Japanese V-twin sportsbike era
Closed by 2006
Honda's VTR1000F (1997-2005) and RC51/SP-2 (2000-2006). Suzuki's TL1000R/S (1997-2003). Yamaha never had one. By 2026, no major Japanese factory makes a V-twin sportsbike — the segment is Ducati's (Panigale V2 / V4) and Aprilia's (RSV4 V4). All three Japanese brands moved their flagship to inline-four litre platforms after WSBK rule changes in 2003-04.
World's biggest production-bike carbs
48mm Mikuni
VTR1000F's 48mm carburettors were the largest ever fitted to a production motorcycle. Honda's later 48mm units became collectible aftermarket parts for tuners. The carb-fed VTR1000F was kept in production through 2005 even though Honda had FI on the RC51 from 2000 — speaks to the simpler bike's customer base.
Why it ended
Inline-four superbike consolidation
Honda killed VTR1000F in 2005 and RC51 in 2006 to focus litre-class production on the CBR1000RR Fireblade (inline-four). WSBK rule changes in 2003 made 1000cc inline-fours dominant. The V-twin sportsbike business case at Honda evaporated. Same fate as Suzuki TL1000R (2003) and Yamaha never going there.
vs RC51/SP-2 (sister homologation bike)
Different riders
RC51/VTR1000 SP-2 (2000-2006): 999cc, 133bhp, FI, race-ready ergonomics, $14,000 new — homologation special. VTR1000F: 996cc, 116bhp, carbs, road-friendly ergos, $8,000 new — proper road bike. Same engine family, very different bikes. RC51 is collector territory now; VTR1000F is undervalued used.
Real cost trajectory
−40% real (vs Fireblade)
$8,800 VTR1000F launch in 1997 ($17,000 today) → $24,799 CBR1000RR-R Fireblade SP in 2026. Modern flagship is more expensive but has 215bhp+ vs 116bhp, full electronics, race-spec components. Used market in 2026: VTR1000F $3-5.5k for clean low-mile. Cheapest way into a V-twin sportsbike with WSBK-related lineage.
Rider aids count (1997 → 2026)
0 → 12+
VTR1000F had nothing — analogue dials, no ABS, no FI, no electronics. 2026 CBR1000RR-R Fireblade SP has cornering ABS, traction control, launch control, anti-wheelie, slide control, ride modes, IMU, quickshifter, Öhlins electronic suspension, lap timer, full TFT. Total transformation.
Cheapest way in
$3k
A clean VTR1000F from 1997-2002. 116bhp 90° V-twin, semi-pivotless trellis-style frame, that classic Ducati-rival character — for the price of a 250cc commuter. Look for fuel tank condition (16L original), 48mm carb sync, reg/rec, and front-end. Properly undervalued in 2026 — appreciating fast as 90s collector market heats up.