MILESTONES ALONG THE WAY
ROUNDUP
FIFTY YEARS AGO, MANY OF THE FEATURES AND TECHNOLOGIES OF MOTORCYCLING that we take for granted today did not exist. Matter of fact, quite a few of them were not even remotely dreamed of back then, even by the most imaginative of visionaries. But as motorcycling flourished in the Sixties and technology breakthroughs came in rapid-fire succession during the Seventies and Eighties, the sport saw more advances over a shorter period of time than ever before in its long history. And Cycle World was there to witness them.
Here are just a few worth remembering.
—Paul Dean
Liquid-Cooled Motocross Bikes
Liquid-cooled streetbikes were nothing new, some dating back to motorcycling’s early days, but the first MX “waterpumper” was the 1981 Yamaha YZ125. The factories had been racing liquid-cooled 125s for a year or so, and Cagiva had grafted a partial system onto a 125, but the YZ was the first full-blown liquid-cooled production motocrosser.
Long-Travel Rear Suspension
The increase In rear-wheel travel from just 3 or 4 inches to around 12 was a revolution that occurred gradually but gained momentum between late 1973 and early 1974. Maico lead the way with forward-mount dual shocks while Yamaha pioneered the modern single-shock concept.
Radial Tires
Credit this game-changing innov tion to the same company that pioneered radial car tires in the 1940s: Michelin. The French tire manufacturer started developing roadracing radiais In the early 1980s and introduced the first pure radial streetbike tire in 1987.
Self-Canceling Turnsignals
This long-awaited feature was introduced not on a high-end, big-bore performance bike or an exotic European special but rather on the $1219, 34-horsepower 1976 Yamaha RD400C two-stroke Twin.
Cast Alloy Wheels
Chalk up another one for the 1976 Yamaha RD400C. With its sevenspoke cast hoops, it was the first production motorcycle to be fitted with aluminum alloy wheels as standard equipment. The 400C also arguably had the best seat ever put on a motorcycle up until that time.
Full-Face Helmets
With the first full-face Star in 1967, Bell forever changed the definition of “helmet.” The Star had to be custom-fitted, and its small faceshield didn't flip up but instead had to be popped out of Its rubber molding, but it offered the best overall head protection anyone had ever seen.
Jofa Mouth Guard
A motocross mouth guard first used circa 1968 was based on an almost identical item made for the sport of hockey by the Jofa company in Sweden. Though it did help prevent MX riders from looking like toothless hockey players, it was superseded in the mid-’70s by much more-protective devices.
Electronic Fuel Injection
EFI made its motorcycle debut in 1980 on, of all things, a 1000cc, highhandlebar, step-seat, inllne-Four cruiser: the Kawasaki KZ1000G Classic. Many riders had serious concerns about the reliability and repairablllty of EFI, but injection today is the rule, not the exception.