VTR vs. Interceptor II
#1
VTR vs. Interceptor II
O.K guys (and girls..) thought I'd give you all a little update. As you may (or may not) have recalled I was a little tweaked that my buddie's '02 Interceptor ate me alive. (He has a Power Commander, K&N, Micron Pipes, one less tooth on the front sprocket, and snorkel gone on his intake..) Anyways, my bike was running pitifully - even on low RPM Roll-On's he was owning it. Anyways, I'm pleased to announce (drum roll please....) that the 'ol '99 VTR now holds steady w/ the Interceptor through hard acceleration. On low RPM roll-on's the VTR own's it, and on high RPM rips he only gets me by a 1/2 a bike length. Now my buddy weighs about 40 - 50 lbs. less than me, and we suspect that if he were on the VTR and I was on the Interceptor, it would kick the Interceptor. I wound up installing a K&N air filter (after the Two Bros. Pipes, and Dynojet carb kit), taking out the snorkel, getting the carbs re-jetted (a little fatter than the Dyno Jet Specs), and finally I followed Killers advice and dropped a tooth on the front sprocket. Just thought you folks would like to know how the VTR/Interceptor wars are going. I'd like to thank everyone for their advice, and I'm more than pleased how my '99 is running now. Now it just needs a Corbin seat and some good R compound tires. Talk to you all later...
#7
O.K guys (and girls..) thought I'd give you all a little update. As you may (or may not) have recalled I was a little tweaked that my buddie's '02 Interceptor ate me alive. (He has a Power Commander, K&N, Micron Pipes, one less tooth on the front sprocket, and snorkel gone on his intake..) Anyways, my bike was running pitifully - even on low RPM Roll-On's he was owning it. Anyways, I'm pleased to announce (drum roll please....) that the 'ol '99 VTR now holds steady w/ the Interceptor through hard acceleration. On low RPM roll-on's the VTR own's it, and on high RPM rips he only gets me by a 1/2 a bike length. Now my buddy weighs about 40 - 50 lbs. less than me, and we suspect that if he were on the VTR and I was on the Interceptor, it would kick the Interceptor. I wound up installing a K&N air filter (after the Two Bros. Pipes, and Dynojet carb kit), taking out the snorkel, getting the carbs re-jetted (a little fatter than the Dyno Jet Specs), and finally I followed Killers advice and dropped a tooth on the front sprocket. Just thought you folks would like to know how the VTR/Interceptor wars are going. I'd like to thank everyone for their advice, and I'm more than pleased how my '99 is running now. Now it just needs a Corbin seat and some good R compound tires. Talk to you all later...
#9
The VFR-VTR wars are alive in my garage. Junior tires with his CBR600 and has been riding my 97VFR lately. I let him take it out solo the other night to bike night. All was well. I had to wipe some drool off it the next morning. We bought this bike last year with 2860 miles on it. It was dirty but nearly perfect.
My Superhawk is almost back to peak and when we ride together - I lead. When I dial it up through traffic the Superhawk sounds like a tractor on a mission. I hear the kid coming in the backround like a nascar racer. The VFR is fitted with a lone D&D and it's loud - almost "open-header" loud.
When the VFR sits at a stop it's like four little soldiers on a quick-march. Bam, Bam, Bam, Bam, every cylinder annoucing. The D&D idles perfectly with the new K&N (no jetting). The Superhawk is much deeper and being a (jetted) deuce less frequent. This thing will rattle the lid on your crapper. Together at a stop - even the cagers give us some room.
He and I have ridden some together and he'll do a close lane split with me at some speed. We were talking about it the other night about how many miles we have spent together - what we've learned by accident and learned by being lucky.
What this brings to our style of driving is almost uncanny because we have grown so intuitive in situations.
This pertains to situations other than the bikes. His ability to communicate what any of the vehicles that we drive are doing is directly associated with our time together.
Teach, mentor, practice. Set a good example. Teach, mentor, practice.
It dates back to when he was in a car-seat and we were headed for the tree farm. This is way back when Hawkrider only had few hundred posts.
My Superhawk is almost back to peak and when we ride together - I lead. When I dial it up through traffic the Superhawk sounds like a tractor on a mission. I hear the kid coming in the backround like a nascar racer. The VFR is fitted with a lone D&D and it's loud - almost "open-header" loud.
When the VFR sits at a stop it's like four little soldiers on a quick-march. Bam, Bam, Bam, Bam, every cylinder annoucing. The D&D idles perfectly with the new K&N (no jetting). The Superhawk is much deeper and being a (jetted) deuce less frequent. This thing will rattle the lid on your crapper. Together at a stop - even the cagers give us some room.
He and I have ridden some together and he'll do a close lane split with me at some speed. We were talking about it the other night about how many miles we have spent together - what we've learned by accident and learned by being lucky.
What this brings to our style of driving is almost uncanny because we have grown so intuitive in situations.
This pertains to situations other than the bikes. His ability to communicate what any of the vehicles that we drive are doing is directly associated with our time together.
Teach, mentor, practice. Set a good example. Teach, mentor, practice.
It dates back to when he was in a car-seat and we were headed for the tree farm. This is way back when Hawkrider only had few hundred posts.
#10
I've only raced one VFR800. In the 1/4 I won by quite a bit. I'm guessing he pulled a high eleven while I was close to a flat eleven. The older 800's are faster than the 02's and up. Must of gained some weight or something.
#11
98 to 01 was the sweet spot for the VFR. fully gear driven cams, no vtec bullshit. 4valves per cylinder all the time and fuel injected. The 97 was the last of the normally aspirated Interceptors and it was a 750cc. The best looking Interceptor was probably the o3 silver.
#15
#17
Yup. Looks like they dropped the Interceptor name between 1986 and 1997, though there's a bit of fuzzy history there. They may have dropped the name in 1988, depending on which website you look at. The Interceptor name resurfaced with the 5th gen VFR800.
#18
I think the name disappeared around the same time they dropped Hurricane name in favor of CBR. I had heard it was for insurance rates, but I have my doubts. 1988 sounds like the year.
#19
My '86 VFR700 had "interceptor" on it.... Trying to find a pic... Pretty sure 87 did too
#20
I believe '88 was the first time they dropped Interceptor for the name change to VFR (went from a 700 to a 750) - I had a '92 which was a VFR - I believe they went back to Interceptor in '97??? I'll say one thing, that V Tek w/ a power commander sure wakes up after 7 grand on the tach. Hey man, who cares, as long as we're all having some good clean fun (however it's alot better on a Thunder Chicken {my pet name for my Hawk})
#21
#24
Although I would have to agree with nuhawk, the 98-01 version looked the coolest (kinda like a mean CBR RR) and (supposedly) was the fastest. I cant stand the styling of the newer viffers, I think its the ugliest bike in Hondas stable. Even with that sweet red white and blue color scheme.
#25
In looking at the Motorcyclist site, they list a 42 lb increase in weight in the VFR from the 98-01 to the post-02 version. I would lean towards the prior version for many reasons, one of which is the weight, the others being VTEC and finally looks.
#26
When you say "normally aspirated" do you mean "naturally aspirated"? Naturally aspirated means an engine pulls air in without the help of a pump (super or turbocharger) or nitrous. I was unaware the VFR had a turbo or supercharger at any point.
#28
Ok so maybe it's just in the words but these are my "bookends" When you move away from carbs that's where "normally aspirated" ends. Fuel injection begins. Forced Induction into the FI tubes is turbo/super/nitrous.
#30
Naturally aspirated by definition means the engine pulls all of its combustion air via vacuum created by the pistons. It has nothing to do with fuel injection. Nitrous is sort of a gray area but is considered not natural because it introduces extra oxygen into the fuel charge that is not naturally pulled from the atmosphere. Now that I know what you guys mean this thread makes a lot more sense.