Yamaha, that's a Japanese word for Bruce Jenner problems...
There is not "insurance" against this sort of thing happening. The "insurance" is doing the design right to minimize the chance of this happening.
recall the cbr125 for weak wrist pins, because I broke one of those, too!
Quality & craftsmanship is not high on a Yamaha. The engineers go for bling more than function
I was referring in the general sense. I believe Yamaha & Kawasaki have the poorest transmissionsHow do you design a transmission for bling and not function?
I was referring in the general sense. I believe Yamaha & Kawasaki have the poorest transmissions
Yamaha are rock solid!
Do you wrench on your bike?Ha.
This always amazes me. I have ridden for over 30 years, presently own over 12 different bikes from from 5 different manufacturers, race, street, dirt, 100 000s of kms on motorcycles...
How much would you need to ride over the years on different brands, different models to even be able to have an opinion?
Cause I must be stupid to not be able to form an opinion on the matter
Do you wrench on your bike?
I mean anything past an oil change.
My circle of friends have had precisely the opposite experience. Least solid bikes by a long, long way compared to any of the rest. Including Suzuki.
Somehow, they got the late-model R6 mostly right, though. As long as you don't crash one you'll probably be OK. Probably why they've hardly changed anything about it since 2006.
Serialize - Ask Art about Emilio's FZ1 - the one that we pulled the engine out of while he was sleeping. That funny noise ended up being a spun rod bearing.