Quick question, I'm looking at some brands of bikes, and I'm reading that suzuki doesn't have the best build quality, whereas Honda is the king for build quality... Any of you guys have experience with suzuki, especially the gsxr series?
Firstly it's not that Suzuki or Kawasaki have bad bikes, and theirs engines are probably the best.
The difference comes in with the little touches like less cable ties used or at least less obviously visible ones.
Honda and Yamaha will often have foam padding on the inside of their fairings for instance while Suzuki and Kawa will just have straight up molded plastic showing.
Generally these things are invisible to everyone but the mechanic working on them.
Honda overall is the "easiest" bike to ride though and generally less extreme. More road friendly if you will.
Kawasaki had a high failure rate at one point, largely due to people pulling wheelies and the sump running dry.
Yamaha over the years have had more recalls (that I know of) than the other three and also tend to break more badly or cost more when they simply fall over.
My own Suzuki GSX-R600 did a rock solid 30000km odd under my ownership without any major drama. The little issue I did have took a while to find and was related to the fuel injector wire pulling out of its crocodile clip. Could have been build quality, could have been ham fisted mechanic. Don't know if many Suzuki's with big issues.
Honda are generally spot on with their perceived quality. Can't recall a single major drama with them in recent years.
Then you have cases like mine where everyone says don't buy a Triumph they have electric/electronic issues. Guess what...none of that but it threw big end bearing at 34500km after being perfect until then except for a paint related problem.
So you really just can't tell.
As long as you don't buy Chinese you'll be fine.
Or my "unreliable American bike" before that in my Buell. Did almost 50000km without spilling a drop of oil or having any major issues. Only warranty claims on that one were wheel and neck bearings.