bobo383
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Neck=Red
Posts: 516
Arlington, TX
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Aha! I've had both a Savage and a VLX600 at the same time! It's hard to say which one I liked better. Wife definitely liked the Honda looks, but the Savage mechanicals. I'm about the same. SUZUKI ADVANTAGES: - The Savage has an advantage in low-end torque, and it is near impossible to stall the bike by quick-handing the clutch as long as you have some throttle. With the VLX, you have to stay in the friction zone a bit longer, 1st gear is higher, and it's harder to creep along in slow traffic.
Savage was also lighter, which is good at low speed but not so great above 70 or so. My 1st Savage was a 5-speed, my current Savage is a 4-speed, and all VLXs are 4-speed. No big deal, but 1st gear is so high on the Honda. The Savage is much simpler with one cylinder, one plug, and air cooling. The VLX is water cooled, 2 plug per cyl. Replacing the battery is easy on the Savage but requires pulling the exhaust pipes on the VLX. Finally, the Savage is all steel and aluminum, but the Honda has alot of plastic in irritating places - side covers, chrome air cleaner cover, some of the engine case covers.
HONDA ADVANTAGES: - The Honda had a clear advantage in engineering, build quality, and ride comfort.
VLX has forward controls straight from the factory, the Savage does not. The VLX air cleaner rattled a bit at speed, but other than that the bike was solid, quiet, and very confidence-inspiring at any speed. Savage is painful for a passenger, but the VLX is very comfortable for a passenger. The VLX has an accelerator pump and a coolant-heated carb, the Savage does not. The Honda has the V-Twin look, and nowhere on the bike is the engine displacement given away. The Honda never backfired out the exhaust, but little poots from the air cleaner were common. The stock Savage sounds like a 12 gauge low-brass field load on deceleration and shutoff.
A DRAW BETWEEN THE TWO: - Stock bike against stock bike, the VLX and Savage are very close - My neighbor and I heads-up raced the two bikes, and neither bike consistently outran the other. (They both, however, outran his 883 sportster up to about 70 mph then the 883 pulled ahead).
Both the Savage and VLX are ridiculously lean from the factory. Both had the same top speed, till I started monkeying with the Savage. Of course with mods the sky's the limit for either bike. Savage belt is zero-maintenance, but the Honda chain allows easy for gearing changes.
Hard to say which one I like better, but I still have a Savage and the VLX was sold with no remorse. (I also have a Honda CB1000, and just sold a YZF600 and a Suzuki GS1000. I like anything that runs and/or goes bang) Just my 2 cents.
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