Showing posts with label Ciba Geigy RG and RGV500. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ciba Geigy RG and RGV500. Show all posts

Friday, October 7, 2022

Kevin Schwantz and the Suzuki XR70

Kevin Schwantz has his first GP500 back, a very special carbonfiber framed Suzuki XR70. 
Read the story here 
For more pics of carbonfiber framed Suzuki's see 

Sunday, January 12, 2020

Ciba Geigy Suzuki

Updated my Ciba Geigy Suzuki photo set with some great articles and tests about this amazing bike! These articles are written in Dutch.
For more pics see
Ciba Geigy Suzuki

Thursday, October 11, 2018

Ciba Geigy Suzuki V4

In 1986 the Suzuki factory stopped racing with the square four bikes and made a V4, the XR71. Team Heron was commissioned to make a frame. Nigel leaper was asked to built a new carbon fibre composite chassis for the XR71 engine, but it was never tested. The project was stillborn - even though comparison with the Suzuki alloy factory frame, by then standard for GP racers, showed that the carbon fibre frame was 1.3 kg lighter, as well as substantially stiffer. The weight with all the magnesium inserts was 8.3 kg, with a carbon composite swing arm - on a Heron design for the first time - scaling a further 6 kg. Though one of the 3 chassis found its way to Japan, the word came down from high, thanks but no thanks.
For more pics see 
Ciba Geigy V4

Saturday, October 26, 2013

When Team Heron sold the Ciba Geigy bikes

At the end of the 1986 season the Heron Suzuki team sold the Ciba Geigy bikes. They were no longer competitive and Suzuki was busy with a V4, the XR71 (1986) and XR72 (1987). Gerhard Vogt from Germany bought most of the bikes and some others went to the Swiss Suzuki importer Frankonia Suzuki and were ridden during the 1987 and 88 GP seasons by Wolfgang von Muralt. After that they also went to Germany.
For more pics see 
Carbonfiber frames Suzuki RG & RGV500 racers

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Ciba Geigy Suzuki's

Received some great information from Bernard, he is the owner of one of the Skoal Bandit XR70 bikes. Bernard thanks for this!
When Suzuki retired from the 500 GPs at the end of 83, the old square four (created in 73) was no more competitive against the Honda and Yamaha V4's. Therefore they continued to provide support to Heron in UK and Gallina in Italy with works engines and Suzuki alloy frames. In the UK the Heron team decided to invest in a new frame to reduce the weight and ordered 2 prototypes from Nigel Leaper in Cambridge. The first prototypes were "white" with aluminium sheets on honeycomb material from Ciba Geigy. Six other bikes were build after the prototypes. In 84 they used XR40 engines, in 85 XR45 with exhausts valves and in 86 the last square four, the XR70 with reed valves instead of disc valves. In 84 and 85 they used alloy swing arms and Suzuki forks but in the middle ot 86 they changed for a carbon swing arm and a White Power fork. The weight of the 86 bike was around 110 kgs and the maximum power was 148 HP due to the UK development especially in exhausts, heads and air-boxes. The problem was that the factory was not interested in carbon (too far away from the production road bikes) so at the beginning they were not helpful with the UK team but the results were better than the Gallina bikes so in 85 Heron got better engines and support. The carbon frame was too stiff, it was the most important problem because the bike was so light. The first pilot in 84 was Rob McElnea, In 85 Paul Lewis came in the team and McElnea left to Yamaha. In 86 Paul Lewis was still in the team with Niall MacKenzie and in the middle of the season Kevin Schwantz also got a bike. For the last race (The GP of San Marino at Misano) MacKenzie was in the first row. Kevin Schwantz won his first point in the 500cc class in Spa Francorchamps. At the end of 86, Suzuki announced their return as official team with the new XR71 V4. A batch of carbon bikes was sold at the end of 86 to Gerhard Vogt in Germany and 2 bikes with the XR70RV engine to the Frankonia team in Switzerland with Wolfgang von Muralt as pilot. They used the bikes for 2 years and at the end of 88 these bikes went to Germany also.
For pics of these bikes see
Carbonfiber framed Suzuki RG & RGV500 racers  

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Ciba Geigy RG and RGV500

Uploaded some pics to my carbon fiber framed RG500 set. Nigel Leaper was the man behind the carbon fiber framed Suzuki 500cc racers. The V4 bike never raced GP's.
For more pics see
Carbonfiber framed Suzuki RG & RGV500 racers