005 9:21 pm
Sex: Male
Location: Saint Louis,MO

#15 Unread post by swatter555 »

You could probably find a well used SV650 for 2-3k. These are a little top heavy also, but then so are most sportbikes.

Also, you need to do some serious research on your insurance, companies will give you vastly different qoutes.

You also need to save some money for the MSF and the proper gear. Getting some textile gear, helmet,gloves,and boots is going to run $800+.

User avatar
Skier
Site Supporter - Platinum
Site Supporter - Platinum
Posts: 2242
Joined: Sat Aug 07, 2004 10:44 am
Sex: Male
Location: Pullman, WA, USA

#16 Unread post by Skier »

From my experiences with my '89 Katana 600 (back when it was running :cry: ), it would have made a "pee"-poor starter bike. It's heavy, and top-heavy, at that. Which means it's difficult to control at low speed. It also lends itself to teaching abd habits, such as a wrist-up position on the throttle.

As for power, it has more than enough to get you in trouble. I don't believe in the bullcrap about "being able to hang with most cars on the street." It's more like being able to beat 999 out of 1,000 in terms of acceleration. At about 85 HP, they are no slouches.

As said before, the plastics also make it expensive if/when you drop it.

Not a good starter bike at all.
[url=http://www.motoblag.com/blag/]Practicing the dark and forgotten art of using turn signals since '98.[/url]

roscowgo
Legendary 750
Legendary 750
Posts: 972
Joined: Mon Jan 30, 2006 7:30 am

#17 Unread post by roscowgo »

Skier wrote:From my experiences with my '89 Katana 600 (back when it was running :cry: ), it would have made a "pee"-poor starter bike. It's heavy, and top-heavy, at that. Which means it's difficult to control at low speed. It also lends itself to teaching abd habits, such as a wrist-up position on the throttle.

As for power, it has more than enough to get you in trouble. I don't believe in the bullcrap about "being able to hang with most cars on the street." It's more like being able to beat 999 out of 1,000 in terms of acceleration. At about 85 HP, they are no slouches.

As said before, the plastics also make it expensive if/when you drop it.

Not a good starter bike at all.

What he said. theres a reason mine has an O ring impression in the seat.

User avatar
earwig
Site Supporter - Gold
Site Supporter - Gold
Posts: 984
Joined: Thu May 19, 2005 2:11 pm
Sex: Male
Location: New Jersey

#18 Unread post by earwig »

What happened to your father? Oh and GeoffXR200R, your Avatar is disturbing, is that a bike injury?

User avatar
Myself002
Legendary 300
Legendary 300
Posts: 477
Joined: Fri Apr 21, 2006 11:59 am
Sex: Male
Location: MA

#19 Unread post by Myself002 »

go for the SV650 if you can find one for 2-3k

User avatar
Shiv
Site Supporter - Silver
Site Supporter - Silver
Posts: 1281
Joined: Thu Sep 15, 2005 9:19 am
Sex: Male
Location: Texas

#20 Unread post by Shiv »

Which will be a journey in itself.

3500 is the cheapest I've ever seen an SV650 at.
Have fun on the open /¦\


There's more to this site than just the message board.
www.totalmotorcycle.com

I know, I was surprised too.

Post Reply