Key performance

100 ch
Power
🔧
1157 cc
Displacement
⚖️
244 kg
Weight
🏎️
228 km/h
Top speed
💺
790 mm
Seat height
20.0 L
Fuel capacity
💰
7 799 €
New price
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Technical specifications

Changements 2006 2005
Front suspension
Fourche téléhydraulique Ø 43 mm, déb : 130 mm Fourche téléhydraulique Ø nc, déb : 130 mm
Rear suspension
Mono-amortisseur, déb : 136 mm Mono-amortisseur, déb : 125 mm
Front brakes
Freinage 2 disques Ø 310 mm, étrier 4 pistons Freinage 2 disques Ø 310 mm, étrier 6 pistons
Seat height
785.00 mm 790.00 mm
Weight
239.00 kg 244.00 kg
Dry weight
215.00 kg 214.00 kg
New price
7 499 € 7 799 €

Engine

Displacement
1157 cc
Power
100.0 ch @ 8500 tr/min (73.6 kW)
Torque
90.2 Nm @ 6500 tr/min
Engine type
4 cylindres en ligne, 4 temps
Cooling
combiné air / huile
Compression ratio
9.5 : 1
Bore × stroke
79 x 59 mm
Valves/cylinder
4
Camshafts
2 ACT

Chassis

Frame
Double berceau tubulaire en acier
Gearbox
boîte à 5 rapports
Final drive
Chaîne
Front suspension
Fourche téléhydraulique Ø nc, déb : 130 mm
Rear suspension
Mono-amortisseur, déb : 125 mm

Brakes

Front brakes
Freinage 2 disques Ø 310 mm, étrier 6 pistons
Rear brakes
Freinage 1 disque Ø 230 mm, étrier 2 pistons
Front tyre
120/70-17
Front tyre pressure
2.50 bar
Rear tyre
180/55-17
Rear tyre pressure
2.50 bar

Dimensions

Seat height
790.00 mm
Fuel capacity
20.00 L
Weight
244.00 kg
Dry weight
214.00 kg
New price
7 799 €

Overview

What drives a manufacturer to revisit a recipe that's been working for nearly ten years? When the Suzuki GSF 1200 Bandit landed in 1996, it established itself as the quintessential popular roadster — the one you buy without hesitation to rack up miles without breaking the bank. But by 2005, the market had shifted. Yamaha had beefed up its FZ1, Kawasaki was sharpening its Z1000, and even Honda was pushing its CB1300 into the accessible large-displacement arena. Hamamatsu had no choice: the package needed an upgrade. And rather than settling for a simple cosmetic facelift, the engineers overhauled the chassis, suspension, and engine character from the ground up.

Suzuki GSF 1200 Bandit

The air- and oil-cooled 1157 cc inline four-cylinder stays true to its philosophy. Its 100 hp at 8,500 rpm won't scare a Superduke on track, but it's the torque that does the daily work: 90.2 Nm available from just 6,500 rpm, delivered with a smoothness the previous version never had. The five-speed gearbox gets the job done without flair, and you'd have appreciated a sixth gear to settle the revs on the highway. The power delivery of the 2005 Suzuki GSF 1200 Bandit aims to be more linear, more usable than that of previous model years. Less surging, more consistency. Fans of the raw character of the early generations will lose a bit of spice, but the machine gains in versatility. The tubular steel double-cradle frame, designed in the same spirit as its little sister the 600, brings improved rigidity. The reinforced swingarm and new suspension — telehydraulic fork up front and monoshock at the rear with 130 and 125 mm of travel respectively — transform the road manners. The Bandit proves more docile on corner entry, less unsettled under hard braking.

The braking, in fact, benefits from six-piston calipers on the twin 310 mm front discs. It's powerful, it's durable, but the lever feel still lacks progressiveness — a recurring shortcoming at Suzuki during this era. The 230 mm rear disc with its two-piston caliper does the bare minimum. As for ergonomics, the 790 mm seat height places the Bandit among the most welcoming large roadsters for average-sized riders. The 20-liter tank allows for decent range, even though the average fuel consumption of a Suzuki GSF 1200 Bandit hovers around 6.5 to 7 liters per hundred kilometers in mixed riding. Nothing outrageous for a 1200 of this generation. The 244 kg wet weight makes itself felt during low-speed maneuvers but is quickly forgotten once the machine is rolling.

Then there's the sore point: the fit and finish. While the reliability of the Suzuki GSF 1200 Bandit is beyond question — with engines capable of racking up very high mileage without complaint — the plastics and panel gaps betray a tight cost-control policy. The switchgear feels cheap, and some assemblies lack precision. The price of a new Suzuki GSF 1200 Bandit in 2005, set at 7,799 euros, partly explains these compromises. For that money, you got a big, reliable, comfortable roadster capable of reaching 228 km/h and taking you anywhere without emptying your pockets. The sharper competition offers superior finish quality and more modern electronics, but rarely this combination of mechanical toughness and rock-bottom pricing. Produced from 1995 to 2006, the big Bandit is aimed at pragmatic riders — the high-mileage types looking for a do-it-all tool rather than a showroom piece. It doesn't shine in any single area, but it never truly disappoints anywhere either. That's its strength, and that's what allowed it to span more than a decade without ever leaving the top of the used-bike sales charts.

Practical info

  • La moto est accessible aux permis : A

Indicators & positioning

Weight-to-power ratio
0.40 ch/kg
🔄
Torque / weight
0.37 Nm/kg
🔧
Volumetric power
85.2 ch/L
In category Naked bike · 579-2314cc displacement (3638 motorcycles compared)
Power 99 ch Top 51%
50 ch median 100 ch 175 ch
Weight 244 kg Lighter than 13%
183 kg median 212 kg 258 kg
P/W ratio 0.40 ch/kg Top 61%
0.24 median 0.46 0.83 ch/kg

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