Twigg wrote:jparry wrote:Hi,
Do you mean Yamaha has paid too much attention to developing the electronic suspension at the expense of developing other parts of the bike?
jparry
Well yes. That was my point.
Easy and obvious fixes have been neglected while development has gone into fancy electronic systems.
I agree. Absolutely, and not least because the FJR's electronic suspension is more sound than fury.
That said, Yamaha doesn't have much choice. The FJR is a supremely competent motorcycle that has for the past several years been badly treated by the motorcycle magazines, whose good evaluations drive sales. The magazines are biased in favor of gee-whiz technology because they've found that reporting on gee-whiz technology sells magazines. So: the magazines, whose sales are driven by stories of gee-whiz technology, have damned the FJR with faint praise, calling it competent, and implying that it has fallen behind technologically.
If the FJR is to continue, Yamaha has to sell enough of them to make continued development worthwhile, and to sell enough of them it has to get better magazine ratings, and to get those it has to emphasize features that the magazines can report as gee-whiz so readers will buy the magazines. The theory is that that will get the FJR better ratings and thus drive sales.
Ultimately it's readers who are driving this. It's like the quote from Walt Kelly's "Pogo" comic strip: "We have seen the enemy, and he is us."
Yamaha's marketing has been incompetent. Take the auto-clutch as an example (and this is a failure of Yamaha's marketing, not its engineering): The auto-clutch could have been marketed as a quick-shifter, very gee-whiz; instead it was explained in pedestrian terms (Remember the web site saying, "It's not an automatic transmission, it's an automatic clutch?"). The magazines reported it in pedestrian terms, and it never caught on (here at least).
Virtually every FJR with a minimum of care can provide over 100,000 miles of stellar performance, while BMW riders can barely keep their over technologized bikes on the road, yet it's the BMWs that get the gee-whiz evaluations in the magazines.
So, to your point: Late to the game, and with sport-touring sales declining, the FJR now touts gee-whiz sounding electronic suspension and cornering lights at the expense of more-practical fixes, like mirrors that show more than your elbows.
From where I sit, if that sells more FJRs, that's a good thing.
jparry