The initial lineup consisted of the GT380
three cylinder (marketed in North America as "Sebring");
GT550 three cylinder (marketed in North America as "Indy") and
GT750 three cylinder (marketed in North America as "LeMans")
Engines Engines were piston-ported
two-stroke with
Suzuki's multi-point oil injection system, marketed as
Crankcase Cylinder Injection (CCI) (previously marketed as PosiForce), conventional battery/points
ignition system and chain-type final drive. The motorcycles featured engines with
Schnuerle porting. Alternators featured a three-phase excited field type using brushes and
slip rings with a wound rotor. A
solid-state rectifier and a mechanical three-step regulator completed the system. Previously Suzuki had primarily used a
permanent-magnet single-phase alternator setup on its bikes so the new equipment was quite a step up for the GT series. The 380 and 550 engines were air-cooled with a system marketed by Suzuki as
Ram Air. This system consisted of a cast aluminum shroud covering a modified
cylinder head to direct the cooling air. The GT750 was liquid-cooled. Suzuki thus led the motorcycle world by being the first company to
mass-produce a liquid-cooled, large-bore two-stroke engine. The GT750 was nicknamed the "Water Buffalo" in North America and the "Kettle" in the UK. Other names were the "Wasserbüffel" in Germany, "la bouillotte" in France and the "Water Bottle" in Australia. "Water Gat" in Finland. The 550 initially featured chrome-plated
piston rings and
cast iron cylinder bores. For the 1976 model year, the 550 received a system of cast-iron rings running in chrome-plated cylinder bores. This change was largely thanks to the RE5, which also used a proprietary cylinder wall plating similar to a
Nikasil coating. The coating, marketed as
Suzuki Composite Electro-chemical Material or
SCEM, is nickel-phosphorus-silicon-carbide based, reducing weight (by eliminating a steel liner) and improving heat transfer, allowing for tighter and more efficient piston-to-cylinder clearance. For model years 1972 and 1973 the carburetors had been three separate items with the complex cabling. 1974 models featured the unitized carburetors mounted to a single bracket with a less complex single push-pull cable arrangement for easier and more durable synchronization. The unitized carburetors continued through to the end of production of the three-cylinder models, when the GT750 received the Mikuni BS40 type diaphragm style carburetors. All smaller models featured Mikuni VM type round slide carburetors. The three-cylinder GT models featured bifurcation of the center cylinder exhaust header. This allowed Suzuki to use four mufflers rather than an unbalanced "2 and 1" or a "three into two" exhaust arrangement. The GT550 and GT750 featured electric starting while other models, with the exception of the GT185, were
kick start only. All models were equipped with five-speed transmissions with the exception of the GT250 and GT380 which had a six-speed, and all models were equipped with
drum brakes front and rear. 1973 three-cylinder models were equipped with hydraulically operated single
disc brakes on the front with drum brakes on the rear. The GT750 featured dual discs up front, another big "first" for Suzuki. Frames were all-welded
mild steel tubing with long wheelbases to give stability at high speed.
GT380 for Italy A marketing anomaly concerned the GT380. The actual engine displacement as introduced in the 1972 model year was 371cc and the 380 stayed this way until the end of production for most market areas. For the Italian market only, the GT380 received a displacement increase to 384cc starting with the 1975 model year. This engine size was continued through to the end of production for Italy alone. This was a counter to an Italian government import ban on bikes less than 380cc and less than 170 kg. Suzuki simply increased the bore of the GT380 to 55 mm, thus making the engine capacity now 384cc. Suzuki also made sure that the data plate riveted to the frame showed a weight of 171 kg. ==GT250==