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The Suzuki Boulevard S83 [1] is a motorcycle manufactured by Suzuki and renamed in 2005. It features a 1360 cc v-twin engine. It was formerly named the Intruder VS1400 which was introduced in 1987.
The Suzuki Boulevard range of motorcycles includes: ... Suzuki Boulevard S50; Suzuki Boulevard S83 This page was last edited on 28 January ...
2003 VS 800 Intruder VS 1400 Intruder VS 1400 Seats A man on his Suzuki VL 1500 Intruder LC. Ystad Port 2017. The Suzuki Intruder is a series of cruiser motorcycles made by Suzuki from 1985 to 2005. After 2005, the Intruder lineup was replaced by the Boulevard range. In Europe, the Intruder name remains in use on certain models.
In 2005, Suzuki re-branded its line-up of cruisers as its Boulevard series, [2] renaming the VL1500 the Boulevard C90. Aside from a name change and cosmetic differences, Suzuki replaced the carburetors with a new multi-port fuel-injection system that was borrowed from Suzuki's Suzuki GSX-R line of racing bikes. They also added a 32-bit ECU ...
Suzuki Boulevard S83, a motorcycle This page was last edited on 7 January 2023, at 04:49 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution ...
The Boulevard 40's engine is a 40 c.i.d. (652 cc), four-stroke, air-cooled, single overhead camshaft power plant, incorporating a Twin-Swirl Combustion Chamber (TSCC) cylinder head design first used in the Suzuki GSX series motorcycle engines. This engine features a balance shaft and an output of 31 horsepower. At 60 mph the engine is spinning ...
The Suzuki Boulevard S50 is a motorcycle manufactured by Suzuki and released in 2005 and production stopped in 2009. It features an 805 cc v-twin engine with four valves per cylinder. It was formerly named the Intruder 1985 - 1991 VS 700 (USA), 1985 VS 750 (worldwide) and VS 800 (1992 - 2004).
The Suzuki TS series is a family of two-stroke, dual-sport motorcycles made by Suzuki since 1969. The series was the first Suzuki trail bikes sold on the mass market. Most of the TS line had an air-cooled engine and most models were introduced alongside the closely related TM (Motocross) or TC (trail) models, TF (farm) and also the DS (for Dirt Sport, which had no turn signals, and simplified ...