|
Harris Magnum 4

|
Make Model |
Harris Magnum 4 (Suzuki GSX-R) |
|
Year |
1990 |
|
Engine |
Air/oil cooled four
stroke, transverse four cylinder, DOHC, 4 valves per cylinder. |
|
Capacity |
|
|
Bore x Stroke |
|
|
Compression Ratio |
|
|
Induction |
|
|
Ignition /
Starting |
|
|
Max Power |
|
|
Max Torque |
|
|
Transmission /
Drive |
|
|
Front Brakes |
|
|
Rear Brakes |
|
|
Dry-Weight |
|
Its designed to be
macho; to look mechanical and aggressive, not smooth and pretty-pretty. Its
over- engineered and brutal, sort of like a two-wheeled AC Cobra. Alloy beams
are still the way to go for racing, but for streetbikes people are starting to
want something different. A return to large-diameter tubes is the way they are
looking.
Steve Harris doesnt mince words when he talks about his and brother Lesters
latest creation. No wonder. This is the Magnum 4, the latest in the
distinguished line to carry that name. Its as beefy and as bold as ever - more
so, if anything, given the total and very deliberate absence of a fairing. The
heritage is obvious but the bike is totally new, designed to cope with
1991-style motive power and cycle-parts, not to mention opposition.
At last, meet a retro-bike with genuine balls. For if theres one thing that
doesnt ring true about the current craze for old-style cycles, its the unspoken
implication that the machines on which the Zephyrs, GSX1100G and so on are based
were such wonderful motorbikes. In some ways they were, of course. But
rose-tinted recollections tend to obscure the fact that a decade or more ago,
any biker with a serious desire to go fast or look good threw his Jap fours
chassis away and replaced it with something from the houses of Rickman, Bakker,
Moto Martin or Bimota.
Or Harris. The Hertfordshire brothers Magnum, based on an endurance-race
trellis and unleashed onto the roads in 1979, was arguably the best-loved
special of the lot. The Magnums hunky steel tubes, curving round the engine
(normally a big aircooled Kawasaki) rather than running beneath it, set
standards for superbike chassis stiffness, simplicity and style until the
aluminium revolution of the mid-80s changed the rules.
And now the
Harris Magnum is back, reincarnated to carry SuzukiՒs oilcooled GSX-R lump -
ironically the very motor whose chassis brought alloy to the masses all those
years ago. The 1100 or 750cc engine will fit but its the larger variant that is
more appropriate, for if any modern motor is in desperate need of a well-sorted
chassis its the GSX-R11.
While the 750 has been refined since 1985 into a superbly well-balanced sports
bike, in recent years the once-dominant Eleven has lurched -- often literally --
from one flawed chassis redesign to the next.
Both these Magnum 4s live in Glasgow. One is the company vehicle of Geraint
Short, boss of the aptly-named firm Specials, whose business is building
motorcycles like this. The other is owned by local speed-freak and regular
customer Chris Woolacott. The two machines are as similar as youd expect of
two, well, specials: one is black, the other white; one engine is stock, the
other tuned; one bike wears conventional forks, the other upside-downers.
Each is a variation on a theme that remains as pure and sharp-edged as the
Magnum concept has always been. The frame dominates totally. On each side of the
bike, a main tube of 1 3/8-thick Renolds 531 curves out from the cylinder head,
hugging the sides of the close-finned cylinder barrel on its way to the
swing-arm pivot. Another big tube runs near- vertically down to an engine-mount
at the front of the cases. Narrower cross-members join the two, completing a
ladder-like pattern that is similar in appearance to that of the Mk 1 and 2
Magnums. (The Mk 3, released in 1985, had a more conventional twin-cradle
frame.)
The swing arm is nothing like the earlier versions, being an aluminium deltabox-style
construction, with massive strengthening on top, that works a vertically-mounted
Ohlins shock. Front suspension, like much of the Magnums detailing, depends on
customer preference. The black bike wears 43mm forks, adjustable for preload and
rebound damping, from Kawasakis 1990-model ZXR750. Alternatively, the white
bikes White Power units can be supplied by Harris as part of a ready-made
rolling chassis. Wheels are 17- inchers in each case, 3-inch front and 5 rear,
shod with Michelin radials.
Early Harris Magnums rolled on 18-inch rear tyres, mere plimsoles compared to
the newcomers hefty 180-section Doc Marten boot, and the Mk 4s other
dimensions are equally removed from those of its predecessors. Rake and trail
are 24 degrees and 104mm, a far cry from original Magnum figures and much closer
to those of the stock GSX-R750. The Mk 4s wheelbase is 1372mm, considerably
shorter than the GSX- R750s 1420mm and dinky-sized in comparison with the
Elevens 1465mm.
Harris estimate that their baby weighs-in at 400lb dry, against the stock 750s
425lb and the 1100s 470lb. The frame itself is probably heavier than stock but
the Magnums no-frills format and simple four-into-one exhaust system save
precious pounds. The deliciously-sculpted alloy fuel tank retains the family
look, as does the typically minimal
fibreglass seat unit (which holds the battery in the seat hump). Previous
Magnums had fairings, when such things were novelties, but the Mk 4 makes do
with just a pair of frog- eye headlights ahead of its clip-ons, and with no more
than an oil-cooler to keep the flies off the engine.
In Harris tradition, the Magnum is produced essentially as a chassis kit
comprising frame, swing arm, rear shock and linkages, petrol tank, seat unit,
footrests and rear-brake master cylinder, plus various brackets, engine-plates
and bearings. To that list must be added not only the engine, electrics, carbs,
exhaust system and forks, but also wheels, brakes, yokes, handlebars, oil-cooler
(the tuned bike runs two), clocks and all the hundred-and-one odds and sods that
go into constructing a complete motorcycle.
Naturally, Harris will gladly supply most of the remaining chassis parts from
their catalogue, with the final choice owing much to depth of wallet. If you
dont fancy forks from a breaker, for example, White Powers upside-downers cost
#600 or #1000 depending on spec. For the really rich, Ohlins sublime suspenders
sell for closer to three grand a pair. Likewise with the brakes, where
Lockheeds calipers cost anything from #80-odd (twin-piston) through #200
(standard four-piston), to over #600 for machined-from-solid racing items with
four lightweight alloy pistons apiece. The skys the limit, but Chriss black
beast provides a good example of how to construct a Magnum 4 for little more
than the cost of a new superbike. As well as the GSX-R engines neat looks and
obvious performance, the thing that inspired the Harris brothers to base their
Mk 4 Magnum around Suzukis lump was its availability at a reasonable price.
Chris picked-up a low-mileage engine from a breaker for 1400 including carbs
and electrics, and used standard GSX-R1100L wheels in combination with Lockheed
discs and twin-piston calipers. He paid Specials to put the whole lot together
in seven days flat, and ended up with a total bill of around #7500.
I guess its a tribute to the Harris brothers peerless track-record -- and to
Specials growing reputation for assembling their bikes -- that despite Suzukis
series of stock-chassised lemons I never had any doubt that the GSX-
R1100-powered Magnum would do the business. It looks right and it feels right:
small and low, despite the width of the petrol tank and the shiny frame-tubes
beneath it. Riding position is leant-forward with feet high, typically tight and
tucked-in, but the absence of a fairing gives an unusual view past the tank and
the Harris-made alloy top yoke.
The racy, naked set-up and the hollow growl from the pipe emphasise the brutes
awakening power as you pull away. But the Magnums handling soon puts the rider
at ease; one short straight and a single lap of the nearest roundabout were all
the Harris took to make me feel at home. As youd expect from the bikes weight
and steering geometry, the feel at the bars is light; the feedback through low
clip-ons, rigid forks and grippy rubber immense.
Flick the bitch and it responds instantly, snapping from side to side with ease
and precision, ironically feeling not unlike a stock GSX-R750 (but much more
nimble than an 1100...). The ZXR750 forks were well up to the job, though the
black bikes Ohlins spring was a shade hard, sending bumps through the
thinly-padded seat, putting too much weight on the front-end, and causing the
occasional handlebar-flutter when I shut off the gas in mid-turn. The white bike
floated over the same bumps and was rock-steady no matter what the provocation,
thanks as much to its shocks softer spring as to the equally exemplary White
Power front-end.
And it sure was nice to have all that GSX-R muscle on tap, harnessed in a
top-notch chassis and ready for instant explosion. Suzuki claim 143bhp from the
1100 in unrestricted form so running standard carbs, K&N filters with a stage-
three Dynojet kit, plus the less-restrictive pipe, its reasonable to reckon the
black Magnum was kicking out over 150 horses. On a bike this short and light,
and with the stock GSX-Rs legendary midrange punch backed-up by crisp
carburation, that was enough to provide the Magnum with suitably bullet-like
acceleration from virtually any speed.
Cracking the throttle sent the bike leaping away, jerking me backwards as it
headed towards a top speed that would have been determined mainly by my ability
to hang on to the clip-ons. On a short stretch of Glasgow by-pass the Harris
howled past 130mph and kept accelerating, wind tugging at my neck, before a
roundabout intervened. Then it was hard on the powerful Lockheeds to stand the
Magnum on its nose, proof that if those old twin-pot calipers are hardly trick
any more theyre still very good brakes indeed.
And that was just the standard-engined bike. Geraints 1340cc Magnum, kitted-out
with 85mm Cosworth pistons and running a 14.5:1 compression ratio, cost #9500
all-in and makes an estimated 170 horsepower. (Running slightly rich, it has
been dynod at 163bhp.) Exiting a corner is second gear and rolling-on the
throttle had the front wheel lifting instantly and thrillingly every time;
short-shifting into third sent the bars light again as the trememdous torque cut
back in. Geraint has had the bike flat-out at over 160mph for five miles on a
German autobahn (an experiment ended when his mates tuned RG500 seized while
trying to keep up), and reports that it was rock-solid all the way. So,
presumably, are his biceps -- but then the Harris Magnum always was a fearsome
beast, a real musclebike, and the Mk 4 version is the most potent Magnum of all.
This latest Harris may be shrunken and sharpened for the 90s, but at heart its
still a creature of the wild, sexist 70s. Macho, aggressive and brutal; its
all those things and more. Wimps and New Men need not apply. But for heavy-metal
fans everywhere, this is the bike for you.
Source .insidebikes.com
|