The Japanese V-twin sportsbike
Extinct in 2026
In 2000 Honda had the VTR1000 SP-1/SP-2, Suzuki had the TL1000R, Yamaha had nothing (briefly). All three Japanese factories were chasing Ducati. By 2026: Honda's last V-twin sport was the SP-2 in 2006, Suzuki killed TL1000 in 2003 and SV1000 in 2007. The only mainstream Japanese V-twin sportsbike in 2026 is the budget SV650 — which is a 645cc commuter, not a litre-class sportsbike. Ducati won the V-twin sport war by attrition.
TL1000S → TL1000R
+10bhp, fixed chassis 1998
The 1997 TL1000S launched with a steeper trellis frame and the famous rotary rear damper — and tankslappers severe enough that Suzuki recalled bikes for steering damper retrofits before the 1998 model year. The 1998 TL1000R fixed the chassis (twin-spar alloy frame), bumped power to 135bhp, and added full fairings. Different bike under the skin. R was the better of the two.
Why it ended
GSX-R1000 K3, 2003
The GSX-R1000 launched in 2001 (K1) and by the K3 in 2003 was making 165bhp claimed at 168kg dry. The TL1000R made 135bhp at 192kg dry. There was no longer a reason for the TL to exist — same factory, same money, the inline-four was 30bhp up and 25kg lighter. Suzuki killed TL1000 at end of 2003 and never went back to V-twin sport.
The TL1000-shaped hole
23 years and counting
Suzuki has not built a V-twin sportsbike since 2003. The engine survived in V-Strom 1000 (2002-2019) and SV1000 (2003-2007), then was retired entirely. The 2026 V-Strom 1050 uses a 1037cc V-twin but it's tuned for adventure-touring, not sport. Aprilia's RSV4 is the spiritual heir to the TL1000 — Italian, V4 (close enough), proper sportsbike — but it's £21,000.
Real cost trajectory
+17% real
£8,200 TL1000S in 1997 (£15,800 today) → £18,500 GSX-R1000R in 2026. Closest spiritual successor is the GSX-R1000R, but it's a very different bike (199bhp, electronics, track focus). Used market in 2026: TL1000S £3-5k, TL1000R £4-7k for clean low-mile. Cult bikes; prices have actually risen in real terms over the last 5 years as 90s sportsbike collecting takes off.
Rider aids count (1996 → 2026)
1 → 12+
TL1000S had fuel injection — that's it. No ABS, no TC, no electronics. The 2026 GSX-R1000R has cornering ABS, traction control, launch control, anti-wheelie, engine brake control, ride modes, IMU, quickshifter, full LCD dash. The TL1000R was at the threshold — sportsbikes added FI, then everything else, in the next 25 years.
Cheapest way in
£3k
A clean TL1000S from the late 90s. 125bhp V-twin, FI, that classic Ducati-rival character — for the price of a 250cc commuter. Look for steering damper fitted, rear damper condition (the rotary unit is the weak link), R&R replacement, and full service history. TL1000R is rarer and 30-50% pricier; both are appreciating fast.