Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

1987 Suzuki Rb50 on 2040-motos

US $53000
YearYear:1987 MileageMileage:0
Location:

North Tonawanda, New York, United States

North Tonawanda, New York, United States
QR code
1987 Suzuki RB50, US $53000, image 1

Suzuki RB50 photos

1987 Suzuki RB50, US $53000, image 2 1987 Suzuki RB50, US $53000, image 3 1987 Suzuki RB50, US $53000, image 4 1987 Suzuki RB50, US $53000, image 5 1987 Suzuki RB50, US $53000, image 6

Suzuki RB50 tech info

TypeType:Mini Motorcycle

Suzuki RB50 description

RB50 GAG is an interesting small bike. It's one of those mini bikes the Japanese motorcycle manufacturers introduced for about three decades ago. But unlike RV50 Van Van or the PV50, RB50 wasn't a naked bike. No, it took the design from the racing track and its own GSX-R or RG/RGV Gamma models. 

The RB50 GAG (A-LA41A) was introduced in 1986 and there were four different graphics available: bomber styled white, rabbit ”Little Racing” pink, GSX-R replica blue/white (also called GSX-R50, the minigixxer) and red/white (see pictures below). All four shared the same machinery.

The frame of the RB50 GAG was advanced. Like a ”real” racer, the mini-replica had also a welded aluminum box frame, hydraulic disc brake (at the front) and Full-Floater aluminum box-type swingarm. 

The four-stroke engine came from the Birdie scooterette, and its power output didn't match the looks of the bike. It looked like it would be very fast but it wasn't. The air-cooled engine delivered 5,2 hp at 7.000 rpm and the dry mass of the bike was 64 kg (141 lbs). According to the service book, the European version was 1 kg (2.2 lbs) lighter. The variation can be caused by a different way of rounding the figure up or down, I don't know the reason. Anyway, according to Andrew, the webmaster of the Babygixxer homepage the model was sold under the name GSX-R50 in the United Kingdom.

Though the competition could beat it in most performance aspects, the RB50 is easy to ride and maintain. At the time, there were trim kits available for the engine but the Suzuki Motor Company discontinued the bike after only a couple of years of production and the go-fast parts produced in the 1980's are long gone. Current owners have to get by with custom-made parts or adapting parts from other bikes. It is not uncommon to see owners swapping-in parts from the competitors, NSRs and YSRs. 

Suzuki had launched a model called RB even in the late 1950's but had not been used in decades. I wonder if the American radar/weather/photographic reconnaissance aircraft, Boeing RB50, had inspired the Suzuki engineers to give the bike its model name. Anyway, the bomber styled graphics of the bike must have had something to do with the fact that the RB50 reconnaissance planes were modified Boeing B50 bomber planes.

Some sources claim that the production of the RB50 ended after 1987. Still, the model was sold in Finland from 1987 to 1989 under the model Solifer-Suzuki R (the spare parts catalogs knew model name Solifer-Suzuki RB50). The specs of the Finnish version of GAG are not the same. The Soilfer-Suzuki had a lighter 2-stroke engine and the bike was stripped from some details to make it weigh less. Nevertheless the design of the bike was the same (the GSX-R replica version

Moto blog

2014 AMA Supercross – Houston Results

Tue, 08 Apr 2014

Ryan Villopoto ran mostly unchallenged for his fourth win of the 2014 AMA Supercross season, taking advantage of an early spill by Ryan Dungey. The win strengthens Villopoto’s hold on the points lead as the Kawasaki rider seeks his fourth-consecutive championship. Villopoto took the holeshot in the Houston main event and never looked back, leading all 20 laps for the win.

Kevin Schwantz to Race 2013 Suzuka 8 Hours

Wed, 01 May 2013

Former Grand Prix World Champion Kevin Schwantz has been making the headlines a lot recently, and not necessarily for good reasons. But finally there’s some good news: Schwantz is  coming out of retirement to race in the 2013 Suzuka 8 Hours endurance race. Schwantz is joining Yukio Kagayama‘s team for the July 28 race, riding a Japanese Superbike-spec Suzuki GSX-R1000.

Rainy BSB tests are nothing new

Mon, 25 Mar 2013

THE combination of bad weather in the UK and a European testing ban means that most BSB teams will now start the season with very little track time. This sounds like a disaster for the top teams but history has proved this isn’t necessarily true and it sometimes doesn’t matter how much pre season preparation has taken place.  Back in 2002 Sean Emmett won on the IFC Ducati at the opening Silverstone round after first riding it in unofficial practice the same weekend. Steve Hislop took the other win on Pauls Bird’s well sorted Ducati. More recently in 2009, Leon Camier took an untested new model R1 Yamaha to victory at the Brands Hatch opener after GSE took delivery of the bike just the week before. Sylvain Guintoli won the other race on a well developed, well tested Crescent Suzuki. You could argue if no one has had testing then it is a level playing field but you have to feel for riders moving up to the superbike class in the world’s toughest national series.  Tyco Suzuki’s PJ Jacobson is one such rider but having spent some time with him over the past few weeks he seems to be taking it all in his stride. It may be the confidence of youth or maybe the fact he has won in every other class he has entered in his short BSB career, but I suspect he fancies at least standing on the Superbike podium at Brands (He also does a bit of ice racing which is not dissimilar to the this year’s UK testing).  The testing ban was implemented with all the best cost cutting intentions and if it had been any other year in the past decade all would be well. The teams may be feeling frustrated but the fans should be excited. With so many unknowns, the 2013 BSB opener at Brands Hatch could be the best ever!