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The Suzuki GSX1300R Hayabusa is a sports motorcycle made by Suzuki since 1999. It immediately won acclaim as the world's fastest production motorcycle , with a top speed of 303 to 312 km/h (188 to 194 mph).
Option C unrestricted in 1999 and 2000. the Suzuki Hayabusa was unrestricted in 1999 and 2000; the 2001 and later Hayabusas were electronically restricted to ~300kph (185-186mph) first model year of Hayabusa to be restricted was 2001; the first 300kph-restricted motorcycle was the 2000 Kawasaki Ninja ZX-12R, one model year earlier than the Hayabusa
The Suzuki GSX-R1000 (often called a Gixxer) is a sports motorcycle made by Suzuki. [1] It was introduced in 2001 to replace the GSX-R1100 and is powered by a liquid-cooled 999 cc (61.0 cu in ) Transverse four-cylinder , four-stroke engine although originally 988 cc (60.3 cu in) from 2001 to 2004.
The Suzuki B-King is a streetfighter [2] style motorcycle manufactured by Suzuki, [3] that was unveiled in 2007. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] It uses the same 1,340 cc (82 cu in) engine that is fitted to the second generation 2008–onwards Hayabusa , but with different exhaust and intake systems.
The Suzuki GSX-R750 is a sports motorcycle made by Suzuki since 1984. It was introduced at the Cologne Motorcycle Show in October 1984 as a motorcycle of the GSX-R series for the 1985 model year. [ 1 ]
They began in 1983 on Suzuki's domestic market Gamma 250 with the goal of producing a lightweight two-stroke for the streets. The RG250 was the world's first production alloy framed motorcycle. Building upon the Gamma's success, Suzuki introduced the four-cylinder, four-stroke, aluminum framed GSX-R400 in 1984 for the Japanese market.
The Suzuki Eiger 400 is an all-terrain vehicle (4-wheel motorcycle) from Suzuki. It has a 376 cc, single overhead cam , four-stroke , single cylinder , air/ oil - cooled engine , weighs 590 pounds (270 kg), has a 4-US-gallon (15 L) gas tank, and offers two wheel or four wheel drive .
Goodbye Hayabusa was the name of two professional wrestling series of events produced by Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling (FMW) in 1999. The backstory of the series was that on-screen FMW Commissioner Kodo Fuyuki decided to end Eiji Ezaki's "Hayabusa" character after August 25, 1999 and the tour consisted of farewell matches of Ezaki's Hayabusa character and the end of it.