Yamaha MT-07 Review

The news and your views about biking
DaytonAndy
Posts: 1387
Joined: 07 Apr 2014, 16:38
Your Bike: Daytona 675R
Has thanked: 271 times
Been thanked: 388 times

Re: Yamaha MT-07 Review

Post by DaytonAndy »

The first 15 minutes I spent on the 899 I was convinced it was too slow and my 675 was significantly faster/better. Within 30 minutes I realised I was wrong!
User avatar
Perkles
Posts: 5889
Joined: 11 Mar 2014, 21:51
Your Bike:
Location: birminghamshire
Has thanked: 2152 times
Been thanked: 1465 times

Re: Yamaha MT-07 Review

Post by Perkles »

i agree with what you are all saying but if i bought an 899 i would always ponder what the full phat 1299 is like
User avatar
Kwacky
Posts: 38617
Joined: 21 Oct 2013, 21:52
Your Bike: Brutale 800RR, 1000SX Ninja
Location: Brum
Has thanked: 4327 times
Been thanked: 8368 times

Re: Yamaha MT-07 Review

Post by Kwacky »

Engine noise plays a massive part in speed perception.
User avatar
Monty
Posts: 6714
Joined: 12 Mar 2014, 07:59
Your Bike: KTM 690 SMC R
Location: Peak District
Has thanked: 2120 times
Been thanked: 2448 times

Re: Yamaha MT-07 Review

Post by Monty »

That's why I only use first gear
Monty™© MCMLXXII
User avatar
Kwacky
Posts: 38617
Joined: 21 Oct 2013, 21:52
Your Bike: Brutale 800RR, 1000SX Ninja
Location: Brum
Has thanked: 4327 times
Been thanked: 8368 times

Re: Yamaha MT-07 Review

Post by Kwacky »

How did that work out for your bike? (giggle)
User avatar
Monty
Posts: 6714
Joined: 12 Mar 2014, 07:59
Your Bike: KTM 690 SMC R
Location: Peak District
Has thanked: 2120 times
Been thanked: 2448 times

Re: Yamaha MT-07 Review

Post by Monty »

(giggle) Not that great to be frank!
Monty™© MCMLXXII
User avatar
kiwikrasher
Posts: 8877
Joined: 17 Mar 2014, 04:32
Your Bike: ‘16 Thruxton R. '10 Multistrada 1200 S.
Location: Kurrajong Heights, NSW, Australia
Has thanked: 4599 times
Been thanked: 4674 times

Re: Yamaha MT-07 Review

Post by kiwikrasher »

duke63 wrote:I think that's true of a lot of V twins until you look at the actual speed you are travelling. They don't feel as frantic, which is what i like about them.
Exactly what I felt on the multi, thing felt like it was idling cranked over, up hill pulling 130-140 km!
Happiness is not a destination. It is a way of life.
User avatar
duke63
Posts: 15501
Joined: 22 Oct 2013, 07:34
Your Bike: Ducati 748/853 & Triumph Street Triple 765RS
Location: Staffordshire
Has thanked: 4178 times
Been thanked: 4132 times

Re: Yamaha MT-07 Review

Post by duke63 »

Perkles wrote:i agree with what you are all saying but if i bought an 899 i would always ponder what the full phat 1299 is like

That's the dilemma. You can always make a 1299 feel like an 899 by putting it in the wet riding mode but you can't make a 899 go like a 1299. It depends on whether the buyer feels that is worth the extra £4k.
The 899 is still plenty fast enough to get you in trouble but the power never feels like it's much more than you really need or will ever use.
User avatar
Perkles
Posts: 5889
Joined: 11 Mar 2014, 21:51
Your Bike:
Location: birminghamshire
Has thanked: 2152 times
Been thanked: 1465 times

Re: Yamaha MT-07 Review

Post by Perkles »

I put my zx10r into low power mode and its still like shit off a shovel !
User avatar
Blade
Posts: 18772
Joined: 14 Mar 2014, 18:43
Your Bike: Kawasaki ZX10R
Location: North West
Has thanked: 3134 times
Been thanked: 3767 times

Re: Yamaha MT-07 Review

Post by Blade »

The 899 is all you need the 1299 is all you want (lol)
User avatar
Kwacky
Posts: 38617
Joined: 21 Oct 2013, 21:52
Your Bike: Brutale 800RR, 1000SX Ninja
Location: Brum
Has thanked: 4327 times
Been thanked: 8368 times

Re: Yamaha MT-07 Review

Post by Kwacky »

Blade wrote:The 899 is all you need the 1299 is all you want (lol)

Get this man into marketing :D

Spot on that it.

Frankie was pulling away from me yesterday and all I could think was "fook, I need a faster bike". But the week before on a 65bhp machine I thought "this is enough power to have fun on".
User avatar
duke63
Posts: 15501
Joined: 22 Oct 2013, 07:34
Your Bike: Ducati 748/853 & Triumph Street Triple 765RS
Location: Staffordshire
Has thanked: 4178 times
Been thanked: 4132 times

Re: Yamaha MT-07 Review

Post by duke63 »

i would like to try the 899 and then the 1299 straight after on the same roads.

It is still on the list of things to do.
User avatar
Blade
Posts: 18772
Joined: 14 Mar 2014, 18:43
Your Bike: Kawasaki ZX10R
Location: North West
Has thanked: 3134 times
Been thanked: 3767 times

Re: Yamaha MT-07 Review

Post by Blade »

Do you think you will do it this year Duke ?
User avatar
Blade
Posts: 18772
Joined: 14 Mar 2014, 18:43
Your Bike: Kawasaki ZX10R
Location: North West
Has thanked: 3134 times
Been thanked: 3767 times

Re: Yamaha MT-07 Review

Post by Blade »

Kwacky wrote:
Blade wrote:The 899 is all you need the 1299 is all you want (lol)

Get this man into marketing :D

Spot on that it.

Frankie was pulling away from me yesterday and all I could think was "fook, I need a faster bike". But the week before on a 65bhp machine I thought "this is enough power to have fun on".
Which bike were you on Kwacky ?

If it was the sx I'm very surprised as I would have thought it would be very similar to frankies bike.
User avatar
duke63
Posts: 15501
Joined: 22 Oct 2013, 07:34
Your Bike: Ducati 748/853 & Triumph Street Triple 765RS
Location: Staffordshire
Has thanked: 4178 times
Been thanked: 4132 times

Re: Yamaha MT-07 Review

Post by duke63 »

Blade wrote:Do you think you will do it this year Duke ?
I might get to try them yes. Still undecided about where to go next.
User avatar
Kwacky
Posts: 38617
Joined: 21 Oct 2013, 21:52
Your Bike: Brutale 800RR, 1000SX Ninja
Location: Brum
Has thanked: 4327 times
Been thanked: 8368 times

Re: Yamaha MT-07 Review

Post by Kwacky »

Blade wrote:
If it was the sx I'm very surprised as I would have thought it would be very similar to frankies bike.
It was the SX. The BMW has 20bhp more and is about 45lbs lighter.
User avatar
Blade
Posts: 18772
Joined: 14 Mar 2014, 18:43
Your Bike: Kawasaki ZX10R
Location: North West
Has thanked: 3134 times
Been thanked: 3767 times

Re: Yamaha MT-07 Review

Post by Blade »

Kwacky wrote:
Blade wrote:
If it was the sx I'm very surprised as I would have thought it would be very similar to frankies bike.
It was the SX. The BMW has 20bhp more and is about 45lbs lighter.
I'm still surprised tbh. I thought the sx would be a torque monster with a stomping mid range and it's torque that accelerates a bike not bhp.
User avatar
kiwikrasher
Posts: 8877
Joined: 17 Mar 2014, 04:32
Your Bike: ‘16 Thruxton R. '10 Multistrada 1200 S.
Location: Kurrajong Heights, NSW, Australia
Has thanked: 4599 times
Been thanked: 4674 times

Re: Yamaha MT-07 Review

Post by kiwikrasher »

Kwacky wrote:
It was the SX. The BMW has 20bhp more and Frankie is about 45lbs lighter.
(lol) that what you get when your motto is 'brake for Cake' (lol)
Happiness is not a destination. It is a way of life.
User avatar
Kwacky
Posts: 38617
Joined: 21 Oct 2013, 21:52
Your Bike: Brutale 800RR, 1000SX Ninja
Location: Brum
Has thanked: 4327 times
Been thanked: 8368 times

Re: Yamaha MT-07 Review

Post by Kwacky »

that is also true

Blade, I think you're over-reading what I've posted.
User avatar
Frankie
Posts: 3926
Joined: 11 Mar 2014, 21:37
Your Bike: Fast Ones, and dirty ones
Has thanked: 727 times
Been thanked: 1482 times

Re: Yamaha MT-07 Review

Post by Frankie »

It's all relative to what you are on and what's around you, after all is a bike not meant to make you smile, so even if it was a c90 and you were having fun it's done its job.

However go out on a ride out on a c90 and the rest of the slappers on their machines you would not be smiling so much, unless we were all on the same machine now that would be fun.

People underestimate the S 1000 R, as a detuned naked RR. This bike is not, it's a bike in its own right, with 160bhp all in the right places I.e. Plenty of torque. Not being funny but I was not even gunning it at the weekend, yes it was progressive in places, but the bike had a little more just waiting whenever I asked for it.

As I will say to anyone who will listen this bike for me right now is the best I have ridden for some time.
It has enough to launch the bike from 0 to 160, it has a very responsive engine that can be ridden balls out everywhere or you can be lazy in terms of conservative gear changing, you have a suspension system that can cope with most road conditions, from super smooth race tracks to the back roads around Lambourn (ride out joke) all from the flick of a switch and constant electronic wizardry of the various modes within the suspension. I also like the ride position, being more upright in terms of the bars is great, but if you want to get your head down and have a hoon you can.
Post Reply