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PLUS WIN AN INDIAN MOTORCYCLE SPORT CHIEF Shannons are giving motoring enthusiasts the chance to win a trip for two to the USA to drive some of the world’s best supercars around the famous Circuit of The Americas racetrack and exhilarating Las Vegas racetrack. The 11-day trip includes airfares, luxury accommodation in Dallas, Austin, Las Vegas and Los Angeles, and $10,000 spending money for eligible Shannons Club Members1. Plus, win a new Indian Motorcycle Sport Chief in Sunset Red Smoke! Including up to 12 months Shannons Comprehensive Bike Insurance and Shannons Roadside Assist2. You could win over $100,000 in prizes! INSURANCE FOR MOTORING ENTHUSIASTS | CALL 13 46 46 FOR A QUOTE | SHANNONS.COM.AU 6KDQQRQV3W\/LPLWHG$%1 ¶6KDQQRQV· LVDQDXWKRULVHGUHSUHVHQWDWLYHRI$$,/LPLWHG$%1WKHSURGXFWLVVXHU$OOEHQHÀWVPHQWLRQHGLQWKLVGRFXPHQWDUHDVXPPDU\RQO\/LPLWVFRQGLWLRQVDQGH[FOXVLRQVDSSO\5HDGWKHUHOHYDQW 3URGXFW'LVFORVXUH6WDWHPHQWEHIRUHEX\LQJWKLVLQVXUDQFH7KH7DUJHW0DUNHW'HWHUPLQDWLRQLVDOVRDYDLODEOH&DOORUJRWRVKDQQRQVFRPDXIRUDFRS\$GYLFHKDVEHHQSUHSDUHGZLWKRXWWDNLQJLQWRDFFRXQW\RXUSDUWLFXODUREMHFWLYHVÀQDQFLDOVLWXDWLRQVRU needs, so you should consider whether it is appropriate for you before acting on it. Competition conducted by Shannons, Level 23, 80 Ann Street, Brisbane QLD 4000. Entry Period: 12.00am 22/2/24 to 11.59pm 28/6/24 (Melbourne time). Entry is only open to eligible $XVWUDOLDQUHVLGHQWVDJHG\HDUVRUROGHU&73H[FOXGHG(OLJLEOH(QWUDQWVPXVWEHRSWHGLQWRUHFHLYH6KDQQRQVPDUNHWLQJFRPPXQLFDWLRQVDQGPXVWQRWRSWRXWGXULQJWKH(QWU\3HULRG'ULYHH[SHULHQFHHOHPHQWVRIWKHSUL]HPXVWEHWDNHQRQWKHGDWHVVSHFLÀHG 0D[LPXPFRVWRIFDOOZLOOQRWH[FHHGFHQWV*67IURPDQ$XVWUDOLDQODQGOLQH+LJKHUUDWHVPD\DSSO\IRUPRELOHSKRQHVRUSD\SKRQHV7RWDOSUL]HYDOXHGXSWRLQFO*673UL]HVGUDZQDWSPDW(QJDJH,QWHUDFWLYH:DVKSRRO&UHVFHQW :RRQJDUUDK16:7KHZLQQHUZLOOEHQRWLÀHGE\SKRQHDQGHPDLOE\DQGSXEOLVKHGLQ7KH$XVWUDOLDQQHZVSDSHURQDQGRQWKHFRPSHWLWLRQZHEVLWH$&7736$7DQG16:73,PDJHVIRULOOXVWUDWLYHSXUSRVHVRQO\1If WKHZLQQHULVDPHPEHURIWKH6KDQQRQV&OXEZLWKDSURÀOHLPDJHDQGHQWKXVLDVWYHKLFOHLPDJHDWWKHWLPHRIWKHGUDZWKH\ZLOOUHFHLYHDQDGGLWLRQDO$8'VSHQGLQJPRQH\ LHWRWDOVSHQGLQJPRQH\RI$8' 2Actual period may be less than 365 days
QU G OT ET ET A OD AY 10 ENTRIES Take out new Motor Insurance* SPECIAL CAR 5 DAILY DRIVE ENTRIES Take out new Home Insurance+ SPOUSE’S DAILY DRIVE RESTORATION PROJECT MOTORBIKE 1 ENTRY Existing Shannons Customers. One entry for each Car, Bike or Home Insured^ HOME & CONTENTS To view conditions and take out an eligible motor or home insurance go to shannons.com.au/usa or call 13 46 46. Competition closes 28 June 2024. Scan to find out more GHSHQGLQJRQWKHZLQQHU·VORFDWLRQDQGGHOLYHU\SLFNXSGDWHKRZHYHUZRQ·WEHOHVVWKDQPRQWKVUHVLGXDOEHQHÀW7KHLVVXHRI6KDQQRQV,QVXUDQFHLVVXEMHFWWR6KDQQRQVQRUPDODFFHSWDQFHFULWHULD7KHLQFOXVLRQRIWKLVFRPSRQHQWRIWKHSUL]HGRHVQRWFRQVWLWXWH À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·VQRUPDOXQGHUZULWLQJFULWHULD+3XUFKDVHDQHZ6KDQQRQV+RPH &RQWHQWV,QVXUDQFH3ROLF\ LQFOXGHVEXLOGLQJRQO\FRQWHQWVRQO\RU EXLOGLQJDQGFRQWHQWVFRYHU  +RPH,QVXUDQFH GXULQJWKH(QWU\3HULRG$FRPELQHGEXLOGLQJDQGFRQWHQWVSROLF\FRQVWLWXWHVRQHULVNSROLF\IRUWKHSXUSRVHVRIWKLV&RPSHWLWLRQ0XVWUHPDLQDFWLYHDQGEHIXOO\SDLGDWWKH(QWU\3HULRGLISDLGDQQXDOO\RUWKHLQVWDOPHQWV PXVWEHXSWRGDWHDWWKHHQGRIWKH(QWU\3HULRG7KHLVVXHRI6KDQQRQV,QVXUDQFHLVVXEMHFWWRWKHSURGXFWLVVXHU·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
THIS IS WHERE YOU START RIDDEN / TESTED 026 TRAIL BLAZER 030 MIDSIZED SPORTY 036 042 FOUR IN HAND TWINNING! 050 HALF-TONNE TWIN-SHARE 026 Harley’s big Road Glide Limited rules the highway Blasting around on Triumph’s TF 250-X dirt demon Suzuki’s GSX-8R ticks a lot of boxes Screaming good fun on Kawasaki’s Ninja ZX-4RR Aprilia’s baby RS 457 is a scaled-down superbike FEATURES 060 ‘YOU DON’T WIN BY FALLING’ 070 MORE THAN FOUR V5s, V6s, even V8s. How much is too much? Steady Eddie Lawson explains first world title 030 RACING 098 WORLDSBK RD4, MISANO 102 ISLE OF MAN TT, PART 2 Dunlop powers on into record books Toprak takes three from three in dominant display REGULARS 8 News / 16 Headcheck / 18 Where Are They Now? / 21 Access / 24 Quiz 58 Poster / 78 Rides / 80 Events / 82 Tested / 84 Top Gear 88 Buyer’s Guide / 93 Schmick / 94 Revolving Racer / 97 In Pit Lane 106 Sport / 112 Grid Talk / 114 Rear View WEB HOT! Check out the website for more action at amcn.com.au 036
COVER STORY SCREAMER! Road testing Kawasaki’s potent 399cc road-going race-replica 84 050 042 060 070 098 112 amcn.com.au 5
ED’S DESK. DEAN MELLOR “EVS MIGHT BE ON THE WAY, BUT INTERNAL COMBUSTION AIN’T DEAD YET!” TALK ABOUT a mix of fortunes! It was great to see Remy Gardner get the holeshot from third on the grid in WorldSBK’s Race 1 at Misano, and then hang on to the lead for the first three laps before Toprak Razgatlioglu made his way through for an emphatic win. And then in the Superpole race Remy got caught up with Garret Gerloff and went down, which meant a 10th-place start on the grid for Race 2. Gardner finished the weekend with sixth in Race 1 and eighth in Race 2, which might not have been what he was hoping for at his team’s home track, but was still a decent result nonetheless. We all had high hopes for Tayla Relph last weekend too after her impressive speed in the first test of the Womens’ Circuit Racing World Championship a couple of weeks ago. After a not-so-great qualifying, Relph started Race 1 from 16th on the grid but went down on the first lap for a DNF and stretched a ligament in her left shoulder. For a while there it looked like Relph might miss Race 2, but she made the SUBSCRIBE TO AMCN Phone (02) 8227 6486 Website subscribe.amcn.com.au Email subscribe@citrusmedia.com.au Six months/13 issues: $109.95 (inc GST)* One year/25 issues: $194.50 (inc GST)* start and finished a credible 12th place. There were mixed results for the other Aussies – Oli Bayliss, Luke Power and Tom Edwards – at Misano. For full details and words from all of the Aussie contingent, check out the race report in this issue from page 102. And now on to something completely different. In Ben Purvis’ feature on bikes with more than four cylinders (page 60) you might wonder why the Chevy V8-powered Boss Hoss didn’t score a mention. Well, I did… There will no doubt be some other omissions, too, but rather than a guide to every more-than-four-cylinders bike ever produced, Ben takes a look at some of the most groundbreaking machines that have been produced since the Curtiss V-8 almost 120 years ago. Of course, Ben’s story was prompted by GWM’s announcement that it will build a flat-eight luxury touring motorcycle called the Souo S2000 to take on the sixcylinder Honda Goldwing and BMW K 1600. EVs might be on the way, but ICE ain’t dead yet! Bring it on… EDITORIAL Editor Dean Mellor Deputy Editor Kel Buckley Sub Editor Hamish Cooper Founding Editor George Lynn DESIGN Art Director Brendon Wise CONTRIBUTORS Sir Alan Cathcart, Michael Scott, Ben Purvis, Mat Oxley, Neil Morrison, Adam Child, Gold&Goose, Gordon Ritchie, Paul Young, Peter Whitaker, Don Cox, David Watt, Sean Mooney and Damien Pelletier AND NOT FORGETTING John Rooth, Mick Matheson, Simon O’Leary, Peter Baker, Mark Watson, Josh Evans and Mark Dadswell ADVERTISING National Sales Manager Todd Anderson todd@motormedia.com.au 0409 630 733 MANAGEMENT Citrus Media Publisher Jim Flynn 0449 801 899 jim@citrusmedia.com.au Accounts accounts@citrusmedia.com.au CONTACT AMCN Australian Motorcycle News PO Box 222, Earlwood, NSW, 2206 amcn@amcn.com.au ISSN 2653-3065 Website amcn.com.au Facebook facebook.com/aumotorcyclenews Instagram @ amcn_mag *Recommended and maximum price only including GST. All motorcycle prices listed are recommended retail only unless otherwise stated. Published by Citrus Media Digital ABN 44 140 352 254 © 2024 All rights reserved. The trade mark Australian Motorcycle News ( AMCN ) is owned by Citrus Media Australia Holdings and is used under licence. Printed in Australia by IVE. Distributed by Are Direct. *$11.95 maximum and recommended retail price only. Material contained in AMCN is protected under the Commonwealth Copyright Act 1968 and may not be reproduced in part or whole without written consent from the copyright holders. PRIVACY NOTICE This issue of AMCN is published by Citrus Media (CM). CM may use and disclose your information in accordance with our Privacy Policy, including to provide you with your requested products or services and to keep you informed of other CM publications, products, services and events. Our Privacy Policy is located at www.citrusmedia. com.au/privacy. It also sets out on how you can access or correct your personal information and lodge a complaint. 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MEET CFMOTO’S NEW 675SR-S One-off Aspar model previews showroom version FMoto will take another big step towards its goal of rivalling the big Japanese and European bike manufacturers this year when it unveils its threecylinder 675SR-S sportsbike to compete in the middleweight race-replica class. This model has been something of an open secret for more than a year now as we first saw patents for CFMoto’s triple in early 2023. Then in September last year a disguised prototype 675SR-S was demonstrated at a track in China before the engine was revealed at the huge EICMA show in Milan. Now a complete, undisguised bike has been unveiled, but in Aspar racereplica colours and with some bolt-on race components to differentiate it from the full I N T H I S I S S U E WHY EDDIE HAD TO LEARN TO BE STEADY Lawson's first world title became a game of bluff 70 production model that will be shown later this year. CFMoto has said that the 675cc triple puts out more than 75kW (100hp) at 12,300rpm and weighs around 10 percent less than comparable engines at 55kg. The new images confirm for the first time the 675SR-S sportsbike it’s designed for will have an aluminium frame with a cast-alloy swingarm pivot section welded to extruded main spars. While a disguised prototype has been seen already, it was covered in a shrink-wrapped camouflage layer that hid all the bodywork details and the chassis. We can now see new elements, including the vents in the fairing sides, and CFMoto has bolted on additional winglets that weren’t there on the earlier test mule. S P E C I A L F E AT U R E WHEN TOO MUCH IS BARELY ENOUGH! Motorcycles that pack more than four cylinders 80
The headlights, which were hidden on the previous prototype, feature the same signature CFMoto style as the 450SR and 300SR models, but with a slimmer overall profile. The main visible elements are actually LED running lights, and it looks like the main headlamps are just below them. A typical TFT screen faces the rider. No doubt it will include all the usual connectivity functions. The fork appears to be a fully-adjustable KYB unit, similar to that on the 800NK, with compression adjustment on the left leg and rebound adjustment on the right. The brakes are four-pot radial calipers from J.Juan and retain the cooling ducts first seen on last year’s prototype. The seat unit is intriguing as it looks like it’s selfsupporting rather than having a subframe underneath. Given CFMoto’s close relationship with KTM, it’s possible the bike uses a lightweight cast-alloy seat unit – something that the Austrian company employs on several of its models to reduce weight. The paint on this oneoff, as well as its race-spec rearsets and foot controls, is a tribute to the CFMotosponsored Aspar Moto2 and Moto3 bikes, but the production version may well have similar colours as the combination of teal, black and white is a CFMoto favourite already used on several existing models. BEN PURVIS I N P I T L A N E C O L U M N DYNAMIC DUCATI DUO COULD END UP A DUEL 97 Marquez-Bagnaia isn't a marriage made in heaven THERE’S NO question Yamaha’s Ténéré 700 has been a huge success for the company since its launch – spawning an array of spin-off variants since – but the base model’s styling has been unchanged since its 2019 release and is in need of a tweak. That’s exactly what it’s getting after five years of production and a disguised prototype for next year’s bike has been caught on camera during tests. The Ténéré’s popularity and versatility are demonstrated by a range that’s grown every year since its launch. What started as a single model has now evolved into the Ténéré 700 World Rally, the Ténéré 700 World Raid, the Ténéré 700 Rally Edition, the Ténéré 700 Extreme and the Ténéré 700 Explore, all offered in some markets alongside the original version. By tweaking the Ténéré for 2025, Yamaha will be able to follow up with revisions to those additional models, giving a substantial upgrade to its line-up with minimal expense. The prototype spotted on test is covered in a thick rubber sheet that disguises the detail of the new fairing, but elements of the redesign can still be seen. Most notably there’s a new headlight, with repositioned lamps behind a clear plastic lens that provides an updated look while retaining a family resemblance to the original version. Above it, the screen is redesigned and the fairing appears to be broader on either side of the light to provide more wind protection. The new fairing also extends down farther on each side, nearly meeting a restyled engine guard that also gives more coverage than the original. However other elements – like the seat unit and even the fuel tank – appear to carry over the same shapes as the previous model. The front mudguard is also a carry-over part but there are redesigned handguards on display. The technical changes are minimal, at least as far as the spy camera’s lens can reveal. The frame, fork, brakes and swingarm all look the same as before, as does the CP2 parallel-twin engine. One alteration that can be seen is a redesigned linkage for the rear shock’s rising-rate geometry. It appears to be a handmade prototype component on this test bike, hinting that Yamaha is experimenting with a variety of different linkages. Given the cosmetic nature of the upgrades and the state of this prototype, we’d expect the revised Ténéré 700 to be ready for the 2025 model year, and to be officially launched towards the end of this year – probably around the time of the EICMA show in November. BP S P O RT S TA RT S PA G E 98 FULL INSIDE STORY OF A HISTORY-MAKING TT Plus WorldSBK and all the MotoGP controversy 98
DIRTY DEED Two-time world enduro champion Johnny Aubert fanged the prototype up part of the Erzbergrodeo course. Rather than a clutch lever, the semiauto had up-and-down triggers on the handlebar. T he idea of selfshifting motorcycle transmissions – or at least those that eliminate a clutch lever – has been around for decades but it’s suddenly coming of age as both BMW and now KTM will be joining the semi-automatic fray with their 2025 adventure bike ranges within a year. We’ve already seen BMW’s ASA semi-auto design but now KTM has thrown its hat into the ring by previewing a semi-auto version of the upcoming 2025 1390 Super Adventure. It also says it will be released this September. This follows confirmation that BMW will debut its semi-auto system on the R 1300 GS and upcoming 2025 R 1300 GS Adventure. A prototype for the new bike made its first public 10 amcn.com.au appearance at the Erzbergrodeo in Austria, covered in a distractioncamo wrap with the letters ‘AMT’ to indicate its Automated Manual Transmission. The lack of a clutch lever and the presence of ‘up’ and ‘down’ triggers on the left-hand handlebar confirmed the new set-up. We knew KTM was working on such a transmission after patents were filed more than a year ago. Unlike BMW’s ASA, which has electromechanical actuators to operate both the clutch and the gear shift, KTM’s patent described a system that uses a servo-operated shift, controlled automatically or via buttons, along with a centrifugal clutch that disengages when revs drop and it’s under no load. As well as the ’bar-mounted shift triggers, the KTM prototype retained a foot-operated shift lever, suggesting both methods can be used but, unlike halfwayhouse systems like Honda’s new E-Clutch, the design eliminates the clutch lever. The new model appears to carry over the existing Super Adventure chassis, but it’s expected to use the new ‘1390’ version of the LC8 V-twin engine that debuted this year in the 1390 Super Duke, gaining variable valve timing and lift on the intake side to boost performance and economy. The styling is updated, of course, with a variation on the latest KTM family look at the front and sharpedged new body panels. We can expect semi-active WP suspension and radar cruise control on some versions. When it comes to variants, the prototype seen here is the most off-road version, potentially to be called the Rally, but there will also be a Super Adventure S with alloy wheels and a lower-mounted front mudguard. A pure road tourer with 17-inch wheels at both ends and more extensive bodywork is also under development. BEN PURVIS
BMW HAS type approved its longerrange R 1300 GS Adventure variant which, while not containing photos, reveals key figures for the new R 1300 GS Adventure including its weight, performance and dimensions. It’s a full 21kg heavier than the standard GS when fully fuelled and has a maximum loaded weight that’s 20kg more than the base version, suggesting the whole bike is being bulked up. The engine, of course, is straight from the R 1300 GS, retaining the same 107kW (143hp) peak power output at 7750rpm and an unchanged peak torque of 149Nm at 6500rpm, but the Adventure’s top speed dips from the R 1300 GS’s 225km/h to 220km/h. That’s probably a function of aerodynamics rather than anything else, as the Adventure is substantially taller with a screen that tops out at 1538mm in its lowest setting and can rise to 1588mm. For comparison, the standard GS screen height ranges from 1376mm to 1426mm. Although the increased height and the ‘Adventure’ designation of the bike hints at taller suspension than the standard version, the wheelbase isn’t increased. In fact, the measurement between the axles is 8mm shorter than the standard bike at 1510mm and the overall length is reduced 4mm to 2208mm. That could mean a shorter fork or a steeper rake. The wheel sizes are unchanged with the same 120/70-19 front and 170/60-17 rear tyre dimensions. BP SEMI-AUTO VERSIONS TOO! BOTH THE Adventure and base R 1300 GS will be available for 2025 using the company’s new ASA (automatic shift assistant) servooperated clutch and shifter. This still uses your left foot to swap ratios in manual mode, but via electronic actuation rather than a mechanical linkage so the ALL-NEW KTM 990 ADVENTURE SPIED! WHEN KTM took the wraps off its 2024 990 Duke it was only a matter of time before an Adventure model emerged with the same engine but we didn’t expect a clean-sheet design. Rather than a mere engine swap, the 990 Adventure gets its own dedicated chassis and a completely rethought arrangement for the bodywork and even the fuel tanks. It’s hard to argue with the all-round ability of the existing 890 Adventure, but the styling of those bikes is divisive. The low-mounted twin fuel tanks flanking the engine have huge benefits in terms of weight distribution and eliminating bulk, but they also contribute to unfamiliar and ungainly proportions. For the 990 Adventure, the engine is the 947cc twin used in the 990 Duke. Despite the same ‘LC8c’ name as its predecessor it’s essentially a completely new design with more power, a bigger bore and longer stroke, as well as diff erent castings for every major component. It’s bolted to a new chassis in the 2025 990 Adventure, which from these pictures appears to be made of oval-section steel tubing rather than the usual round-section. The fork is WP, the brakes appear to be taken from the current 890 Adventure, while the swingarm is borrowed from the 990 Duke, but fi tted with a new rising rate shock linkage. It still avoids the single-tank set-up of its rivals but the two side-mounted tanks are higher, increasing the bulk in the traditional ‘tank’ area but making the bike look better-proportioned. Since the tanks still flank the engine, it remains more compact than a single- semi-automatic bikes don’t carry any weight penalty compared to the manual versions. That’s a key selling point in comparison to Honda’s more complicated DCT semi-auto, as used on the Africa Twin, which adds 11kg to the mass. tank solution. Like the KTM 450 Rally Replica, the 990 Adventure may have a third under-seat fuel tank. There’s a translucent-looking white plastic box above the rear shock absorber. Its underside is sculpted to leave room for the suspension to compress, which means it can’t be intended for a regular-shaped component like the battery but would be perfect for liquid. The front fairing is unfinished at this stage, but it’s clear that the finished light will need to be smaller and neater than the current 890 Adventure’s split-lamp set-up to fit inside the gap in the fairing. Behind that screen sits one of the largest instrument panels we’ve seen yet on a bike, a portraitoriented, iPad-style design that should be ideal for on-screen maps. The upcoming 1390 Super Adventure is also expected to have a similar display, as does the soon-to-belaunched CFMoto 800MT-X, which is based on the previous KTM Adventure engine and chassis. BP amcn.com.au 11
BRIEFS. YOUR QUICK FIX DID YOU KNOW? Hunter Lawrence’s results in the AMA 450 MX class put him in the title-chase lead for the first time in his career. $14,130 The amount the Mount Gambier Motor Cycle Club raised for the Cancer Council of South Australia by holding its 2024 Cancer Council Cup. With a time bonus based on the percentage of funds raised, the final results remained unknown until the presentations, with club president Alex Trnovsky demonstrating it was possible to finish nearly last and still win. Planning is underway for 2025. RE’S FLAGSHIP SYDNEY STORE “His determination to win has always been matched by his ability to innovate” Isle of Man TT’s head of motorsport Paul Phillips speaking after the event’s most successful TT driver Dave Molyneux announced his retirement after four decades, 17 wins and 31 podiums. As well as his unmatched success, Molyneux was known for building his own creations and mentoring young sidecar competitors. CLEVER MAN REAL STAR Davo Johnson skillfully bailed out of his tankslapping Platinum Club Kawasaki and slid down the centre of the road to survive a monster TT crash. Forget Chris Hemsworth, a beautiful example of a 1972 Norton Commando stars in several big scenes in the new biker flick Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga. HOT & NOT AMCN’S THERMOMETER NORTON KICKS CEO GOAL Signalling it means business, Norton has announced it has further strengthened its leadership team with former CEO of Manchester United Football Club Richard Arnold. It says Arnold “will be of huge benefit to both the commercial arm and wider business, at a crucial moment in Norton’s development.” Arnold is a motorcycle rider who owns a Norton V4SV. 12 amcn.com.au RIDE FOR MYERS A group of 20,000 British riders spanning 25km took part in a ride to celebrate the life of The Hairy Bikers star Dave Myers, who lost his battle with cancer earlier this year. The ride began in London and finished in Myers' home town of Barrowin-Furness. “Dave loved Barrow and he wanted to put Barrow on the map,” his widow Lili said. “And today, beyond his grave, he’s done it again.” Newly opened Moto Machine in the Sydney suburb of Clyde is now the largest Royal Enfield showroom in Australia and New Zealand. Located at 10 James Ruse Drive, it boasts a 450m2 showroom, a ‘make it yours’ customisation station and a workshop servicing all makes and models. The mid-June opening made it the 56th Royal Enfield dealership in Australia and New Zealand and the 172nd in the Asia Pacific region. VALE PHIL BEAUMONT VALE GLENN WILLING Long-time Queensland Kawasaki dealer, racing supporter and industry stalwart Phil Beaumont died in Brisbane on 7 June. Legend of Australian motorcycle racing Glenn Willing died on 10 June. Brother to the late and equally great Len and Warren, Glenn was just 60 years old. MENTAL TWISTIES 3 4 The winner of this issue’s swanky AMCN neck sock is Isabelle Farlie from Westmeadows in Victoria. 2 1 5 1. Badge gone 2. Rossi Honda 3. New head 4. Rossi 5. Chair leg gone
ducati.com NEWĚ{QGz^ĚVwVv?Ě/Ggg‡ Race Wilder 3]VĚiVĚVwVv?Ě/Ggg‡Ě^wĚGĚhkzkvQ‡QgVĚTVT^QGzVTĚzkĚz]VĚwskv^VwzĚGiTĚhkwzĚ^izvVs^TĚk[ŽþvkGTĚViz]{w^GwzwÙĚTVw^\iVTĚ[kvĚGT€Viz{vVĚGiTĚVu{^ssVT́^z]Ě z]V̀Vv‡ĚPVwzĚvGQVþTVv^€VTĚQkhskiVizwÞ V€VgksVTĚGiTĚzVwzVTĚGzĚz]VĚvGQVzvGQfwÙĚz]VĚiVĚVwVv?Ě/Ggg‡Ě^wĚvVGT‡ĚzkĚGQQkhsGi‡Ě‡k{Ěki̇k{vĚhkwzĚV†zvVhVĚGT€Viz{vVẃ^z]Ě^zw̖šhhĚ@ Ě w{wsViw^kí^z]Ě^iQvVGwVTĚzvG€VgĚGiTĚQgkwVTĚQGvv^T\VĚ[kvfÙĚ^iQvVGwVTĚ\vk{iTĚQgVGvGiQVÙĚGiTĚsvk[Vww^kiGgþgV€VgĚzVQ]i^QGgĚVu{^shVizÞĚ3]VĚiVĚQGvPkiĚ wzVVgĚ QVizvGgĚ wskfVTĚ ]VVgwĚ GiTĚ g^\]zVvĚ QkhskiVizv‡Ě ^ggĚ ]VgsĚ ‡k{Ě zGQfgVĚ Gi‡Ě kPwzGQgVĚ ^z]Ě {isGvGggVgVTĚ sVvŽkvhGiQVĚ GiTĚ svVQ^w^kiÞĚ 3]VĚ iVĚ g^€Vv‡ÙĚ^iws^vVTĚP‡Ěz]VĚVwVv?Ěz]GzĚizk^iVĚ!WkĚskVvVTĚzk̀^Qzkv‡ĚGzĚz]VĚvŒPVv\vkTVkĚ,vkgk\{VÙĚVi]GiQVwĚ^zwĚk[ŽþvkGTĚiGz{vV́^z]ĚGĚ{i^u{VĚGiTĚ distinctive style. :]Vz]Vv̇k{čvVĚgkkf^i\Ě[kvĚk[ŽþvkGTĚGT€Viz{vVwĚkvĚGĚvGgg‡þvG^TÙĚz]VĚiVĚVwVv?Ě/Ggg‡Ě^wĚvVGT‡ĚzkĚ]Vgṡk{Ěk€VvQkhVĚz]VĚhkwzĚT^[Ž^Q{gzĚQ]GggVi\VwĚ and propel your dreams beyond every limit. VwVv?Ě/Ggg‡ÞĚ/GQVĚ:^gTVvÞ Overseas model is shown and specifications may vary for the local model. The model in this image may feature accessories and merchandise that are not supplied as standard. Always wear protective hkzkvQ‡QgVĚQgkz]^i\́]ViĚv^T^i\ĚGiTĚkPV‡ĚgkQGgĚvkGTĚvV\{gGz^kiwÞĚkĚikzĚGzVhszĚzkĚvVQvVGzVĚz]VĚv^T^i\ĚwQViVĚTVs^QzVTĚ^iĚz]^wĚ^hG\VÞĚ kizGQżk{vĚ{z]kv^wVTĚ{QGz^ĚVGgVvĚ[kvĚhkvVĚ^i[kvhGz^kiÞ
THE KNOW. IT HAPPENED SINCE LAST ISSUE SUZUKI DEVELOPING ELECTRIC CROSSER Patent shows battery-powered competition bike E lectric powertrains might still be less than ideal for mainstream high-performance motorcycles but they’re proving to be a strong option for competition motocross bikes and Suzuki is the latest to be developing just such a machine. Honda’s CR Electric Proto is already competing in the All-Japan Motocross Championship against conventional ICE-powered racers, and proving competitive. We’ve also seen that Yamaha is developing an electric crosser of its own. Now a new patent from Suzuki shows its electric motocross powertrain, including a remarkably compact reduction gearbox designed to allow the unit to fit inside a standard RM-Z chassis. Electric power works well for motocross thanks to the instant access to torque and the relatively small range of speeds the bikes have to operate in, playing to the Powered by petrol now but Suzuki has big plans to turn this into a silent, race-winning torque monster 14 amcn.com.au A reduction gearbox allows the powerplant to fit inside a standard RM-Z chassis strengths of an electric motor. Since the races are relatively short, there’s no requirement for vast, heavy batteries – smaller, lighter packs are all that’s needed to get to the end of a heat. What’s more, with a growing number of electric kids’ crossers already on the market, a generation of riders is being introduced to the sport with batterypowered machines. So it’s logical to offer an upgrade path using the tech they’re familiar with, particularly if it’s capable of achieving the same performance levels as combustion engine bikes. Electric crossers will open opportunities for motocross tracks in new places, where combustion engine bikes wouldn’t be welcome. Nonpolluting and nearly silent, they’re unlikely to spark complaints even if tracks are set up near residential areas, and can even be used indoors. BEN PURVIS BRIXTON STORR 1200 ADVENTURE BIKE PLANNED BR I X TON UN V EIL ED its first adventure bike – the Storr 500 – a couple of years ago as a concept and it’s set to reach production soon but there’s already a bigger version in the works as these designs for a 1200cc twin confirm. Despite carrying a British-inspired name, Brixton is a brand developed in Austria but manufactured in China by Gaokin. At the moment its range includes an array of 500cc and 125cc ‘Crossfire’ models and the more retro ‘Cromwell’ offerings in 125cc, 250cc and 1200cc format. The new adventure bike shown here crosses those two ranges, taking the big parallel-twin engine from the Triumph Bonneville-rivalling Cromwell 1200, as well as its twin-shock steel frame, and wrapping it in bodywork that resembles the Crossfire-based Storr adventure bike. While the finned engine and twinshock frame have a retro look, which is unsurprising given the bike they come from, the new adventure model’s fairing and overall shape are modern. There’s also up-to-date componentry, including an upside-down fork, piggyback shocks and radial brakes as well as tubeless wire wheels and a big TFT dashboard display. A slightly odd combination of old and new, perhaps, but it’s a quick shortcut to creating a low-cost, large-capacity adventure bike that’s likely to be much cheaper than similarly-sized rivals from European brands. BP
YOUR JOURNEY STARTS HERE ENQUIRE NOW You get the bike, we’ll get the licence. Learn to ride on a Harley-Davidson X™ and we’ll give you $500*. * Terms and Conditions Apply. Offer available at participating dealers only. Offer available to customers who obtained their motorcycle licence after 1 January 2023 and purchase a Harley-Davidson X™ Model at Ride Away Price between 1 June and 31 August 2024, unless extended. Not to be used in conjunction with any other offer. Offer may be withdrawn by Harley-Davidson® Australia & New Zealand at any time without notice. Vehicles shown may vary visually by market and may differ from vehicles manufactured and delivered. scan me
THE KNOW. HEADCHECK LEAD NEW BMWS NEWS FOR 1980 BMW is known to be developing several new superbikes for the 1980s. The new bikes, known only as the K3 and K4 at this stage, are in-line multis. The K3 is already to prototype stage and is an in-line triple with a fully monocoque chassis. The K4 is in an earlier stage of development and its four-cylinder motor is yet to be started. SPORT ULSTER GP AUSSIE WORLD TITLE Victorian motorcycle dealer Barry Smith won the TT Formula Three World Championship at the Ulster GP on 19 August. The Formula One, Two and Three world championship classes were created three years ago when the Isle of Man was dropped from world title status, and are based on a formula which allows two and four stroke road-based machinery to compete on equal terms. This year the championship was extended to include an extra race, at Ulster in Ireland. Smith won both races in the championship by a veritable mile on his RD250 Yamaha-based racer to score a maximum 30 points. At the Island Barry had a wire-to-wire victory and came within a whisker of lapping at 100mph on his semi-production machine. He eclipsed the F3 lap record. 16 amcn.com.au AMCN Vol 29 No 06 PIC OF ISSUE BUY!
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1. Always the quiet achiever, a shy Murray Sayle poses with the remains of his K&K-framed Yamaha TZ250 that he intends to restore 2. Medallion from the 50th Czechoslovakian Grand Prix in 1980 3. His 1979 King of the Weir trophy 4. Detail from a trophy won in Europe THE KNOW. WHERE ARE THEY NOW? WORDS DON COX + PHOTOGRAPHY GRAHAM MONRO 1 MURRAY SAYLE A racer, turned industry stalwart, these days he prefers life through a different lens pa-Francorchamps, Belgium, 1 July, 1979. The first Grand Prix on the revised circuit. A landmark day with Australian riders taking first, second and third places across the three solo classes. It was a controversial meeting. Problems trying to cure the new tarmac in cold weather prompted contractors to mix diesel fuel with the tar. The result was a super-slick surface and a factory rider boycott. Private entrants shone. Barry Smith (MBA) won the 125cc Grand Prix, Murray Sayle was third in the 250 class and Ken Blake second on a Yamaha 350 to Kiwi Dennis Ireland (Suzuki) in the 500s. Murray Sayle’s Yamaha TZ250E had a K&K frame (Kel Carruthers and Kenny Roberts) he bought from the US. He recalls racing on an intermediate Dunlop KR124 front tyre and the softest rear Dunlop slick in its range. Austria’s Edi Stēllinger won on a Kawasaki KR250, beating England’s Chas Mortimer on a Maxton-Yamaha. Mortimer boycotted the podium ceremony to show his displeasure to race organisers over the whole saga. A bemused Sayle was handed the second-place trophy. Rolling back the clock, Sayle began his domestic racing career in 1969 on a Yamaha AS1 125 he said was lucky to do 145km/h downhill at Bathurst. He wrapped it up in 1978 by winning 18 amcn.com.au the Australian Unlimited Championship on a MilledgeYamaha entered TZ750D. Between those years he raced Yamaha 350s and from 1974 for Team Kawasaki Australia. He won the 1975 Australian 350 GP at Bathurst, beating younger brother Jeffrey on the last corner. The same year Sayle teamed with Gregg Hansford to win the Castrol Six-Hour on a Kawasaki Z1-B 900. At the end of that year he married Rhonda Willing, sister of Macquarie Boys’ High School mate and fellow racer Warren Willing. Murray’s first overseas rides were in the early 1970s in the New Zealand summer events, which morphed into the famed Marlboro Series from 1973 to 1978. He went first with his 350s, then on various Kawasaki 750s, doing the series pretty much every year. In the 1977-78 he was second to brother Jeffrey in the main series and second to Hansford in the 250 series. Riding for Team Kawasaki Australia meant Murray had the opportunity to race in the US. In 1978 he rode the Milledge TZ750 and his K&K Yamaha 250. He was invited by Yamaha to the Sugo Big Road Race in Japan and finished second to Willing. In 1979 Murray headed 3 2 for Europe, joining brother Jeffrey. In the Italian GP at Imola Jeffrey and Murray were fifth and sixth, their first GP championship points. His next big result was in Belgium. A back injury sustained at N¾rburgring in 1980 ended Murray’s racing career, so he concentrated on machine preparation for, among others, the Yamaha Dealer Team and his brother. Murray was a fitter and CHAS MORTIMER BOYCOTTED THE PODIUM CEREMONY. A BEMUSED SAYLE WAS HANDED THE SECOND-PLACE TROPHY 4 turner by trade but later worked for Kawasaki Motors Australia in the technical department and for his friend Mark Briggs’ company Fibre Flash. He served as a motorcycling administrator at national level. Known for his dry humour and never drinking anything stronger than Coca-Cola, Murray Sayle developed an interest in photography and these days concentrates on shooting wildlife.
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ACCESS. OGIO PACK WINNER LETTER OF THE ISSUE Win an Ogio Alpha Lite 120 pack with a 20-litre capacity and featuring exceptional abrasion and tear resistance. Valued at $69.95! AIR YOUR THOUGHTS OR VENT YOUR SPLEEN Access, AMCN, PO Box 6, Bittern, Vic, 3918 access@amcn.com.au Include your full name and address in your letter, via post or email. Long letters will be cut to fit, so don’t ramble. The views expressed by readers are not necessarily those of the editor. LETTER OF THE ISSUE States of matter If Liberty Media’s takeover of Dorna (AMCN Vol 73 No 21) looks like its F1 model, they will try to expand the sport into the US. Let’s hope WKDWGRHVQȆWPHDQDUHWXUQbWR Laguna Seca or Indianapolis. When Laguna last hosted a MotoGP event in 2013, it yielded the lowest top speed, lowest average speed and least lean angle. Ben Spies’ data showed he was at full throttle for just 2 percent of the lap. As Valentino Rossi and Marc Marquez showed, you have to invent places to pass, both of which would be disallowed with current track limitation rules. There was the amazing pass by Casey Stoner on Jorge Lorenzo down the not straight in 2011, but that was more to do with Stoner’s gifts than Laguna’s offerings. There is of course The Corkscrew – a legendary piece of motorsport real estate – but hardly a game changer. Sure, it’s fun to watch and no doubt EUHDWKWDNLQJbRQERDUGEXW practically it’s a chicane laid over a 14m decline. Then there was Indianapolis, a hybrid circuit thrown together and last hosting MotoGP in 2015. A IULHQGbZKRYLVLWHGbVDLGKH needed binoculars to read the numbers on the bikes and called it a “festering turd of a track”. Sticking with this rather tasteless theme, I’m not JRLQJWRWDNHbDGXPSZLWKRXW offering a solution. Utah Motorsport Campus, then known as Miller Motorsports Park, hosted the WorldSBK from 2008-2012 producing some excellent racing. King of Supersports Kenan Sofuoglu was heard to say that Utah was not only the best track in North America, but one of his favourites on the tour. But Liberty will tell you that Utah is not Vegas; so if US expansion is a priority – please Liberty – choose wisely. Bruce Potter via email Rossi and Stoner’s epic battle at Laguna Seca The born-again BSA is on track to secure an Australian distributor Summer gold Have you heard any news on the new BSA line being released into Australia or who might have the franchise for them? I would love to buy one for summer. Michael Ooyendyk via email Nothing official at this stage, Michael, but we have been told by a source with a direct line to the Mahindra Group (owner of BSA) that a deal is not far off. Deano Discovery channel I’ve never read your magazine before; I picked it up at Sydney airport last week attracted by the line on the cover that read ‘Why internal combustion ain’t dead yet’. Not only was it a hugely informative feature that made my petrol-loving heart sing (it must have taken a long time to research, so I doff my hat to the author), but I discovered a magazine that held my attention nearly all the way through and changed my mind about being pretty unhappy handing over 12 bucks for what felt like a flimsy catalogue in my hands. I buy a lot of music magazines – I’m a producer and sound engineer when I’m not riding one of a handful bikes in my garage – their paper quality and page count are far, far higher, but I was still impressed with the quality and the diversity of the content presented and particularly pleased with the timeliness of the sport report. Thanks Dean, to you and your team, for what’s going to be a new regular read for me when I need to zone out from my music world. Name withheld by request We’re happy to hear you enjoyed the read. Although the paper stock might not be as flash as some other glossy magazines on the market, it’s better than the green newsprint that it used to be printed on. We reckon solid, informative and entertaining content will always trump glossy gloss-over content, which is why AMCN has been around for 73 years! Deano amcn.com.au 21
ACCESS. YOUR SAY SUBSCRIBE & SAVE! Available in six- or 12-month options subscribe.amcn.com.au Movie buff Isn’t it a great time to be going to the movies. The latest Mad Max saga is basically a biker film with everything from a radial-engine chopper to an early 1970s Norton Commando in Production Racing trim. Then next month we get The Bikeriders with authentic Harleys and Brit bikes an integral part of it. I bought a copy of Danny Lyons’ book in the States 10 years ago after it was reprinted. It’s a classic. Bob Worth via email I have to get out more often, Bob. I might try to catch the new Mad Max film this weekend. BTW, did you know that motocross legend Stephen Gall was one of the stunt riders in the movie? Deano Conrod straight I am writing to inquire about the sudden withdrawal of Conor Cummins from the 2024 Isle of Man TT. As a dedicated follower of the TT races and a long-time fan of Cummins, I was surprised and concerned by his unexplained exit. Cummins is a level-headed and seasoned rider with 13 podiums. After re-signing with the hugely experienced Padgetts squad alongside the returning Ian Hutchinson, I was hoping he’d be a strong contender this year. His withdrawal – or should I say the lack of THE MAD MAX SAGA IS A BIKER FILM WITH EVERYTHING FROM A RADIAL-ENGINED CHOPPER TO A 70S NORTON COMMANDO reasoning behind it – raises many questions. Cummins’ experience and skills make him a significant figure in the TT races, and any information about his situation would be greatly appreciated. Any chance of more details or an interview with Cummins or his team to shed light on this matter? And Conor Cummins plans to return to the TT in 2025 congratulations to Michael Dunlop for his incredible accomplishment. Ray Perkins via email We now know a little more about Conor after his official statement said: “I have withdrawn from the 2024 Isle of Man TT Races with immediate effect, and will provide an update on my plans for the remainder of the season in the 22 amcn.com.au coming weeks.” Later he confirmed he had lost confidence in the bikes he was riding but hadn’t given up on TT racing. When we hear more we’ll let you know. Deano Princesses! Just wondering if you guys clocked that HRH Princess Beatrice was in the pitlane at the Isle of Man TT? Grace, the pitlane commentator, grabbed
a quick word with her and I was surprised to learn that she’s a self proclaimed “huge motorsport fan”. She said that the TT was her first-ever motorcycle race. Let’s hope her second isn’t the processional bore MotoGP seems to have turned into lately, compared to the TT, or she’ll never watch bike racing again! An unpopular opinion, I know, but I’m old enough to remember the all-in scraps on 500cc two-strokes. Now that was racing! Ian Crowe via email Other than perhaps the most recent MotoGP race at Misano, I would hardly describe this season as a “processional bore”. In fact, I reckon there have been some absolute cracker MotoGP races this year. But yes, the Isle of Man TT action was royally good! Deano Miller movements Pretty disappointed to see there’s no room left for Jack Miller at KTM. I understand his results have been pretty dreadful this year and based on that, he nor I can really blame KTM bosses who, let’s face it, are there to win trophies, not mates. It wasn’t that long ago that Jack was pretty hot property on the rider market but it looks to me he’ll be left to pick up Joan Mir’s seat in the factory Honda squad. His experience on a Honda (when it was still competitive), as well as a Ducati and most recently a KTM will put him in good stead in the role of a development rider, but is there any coming back from that in terms of a landing a seat where he has a chance to fight for a world title? I heard a rumour that Andrea Dovizioso has been offered “an open door” somewhere in the paddock – surely that’s to bolster Honda’s test rider PUNCTURE REPAIR KIT • Ultra-compact capabilities alongside Stefan Bradl. Stefan’s quick, no doubt about it, but he’s been testing for HRC since 2018, so he’s maybe not providing the kind of feedback required to move the project forward at the same rate that Yamaha seems to be. Cal Crutchlow and Dovizioso locking horns again in a wildcard scenario? I’d like to see just how far riding styles and approaches have changed in the last half a dozen or so years. Anyway, where to for Jack? • Weighs only 567g and measures 135 x 105 x 40mm This kit contains our award winning MotoPressor Puncture Repair Tool, 5 pre-glued vulcanised repair strings, an inflation tool and 3 x 16g CO2 canisters and a neoprene bag. This kit is all you will need to get you out of trouble if you get a puncture. Steve Black via email Jettstar I’m writing to throw my support behind Darren Goodwin’s suggestion that Jett Lawrance needs to be elevated to superstar status by Australian media given his tremendous achievements in the US (AMCN Vol 73 No 23). Right now, all the mainstream sport reports ever seem to tell me is which AFL player needs to apologise for inappropriate off-field behaviour. What Jett and even brother Hunter are doing in arguably one of the toughest environments in terms of competition is incredible. And the fact they are brothers should have Australian-based news teams and mainstream sports reporters scrambling all over them. Any chance of an interview, Deano? Pat Dawson Melton, Vic The boys are killing it in the US. AMCN’s sister magazine ADB (Australasian Dirt Bike) has an exclusive interview with them in its current issue. Deano PUNCTURE REPAIR TOOL SMART. COMPACT. GENIUS! The knife slides off the tool to easily cut the plug. Pliers, rasp, needle insertion tool, knife and 5 pre-glued plugs, all in a handy pouch. 4 tools in one 1 Remove offending item from your tyre. 2 Use the rasp to clean out the hole. 3 Thread needle with plug, push into the hole, twist 1½ times before pulling out. 4 Separate the knife from tool and cut the plug flush with the tyre. For further information on all of our products, please check our website for details. Also available at all good motorcycle shops through Pro Accessories.
QUIZ. MENTAL TWISTIES SPOT THE DIFFERENCE WIN! AN AMCN NECK SOCK Michael Dunlop wins Supertwin TT Race 1 for a record-breaking 27th victory, breaking his uncle Joey’s 24-year-old record of 26 Isle of Man TT wins. Peter Hickman was second and Dominic Herbertson third. Spot the five changes Fred’s made to this image, email us your answers (and address!) and you could win a neck sock. ORIGINAL ANSWERS WILL BE RE V E ALED IN THE NE X T IS SUE 24 amcn.com.au EMAIL YOUR ANSWERS AND ADDRESS TO AMCN@AMCN.COM.AU FOR YOUR CHANCE TO WIN!
Conquer q all Summits learn more Embark on unforgettable journeys with the CFMOTO 450MT, a powerful and versatile adventure touring motorcycle designed to explore the world beyond boundaries. Tundra Grey 9,490 $ RIDE AWAY Zephyr Blue *Ride Away price advertised includes 6 months of registration. In states with no 6-month registration term available, the ride-away price will be $9,690, and the registration term will be 12 months. Full model specifications, pricing and range can be viewed at www.cfmoto.com.au While others dream of conquering summits, the 450MT simply lives it. Whether you crave the freedom of open roads or the excitement of off-the-beaten-path exploration, the 450MT is your passport to limitless adventure.
QUICK SPIN. HARLEY-DAVIDSON ROAD GLIDE LIMITED HALF-TONNE TWIN-SHARE If cross-continental touring with a pillion is your bag, the Road Glide Limited is the Harley for you he Road Glide is built for touring on the open road, not for poking around town, but to get out of town most of us need to crawl through the ’burbs, and so it is when I pick up this hefty hunk of American iron from HarleyDavidson’s HQ in Sydney’s north. First up there’s the off-camber righthander as soon as I exit Harley’s driveway, and then there’s the crappy roadworks all along the Warringah Freeway on the approach to the Harbour Tunnel, with multiple lanes of traffic funnelling into just two for the underwater run. And then there’s the stop-start traffic as I fight my way to escape the ever-expanding urban sprawl. It’s in conditions like this that being fully aware of the Road Glide’s size and weight is vitally important. While you can still weave your way through traffic, you have to make sure there’s plenty of margin for error, as its overall length (2595mm) approaches that of some small hatchbacks, and it feels almost as wide. Forget about lane-splitting. This Limited variant is a substantial 43kg more 26 amcn.com.au than a ‘base-spec’ Road Glide, thanks in part to its huge topbox, super-comfy pillion backrest and two additional speakers for the sound system. Yep, it’s no commuter, but for Harley riders who want to traverse continents with a pillion on board this is the weapon of choice. So just how hefty is it? The Road Glide Limited tips the scales at 423kg ready to ride. You can feel that weight as soon as you hoik it off the sidestand but once moving, even at low speeds, it’s surprisingly agile and easy to ride thanks to a low seat height, a wide handlebar and forgiving geometry. In fact, the only time I struggled with the Limited’s size and weight was when trying to turn it around in a confined garage. Bear in mind that there’s no reverse gear, so it pays to put some serious thought into where and how you park it. Once out of town, the Road Glide Limited is in its element, loping along at highway speeds without raising a sweat. At the heart of the beast is Harley’s 114ci (1868cc) Milwaukee-Eight V-twin, which makes a claimed 65kW (87hp) at 5020rpm and 160Nm at a lazy RIDER PROFILE Name Dean Mellor Height 167cm Weight 76kg Fact Old bikes, new bikes, doesn’t matter – Deano loves them all and tries to pack as many as he can in his garage at any one time. He sometimes rides ’em, too.
TEST + PHOTOGRAPHY DEAN MELLOR BAG IT You can fit loads of gear into the panniers and topbox, the latter accommodating two helmets. BUSINESS CLASS If your pillion likes the finer things in life, they’ll be happy perched in the Limited’s comfy armchair. HEAR THIS The four-speaker sound system delivers 25W per channel and can be heard with a full-face helmet and earplugs. 3000rpm. No, the Limited isn’t yet endowed with the new 117ci engine found in the ‘base-spec’ Road Glide (as tested by Roothy in AMCN Vol 73 No 23). As a result peak power and torque is down 15kW (20hp) and 15Nm respectively, but even with its additional weight the Limited is still no slouch. Crack the throttle wide open at almost any revs and the 114 gets up and boogies, pulling hard (and cleanly) from down low and offering up a meaty midrange, with a tantalising bellow from the twin exhaust system. I’ll forgive the six-speed gearbox for feeling bit clunky and slow considering it has to handle a truckload of torque, but the fact it can be reluctant to slip into neutral from time to time can be frustrating. The clutch is on the heavy side but offers progressive engagement. Harley claims a maximum lean angle of 32°for the Limited allowing you to hustle it through bends at a decent clip. The wide ’bar makes it easy to tip it into corners and it holds a line beautifully once cranked over, but sudden changes of direction aren’t its forte. You simply can’t overcome the physics of a 170mm BIG-ISH TWIN CRASH BARS SCREEN TIME The 114ci Milwaukee Eight makes a claimed 65kW (87hp) at 5020rpm and 160Nm at a lazy 3000rpm. Black bars should protect the paint if the Limited takes a nap and make it easier to pick up if it falls over. The big framemounted screen offers decent weather protection and has a flap to adjust airflow. 1. It might not be fitted with Harley’s latest big bruiser 117ci V-twin but the smaller version packs a mighty punch of torque 2. Twin front disc brakes lack initial bite but a good tug on the lever reins in this big beast. We’re talking about a claimed wet weight of 423kg before you add rider, pillion and any luggage 3. The Limited is a very classy beast of burden. Check out the size of its massive topbox, which easily accommodates two full-face helmets. The paint scheme is an understated duco Harley calls Sharkskin Blue 1 2 3 YOU CAN HUSTLE THE LIMITED THROUGH BENDS AND IT HOLDS A LINE BEAUTIFULLY amcn.com.au 27
QUICK SPIN. HARLEY-DAVIDSON ROAD GLIDE LIMITED SPECS ENGINE Capacity 1868cc Type 45 º V-twin, four valves per cylinder Bore & stroke 102mm x 114.3mm Compression ratio 10.5:1 Cooling Twin-cooled Fueling Electronic sequential port injection Transmission Six-speed Clutch Wet, multi-plate, slipper type Final drive Belt PERFORMANCE Power 65kW (87hp) @ 5020rpm (claimed) Torque 160Nm @ 3000rpm (claimed) Top speed 190km/h (est) Fuel consumption 5.6L/100km (tested) ELECTRONICS Type Not given Rider aids Cornering ABS, traction control, drag torque slip control and vehicle hold control Rider modes NA CHASSIS Frame material Tubular steel Frame type Backbone Rake 26° Trail 170mm Wheelbase 1625mm SUSPENSION Type Showa Front: 49mm non-adjustable upside-down fork, 117mm travel Rear: Dual shocks, preload adjustable, 76mm travel WHEELS & BRAKES Wheels Cast aluminium Front: 18 x 3.5 Rear: 18 x 5.0 Tyres Dunlop D408F & D407T Front: 130/70-18 Rear: 180/55-18 Brakes Front: Twin 320mm discs, four-piston calipers Rear: Single 320mm disc, four-piston caliper trail, a 1625mm wheelbase, 18-inch wheels and half a tonne of bike and rider. Braking performance is decent with four-piston calipers gripping twin 320mm floating discs up front and a fixed 320mm disc at the rear. Front brake feel lacks a little in initial bite, but squeeze it hard and it gets the job done. The rear brake works well and is ideal for tightening your line mid-corner. The suspension is quite basic – a non-adjustable 49mm fork and twin rear shocks with preload adjustment – but it is well set up and offers a good blend of compliance and control. The rear shocks didn’t bottom-out on test, even when riding two-up, although I didn’t have much weight in the panniers or topbox. While the Limited is a big bike, the reach to the swept-back handlebar is relaxed, the footboards allow plenty of options to position your legs how you want, and the seat height is a low 735mm so, despite the girth, it’s not a stretch to plant both boots flat on the ground. The seat itself is so, so comfy, with a wide base, supple and supportive cushioning and a decent turn-up at the rear. Even more comfy is the pillion seat with its supportive backrest and armrests, and generous footboards. The large frame-mounted fairing offers decent weather protection although I would have preferred a slightly lower screen as I found myself looking through it rather than over it, right where there’s some distortion due to its curved shape; taller riders won’t have this problem. There’s a closable flap beneath the screen that allows you to adjust the airflow, but it’s either open or closed and nothing in between. Switchgear is your typical high-quality Harley kit and it’s all easy to operate once you’re familiar with it. Instruments are presented in the form of a 6.5-inch colour touchscreen accompanied by a pair of analogue gauges for speed and tacho. No, the Limited doesn’t get the big 12-inch touchscreen as fitted to the base model Road Glide, but it’s still a decent size and is easy to read and navigate. The four-speaker sound system is a ripper, and you can easily hear tunes when wearing earplugs and a full-face lid, and barrelling along at 110km/h- plus. There’s a USB cable in the right-side storage box that you can plug your phone into and satnav is included standard. There’s another storage box on the left. The top-opening lockable and weatherproof panniers offer plenty of space for gear, while the topbox is simply huge… it accommodates two helmets, is lined and includes a 12V power outlet. If there’s anything you can’t fit in the panniers and topbox, there’s a luggage rack so you can strap down the kitchen sink. As you’d expect of a big touring Harley, build quality is top-notch. Fit and finish is excellent, the trim is superb and the paint is lustrous. On test fuel consumption was 5.6L/100km so you should get more than 350km out of the 22.7L fuel tank. The Limited will set you back $47,750, which is $1255 more than the base-model Road Glide. Essentially you’re paying more for a smaller engine, less power, less torque and a smaller TFT screen… so you might wonder why anyone would buy it? I can only think of one reason: load carrying. If you’re going to be doing big miles with a pillion and luggage, not much comes close to the Road Glide Limited in terms of capacity and comfort. And sure, $47,750 is a lot of money, but the Road Glide Limited is a lot of bike. DIMENSIONS Weight 423kg (wet, claimed) Seat height 735mm Width 930mm Height 1425mm Length 2595mm Ground clearance 130mm Fuel capacity 22.7L AN ACRONYM FOR THAT THE ROAD GLIDE Limited has a heap of safety kit including electronic linked braking (ELB), cornering ABS (C-ABS), cornering traction control system (C-TCS), cornering dragtorque slip control system (C-DSCS), vehicle hold control (VHC) and a tyre-pressure monitoring system (TPMS). SERVICING & WARRANTY Servicing First: 1600km Minor: 8000km Major: 16,000km Warranty Two years, unlimited kilometres BUSINESS END Price From $47,750 (ride away) Colour options Billiard Grey, Vivid Black (+$750), Sharkskin Blue (+$1465) CONTACT harley-davidson.com/au 28 amcn.com.au Supremely comfortable for rider and pillion, loads of luggage space, great fit and finish. PROS AND CONS Smaller engine than base Road Glide, smaller TFT screen, and it’s bloody big and heavy.
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QUICK SPIN. TRIUMPH TF250X TEST MATT BOYD + PHOTOGRAPHY DEAN WALTERS TRAIL BLAZER It’s been a long time coming, but Triumph’s first 250cc motocrosser is here and ready to shake up the establishment riumph is embarking on one of its biggest challenges since John Bloor rescued the company from receivership in 1983. The launch of its first motocross racer is its first step in creating a family of all-new motocross and enduro models. Triumph’s TF250X has arrived at the same time Ducati has released its first motocross racer, the Desmo450 MX. Both companies are strangers to motocross but in a period of sales growth. Triumph is set to sell more than 100,000 units globally this calendar year while Ducati is experiencing record sales. Can they shake up motocross like they have roadracing? Recently both brands have assumed important roles in motorcycle racing. In 2019 Triumph went all-in on the racing world, winning the contract to be the sole engine supplier for the Moto2 world championship using its 765cc triple. In 2022 Ducati took the unprecedented step of becoming the sole supplier of bikes competing in the 2023 MotoE World Cup, the electric class 1 30 amcn.com.au 1. Ahead of the technical game but can Triumph stay ahead of the pack on the track? 2. The engine is a top-end powerhouse that in standard form suits fast, open tracks 3. Twin Air dual-layer filter shows Triumph means business 4. The optional launch control module 5. Standard exhaust is fine but accessory version adds midrange
FRAME GAMES Triumph experimented with different frame materials and designs but settled with an aluminium version that consists of forged and machined parts handwelded together. CUT SNAKE The 250cc single is fed by a Dell’Orto throttle body and produces 35kW (47hp) at 13,500rpm – that’s the same peak as Aprilia’s 457cc twincylinder sportsbike! – and 28.6Nm at 9000rpm. of MotoGP. Then in 2021 Triumph shocked the motorcycle world by announcing an off-road racing venture it had never attempted before. Sure, back in the 1950s and 1960s road Triumphs had been converted for scrambles, desert and ISDE racing but a track-only MXer was a completely new direction for a brand dating back to 1902. To its credit, Triumph realised it couldnಬt go this alone so it enlisted some of the best in the business, including seven-time AMA motocross and five-time AMA supercross champ Ricky Carmichael and fivetime enduro champ Ivan Cervantes as test riders. Triumph admits this project took way longer to reach fruition than it had initially planned but acknowledges it couldn’t release a motorcycle it wasnಬt completely happy with. I can understand that attitude because the fact Triumph had never built a competitionbased dirtbike before gave it a free pass to get a few things wrong. Yamaha, Honda and the rest have decades of development behind them to get TOP SHELF To produce such a convincing and well-executed dirtbike, Triumph partnered with brands like KYB, Brembo, Galfer, DID, ODI, Pirelli, Exedy, Dell’Orto, Pro Taper, Athena and Twin Air. MORE DIRT Triumph is currently hard at work finessing a 450cc motocross model that we will likely see before the end of the year, with 250 and 450 enduro models to follow soon after. PARTS ACCESS Triumph dealers are now part of a 24/7 online ordering system where you can log on and order your parts and select either click-and-collect or delivery direct to your door. 3 2 4 5 TRIUMPH ADMITS THIS PROJECT TOOK WAY LONGER TO REACH FRUITION THAN IT HAD PLANNED amcn.com.au 31
QUICK SPIN. TRIUMPH TF250X WANT MORE? The TF250X comes loaded with high-end equipment from standard but there’s an extensive list of aftermarket accessories available to make it even more race ready. 1 THE TF250X DOESN’T JUST MEET ITS RIVALS BUT PUTS A FEW OF THEM TO SHAME where they are at today. The acid test is riding this new MXer in its natural environment and, after spending quality time with the new TF250X, I believe Triumph has developed a motorcycle in four years that doesnಬt just meet its rivals, but even puts a few of them to shame. It leaves me to wonder if Triumph engineers really are that good or if the established manufacturers are resting on their laurels and only doing what they have to? The Triumph has its own feel. The footpeg and handlebar positions are comfortable but unique – something it obviously worked hard on to achieve. The cockpit doesnಬt feel alien, even though it feels very different to anything else on the market. A high-quality Pro Taper handlebar with a carbon core and lock-on grips is fitted as standard – things you generally need to upgrade on a new motocrosser when you get it home. Its KYB front and rear suspension is regarded in the motocross and enduro scene as being some of the best production units available. The standard suspension is a little on the soft side for my 95kg frame but Triumph has different weight springs available and was able to pair me with a bike that had springs fitted suitable to my weight. 32 amcn.com.au 1. Triumph has opted for quality components, including Pirelli Scorpion MX32 tyres 2. Who ever thought they’d one day see the Triumph badge on a serious track-only dirtbike? 3. Rear suspension has highand low-speed compression adjustment 4. Brembo brakes squealed but never faded in tough conditions 5. Plenty of electronic adjustment is available on the fly A FULL TITANIUM Akrapovic exhaust system improves midrange power and throttle response significantly. $2150.01 The XTrig holeshot device locks the front suspension down lower off the start to prevent wheelstanding off the startline. $131.93 Athena LC-GPA launch control module with riderselectable enhanced traction control and launch control settings and LED engine speed indicator. It allows you to adjust the launch control mode, which retards the ignition timing so the bike will get less wheel spin off the start. $394.16 MX Tune Pro wifi module enables you to connect with the bike’s ECU through a downloadable phone app so you can select from a range of pre-programmed maps to customise the bike’s power delivery. $321.59 Performance gripper seat and seat cover. $379.33 Because the standard bodywork has graphics imprinted in the plastics, there’s a replacement set of panels so you can have your own custom stickers made and fi tted. $288.61 Of course a professional motocross racer is going to like a certain type of set-up, but for the masses the suspension is compliant and set up well. The action is smooth and gradual, but most of all predictable – there is nothing worse than the back end kicking out on you when you arenಬt expecting it. The frame, I was told, was what was holding up the planned release. The test riders werenಬt totally happy with it and Triumph needed more time to produce that final percentage of compliancy. The frame geometry gives the stability and compliance you need to go fast. There’s good rider feedback through the footpegs but it still flexes enough to be comfortable and not make the ride feel rigid. The 249.95cc single-cylinder engine is a topend monster with a rev ceiling so high you think youಬre never going to reach it. Open the taps and the engine revs far past where you think it should but also produces power right through to the end with no sign-offs. The quarter-litre single had no problem getting me over some big jumps. In fact I had to get comfortable revving the bike more and getting used to an engine that can rev. Stepping off a 450cc machine, where you short shift and use the engine’s torque rather than the
2 3 4 6 5 rpm, meant I had to spend some time training my brain to use the gearbox to keep the engine above the 8000-9000rpm mark. This is the way all manufacturers are tuning 250cc four-stroke machines these days. They sacrifice low to mid-rpm torque for higher peak rpm to produce higher horsepower. This is all well and good for European or US tracks, that are much bigger and faster, but tracks in Australia are slower and tighter so we still need bottom-end torque. I reckon Australian-market Triumphs will do better with a 50-tooth rear sprocket instead of the standard 48-tooth ring. The optional Akrapovic exhaust system, with additional maps accessible through the tuner app, also drastically improves midrange power. The brakes are just as strong as you would expect from Brembo, although I got some squealing from them when they got hot. It didn’t bother me because the performance remained high and I still had firm pressure at the lever. The clutch has a nice responsive action and the addition of a map switch beneath the bank of buttons to control the switchable electronic rider aids is a neat touch. As well as the ability to switch amcn.com.au 33
QUICK SPIN. TRIUMPH TF250X SPECS ENGINE Capacity 249.95cc Type Single cylinder, DOHC, four valves Bore & stroke 78mm x 52.3mm Compression ratio 14.4:1 Cooling Liquid Fueling EFI, Dell’Orto throttle body Transmission Five-speed Clutch Wet, multi-plate, belleville spring Final drive Chain PERFORMANCE Power 35kW (47hp) @ 13,500rpm (claimed) Torque 28.6Nm @ 9000rpm (claimed) Top speed 95km/h (est) Fuel consumption Not measured ELECTRONICS Type Not given Rider aids Traction control, launch control and quickshifter Rider modes High and low CHASSIS Frame material Aluminium Frame type Backbone Rake 27.4° Trail 116mm Wheelbase 1492mm SUSPENSION Type KYB Front: 48mm upside-down fork, adjustable rebound and compression, 310mm travel Rear: Monoshock, adjustable rebound and high- and low-speed compression, 305mm travel between the high and low power modes, there’s also individual launch control, traction control and quickshifter buttons which can be accessed on the fly. Much like it was in the roadbike world a decade or so ago, the introduction of electronic riders aids to the motocross sector is ultimately a good thing that will progress the breed. I can see them becoming popular and the current generation of riders becoming reliant on them. But for me, Iಬm old, and I grew up controlling my traction to the rear wheel with the clutch and throttle so when that manual control is taken from me it feels like Iಬve lost something. I guess itಬs messing with my instincts and I would need more time to retrain my brain before I could extract the most benefit from them. I can assure you the TF250X has been worth the wait. It fits into the class well and is loaded with quality parts so you donಬt need to go spending thousands of dollars on engine or suspension upgrades. My only criticism is I would like to see a 50-tooth rear sprocket fitted as standard, or at least included, and the gains to the bottom-end power of the Akrapovic system is so great, that a higher performing standard exhaust should be a no brainer. A lighter rider is likely going to get their arms stretched by this thing as is, but for me as a larger rider on a 250 I need a little more torque down low. I’m really looking forward to seeing how this bike is taken up in the Australian market. The old adage of ‘win on Sunday, sell on Monday’ is still really relevant in the off-road world. Even though Triumph says it’s going to open “specialist motocross and enduro centres”, I suspect it’s going to be a steep learning curve for the established dealers. LOADED WITH QUALITY PARTS SO YOU DON’T NEED TO SPEND THOUSANDS ON UPGRADES Experience has taught me it takes a lot more than simply producing a hugely capable machine to translate into a sales success. The $14,250 asking price is bang-on, in my mind, but for this bike to sell in big numbers here, Triumph needs to go racing and be a consistent podium finisher in premier classes. Thatಬs not only going to cost money, but itಬs also going to take a lot of know-how that its rivals have built up over many decades of experience; things like engine and suspension tuning, and how to manage a race team. I’m not saying Triumph can’t be a sales success here in the short-term, because the bike has the credentials to do extremely well. But the steps Triumph take in order to ensure the TF250X can enjoy the success it absolutely deserves will be fascinating to watch. WHEELS & BRAKES Wheels Spoked aluminium Front: 21 x 1.6 Rear: 19 x 1.85 Tyres Pirelli Scorpion MX32 Front: 80/80-21 Rear: 100/90-19 Brakes Brembo Front: Single 260mm disc, single-piston caliper Rear: Single 220mm disc, single-piston caliper DIMENSIONS Weight 104kg (wet, claimed) Seat height 960mm Width 836mm Height 1270mm Length Not given Ground clearance Not given Fuel capacity 7L SERVICING & WARRANTY Servicing First: 1 hour Minor: 15 hours Major: 30 hours Warranty 30 days BUSINESS END Price $14,250 Colour options Triumph Racing Yellow/ Black/White CONTACT www.triumphmotorcycles.com.au 34 amcn.com.au High-quality execution that outdoes its rivals in some areas, complete with a unique British tank badge. PROS AND CONS More bottom-end grunt (via 50-tooth sprocket/exhaust) will help stand it farther apart from its rivals.

QUICK SPIN. SUZUKI GSX-8R TEST DEAN MELLOR + PHOTOGRAPHY MARK DADSWELL & LEWIS CROFT 1 MIDSIZE SPORTY A little sportier and a litle costlier than a GSX-8S, the new and better-equipped GSX-8R is a whole lot of fun he Suzuki GSX-8R is a fantastic example of platform sharing done right. Based around the 776cc parallel-twin engine that sees service in the V-Strom 800 adventure bike and the GSX-8S nakedbike, the faired 8R is different enough to attract new buyers rather than just pilfer sales from its closely related siblings. To my eye, the 8R is the pick of the three-bike line-up when it comes to good looks. Suzuki describes the 8R’s styling as a modern interpretation of the brand’s sportsbike heritage. While it might not offer up the performance of those potent GSX-Rs of old, the 8R definitely looks the part. While the Australian launch of the 8R was a road-only event, we already know that it’s also a hoot to ride on the track thanks to Adam Child’s recent world launch report (AMCN Vol 73 No 17) from Circuito Monteblanco in Spain. As well as 2 36 amcn.com.au RIDER PROFILE Name Dean Mellor Height 167cm Weight 76kg Fact Deano regrets selling all of his old bikes… then decades later repurchases the same model. He recently bought another ’96 Blade… because he’s livin’ in the past.
COVER UP The GSX-8R’s fairing and screen might not offer a lot of weather protection but they sure do give the midsize twin a sporty new look compared to the naked 8S. SPRUNG In place of the KYB kit in the 8S, the GSX-8R scores a Showa 41mm SFF-BP (Separate Function Fork – Big Piston) fork and Showa preload-adjustable shock. that, the local launch of the mechanically similar GSX-8S I attended last year (Vol 73 No 02) included a few sessions at Queensland’s Lakeside Park, and I had a blast there. Don’t believe that the GSX-8R is a handy track weapon? Just ask Rocco Landers, who recently took the 8R’s first win in the MotoAmerica Twins Cup at Road America competing against a swag of Aprilia RS 660s and Yamaha YZF-R7s. Twins Cup organisers use a balance of performance requirements to make all bikes equal. Each model entered has its own specific software package and racing kit, so the largercapacity 8R didn’t have an obvious advantage. In the real world, with only modest output compared to the likes of a GSX-R600 or 750, the parallel-twin 8R doesn’t offer ‘rip yer arms off’ acceleration, but it’s still quick enough ARRESTED Twin 310mm discs are gripped by Nissin radialmounted four-piston calipers. ABS is not lean sensitive but it works well in a variety of conditions. PARALLEL UNIVERSE The 776cc parallel twin runs a 270° crank and makes a claimed 61kW (83hp) at 8500rpm and 78Nm at 6800rpm. Twin balance shafts make it feel smooth. 3 4 SIT ON IT The riding position is similar to the naked 8S but the clipon ’bars are slightly lower, albeit still at a comfortable height for long distances in the saddle without cramping. 1. The Aussie launch ride was held in varying weather conditions, perfect for testing the all-round ability of the sporty 8R 2. Easy-to-read TFT screen has day and night modes 3. The 776cc DOHC parallel-twin, four-valves-per-cylinder engine has the same spec as the 8S 4. Showa’s 41mm SFF-BP (Separate Function Fork – Big Piston) is not adjustable 5. Clip-on ’bars are set at a comfortable angle 5 ROCCO LANDERS TOOK THE 8R’S FIRST WIN IN MOTOAMERICA’S TWINS CUP AGAINST APRILIA RS 660s AND YAMAHA YZF-R7s amcn.com.au 37
QUICK SPIN. SUZUKI GSX-8R 1 THE RIDING POSITION IS QUITE SPACIOUS AND LONG DAYS IN THE SADDLE ARE ACHIEVABLE to thoroughly entertain thanks to plenty of accessible torque throughout the rev range, an effective electronics package, a flickable chassis and decent brakes. At $14,990 ride away the 8R costs $1500 more than the 8S. While it is mostly the same under that sleek new bodywork, there are a few notable upgrades, including lower-set ’bars for a sportier riding position and upgraded suspension. Before we get into the differences though, let’s take a look at what is the same. Power output from the 776cc DOHC parallel twin remains unchanged, with claimed peaks of 61kW (83hp) at 8500rpm and 78Nm at 6800rpm. The engine runs a 270° crank and, with a relatively long 70mm stroke, it makes decent torque from down low and through the midrange. There’s no sudden surge of power as revs climb towards the 9750rpm redline, but rather a linear feel that makes the 8R feel easy to ride despite its sporty appearance. Two balancers at 90° to the crankshaft have been added to supress unwanted vibrations. They work exceptionally well and the engine feels incredibly smooth for a parallel twin throughout the rev range. The 8R runs a version of Suzuki’s Intelligent Ride System (SIRS) that incorporates ride-by-wire throttle, Suzuki Drive Mode Selector (SDMS), Suzuki Traction Control System (STCS), up and down quickshifter, low-rpm assist and a one-touch starting system. The SDMS provides a choice of A, B and C (Active, Basic and Comfort) throttle maps; A provides the sharpest throttle response, B provides access to maximum power output but with a softer throttle response and flatter torque curve, while C provides 38 amcn.com.au 1. Sure-footed handling and excellent brakes gave confidence for cornering in the wet 2. Riding ergonomics are good enough for a long day in the saddle 3. Playing chasey on the Great Ocean Road 4. Fairing and headlight styling is influenced by Suzuki’s largercapacity sportsbikes 5. Despite sharing many components with its V-Strom adventure and 8S nakedbike stablemates, the 8R has a character all its own 2 the softest throttle response and a gentle torque characteristic, and is essentially a rain mode. There were some sketchy conditions on the launch ride from Warrnabool, along the coast to the Otway region and back to Melbourne thanks to inclement weather and crook roads. While I sampled both A and C modes several times, I found B to be the pick of the throttle maps. A was a little too snatchy and aggressive while C really dumbs things down too much. Without an IMU the 8R’s ABS and traction control are not lean-sensitive, but both performed faultlessly in the wet and dry. The traction control can be manually set to Mode 1, 2, 3 or off (the higher the number the greater the intervention) regardless of what ride mode is selected, allowing you to tailor settings to suit your riding style and road conditions. For example, you can opt to have a snappy throttle response by selecting ride mode A, but you can also have the TC set to 3 for the highest intervention if it’s belting down rain, or turn TC off altogether if you want to point the front wheel in the air. Switching between ride modes and TC settings is easily done on the fly, so you can play around with the combinations to your heart’s content. Your chosen settings can be clearly seen on the bright five-inch colour TFT display. Notably, the selected settings are retained when you switch the bike off and on again, so you don’t have to repeat the process once you have set it up how you want. The two-way quickshifter allows for smooth and fast upshifts, even at partial throttle openings, but downshifts can sometimes be a bit finicky, so are more easily achieved using the light and progressive slip-and-assist clutch. But with a nice spread of torque you don’t have to work your way up and down the ratios if you don’t feel like it. Now to the main upgrade. A new Showa 41mm SFF-BP (Separate Function Fork – Big Piston) replaces the KYB unit on the 8S. While it remains non-adjustable, Suzuki says it’s lighter and offers more stable damping characteristics. The rear shock has also been upgraded from a KYB unit to a preload-adjustable Showa one. Suspension travel remains the same at 130mm front and rear, but you can definitely feel an
IT’S A TWIN THING SUZUKI GSX-8R $14,900 ride away 736cc parallel twin 61kW (83hp)/78Nm 205kg (kerb) APRILIA RS 660 $22,740 ride away 659cc parallel twin 73.5kW (100hp)/67Nm 169kg (dry) 3 4 YAMAHA YZF-R7 $15,949 ride away 689cc parallel twin 54kW (72hp)/67Nm 188kg (wet) 5 improvement from the new set-up when riding on the road. While the 8S feels underdamped at the rear on crook surfaces, I had no such qualms on the 8R. Up front, the 8R feels planted and controlled, and inspires plenty of confidence when late-braking and tipping into corners. Kerb weight is a claimed 205kg (3kg up on the 8S). The 8R is far from the lightest machine in the midsize twin category but changes of direction require little effort and it’s easy to flick the bike from side to side. Those clip-on ’bars look quite sporty but are actually positioned quite high, so there’s not much more weight on your wrists than when riding the 8S with its flat single-piece handlebar. They are also set quite wide, allowing for plenty of leverage. Despite its appearance, the riding position on the 8R is quite spacious. Because you’re not head down, bum up, long days in the saddle are achievable without a visit to the physio. The Dunlop Sportmax Roadsport 2 rubber – a 120/70ZR17 up front and 180/55ZR17 at the rear – offers loads of grip and feel in both the wet and amcn.com.au 39
QUICK SPIN. SUZUKI GSX-8R 1. The 8R runs the same Nissin brake package as its naked stablemate the 8S 2. Optional soft panniers turn the 8R into a decent sports-tourer 3. Metallic Triton Blue suits those buyers wanting Suzuki’s corporate colours 1 2 SPECS ENGINE Capacity 776cc Type Parallel-twin, DOHC, four valves per cylinder Bore & stroke 84mm x 70mm Compression ratio 12.8:1 Cooling Liquid Fueling EFI Transmission Six-speed Clutch Wet, multi-plate, slipper-type Final drive Chain PERFORMANCE Power 61kW (83hp) @ 8500rpm (claimed) Torque 78Nm @ 6800rpm (claimed) Top speed 225km/h (est) Fuel consumption 4.3L/100km (measured) ELECTRONICS Type Not given Rider aids ABS, traction control, Low RPM Assist and quickshifter Rider modes A, B & C CHASSIS Frame material Steel Frame type Twin spar Rake 24° Trail 104mm Wheelbase 1465mm SUSPENSION Type Showa Front: 43mm, non-adjustable upsidedown fork, 130mm travel Rear: Monoshock, adjustable preload, 130mm travel WHEELS & BRAKES dry. Again, this is the same spec as fitted low engine speeds. There are plenty of to the 8S, and it’s a great tyre for both other practical accessories available, road and track. including a USB socket, tank pads and The 8R also runs the same Nissin heated grips, as well as loads of bling Optional soft bags, as picured brake package as the 8S, so there including a smoked screen, billet on the Metallic Matt Sword are two 310mm discs up front levers and rim stickers. Silver bike tested here, cost gripped by four-piston radialFour colours are on offer: Metallic $889. They proved convenient mounted calipers, and a 240mm Matt Sword Silver, Metallic Triton on this trip and kept their disc at the back with a single-piston Blue, Pearl Ignite Yellow and Metallic contents clean and dry. caliper. There’s more than enough Mat Black. For my money, the yellow braking performance on offer and is the standout and it looks even better good feel at the lever and, while the ABS in the metal. kicked in a couple of times when braking hard Other than colour choice, the big question in the wet, it wasn’t overly intrusive. facing potential buyers will be whether the 8R is There are loads of practical features on the worth 1500 bucks more than the 8S. I reckon it is on GSX-8R that will keep owners happy, including looks alone, but also because of the better quality that easy-to-read TFT screen with day and suspension package, which suits the road and the night modes, the bright shift light, the intuitive track. That’s the beauty of the GSX-8R – it genuinely controls, the one-touch Easy Start system and the is a multi-purpose bike you can commute on, tour Low RPM Assist, which helps prevent stalling at on or take to the track on the weekends. BAG IT UP FOR A TRIP 3 Wheels Cast aluminium Front: 17 x 3.0 Rear: 17 x 5.5 Tyres Dunlop Sportsmax Roadsport 2 Front: 120/70ZR17 Rear: 180/55ZR17 Brakes Nissin Front: Twin 310mm discs, four-piston radial calipers Rear: Single 240mm disc, single-piston caliper DIMENSIONS Weight 205kg (kerb, claimed) Seat height 810mm Width 770mm Height Not given Length 2115mm Ground clearance 145mm Fuel capacity 14L SERVICING & WARRANTY Servicing First: 1000km Minor: 12,000km Major: 24,000km Warranty Two years, unlimited kilometres BUSINESS END Price From $14,990 (ride away) Colour options Metallic Triton Blue Matt Sword Silver or Pearl Ignite Yellow CONTACT suzukimotorcycles.com.au 40 amcn.com.au A great example of how to do platform sharing without losing individuality. PROS AND CONS On a model that is such a great all-rounder, it would be good to have heated grips as standard.
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ack in the 90s when 400cc four-cylinder sportsbikes were the thing, I was busy avoiding homework and school detention. Then when I got my licence in 2002 I was too busy putting road tyres on my XR600 to get involved with sportsbikes. Looking back, it was a golden age of racing and tearing up twisty mountain roads. The 400s were weapons on a tight track or road but then they sadly went the way of the Dodo. When the re-invented Kawasaki ZX-4R and higher-spec ZX-4RR were released, I was keen to get my butt on one to see what I had missed out on all those years ago. AMCN had already tested it on the racetrack, so it was time to see how it handles life on the road. Rolling into Kawasaki HQ, I spotted a nice ZX-10R out the front. I parked next to it and as I took my helmet off I spied the ZX-4RR sticker on the side fairing. I couldn’t believe that I had been fooled by the big bike looks. This isn’t your run- amcn.com.au 43
ROAD TEST 2024 KAWASAKI NINJA ZX-4RR of-the-mill LAMS 400cc twin or single cylinder; it is a real-deal four-pot screamer that is not LAMS approved and its appearance reflects that. It simply looks fantastic. It has twin front discs, a proper-looking exhaust system, a stiff WorldSBKinspired frame and a trick-looking swingarm. Kawasaki has also fitted it up with sport-focused tyres, good suspension, a two-way quickshifter and a go-fast colour scheme. It is a dream come true for an aspiring racer or trackday enthusiast. But most owners will need or want to ride it on the road regularly also, so let’s hit it. Switching on the key brings the full-colour TFT dash into life, a dash that wouldn’t look out of place on the top-spec ZX-10RR or even one of the H2 models. It is functional and beaut to look at while providing all the necessary information. Hit the starter button and the tiny 57mm pistons start doing their thing. It is pretty quiet even though it idles at 2000rpm. It’s hard to fathom just how small the internal engine parts are but those pistons only move 39mm from top to bottom. It makes me think of the inside of an analogue watch. Bear in mind there was once a four-cylinder ZXR250R with 49mm pistons, so Kawasaki wouldn’t have batted an eyelid at the 400’s during design. 1 2 LETTING THE 400 SPREAD ITS WINGS AND REV OUT IS AN AURAL DELIGHT… ALL THE WAY TO 15,500 44 amcn.com.au Engage first gear and the baby Ninja will pull away slowly with surprisingly little throttle input. But if you want to move away at any sort of trafficbeating pace, you will need to dial up a few more revs, in the vicinity of 8000rpm. Which takes a little getting used to after riding big bikes. I find myself cruising the suburbs at 40km/h in sixth gear and it is as smooth as silk with zero protest from the engine – it just purrs along – but don’t bother trying to accelerate quickly from those revs. There is simply nothing on offer from the rev-happy engine in the low end of the tacho. Letting the 400 spread its wings and rev out, however, is an aural delight. It sounds just like a ZX-6R but without the police sirens as you rev out second gear on the road. The induction wail from the ram-air intake is trademark Kawasaki and just awesome. Using all the rev range soon becomes addictive as the torque peaks at about 12,500rpm. You can feel the torque die off after that while the revs happily keep rising all the way to 15,500rpm. To get the most out of the engine you need to disengage your mechanical sympathy and just send it. It doesn’t do anything unpredictable like pull wheelies etc., it just makes noise and builds speed progressively. I can’t help but feel a little self-conscious as pedestrians turn and look at what is screaming its head off expecting a bike doing warp speed, but there’s me barely breaking the speed limit getting ahead of the cars from the lights. I think the little Ninja attracts more attention than just about any other bike I’ve ridden thanks to the screaming induction noise. People must hear it a mile away.
SUPER SPRINGS CLICKIN’ GEARS SWISS WATCH BIG-BOY BRAKES WORLD CLASS The ZX-4RR gets some extra functional bling over the single R version. A preload-adjustable fork and a fully adjustable BFRC Lite rear shock similar to the kit found on the ZX-10RR makes for super performance. To keep the little screamer in the go zone, you will be grateful for the Dual Direction KQS or two-way quickshifter. Perfect throttle blips on down shifts and accurate upshifts all without touching the clutch. The 399cc four-cylinder engine revs to 15,500rpm and the 12,000km service intervals means Kawasaki has precision wound up to the max. The engine produces a class leading 56.7kW (76hp) and is not LAMS approved. Twin 290mm discs gripped by four-piston monobloc calipers gives the ZX-4 Supersport-spec items and pulling the Ninja up is both easy and accurate. No stoppies here however as the non-switchable ABS says no! Kawasaki has the runs on the board with the ZX-10RR, so it would only be fair to use some of the know-how in the ZX-4RR chassis. Think of downsized Superbike performance thanks to the stiff trellis frame. 3 4 1. Fully adjustable Showa BFRC Lite Rear shock is race quality 2. Don’t even think of putting a race canister on this, it’s loud enough as it is 3. Digital dash is brilliant and can record all your racetrack efforts 4. Styling is a chip off the old block of the championship-winning ZX-10RR Superbike 5. Supersport-spec front brakes are way more than this bike needs but who’s complaining? 5 While taking some happy snaps a couple of kids even came over and asked to hear it rev. I let them give the throttle a twist and it made their day. I can’t even imagine how it would sound with a full titanium racing exhaust system. It would be criminal. Tucking in and ripping down backroads feels like I’m racing in the North West 200 but barely breaking the national speed limit while clicking up and down through the gearbox with the standard-fitment quickshifter. Commuting to and from work, the 400 slices through gaps like a Ninja, if you are in the right gear. Best not to get caught napping low in the rev range if you want to jump into a gap as you will be disappointed with the 400’s available torque. But if you keep the revs up over 8000rpm it’s smooth sailing. The 400 is super chill at highway speeds with no bad manners. I am delightfully impressed. The quickshifter isn’t perfect but it’s not far off. I feel that I could shift quicker up through the gears without it as the ‘cut’ time is a bit too long when high in the rev range. But cruising lower in the revs it’s pretty good. Downshifting is bliss at any speed. A firm click down on the shifter and the engine blips the perfect amount to engage the lower gear. The little Ninja also has a slipper clutch but it’s hardly noticeable besides a gentle pulse through the clutch lever if you are resting your fingers on it. The clutch is a cable-operated slip-and-assist type, making it very light to operate with good feel. Bonus points are awarded for span-adjustable levers, too. But don’t make plans on backing it in supermoto style as the ABS is non switchable. As you would expect from a small sportsbike, amcn.com.au 45
ROAD TEST 2024 KAWASAKI NINJA ZX-4RR DIGITAL COMMUNICATION THE 4.3-INCH TFT colour dash takes pride of place in the cockpit. Worthy of much higher-spec bikes, it displays a magnitude of information. In track mode it focuses on lap time and the tacho between 10,000rpm and 15,000rpm. It selfadjusts for brightness and can run either a white or black background. The ZX-4RR is also Bluetooth compatible out of the box. Hook up your smartphone with the Kawasaki Rideology app and track your rides and maintenance information. The data log of your ride shows RPM, gear position, water temp and speed. It lays it over a map or by graph. When your phone is hooked up you can receive notifications and answer calls through the bike’s dash. Under the passenger seat there is a USB power outlet for charging on the go. 46 amcn.com.au THE ZX-4RR IS SURPRISINGLY ROOMY. IT FEELS SIMILAR IN SIZE TO A 600CC SUPERSPORT the handling is swift and precise as the chassis geometry is derived from the multiple world championship winning ZX-10RR. It isn’t really as light as you might expect at 188kg wet, but it doesn’t feel like it’s carrying excess baggage. the 400 tips into corners almost as fast as you can think about turning and holds a line ferociously – the way it hugs a turn is just epic, I have to recalibrate my brain to keep up my momentum and simply chuck it into corners to try and push its limits. It just keeps asking for more as it loves corners. With the high-revving engine you get the most out of the package by keeping corner speeds up and the revs high flowing from one corner to the next. The suspension is up for it, too. The ZX-4RR is equipped with a preload-adjustable, 37mm separate function, big-piston Showa fork and a horizontal rear linkage with a BFRC lite Showa shock. That stands for Balance Free Rear Cushion. The same spec equipment as found on a ZX-10RR, it has adjustable preload, rebound and compression damping. While I am way above the weight the little Ninja is designed for, I find the suspension more than capable of coping with my antics. Yes, it is a bit squishy, but I’m safely 25kg heavier than
THE RIVALS APRILIA RS660 $22,740 Ride away 1 2 YAMAHA YZF-R7 HO $15,649 Ride away the weight of the expected rider. The suspension is designed for sporty performance above comfort, and I think it is a good balance between the two. Braking performance is exceptional. Dual 290mm discs up front are grabbed by four-piston monobloc calipers that wouldn’t be out of place on a 1000cc bike. Rubber brake lines are utilised, which I usually detest, but in this case with a light and nimble bike it takes the edge off what could be some pretty aggressive brakes. One finger braking is all that is needed. The electronics suite is impressive for a 400cc machine with four modes available in Sport, Road, Rain and Rider. Rider is a customisable mode where you can choose from three throttle maps and three traction control settings as well as off. There is no option for ABS switching, which is a bit of a bummer for a track-focused bike. I spend most of my time in the Sport mode as it gives full power with the best throttle response and, let’s face it, the power output isn’t aggressive enough to warrant softening. The traction control is very unobtrusive as the bike doesn’t wheelie or break traction generally. I only noticed it kick in once with a heavy throttle hand across some poor quality bitumen while leant over causing the rear to skip a bit and the TC to cut in. So it is nice to know it is there if you need it. The ZX-4RR is surprisingly roomy. It feels similar in size to a 600cc Supersport machine but a little lower to the ground and, of course, it’s lighter. An 800mm seat height makes it really accessible and the reach to the ’bars isn’t too long so there isn’t 3 1. You can fine-tune the suspension for road or track 2. Riding position is surprisingly comfortable for a sportsbike 3. Easy-to-use controls mean you can calibrate the digital dash on the fly 4. Trust us when we say that the secret to fast progress on winding roads is to disengage your mechanical sympathy and keep the revs up over 12,000rpm HONDA CBR650R (LAMS) $12,499 Plus on roads KAWASAKI NINJA 500 (LAMS) $7544 Plus on roads 4 amcn.com.au 47
ROAD TEST 2024 KAWASAKI NINJA ZX-4RR 2 SPECS ENGINE Capacity 399cc Type Inline-four, four valves per cylinder Bore & stroke 57 x 39.1mm Compression ratio 12.3:1 Cooling Liquid Fueling EFI Transmission Six-speed Clutch Wet, multi-plate, slipper Final drive Chain 3 PERFORMANCE Power 56.7kW (76hp) @ 14,500rpm (claimed) Torque 37.6Nm @ 12,500rpm (claimed) Top speed 210km/h (est) Fuel consumption Not measured ELECTRONICS Type Kawasaki Rider aids ABS, traction control, quickshifter Rider modes Track, Sport, Rain or Rider CHASSIS Frame material Steel Frame type Trellis Rake 23.5° Trail 97mm Wheelbase 1380mm SUSPENSION Type Showa Front: 37mm Showa SFF-BP USD fork, preload adjustment, 120mm travel Rear: Showa BFRC Lite monoshock, fully adjustable, 124mm travel WHEELS & BRAKES Wheels five-spoke alloy Front: 17 x 3.5 Rear: 17 x 4.5 Tyres Dunlop GPR300 Front: 120/70ZR17 Rear: 160/60ZR17 Brakes Kawasaki, ABS Front: Twin 290mm discs, four-piston calipers Rear: Single 220mm disc, single-piston caliper DIMENSIONS Weight 188kg (kerb, claimed) Seat height 800mm Width 765mm Height 1110mm Length 1990mm Ground clearance 135mm Fuel capacity 15L SERVICING & WARRANTY Servicing First: 1000km Minor: 12,000km Major: 24,000km Warranty Two years, unlimited kilometres 1 1. Smaller riders will be able to tuck in 2. Quickshifter works best on the down change 2. Pillions are possible but, really, would you want to? BUILT WITH QUALITY COMPONENTS AND A FOCUS ON PERFORMANCE COUNTING YOUR ARGHS a heap of weight going through your wrists, even though the riding position is quite sporty. I did bump my knee on the handlebar while doing a feet-up full-lock U-turn. There is no way in hell I can tuck in behind the tiny screen but it is a nice gesture by Kawasaki to have it clear in case someone else can get down that low on it and still see where they are going. Aside from the tiny screen, I can’t get past how comfortable it is given my 100kg and 178cm chassis. The Ninja has full LED lighting. Normally sportsbike headlights are form over function but I found while commuting in the dark that these are excellent. Fuel range is pretty good at over 300km per tank, in theory. I got 260km and only put 11.9L in to the 15L tank, so range is more than enough for commuting or a decent day out in the country in search of deserted twisty roads. As you can see, the ZX-4RR isn’t your average small-capacity sportsbike. It is built from the ground up with quality components and a focus on performance rather than price. It’s a case of horses for courses and this little ripper won’t suit everyone. But if you’re keen to have a trackday-capable bike with world championship-winning pedigree you will see the value in the $15k price tag. It is not a learner bike, it is a pint-sized superbike. IF THE THOUGHT of shelling out $15,000 to ride away on the RR has you a little apprehensive, the entry-point ZX-4R can be had for about $13,500 ride away. Obviously you miss out on a few trick bits but the fun level will still be high. The ZX-4R doesn’t have the KRT-inspired green paint and is available in metallic black only. The front fork is the lowerspec unit without preload adjustment, while the rear shock is non-adjustable. The R also misses out on the two-way quickshift er. For most, these are not deal-breaking items, so save yourself some dollars for new gear to hit the track with if you like. BUSINESS END Price $13,194 (plus on-road costs) Colour options Lime Green/Ebony CONTACT www.kawasaki.com.au 48 amcn.com.au Nimble handling, screaming four-cylinder engine and it’s surprisingly comfortable. PROS AND CONS No LAMS option for newbies, no class to race it in and expensive for the capacity.

FIRST RIDE APRILIA RS 457
457 , t he R S d e l o o f e d - up on’t be a c ho p p t i r e l y t s u j ’t i sn i s en t he 457 , 0 6 6 S R t s ow n , w it h i t n or k e r e f dif body w , s i s s a , ch e n g i n e a i d s a i me d a t er t it i ve a nd r i d c omp e y l h g i s bi k e t he h y s p or t t i c a p a sma l l- c a nu fac t u red .M g io m a rke t he P i ag l it y, t t a a i i f ac i i n I nd a r a m at B ’s p u r ov a l g ro M S ap p A L f o e to t he e d g i o d i a l l e d u p n o t h g t es r i i g ht r a i t d a nc r - to - w e e w o p g. s a nd w it h it W/175k iona l i mages k 5 3 – ot um y, m a x i m e i n g t he p r o m e c t i n g a p e a k p e s i ke ex A f te r , I was t ’s not l i k t c u a r b t , in on s foot age i ng pa ra l lel t w a ly, a generou t v I v n i ate l y h i g h - r e e f t t h e ho t e l i i m me d s a l I w s e A u lo w t h at . b l e t o r q s , no t a b l y b e a s u f t as o d a n d s of s p r e ad w s pee h o t l s o t o A m . h nt g i s a s s iu m bi k e , w i t n i ap p a r e l e u f m fa r , t he or a p r e w r p m b e i n g f t 6 0k m / h c e p om l o u ld e x y ou w o p a n d d r i v e f r k-u t he p i c amcn.com.au 51
FIRST RIDE APRILIA RS 457 sharper than I was expecting. Once away from the congested traffic, the RS continued to surprise me. That flowing drive through the midrange made me feel like I was riding something closer to a middleweight, while the hard-pulsing soundtrack from the 270-degree-crank twin was as racy as it was sweet. Overtakes were anything but terrible, with enough power in reserve to rescue any slight error. And, yes, I know I try this ‘test’ on every bike I ride - it will happily lift the front wheel in the first two gears with the TC removed and a little clutch intervention. I can’t remember another learner-approved bike so easy to wheelie. Aprilia has promoted the RS’s racing DNA but actually built a unique new engine that works successfully on the road. You don’t have to spend your life near the rev limiter and with your chin on the fuel cap. It has enough power to sit comfortably at freeway speeds and there is enough accessible grunt to have a fun and spirited ride, with that adrenalin-stirring exhaust note urging you on. Aprilia had fitted our testbike with the optional two-way quickshifter, which works perfectly in both directions at low and high speeds. It’s seamlessly slick around town; superlight and super-quick in the hills – and certainly worth discussing with your dealer when it comes to closing the deal. Top speed is estimated to be around 200km/h, or just below. For a LAMS-approved machine that is quick and potentially class leading, and also suggests the RS’s bodywork is as slippery as it is handsome. We didn’t get the opportunity to try any prolonged high-speed riding, but the wellbalanced twin feels smooth in most riding scenarios, although we’ll have to wait and see what the vibes are like at a sustained 120-150km/h – obviously on a closed road, officer. The fact that it says Aprilia on the side of the tank guarantees that the RS will find its way to an apex without too much of a problem. The MotoGPwinning manufacturer does not make poorhandling sportsbikes. But what I did find unusual was the Aprilia-branded ‘Eurogrip’ tyres fitted to the 457 instead of the brand’s usual Pirellis. I can’t remember last time I rode a sporty Aprilia without Italian rubber. The tyres on the RS 457 are made by TVS in India and essentially 4 52 1 2 1. A proper racing cockpit but with a digital dashboard that’s easy to navigate and operate 2. It might be a learner’s bike but, damn, it’s so easy to wheelie 3. Radial-mounted brake caliper on a single disc does a good job 4. Superb roadholding means you can attack the corners with the knee searching for the apex 5. More than a hint of MotoGP magic 6. From a distance it can easily be mistaken for the larger RS 660 but the RS 457 should come in at well below half its elder sibling’s rideaway price 5 amcn.com.au 3
PROTECT! BOUNCE! GO! ROLL! STOP! Ride-by-wire allows three rider modes (Eco/Sport/Rain), traction control and switchable ABS. None of the rider aids are lean-angle sensitive. The 41mm inverted fork with 120mm of travel is adjustable for preload only. The rear shock, again preload adjustable, has 130mm of travel. Not a sleeved-down 660, the 457cc parallel twin is new for the 457, producing 35kW (47hp) at 9400rpm, with 43.5Nm of torque at 6700rpm. The 457 uses lightweight 17-inch alloy wheels wrapped in 150/60 rear and 110/70 front Eurogrip rubber made in India by TVS. A single 320mm disc at the front, gripped by a fourpiston ByBre caliper. But check out the discolouration on the disc. I CAN’T REMEMBER ANOTHER LEARNERAPPROVED BIKE SO EASY TO WHEELIE highlights the market this bike is mainly aimed at. When you jump on a bike shod with familiar tyre brands you have an idea of what to expect. But on unfamiliar Indian-made rubber I was a little tentative for the first few kays, with the traction control and ABS systems active just in case. However, in perfect riding conditions I soon clicked with the unusual rubber and started to trust its grip and feel. This was a road test, not a track test, and in this context the tyres are not bad. They don’t have the one-to-one, rider-to-bike feel of, say, a sticky Pirelli. Also I doubt they have the performance when pushed hard but I didn’t experience a slide or front-end tuck all day, while grip levels were high enough to invite knee-down levels of lean in the longer corners. On the downside, the TVS Eurogrips didn’t give me the confidence to throw the light and agile 6 RS quickly on its side. They felt a little hard and lacked the feel I needed to flick it through leftsrights like the featherweight (159kg dry) bike it is. But I guess it all depends on where and how you ride. Inexperienced owners who aren’t so likely to push the RS’s handling limits will find them faultless. Experienced riders might feel inclined to change the rubber, especially for trackdays. To be fair this is true for other bikes in this category. The suspension set-up, meanwhile, is hard to fault. There is only adjustment for rear preload, but the RS took a wide spectrum of Italian road imperfections in its stride while also offering enough support and control for a spirited ride. The ride quality is compliant and offers a plush 120/130mm of travel without being overly soft. For a relatively light bike the RS feels stable, secure and sure-footed, again managing to adopt amcn.com.au 53
FIRST RIDE APRILIA RS 457 the dynamic feeling of a much larger motorcycle. Braking power is provided by a single 320mm disc and ByBre calipers front and rear. With just 175kg (wet) plus rider to pull up, they are more than up to the job on the road but do lack the bite you might expect from an Aprilia from the RS stable. On track, or when pushed hard on the road, some riders may require a little more – something I’m sure different pads would provide. The two-channel ABS isn’t lean-angle sensitive but works well without being intrusive. You can sometimes feel the rear ABS working, which is just an indication of the rear brake’s limitations and will be welcomed by new riders. You can switch off the ABS at the rear and have front only, but it can’t be switched off entirely. On the road I was pleasantly surprised to discover that the new RS is relatively roomy for a bike in this class and feels more like a 600 than a lightweight 250 – anyone under 180cm tall will slot in just fine. At 170cm, I felt balanced and sportily poised on board without too much weight on my wrists. I expected a seat with all the comfort of a wooden bench but found instead an agreeably soft perch. Okay, you’re probably not going to be doing any long-distance touring on the RS 457, especially THE RS 457 COULD EASILY BE MISTAKEN FOR ITS LARGER SIBLING, THE RS 660 SCHOOL SPORTS APRILIA RS 457 457cc parallel-twin 35kW/175kg $TBA KAWASAKI NINJA 500 451cc parallel-twin 33.4kW/171kg $7544 (plus on-road costs) as the screen is on the low side, but it is genuinely accommodating for such a racy looking bike. It averaged close to 3.4L/100km, despite being ridden hard at times. With a 13-litre petrol tank that equates to around about 300 kays between fuel stops – not bad and achievable without too much discomfort. From a distance, the Aprilia could easily be mistaken for its larger sibling, the RS 660. It’s an attractive and desirable bike, one that also has the kudos of carrying the name of a MotoGP-winning manufacturer on its tank. Up close the ByBre calipers and the unfamiliar rubber are giveaways of the bike’s entry-level intentions and , while Aprilia Australia is yet to announce the pricing, you do get a sense that the RS 457 is punching above its weight. That continues with the 5-inch TFT dash, which is clear and easy to navigate and use. The switchgear is simple and straightforward. You can turn the TC up and down, as well as disengage it altogether, and do so on the move. Riding modes are also easy to change via the starter button on the right cluster. There isn’t a vast amount of difference between them though, which given the 35kW (47hp) to play with, isn’t surprising. There is a sizeable catalogue of accessories to help turn your RS into a wicked track tool or 54 amcn.com.au YAMAHA R3 321cc parallel-twin 31kW/167kg $8699 (ride away) CFMOTO 450SR 449.9cc parallel-twin 34.5kW/177kg $8290 (ride away) 1
3 4 5 6 2 1. Although it loves to rev, the little parallel-twin has plenty of midrange for everyday riding 2. It might be built to a budget but component quality appears okay 3. Our tester reckons the slick accessory quickshifter should come as standard 4. Rear shock is adjustable for preload only 5. Welcome to the Aprilia Racing family 6. More than a styling exercise, the RS 457 delivers on most levels amcn.com.au 55
FIRST RIDE APRILIA RS 457 ANOTHER LAMSAPPROVED SPORTSBIKE? How many does Aprilia need? SPECS GIVEN APRILIA has a very well-appointed LAMS offering in the restricted RS 660, if it was after a smaller-capacity version for less experienced riders, why didn’t it just manufacture a sleeved-down version of the 660? The answer really comes down to price and place of manufacture. At $22,590 the well-appointed 660 is made in Italy and well out of reach of most would-be riders in the 450cc LAMS-approved category, even if you strip off the high-end electronics package and downgrade some of the componentry. And while the price of the 457 is still a mystery to Australian buyers, it’s manufactured in Piaggio’s Indian plant. The country of origin explains the ByBre (Brembo’s Indian subsidiary) braking package and the TVS-made Eurogrip tyres. The best bit might be the fact that it costs far less for a bike to be exported from India to Australia than if it has to come from Italy. This will hopefully be reflected in the retail price when it’s announced. Stay tuned. ENGINE Capacity 457cc Type Parallel-twin, DOHC, four valves per cylinder Bore & stroke 69mm x 61.1mm Compression ratio 10.5:1 Cooling Liquid Fueling EFI Transmission Six-speed Clutch Wet, multi-plate, slipper type Final drive Chain PERFORMANCE Power 35kW (47hp) @ 9400rpm (claimed) Torque 43.5Nm @ 6700rpm (claimed) Top speed 220km/h (est) Fuel consumption 3.4L/100km (measured) ELECTRONICS Type Not given Rider aids Traction control and ABS Rider modes Eco, Sport and Rain CHASSIS Frame material Aluminium Frame type Twin spar Rake 24.1° Trail 102.5mm Wheelbase 1350mm SUSPENSION Type Not given Front: 41mm upside-down fork, preload adjustable, 120mm travel Rear: Monoshock, preload adjustable, 130mm travel WHEELS & BRAKES Wheels Cast aluminium Front: 17 x 3.0 Rear: 17 x 4.5 Tyres Eurogrip Protorq Front: 110/70-17 Rear: 150/60-17 Brakes ByBre Front: Single 320mm disc, four-piston caliper Rear: Single 220mm disc, single-piston caliper DIMENSIONS Weight 175kg (wet, claimed) Seat height 800mm Width 795mm Height Not given Length 1960mm Ground clearance Not given Fuel capacity 13L SERVICING & WARRANTY Servicing First: 1000km Minor: 10,000km Major: 20,000km Warranty Two years, unlimited kays AN OUTSTANDING SPORTY RIDE FOR A BIKE IN THE LEARNER CLASS super-efficient commuter. From a front brake lever guard to a USB charger, comfort seat and high screen, it’s all there, along with the slick twoway quickshifter that I’d definitely opt for. Aprilia hasn’t just produced an excellent entrylevel model, the Noale-based manufacturer has produced an excellent bike, full stop. While it might look like a tightly focused mini racer on the road I discovered that the RS 457 is versatile and accommodating and delivers an outstanding sporty ride for a bike in this class. Its all-new engine is smooth and torquey for its category. The riding position is reasonably roomy and the bike’s aggressive styling looks great. Some might want to replace the tyres and the brake pads, but a lot of riders will be more than satisfied with the standard set-up. Assuming the price is hovering around the $10k mark or just under when it’s announced, I reckon Aprilia has hit the mark with the RS 457. Young riders are going to be drawn to the glamour of the MotoGP winning brand, especially as the visual connection with the RS-GP bikes raced by Aleix Espargaro and Maverick Vinales is so strong. Tuck in behind the minimal screen and you too are part of the Aprilia story. BUSINESS END Price TBC Colour options Prismatic dark/Racing stripes/Opalescent light CONTACT www.aprilia.com/au_en 56 amcn.com.au An excellent little sportsbike that justifies its styling links to the RS 660 and even Aprilia’s race-winning RS-GP. PROS AND CONS It would be great if the slick factory-accessory quickshifter came as standard.

WHOLE SHOT > Michael Dunlop on his way to the Supertwin double and his 29th TT win on the Paton S1-R we tested in the previous issue of AMCN. He was on track to set a new lap record before the race was shortened. Isle of Man TT

MASTER CYLINDERS FIVE OR MORE 60 amcn.com.au
As Great Wall unveils its eight-cylinder tourer we look at other bike brands who have pushed the boundaries ingles, twins, triples and fours. This quartet of engine formats – albeit in a broad variety of configurations – has dominated motorcycling’s entire history and it’s nearly impossible to make a logical argument that any bike needs anything more than four cylinders. Four cylinders give enough power for today’s generation of MotoGP racers, the fastest ever seen and so rapid that their performance has to be reined in by rule changes in 2027. Fours can also be made to have perfect primary balance, are easily sculpted to fit within the confines of a motorcycle frame, and can be arranged in an array of formats and capacities to suit virtually any purpose. But we’re human; it’s in our nature to want more. And it’s in that vein that we find a small array of motorcycles that, whether in pursuit of absolute performance or purely for bragging rights, have ventured to have a cylinder count of more than four. China’s Great Wall Souo Motorcycle company is leaping in at the deep end. A newly-formed subsidiary of car and ute maker Great Wall Motors, the company’s first motorcycle is a vast tourer designed with the simple aim of out-doing the most elaborate and well-equipped models made by any existing bike brand. Taking the Honda Goldwing as its baseline – one of the few bikes to step beyond the four-cylinder mark with its flat-six engine – Souo’s first effort has a flat-eight engine. If it successfully reaches showrooms, and there’s little reason to believe it won’t thanks to the might of the GWM empire behind the project, it will be the first purpose-made, eightcylinder motorcycle engine ever to reach mass production. But there have been plenty of engines before that break the fourcylinder barrier… amcn.com.au 61
EIGHT-CYLINDER BIKES CURTISS V-8 EIGHT-CYLINDER bikes might be few and far between but the idea has been around since the dawn of motorcycling. We can go back nearly 120 years to find the first viable eight-cylinder machine in the form of the one-off Curtiss V-8. It was built in 1906 by Glenn Curtiss, who had been manufacturing motorcycles since 1902 and had recently expanded to build engines for the new-fangled flying machines that were springing up in the wake of the Wright brothers’ escapades. He made MOTO GUZZI OTTOCILINDRI THE ABILITY of eight cylinders to push the boundaries of motorcycle performance was proven again in the mid-1950s when Moto Guzzi took to the grand prix circuit with its V8 – or Ottocilindri – racer. The Guzzi was raced in a period of unprecedented diversity in a 500cc GP class that was still in its infancy. In a field that saw singles, twins and four-cylinder machines all proving competitive, it was jaw-dropping. 62 amcn.com.au the, er, logical decision to slide one of his 4410cc, 30kW (40hp), air-cooled Model B-8 aircraft engines, with eight individual cylinders mounted on a common crankshaft, into a motorcycle chassis to set a new land-speed record. While unofficial, as there were few rules at the time to standardise speed records, Curtiss was measured at 219.31km/h in January 1907 on Ormond Beach in Florida. It was a record that would outlive Curtiss himself, not being bettered by an officially-measured land speed attempt until August 1930. Revving to 12,000rpm and managing a peak of around 60kW (80hp), the V8 Guzzi could hit 275km/h – far more than its rivals. But racing is about more than just power and top speed. The innovative Moto Guzzi retired before reaching the flag more often than not, and when it was running struggled with suspension, brakes and tyres that weren’t designed to cope with its performance. It disappeared from GP competition, along with Moto Guzzi itself, at the end of the 1957 season having failed to live up to the promise of its innovative layout.
MORBIDELLI V8 HAVING FIELDED small-capacity GP NORTON NEMESIS NORTON MIGHT be on an even keel today under the stewardship of India’s TVS, but for decades the brand was in limbo – punctuated by sporadic revival attempts. Undoubtably the most ambitious was the Norton Nemesis. Conceived in the late 1990s, the Nemesis was intended to be a V8powered halo product with recordsetting levels of performance, while Norton’s main output was envisaged to be a range of 750cc four-cylinder machines imagined as WorldSBK contenders. The whole project was originally intended to go under the March name, with engines created by Al Melling, who had a history in F1 engine development. For the Nemesis, he’d mate two of the 750cc fours together on a common crankcase to create a 1500cc V8 using the same 73mm bore and 44.7mm stroke as the proposed four-cylinders. Rebranded the Norton Nemesis, the V8 project rapidly gained traction with huge media interest. Two versions were envisioned: a base model making 175kW (235hp) and another putting out 209kW (280hp) thanks to different cylinder heads with three spark plugs per cylinder and a 14,000rpm rev peak, 2000rpm higher than the standard model. Norton even said the higher-spec bike would have a semi-auto transmission, with a push-button clutch used only for starting and stopping, although none of that ever came to reality. As well as the V8 engine, the bike featured unconventional suspension, with cast aluminium fork sliders that incorporated the brake calipers, and oversized hollow axles. Although widely dismissed as vapourware, the prototype Nemesis was a genuine, running machine. After decades on display at the British Motorcycle Museum it was recently fired up for the first time in years and is now undergoing a meticulous rebuild by engineering wizard Allen Millyard, who’s built several multi-cylinder oneoff s including a Dodge Viper-powered V10 and Kawasaki-based 1600cc V8 and 2300cc V12 monsters. bikes from the late 1960s until the early 1980s, Giancarlo Morbidelli’s eponymous bike company disappeared from the public eye for a decade before remerging in a brief flash of glory with its planned V8 tourer in 1992. First shown with gawky styling by Pininfarina – a styling house that’s turned out countless fabulous Ferraris but seemed to struggle when it came to making proportions work on motorcycles – the Morbidelli packed a longitudinal 848cc engine making a respectable-for-the-era 90kW (120hp) and, like the new Souo, played on the eight snaking exhausts emerging from its bespoke engine. Positioned as a sports-tourer, the bike was intended to carry an astronomical price tag and appeal to the wealthiest clientele. It’s a strategy that might work today, when there seems to be an endless supply of customers for limited-edition motorcycles, but 30 years ago the customers weren’t forthcoming. A restyled version of the bike, arguably prettier than the Pininfarina original but certainly less distinctive, was shown a couple of years later to a similar apathy from customers, and the project folded after just three or four prototypes had been made. HONDA NR750 OFFICIALLY, HONDA’S NR750 street bike and the NR500 racers that preceded it all use V4 engines – but in reality, they’re closer to being V8s. The NR500 was sparked by Honda’s desire to win in 500cc GP racing using a four-stroke against a field of two-strokes. Making its debut in 1979, the project used four oval cylinders, each essentially doing the job of two cylinders from a V8. That meant each piston was held by two conrods, and each combustion chamber housed no fewer than eight valves – four intake and four exhaust. Honda knew that to make a four-stroke beat the four-cylinder, 500cc two-strokes it needed an engine that could rev twice as high. A V8 with tiny pistons and valves would have been the answer, but since the GP rules at the time didn’t allow more than four cylinders, the oval piston NR was born. Today the NR500 GP project is often unfairly seen as a failure, largely because Honda gave up on the idea so fast. It was only entered in eight championship rounds and, while engineers involved believed it could have been developed into a winner given enough time, Honda switched to twostrokes and the multiple-title-winning NS and NSR models. The development work from the NR500 was carried over to the NR750 endurance racebike in the 1980s, and eventually to the limited-edition NR750 street bike in 1992. This is a vastly expensive machine that remains a collector’s dream today. amcn.com.au 63
SIX-CYLINDER BIKES BENELLI SEI THE INLINE six-cylinder engine is, arguably, as close to perfection as you can get with a combustion engine short of a V12 – something that hasn’t been tried on two wheels apart from the occasional one-off. Perfect primary and secondary balance mean inline sixes can be uncannily smooth and, from a performance point of view, that trait encourages more revs and more power. Benelli’s Sei was the first production six-cylinder machine, starting out as a 750 back in 1972. Bear in mind that the first modern, mass-produced four-cylinder – Honda’s CB750 – had only appeared three years earlier, so this was a notable escalation in hostilities in a burgeoning battle for technical supremacy. While 57kW (76hp) from 747cc doesn’t sound much now, in its day that was superbike territory. As well there’s never been another production six-cylinder roadbike as small as the first-gen Sei. In 1979, the second-generation version grew to 906cc. Despite remaining on sale for a decade it never proved a showroom success, hampered by a high price and no real performance advantage compared to more affordable four-cylinder rivals. Air cooling, a single-overhead-cam and two-valvesper-cylinder looked increasingly old-hat, despite the high cylinder count, in comparison to more race-inspired DOHC, four-valve and water-cooled rivals. HONDA CBX FOR MANY the Honda CBX is still the definitive six-cylinder motorcycle, with an imposingly-wide engine and six chrome header pipes. It looked every inch like the engine was too big for the bike it had been shoehorned into, not least because, unlike the Benelli Sei, it had bulky DOHC cylinder heads and six individual carbs. While the Benelli Sei struggled to get a performance edge over its four-cylinder rivals, the CBX had no such issues. Coming in at 1047cc it was substantially bigger than Honda’s CB750 and put out 78kW (104hp) in its initial form. It was a relative sales success, too, but even so remained a short-lived model, dropped from the range in 1982 as a new generation of liquid-cooled models started to take precedence. 64 amcn.com.au BMW K 1600 ALTHOUGH THE Goldwing plugged on with its flat-six engine the six-cylinder format appeared all but dead at the turn of the millennium, so BMW’s decision to revive the idea of an across-the-frame inline six for the K 1600, which made its debut in 2010, came as something of a surprise. Reaching full production a year later, the K 1600 has spawned a range of models including the GT, the GTL, the Grand America and the K 1600 B bagger. Like other sixes mentioned here, the bike’s priority is smoothness rather than outright performance, although with 118kW (158hp) on tap it’s not short of the latter and remains the most powerful sixcylinder motorcycle ever to reach true mass production.
HONDA GOLDWING HOREX VR6 WHILE INLINE sixes have an edge on smoothness and the Goldwing’s flat six offers some benefits in terms of packaging there have been few attempts to build road-going bikes around V6 engines. There’s an arguably good reason for that. V6 engines lack the purity of balance that makes inline sixes so appealing, and actually suffer some of the same difficulties as triples when it comes to getting them to run smoothly. They’ve become popular in cars thanks to their relative compactness, though, and the same reasoning lies behind the development of the Horex VR6. Although far from a sales success, the Horex VR6 – launched back in 2010 – took an intriguing direction. Its homebrewed 1218cc V6 has an incredibly tight V-angle of just 15 degrees and takes inspiration from Volkswagen’s VR5 and VR6 engines by using a single cylinder head that spans both banks. However, where the VW car engines use a single camshaft for each bank of cylinders, the Horex has a unique threecamshaft set-up and three valves per cylinder – two inlet and one exhaust. The rearmost camshaft operates the inlet valves of the rear cylinder bank, the middle camshaft carries the rear bank’s exhaust cam lobes and the front bank’s inlet cam lobes, and the front camshaft acts on the front bank’s exhaust valves. The narrow-angle V of the engine means that it’s theoretically much more compact than either an inline engine or a wider-angle V could be. With just one cylinder head across both banks, the outright number of components is also lower. HONDA’S GOLDWING was already an established leader in the touring class for more than a decade before it adopted the flat-six engine layout that’s now synonymous with the model – and the clear inspiration for Great Wall’s new flat-eight tourer. The original version used a flat four, initially in 999cc form, back in 1974. That engine would grow with successive models to 1085cc, then 1182cc, but while charismatic and unusual the flat-four layout wasn’t as smooth as some rivals. The answer? Add two more cylinders, and with that the Goldwing as we know it was born in 1987. Unlike most other six-cylinder projects at the time, the ’Wing’s evolution to a six wasn’t a performance-oriented move. The new 1520cc engine put out 75kW (100hp) but, more importantly, managed 150Nm and didn’t need to be thrashed to get there. With equipment KAWASAKI Z1300 APPEARING A year after Honda’s CBX in 1979, Kawasaki’s Z1300 raised the six-cylinder bar. Sticking to the across-the-frame, inline six convention of the Benelli and Honda machines that came before it, the Z1300 was technologically a step ahead thanks to water cooling and would remain a levels and weight that the original four-cylinder Goldwing’s designers couldn’t have imagined, the GL1500 became the definitive example of motorcycle touring excess and its successors carry that mantle onward today and into the future. Growing to 1832cc in 2001, the ’Wing became the GL1800 with smoother styling and a new aluminium frame. It would live on that way for 17 years until the all-new version was introduced for the 2018 model year. Gaining unconventional, Hossackstyle front suspension and the option of a semi-automatic, dual-clutch transmission – both also copied by Great Wall’s new eight-cylinder model – the latest generation Goldwing remains a benchmark of the touring class, although today its lack of electronic rider aids, like radar cruise control, suggest a revamp is overdue. Over the years, the Goldwing’s flat six engine found its way into the Valkyrie and F6C cruisers as well as the limited-production Rune. pioneer later in life when it adopted fuel injection many years before it became the norm. With 1286cc, the Z1300 was one of the biggest and most powerful production bikes ever made at the time of its launch, boasting 89kW (119hp). By adopting a touringoriented role it enjoyed a decade-long lifespan even though motorcycles and their technology were completely transformed during the 1980s. amcn.com.au 65
RACING SIXES HONDA RC165, 166 AND 174 HAVING SEEN the success of MV Agusta’s four-cylinder racebikes in the 1950s, Honda adopted a similar layout for its 250cc GP machines at the end of that decade. Inevitably it came to the same conclusion – an ever-greater number of increasingly diminutive cylinders could pay dividends in terms of higher revs and more power. The result was an explosion of multi-cylinder racebikes – 50cc twins, 125cc fours and, of course, a series of six-cylinder competition machines. MV AGUSTA 6 CILINDRI MV AGUSTA had become a dominant force in 1950s GP racing thanks to its pioneering four-cylinder bikes so by the latter half of the decade a six-cylinder machine seemed the obvious way forward. On paper it could be smoother, higher-revving and more powerful, and the company’s experience with fours put it in good stead to create such a bike. The resulting racer, the 500 6 Cilindri, first emerged in 1957 but didn’t race until the following year, when it retired from its single competitive event. A 350cc version was also built but never raced. MV might not have reaped the rewards from the project, but the same idea would re-emerge a few years later to much more success when Honda pushed ahead with its six-cylinder racers, which in turn prompted MV to reinvestigate the idea of six-cylinder racebikes in the late 1960s, developing a new 350cc design. But it proved unnecessary and the project was halted when a four-cylinder limit was introduced to the championship. LAVERDA V6 WITH THE exception of the Horex VR6, V6s have been few and far between in motorcycling, so the Laverda V6 endurance racer is perhaps the bestknown example of the breed. Unveiled in 1977, the Laverda V6 was intended to be a racer but the idea was that it would spawn a generation of luxury touring bikes sharing the same engine. The engine was developed by Maserati’s Giulio Alfieri, who’d previously been responsible for the V6 66 amcn.com.au The 3RC164, RC165 and RC166 were all 250cc six-cylinder racers, while the RC174 was a slightly enlarged 297cc version. All competed in a brief window between 1965 and 1967. Today the bikes are favourites at any event where they’re given demonstration runs, with an ear-bleeding noise that’s quite disproportionate from their tiny engines. Honda quit GP racing at the end of 1967 and the FIM introduced limits on cylinder counts in each class, bringing an end to one of the most rapid periods of technical development that the sport has ever seen. engines used in the Maserati Merak and Citroen SM. These were unusual in that they were derived from an earlier V8 engine, and as such featured a 90-degree vee angle that’s far from ideal for a V6 engine. Despite being conceived as a V6, the 1000cc Laverda engine he designed also used a 90-degree vee, a layout that introduces headaches when it comes to reducing vibration. Despite a well-publicised entry in the 1978 Bol d’Or, the Laverda V6 didn’t make the finish and wouldn’t race again.
THE NEARLY SIXES SUZUKI STRATOSPHERE CONCEPT BIKES are often forgettable designer dalliances with little to no chance of reaching production but once in a while one comes along that looks so tempting it’s disappointing to know that you’ll never be able to buy it. The Suzuki Stratosphere concept that was unveiled at the 2005 Tokyo Motor Show falls into the latter camp. With styling that harked back to the Katana and still looks sharp today, nearly two decades on, the Stratosphere’s HONDA CBX REVIVAL IF THE Stratosphere was tempting because it was so close to reality, the revived six-cylinder ‘CBX’ that turned up in Honda’s design registrations back in 2018 is intriguing because it never made any sort of official appearance. Detailed computer models revealed a machine with a faux-finned, retroinspired, DOHC six-cylinder engine – it was water-cooled really, with a substantial radiator ahead of it – mounted in a tubular frame not unlike that of the CB1100 and wrapped in party piece was an 1100cc straightsix engine that was claimed to make 134kW (180hp), a figure that still sounds prett y stout today and was world-beating back then. Video proved the bike was a runner, and there briefl y appeared to be a genuine possibility that Suzuki might push the project forward to production. But with the onset of the global financial crisis in 2008 and the huge cutbacks to R&D budgets that came with it, the Stratosphere remains an intriguing glimpse of what might have been. bodywork that had the look of a 1970s endurance racer. An USD fork and radial brakes pointed towards modern handling and performance, and the presence of components like mirrors, licence plate brackets and even pillion footpegs all pointed towards it being a genuine prospect for production. But it was never shown, either as a concept or a planned production bike, suggesting that this is a project that somehow got cancelled relatively late in its development. The real bike probably lurks somewhere in the depths of Honda’s R&D department but, like so many other prototypes, it’s unlikely ever to be seen in public. amcn.com.au 67
FIVE-CYLINDER BIKES HONDA RC149 FIVE-CYLINDER engines are, as a whole, something of an oddity. They don’t have the perfect primary balance of an inline four or the ideal primary and secondary balance of an inline six, but they can be relatively smooth-running and as such have appeared on occasion in motorcycles – albeit only racers. Back in the mid-1960s, when it was developing six-cylinder 250s and 50cc twins, Honda struck upon the idea of using the same cylinder dimensions of its 50cc two-cylinder racers – 33mm PROTON KR5 IN 2002, the opening year of the four-stroke MotoGP series, teams were allowed to compete with year-old two-strokes against the new generation of four-stroke racers and that’s precisely what Kenny Roberts’ Proton-backed team did – sticking with its old V3 stroker, which also became the last two-stroke ever to sit on pole position at a top-category race when Jeremy McWilliams went quickest at Phillip Island. It was a cunning move, though, as it meant KR could see what direction the big factory teams took under the new 68 amcn.com.au four-stroke rules. Unsurprisingly it concluded that a four-stroke V5 – like the dominant Honda RC211V – was the way to go in 2003. It wasn’t that easy, though. The KR5 wasn’t ready at the start of the year, so the old two-stroke triples were forced back into duty. When it hit the track, the results were no better than riders McWilliams and Nobuatsu Aoki had achieved on the two-stroke. After an equally underwhelming 2004 season, the Roberts V5 was retired (although the team would return to a V5, this time using Honda’s engine, for 2006 after a dire fling with KTM V4s in 2005). bore and 29mm stroke – to create a 125cc GP bike with five cylinders in a row. The result was the 1966 RC149, a 21,500rpm screamer that became the last four-stroke bike ever to win the 125cc GP rider and manufacturer titles, even against two-stroke rivals, in a year when Honda took a clean sweep of championships across all five GP classes. Such complex machines were then outlawed, leading to Honda quitting GPs for over a decade and the dominance of two-strokes in the years that followed.

FOUR DECADES EDDIE LAWSON Four decades after Eddie Lawson clinched his maiden world title, we look back at the year that made him 70 amcn.com.au
orty years ago, America’s Eddie Lawson surprised many grand prix insiders and fans by winning the world 500 championship in his second season. Yamaha had last won the premier-class riders’ title with Kenny Roberts in 1980 and no Dunlop rider had taken the 500 crown since Giacomo Agostini in 1975. Freddie Spencer was the hot tip to retain the title in 1984. Roberts had retired, Honda now had a V4 machine and Michelin had pioneered radial rear motorcycle tyres. Dunlop’s racing tyres were still cross-ply. It did not pan out that way; not even close. Take a bow US journalist John Ulrich, who predicted not just that Lawson would win but why, saying Honda would falter once maybe twice and ‘Steady Eddie’ would be right there. ‘Steady’ was a misnomer, by the way. He progressed in one year from the guy Europeans reckoned was unworthy of the number-two seat in the Agostini-owned works Yamaha team to world champion. The truth was, Lawson already knew how to stitch a title season together. In 1980-82 with Kawasaki he won two American 250 championships and two – very nearly three – American Superbike crowns. He finished at amcn.com.au 71
FOUR DECADES EDDIE LAWSON 1 every GP start in 1983. His crew chief that year, Queenslander David Cullen, reckoned Lawson simply lived to win races. Cullen reflected on the 1983 season for this story. “Eddie was told it should be a learning year (but) by the end of the year he was beating Randy Mamola on the Suzuki to finish third in races. It took him a while to adjust to being in Europe and I thought it would take him a bit longer to win a title. He was going pretty well but hadn’t shown the form that he would do it. He hadn’t shown fully what he was capable of. He received no credit from the press for what he achieved.” Insight into Lawson along with some surprises were gained in a lengthy interview at Silverstone between Friday’s first and second practice sessions at the 1984 British GP. Eddie’s new crew chief, Australia’s 1969 world 250 champion Kel Carruthers, had provided some background before I knocked on the door of his motorhome. Lawson opened the door, dressed in a tracksuit. No one else was there and, to my surprise, we talked right then. I had never met him and I wasn’t a GP pressroom regular, just an Australian journalist taking in some GPs during an extended European holiday with my wife, and only writing for Australian publications. Unthinkable today. Premier-class title leader riding for the biggest sponsor. You’d start with emails to the team press officer a month in advance and perhaps be allotted just 10 minutes on the Thursday. First impression? Fuller in the face than I expected at age 26. Large blue eyes. Quietly spoken. Candid, forthcoming, intelligent. Second fastest in the first practice session, a tenth of a second behind Raymond Roche (Honda triple with a factory engine) and thinking about the next session as we talked. It took a while for him to warm to his subject. Lawson’s friend Wayne Rainey, that year riding 2 3 1. Breakthrough moment for Eddie Lawson as he shares the podium with Raymond Roche and Barry Sheene in South Africa 2. Clear-eyed and thinking about the next qualifying session 3. Lawson’s first 500cc win was in the rain at Kyalami 4. The start of the French GP, where Lawson finished 5.8sec behind winner Freddie Spencer 5. Lawson gained earlier fame in the US winning two Superbike crowns for Kawasaki 6. Lawson and team manager Giacomo Agostini celebrate another win 7. Kawasaki created the 1983 KZ1000R Eddie Lawson Replica in honour of his US titles 8. Lawson hunts down Randy Mamola in the French GP FIRST IMPRESSION? LARGE BLUE EYES. QUIETLY SPOKEN. CANDID, FORTHCOMING, INTELLIGENT 72 amcn.com.au a Yamaha 250 for Kenny Roberts’ new team, reckoned Eddie was too quiet for his own good. Carruthers had told me why Eddie might be peeved: “The Italian press have written some ridiculous things about him.” Perhaps they felt they had some stake in the Yamaha team with Agostini in charge and Virginio Ferrari as number two. “Eddie is leading the championship and they’re saying he should be winning more races,” Carruthers said. “But if he crashed trying to win one they’d be the first to criticise him.” Compounding that, Carruthers explained, were the tyres. He reckoned the Dunlops had suited the circuits early in the season, not so much later on. As Motocourse editor Peter Clifford noted, Lawson missed the podium at Rijeka in Yugoslavia and Belgium, lacking traction. Not revealed by Carruthers or Lawson at Silverstone was that they had an improved package for Silverstone, ideas trialled two weeks earlier at the Laguna Seca US National race. In hindsight, that California meeting changed the last quarter of the 12-round championship. Spencer’s and Lawson’s nearest points threat Randy Mamola travelled there; Agostini thought better of allowing Lawson to ride. During practice Spencer ran out of brakes, crashed and reinjured a collarbone. He was never into riding unless 100 percent fit and hence did not travel to England. Roberts carried the Yamaha flag at Laguna Seca. He tested a shorter swingarm, new tyres and carburetion changes. Carruthers made a second
swingarm, 20mm shorter, so Lawson would have them in both bikes at the former RAF training airfield. Lawson loved the circuit, describing it to reporters as the finest in the world. Fast and safe. Some said he’d ridden his best race of 1983 to finish runner-up to Roberts in the second leg of a twopart race. The lap average speed of 192km/h meant it narrowly shaded Salzburgring as the fastest circuit on the calendar. There was news in the Honda camp too, as HRC continued development of its V4 machine. The NSR500 bike had broken cover during testing at a Surfers Paradise International Raceway in December 1983. Michelin used the same test for Spencer to try its radial rear tyre. Pictures from that test and subsequent reveals showed an unusual bike. The fuel tank was under the engine and the exhausts snaked over the top, covered by a dummy tank. It had one crankshaft and employed crankcase reed induction compared with the three-cylinder NS500 triple’s piston-reed arrangement. Yamaha’s twin-crank 0W76 had the same induction technology for 1984, replacing the discvalve system of its 1983 0W69 machines. Yamaha kept that change secret in the early-season GPs. Honda and Yamaha used the same general engine architecture from 1984 to the end of the 500 era in seasons 2001-02. There were, however, some problems for the new Honda NSR500. Spencer was the only rider using it and he was a non-starter in the opening GP in South Africa after a carbon-fibre wheel broke. Lawson, riding in his first wet-weather GP, won 4 7 5 6 8 amcn.com.au 73
FOUR DECADES EDDIE LAWSON from Honda’s Roche on a triple and Barry Sheene on a 1983 Suzuki. Spencer won next time out at Misano, but the V4 wasn’t proving easy to ride or noticeably quicker than the factory triples. Spencer crashed the V4 during the Transatlantic match-race series and did not appear at Jarama. Lawson won there. Second place went to Randy Mamola, who had been without a ride since Suzuki folded its works team at the end of 1983. Manager Jim Doyle had secured Honda NS500s for him, with New Zealand’s Mike Sinclair as crew chief. Round four in Austria showed the depths of Spencer’s problems. He could not stay with Lawson or the triples of Mamola and Ron Haslam, until Mamola slowed dramatically in the last lap and a half to gift him second place. Many had expected the V4 Honda to be a missile there. During 1 the next GP at the new N¾rburgring Honda retrieved one of its 1983 triples from its base in Belgium and Spencer won on it. He won again on an uprated V4 in France and claimed victory in Yugoslavia with a four-cylinder bike. Meantime, HRC had Mamola and Haslam try the V4. Mamola won at Assen and Spencer on a triple in Belgium. Carruthers’ briefed me on the Friday morning at Silverstone: “Eddie had a problem in that he won three of the first four races, then in Italy he had trouble with the tyres and in the next few races he had a lot of trouble with the tyres. The tyres are really good on fast corners, but we have traction problems on slow corners, and most of the circuits in the second half of the season have lots of second and third-gear corners. So Eddie found himself in the fortunate or unfortunate position of not having to win races.” Ulrich had told me Lawson could be moody and riding for placings wasn’t his natural game. “Ideally, you should win, because that’s the only way to make sure,” Carruthers said. “But what happened was he had a little tyre problem or you had a race like the Dutch TT where Eddie said he could have beaten Randy Mamola if Randy had been on his own. Randy is good enough that you just can’t pull up, pass him and disappear. You have to race him for a few laps and wear him down. “Eddie started to do that, then they were baulked in traffic and Raymond Roche arrived. Eddie was frightened of getting knocked down or something. So he thought, hey, this isn’t worth the risk and back off a bit and finished third. I know all being well Eddie can 74 amcn.com.au 2 3 run with Freddie Spencer. In France, Eddie’s bike wasn’t running too well but he knew he had to beat Randy for second place. On the last lap he did a really good job by pulling out and beating Randy. At N¾rburgring in the German Grand Prix he was going well until someone ran him off the track. “After that he thought, I am in second place and I won’t catch Freddie without doing something stupid.” Lawson took up the story: “I thought Freddie and I would race it out. He’s had bad luck at the races we have gone well and the ones he’s gone well, we’ve had bad luck. There have been some good ones and a lot of disappointing ones. The
4 1. Freddie Spencer crashed at an international meeting at Laguna Seca in 1984 causing him to miss some vital rounds 2. Spencer and Lawson on the startline of the French GP 3. Lawson learnt to feed on negative comments and turn them into a motivation to win, big-time 4. Raymond Roche, Freddie Spencer, Ron Haslam and Eddie Lawson create a freight train of GP bikes in 1984 5. Lawson at Silverstone in 1983, where he finished just off the podium in a hint of what was to come the next season 6. Barry Sheene may have been coming to the end of his career but he set the fastest lap at Kyalami and regularly challenged the 1984 title contenders 5 German GP we got bumped off the track early in the race. I was disappointed with that. Then we had carburetion troubles and tyre problems at certain tracks. “You don’t win world championships by falling down. It was a difficult situation. You can’t made mistakes, to fall down or anything, and you pray the bike doesn’t break. It’s better to just go out and ride as hard as you can go. That is the way I like to ride. I feel more comfortable that way. But you feel the pressure that you just can’t blow it. I would sit there wondering, well, should I try to win and fall down, then someone would ask why try so hard. And if you didn’t win, they’d want to know why you didn’t win. “So I felt pressure that I just couldn’t make any mistakes, especially with the points situation the way it was. If Freddie and I had been very close on points that would have been no problem. You just 6 LAWSON WAS TIRED OF HAVING HIS EFFORTS DEVALUED BY COMMENTS THAT SPENCER WASN’T IN THE RACE OR HAD PROBLEMS race as hard as you could to win. Last year was my first year and no pressure. I could go out and learn the machines and the tracks. This year it was different to what I expected and it was difficult. The hardest thing I’ve had to do.” Lawson was more forthcoming on the races he’d won. Sure, he’s proud of winning them but there was a message: he was tired of having his efforts devalued by comments that Spencer wasn’t in the race or had problems. “South Africa was run in the pouring rain, but I felt really good about that race,” he said. “Freddie wasn’t there but I feel strongly that if he had been there he would have got beat. You can’t say whether it would have been that way, but that’s how I feel. He wasn’t at Spain and I won that race.” But you won there on a circuit that shouldn’t have suited your bike, I ventured. He was especially peeved about the Austrian GP, saying “we won that race fair and square”, only to hear excuses about the Spencer and Mamola machines. Mamola ’fessed up some time later that he had let Spencer through to second. Competition was on in earnest for places in Honda’s 1985 team. Mamola did his case no harm by opting to ride the V4 at Silverstone. The eight-rider front row was: Roche, Didier de Radigues, Lawson, Mamola, Haslam, Virginio Ferrari, Sheene and Australian private entrant Paul Lewis on a Suzuki prepared by Gary Flood. Wayne Gardner, Haslam, Takazumi Katayama, Roche and Didier de Radigues had factory Honda engines. According to the English-language TV commentary, Lewis had qualified on a set of Gardner’s Dunlops. It was a barn-stormer 28-lap race. The Hondatriple crew enjoyed the early glory until laps eight and nine, when Mamola and Lawson took up the running and increased the pace. Lawson spent those laps taking tight lines into corners to avoid the risk of riders diving under him and knocking him over. Roche’s machine broke a wheel and he let it fall on the outfield in disgust. De Radigues later retired when his drive chain stretched. However the big drama was from wildlife. Mamola struck a hare with his machine and Lawson with his knee. Fortunately the championship top two stayed on board. In the final laps Lawson decided a sure amcn.com.au 75
FOUR DECADES EDDIE LAWSON 2 1 12 points was the best plan for the championship. Mamola won by two and a half seconds. Haslam was third, followed by Ferrari (his best result of the year), Sheene and Gardner. Lewis was a non-finisher. Lawson won the next round in Sweden and the title. Mamola retired with a throttle-cable problem, Roche finished second and Gardner third, his first GP podium. Mamola had some consolation by winning the final round at Mugello in a Honda-triple podium lock-out. The top two factories made key changes for 1985. Honda built Spencer a new V4 with the fuel tank in the conventional position and made a special 250 so he could contest two championships. Gardner, Haslam, Katayama and Mamola had factory NS500 triples. Yamaha switched to Michelin tyres and hired Roche to replace Ferrari. Agostini reportedly reduced Lawson’s salary as world champion to less than his 1984 fee. As a side note, Wayne Rainey finished eighth in the 250 championship for Kenny Roberts’ fledging race team. It was a low-budget effort using Yamaha TZ250s with Hans Hummel cylinders, equipment virtually all the Yamaha 250s used that year. He struggled with push starts but did take a podium finish at Misano. The races were absorbing, typically with eight or nine riders in the leading group. This was very exciting for spectators. Carruthers countered by saying this meant “there was no one really good in there”. He reckoned Rainey had a future. Some European scribes looked at eighth place and decided when Rainey reappeared as a 500 GP rider in 1988 he would not be a title contender. Rainey did not forget that. He won a 500 GP in his first 500 season and in the next four years finished 2-1-1-1. 3 1. Two-time title winner Barry Sheene was reunited with Suzuki for 1984 and aged 33 years was battling a new generation of rising GP stars, including Lawson 2. Lawson waits while Radar Cullen, crouched beside the bike, and crew work on his Yamaha 3. Lawson on top of the podium with Spencer and Mamola after the Austrian GP, his third win in four races AGOSTINI REPORTEDLY REDUCED LAWSON’S SALARY AS WORLD CHAMPION TO LESS THAN HIS 1984 FEE 76 amcn.com.au 1984 500 GRAND PRIX SEASON RESULTS • South Africa Lawson, Roche, Sheene • Italy Spencer, Lawson, Roche • Spain Lawson, Mamola, Roche • Austria Lawson, Spencer, Mamola • Germany Spencer, Lawson, Mamola • France Spencer, Lawson, Mamola • Yugoslavia Spencer, Mamola, Roche • Netherlands Mamola, Roche, Lawson • Belgium Spencer, Mamola, Roche • Great Britain Mamola, Lawson, Haslam • Sweden Lawson, Roche, Gardner • San Marino Mamola, Roche, Haslam Championship points: Lawson, 142; Mamola, 111; Roche, 99; Spencer, 87; Haslam, 77; Sheene, 34; Gardner, 33; van Dulmen, 25; de Radigues, 24; Ferrari, 22. Christian Sarron (Yamaha) won the British 250 GP and Angel Nieto (Garelli) the 125 GP. They went on to win those championships.
KISKA.COM Photo: R.Schedl 1390 SUPER DUKE R REAL AND RAW, NO BULLSHIT. AVAILABLE NOW KTM.COM Please make no attempt to imitate the illustrated riding scenes, always wear protective clothing and observe the applicable provisions of the road traffic regulations! The illustrated vehicles may vary in selected details from the production models and some illustrations feature optional equipment available at additional cost.
AMCN RIDES. CENTRAL WEST, NSW T his awesome dirt route is one for the adventure bike riders out there. Much of it is on unsealed tracks and, although it is relatively easy going on a dual-sport bike, it is beyond the scope of most roadbikes with road rubber – although not impossible if you are brave-hearted, foolhardy, or both. It is a great ride through some typical Central West New South Wales scenery; plenty of wildlife and points of interest along the way. Best of all you will find very few other vehicles along most of the route except for the occasional farm ute or lost tourist. From Wellington, take the highway north from town then turn right towards Gulgong on Goolma Rd. Twelve Mile Rd forks to the right after a few kilometres and winds past rural properties as you head east. We like to take the unsealed dirt road signposted to Wuuluman on the right, which runs southeast before eventually linking with Uungula Rd, thereby extending the dirt riding component as much as possible. 78 amcn.com.au A right turn on to Uungula Rd then takes you on a loop to the Cudgegong River, and then back towards to Twelve Mile Rd. The track is fairly well maintained at either end but deteriorates slightly in the middle where it is less used. The surface is dirt through several cuttings and you will encounter several shallow water crossings on after even moderate rainfall. The trail opens up a little after it meets the Cudgegong River to become a series of fast gravel sweepers. As the track passes directly through private property for some of its length camping is not an option, although there are spots to pull up and enjoy the view. Turning right on Twelve Mile Rd will take you south towards Yarrabin where another right turn on to Yarrabin Rd will take you to the Cudgegong River Park. This is a good spot to camp overnight on the banks of Lake Burrendong where you are able to set up anywhere on the property that appeals to you. Returning back along the sealed Yarrabin Rd 1. Take Uungula Rd to extend your dirt-trail adventure 2. Set up for the night at Cudgegong River Park 3. It’s times like this you’d wished you’d packed a collapsible fishing rod in the panniers 4. The Macquarie River crossing is usually doable but not if there has been a lot of rain in the area 5. Hill End reeks of genuine gold rush history so plan to spend a night at the quaint Royal Hotel to get the full experience 6. An old shaft at the Ophir Goldfield Reserve shows the effort miners put into finding this precious metal more than a century ago
1 THE ESSENTIALS DETOUR > Plenty of fuel is available at Wellington and Mudgee, but nothing in-between. Although if you take our overnight camping suggestion there is PULP available at the holiday park. As you head towards Mudgee from Yarrabin the road intersects the Hill End road. A right turn here will take you into the historic town of Hill End where you can access the top of the Bridle Track, which will take you south to Bathurst. For the more adventurous riders, try the Dixons Long Point road on the right just before you get into Hill End. The riding is mainly easy-going dirt but includes a fairly deep crossing of the Macquarie River at the bottom of the gorge, which can be tricky on heavier bikes and is definitely best avoided after extended heavy rain. On the other side of the river crossing the track continues on to either Orange, or Bathurst via the Ophir Goldfield Reserve. 2 > Camping is the best option along this route with good facilities on both sides of Lake Burrendong, as well as at the Ophir Goldfields Reserve if you take the suggested detour. > Wellington and Mudgee have good food and general supply options if you want to stock up before heading out along the tracks. THINGS TO DO Lake Burrendong is a popular fishing spot with several different species of fish caught regularly. There are plenty of camping spots right on the water’s edge so you can chuck a line in easily while you are relaxing after a day in the saddle. 3 5 Hill End is a great little historic town to walk around. Many of the old buildings have been restored to their original state and offer a sense of bygone times. There are also a number of relics from the gold rush lying around to add an authentic feel to the town. FIX IT Your best bet for mechanical support is Mudgee. Mudgee Honda Centre can be found at 137 Church St, Mudgee ((02) 6372 3100). It’s open Saturday mornings and will do its best to help out with tyre and basic workshop repairs. If you are stuck in Hill End, try and find the owner of the local bakery, who is motorcycle savvy and usually happy to help out, with either a pie or a spanner, or both. 4 SLEEP Reflections Holiday Parks Cudgegong River has accommodation options and good, clean amenities. The kiosk has some basic food supplies and hot food, as well as coffee. They also have PULP on site, which is a bonus. Phone (02) 6373 3695 for more details, but bookings for campsites are not generally required. FUEL UP Busy Bee Roadhouse Sydney Road, Mudgee, NSW. (02) 6372 1545 Caltex Service Station 128 Lee St, Wellington, NSW. (02) 6845 2684 EAT If you extend your ride through Hill End we can recommend the Royal Hotel for food and accommodation. (02) 6337 8261. 6 via a nice set of medium-speed corners takes you to Hill End Rd where a left turn takes you to Mudgee, and a right turn leads to the village of Hill End. There is a great selection of unsealed roads throughout this region that are easy to link up, creating some awesome riding loops between the small towns and villages of the Central West. So plan your route over an evening beer. This particular riding route is only around 80km from Wellington to Yarrabin, and then another 40km into Mudgee from the camping reserve on the lake. It is an excellent ride on an adventure touring bike with good riding surfaces and scenery, and plenty of options in the area to extend your ride in any direction. amcn.com.au 79
EVENTS. YOUR SOCIAL LISTINGS RACING WHAT, WHERE & WHEN Having been signed to the factory team for 2025 will Marc Marquez get updated parts for his Gresini Ducati when MotoGP resumes? Rd6 19-21 Jul, Brands Hatch, KEN Rd7 9-11 Aug, Thruxton, HAM Rd8 24-26 Aug, Cadwell Park, LIN Rd9 13-15 Sep, Oulton Park, CHS Rd10 27-27 Sep, Donington Park, LCE Rd11 11-23 Oct, Brands Hatch, KEN INAUGURAL FIM WOMEN’S WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP Rd 2 12-14 July, Donington Park, UK Rd 3 9-11 Aug, Algarve, PT Rd4 20–22 Sept, Cremona, IT** Rd 5 11–13 Oct, Estoril, ES Rd6 18-20 Oct, Jerez , ES INAUGURAL FIM INTERCONTINENTAL GAMES Nov 30-Dec 1 Jerez, Spain MOTOAMERICA Rd6 28-30 Jun, Ridge Motorsports Park, WA Rd7 12-14 Jul, Laguna Seca, CA Rd8 16-18 Aug, Mid-Ohio, OH Rd9 13-15 Sep, Circuit of the Americas, TX Rd10 27-29 Sep, New Jersey M’sports Park, NJ OFF-ROAD RACING PRO MX CHAMPIONSHIP Rd5 23 June, Murray Bridge, SA Rd6 21 Jul, Toowoomba, Qld Rd7 11 Aug, MX Farm Queensland, Gympie, Qld Rd8 17-18 Aug, Queensland Moto Park, Qld AUSTRALIAN SUPERCROSS CHAMPIONSHIP Rd1 12 Oct, Kayo Stadium, Redcliffe, Qld Rd2 2 Nov, WIN Stadium, Wollongong, NSW Rds 3-4 TBC AUSTRALIAN JUNIOR MOTOCROSS CHAMPIONSHIP Sept 24-28, Bunbury, WA AUSTRALIAN OFF-ROAD CHAMPIONSHIP Rds7-8 27-28 July, Coulson, Qld Rds9-10 24-25 Aug, venue TBC, SA Rds11-12 14-15 Sept, Nowra, NSW AUSSIE FLAT TRACK NATIONALS Rd1 27 July, Appin (flat track layout), NSW Rd2 28 July, Appin (TT layout), NSW Rd3 31 Aug, Brisbane (flat track layout), Qld Rd4 1 Sep, Brisbane (TT layout), Qld Rd5 16 Nov, Gunnedah (flat track layout), NSW Rd6 17 Nov, Gunnedah (TT layout), NSW AUSTRALIAN DIRT TRACK, TRACK CHAMPS Senior Dirt Track 5-6 Oct, Gunyarra, Qld Junior Track 10-11 Aug, Forbes, NSW Junior Dirt 28-29 Sep, Mildura, Vic ENDURO GP WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP Rd4 21-23 Jun, Bettola, IT Rd5 12-14 Jul, Gelnica, SI Rd6 2-4 Aug, Rhayader, Wales, UK Rd7 13-15 Sep, Brioude, FR (First two rounds and GPs of Italy, Wales and France form the five-event Women’s Enduro World Championship.) FIM JUNIOR MOTOCROSS WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP July 12-14, Circuit Kamperweg Heerde, Netherlands 2024 TRIAL DES NATIONS Sept 21-22, Pobladura De Las Regueras, Spain RIDE DAYS & SCHOOLS Phillip Island Ride Days / 0490 281 840 Phillip Island, Vic Sydney Motorsport Park Ride Days/0490 281 840 SMSP, NSW Murray Valley Training Co 0459 415 787 Barnawartha North, Vic 80 amcn.com.au Champion’s Ride Days (07) 3287 4144 Broadford, Vic Collie Motorplex, WA Morgan Park, Qld The Bend, SA California Superbike School / 1300 793 423 Phillip Island, Vic SMSP, NSW Broadford, Vic Morgan Park Qld Trakdayz 0401 484 898 Wanneroo, WA Mount Gambier MCC Coaching / Ride Days 0448 951 163 Mac Park, SA Ride-Tek MTA 1300 788 382 Sandown, Vic Top Rider 1300 131 362 Various venues, Qld Ridedays WA (08) 9409 1002 Wanneroo, WA Collie, WA Phoenix MCC Junior Coaching 0403 386 788 Tailem Bend, SA Mallala, SA FIM SPEEDWAY GP C’SHIP Rd6 29 Jun, Gorzow, PL Rd7 17 Aug, Cardiff, UK Rd8 31 Aug, Wroclaw, PL Rd9 7 Sep, Riga, LV Rd10 14 Sep, Vojens, Dk Rd11 28 Sep, Torun, PL FIM SPEEDWAY OF NATIONS Semi1 9 July, Manchester, UK Semi2 10 July, Manchester, UK SON2 12 July, Manchester, UK Final 13 July, Manchester, UK UNDER-21 SPEEDWAY WORLD C’SHIP Rd2 6 Sep, Riga, LV Rd3 27 Sep, Torun, PL INAUGURAL FIM WOMEN’S SPEEDWAY GOLD CUP June 20-21, Teterow, Germany AUSTRALIA SPEEDWAY SIDECAR CHAMPS 25-26 Oct, Oakburn Park Raceway, Tamworth, NSW INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY MASTERS 27-28 Dec, Gillman, South Australia AMA PRO MOTOCROSS CHAMPIONSHIP Rd5 29 Jun, The Wick 338 National, MA Rd6 6 Jul, Redbud National, MI Rd7 13 Jul, Spring Creek National, MN Rd8 20 Jul, Washougal National, WA Rd9 10 Aug, Unadilla National, NY Rd10 17 Aug, Budds Creek National, MD Rd11 24 Aug, Ironman National, IN *Provisional **Subject to homologation ROAD RACING AUSTRALIAN SUPERBIKE CHAMPIONSHIP Rd4 12-14 Jul, Morgan Park Raceway, Qld Rd5 7-8 Sep, Phillip Island GP Circuit, Vic Rd6 4-6 Oct, One Raceway, NSW Rd7 8-10 Nov, Shell V-Power Motorsport Park, SA BLU CRU OCEANIA JUNIOR CUP Rd3 12-14 Jul, Morgan Park Raceway, Qld Rd4 4-6 Oct, One Raceway, NSW Rd5 TBA Rd6 8-10 Nov, Shell V-Power Motorsport Park, SA AUSTRALIAN SIDECAR CHAMPIONSHIP Rd3 6-7 Jul, Sydney Motorsport Park, NSW Rd4 15-16 Sep, Phillip Island, Vic INAUGURAL SOUTHERN CROSS CHALLENGE CUP 6-7 July, Sydney Motorsport Park, NSW SOUTHERN CLASSIC 9-10 Nov, Broadford, Vic AUSTRALIAN HISTORIC ROAD RACE CHAMPS 15-17 Nov, One Raceway, NSW NATIONAL BEARS CHALLENGE Rd3 6-7 Jul, SMSP, NSW Rd4 14-15 Sep, Phillip Island, Vic Rd5 12-13 Oct, SMSP, NSW (provisional) Rd6 16-17 Nov, Broadford, Vic MOTOGP WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP Rd8 30 Jun, Assen, ND Rd9 7 Jul, Sachsenring, DE Rd10 4 Aug, Silverstone, UK Rd11 18 Aug, Red Bull Ring, AT Rd12 1 Sep, Aragon, ES Rd13 8 Sep, Misano, IT Rd14 22 Sep, Sokol, KZ (rescheduled) Rd15 29 Sept, Mandalika, ID Rd16 6 Oct, Motegi, JP Rd17 20 Oct, Phillip Island, AU Rd18 27 Oct, Buriram, TH Rd19 3 Nov, Sepang, MY Rd20 17 Nov, Valencia, ES SUPERBIKE WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP Rd 5 12-14 July, Donington Park, UK Rd 6 19–21 July, Most, CZ Rd7 9–11 Aug, Algarve, PT Rd8 6–8 Sept, Magny-Cours, FR Rd9 20–22 Sept, Cremona, IT** Rd 10 27–29 Sept, Aragon, ES Rd 11 11–13 Oct, Estoril, ES Rd12 18-20 Oct, Jerez , ES BRITISH SUPERBIKE CHAMPIONSHIP Rd5 5-7 Jul, Snetterton, NFK
RALLIES & SHOWS 21-23 JUNE 100th Anniversary of the first Australian Motorcycle Grand Prix at Goulburn. The highlight of the celebration will be an escorted, re-enactment ride along the original 80km course from the outskirts of Goulburn to Windellama, across to Bungonia and back along Mountain Ash Rd to the start-finish line. Organisers are also raffling off a 2023 Indian Scout Bobber. For more information head to www.goulburngp.com.au Motorcycle displays, entertainment and a re-enactment ride will bring history alive at Goulburn, NSW, this weekend 21-23 JUNE The Casper Rally. Hosted by the South Coast United Motorcycle Tourers on the banks of the Abercrombie River, 72km north of Goulburn and 75km south of Oberon, on the Oberon side of the river. Toilets on site with drinking water and firewood provided. BYO drinks, food and cooking gear. Raffle and awards. Inquiries Andy 0437 608 440 or Dieter 0417 616 199. 22 JUNE The Winter Undercover Motorcycle Swapmeet runs from 9am-3pm at the Greyhound Racing Track, Angle Park, Adelaide, SA. Plenty of parking for buyers with a sausage sizzle/ BBQ. Full indoor vehicle access for vendors, just book ahead to reserve your site for $10. Buyer entry $5. For details phone Mark on 0439 831 862, email winterswapmeet@fomsa.org, or see the website at www.fomsa.org. 18 AUGUST Townsville Combined Motor Clubs Swap Meet welcomes motorcyclists either selling or buying parts and tools at the Townsville Showgrounds. There will be static displays. Camping is available and proceeds go to Ronald McDonald House, Townsville. For more information send an email to cerutfa@ozemail.com.au. 29 JUNE The 50th anniversary celebration of the 1974 movie Stone is a double-feature at Yatala Drive-in, Stapylton, on Queensland’s Gold Coast. It is hosted by the Kawasaki Z Owners Club of Qld. Bring your Seventies motorcycle for the planned pre-film display at 4pm. Movie tickets are $50 a carload of six people or $25 a single adult. The double bill is Stone and Stone Forever (R18). Tickets at www.fivestarcinemas.com.au/ drive-in/movie/stone---stone-forever-doublefeature. 16 JULY Black Tie Biker’s Ball at Forster, NSW, is a fundraiser for the local Great Lakes Women’s Shelter. Hosted by the Sisters on Steel SMC, it promises to be “a wild night of fun, dancing, raffles and live music” at Club Forster. Visit www.clubforster.com.au or phone the Sisters on Steel SMC on 0421 159 753. 31 AUGUST Dubbo Motofest at the Dubbo Showground, 110 Wingewarra St, from 9am to 4pm invites riders to enter their bike into a category in the massive show and shine, or simply register to display it in the Motorcycle Muster. Unfinished projects are also welcome to be displayed. Other attractions include a trade expo, motocross stunt riders, bar and food vendors. Full event details can be found at the website at www.dubbomotorfest.com.au. 14 SEPTEMBER The 28th Annual Red Scarf Rally is hosted by the Illawarra Classic Motorcycle Club at Don’s Farm, 536 Avondale Rd, Avondale. The event includes a swap meet, long and short rally runs, undercover BBQ area, toilets and lots of space for motorcycle displays. Contact club organisers on 0422 680 647. 14 SEPTEMBER Wattle Flat Car & Bike Show at Sofala, near Bathurst, with funds going towards free community events and revamping its small community hall. Full details and information at www.facebook.com/wfcarbikeshow. 6 OCTOBER The Australian National Show and Shine is held at Seven Creeks Parklands Euroa, Victoria. Hundreds of cars and motorcycles will be on show, along with market and trade stalls, live music and children’s entertainment. For more information take a look at the website at www.australiannationalshowandshine.com.au. 25-27 OCTOBER The Spaghetti Rally, hosted by the Moto Guzzi Club of Victoria, attracts enthusiasts of this iconic Italian brand. Location is Edi Cutting campground, on the King River (between Moyhu and Whitfield) in Northern Victoria. Register to attend at motoguzzivictoria.club. 25-27 OCTOBER The Machine Show is a family-based, vintage motorcycle camp-out weekend get-together at the showgrounds in Braidwood, NSW. A bar means there’s no BYO and food vendors are on site. Display your bike or sell parts at an informal swap meet. More information at www.themachineshow.com.au. 26-27 OCTOBER National Jampot Rally, hosted by the AJS and Matchless Owners Club of Australia at Victor Harbor, SA. Seeking ride corner marshals. Contact Nipper Kuerschner on 0418854565 or email nipper.nipper33@gmail.com. 26-27 OCTOBER The Australian Postie Grand Prix, hosted by the Cessnock community and run through the streets of the Hunter Valley town in NSW, is celebrating 10 years of this family-friendly event. See postiebikegp.com.au for details. 15-16 NOVEMBER Walcha Motorcycle Rally takes place in the beautiful country town of Walcha, NSW, at the showground hub and surrounding areas. Arrive Thursday afternoon for welcome drinks and live music. Enjoy Friday and Saturday’s program and rides, then use Sunday to make your way slowly home. Walcha is at the intersection of the Oxley Highway and Thunderbolts Way. For more information head to the event’s website at www.walchamotorcyclerally.com.au. Aussie made designs, from a life on the road the road beckons visit us online or call (03) 9786 3445 amcn.com.au 81
ARAI CONCEPT-XE Retro-cool but with all the modern safety features we’ve come to expect from Arai. Visor can be swapped between models JUST ARRIVED! fter a few years in Arai’s V-Profile lid which, by the way, still feels snug and plush, I’m keen to try the Japanese brand’s ConceptXE, which blends 1980s styling with all the modern tech and protection the brand is known for. It’s not long lobbed, so I’m yet to try it on a bike, but first impressions after pulling it on to my head are a well-fitting, high-quality helmet complete with that wonderful new-car smell. 82 amcn.com.au The really cool thing is that the $199.95 iridium Pinlock-ready Pro Shade visor that I’ve been running on the Profile-V will fit straight on to the new Concept-XE, despite the Profile-V running a pod-style system – a la Michael Dunlop – and the Concept-XE using a more retrostyled mechanical system that calls for a coin to undo the pivot covers. It’s a clever and practical option in these times when a $200 visor is simply out of reach for a lot of people, including me. Arai Concept-XE $799.95 Sizes XS-XL Colours White, Frost Black or Modern Grey Cassons www.araihelmets.net.au (02) 8882 1900 That mechanical retro look does result in a pretty fiddly visor change, but the beauty of the Pro Shade is once I have that system fitted to the new lid, I won’t need to change it again. It gives me a clear visor when I want it or an iridium tint when it’s bright, so all my bases are covered. And I sure as hell won’t be requiring a slick pitstop on Glencrutchery Road anytime soon, so it doesn’t really matter to me. In terms of tech, the outer shell is made using a Peripherally Belted e-Complex Laminate Construction – PBe-cLc for short – which balances light weight with the ability to spread the forces of an impact across the helmet while boasting good glance-off properties – all things which allow it to meet ECE R2206 standards. And while that all sounds terrific, I have no intentions of testing the validity of those claims. The emergency release cheek pads provide extra peace of mind, too. Despite looking like they’re
MACNA CHILL RTX WOMEN JUST ARRIVED! SINGLE DIGITS I HAVE TINY hands, so finding a pair of gloves that keep my digits warm when the temperature drops into single digits while still allowing me enough feel at the ’bars, levers and switches has always been difficult. Which is why I’m hoping Mana’s Chill RTX gloves are going to do the trick for me this winter. What attracted me to them initially was the relatively short cuff length. Small-diameter wrists mixed with thick winter-weight jacket sleeves trying to accomodate thick gauntlets just gets frustrating, especially when my already-gloved right hand is trying to sort out the left-hand side before jumping on the bike. First-world problems, I know, but when you’re on and off bikes as often as I sometimes am, it wears, well, thin. I used the brand’s sizing guide to determine I’d need a size small and they’re a beaut fit at always open, the six vents in the chin can be closed by moving a small slider on the inside of the chin bar. According to Arai, when these vents are ‘closed’, they’ll actually direct air up and along the inside surface of the visor to help prevent fogging, and channel back around the mouth and nose when in the open position. The hot air is said to be pulled out of the helmet through three holes in the EPS liner and funnelled out two discreet exhaust vents at the rear. There’s a breath deflector as standard while a breath mask can be purchased as an optional extra, as can a chin cover and tear-offs, and all the internal soft bits are removable and washable. It’s available in three colour variants, gloss white, matte or Frost black, as well as a gloss dark grey version called Modern grey. The Profile-V is priced at $649.95 for a solid colour, whereas the Concept-XE is $799.95 and I’m keen to see if I can feel any difference with the extra $150 outlay, or if I’m paying for the uber-cool retro looks only. Stay tuned. KEL BUCKLEY the wrist and across the palm, while the length of the fingers seems a little long. This may not be a problem once on a bike and my hands are wrapped around the grips though, because sometimes a good fit off the bike can end up with your fingers pushing right up against the ends of the finger pockets, which can make them more exposed to the cold. They’re said to be waterproof – we’ll see about that – and the thermal properties come from Thinsulate, although Macna doesn’t specify how much. Protective properties seem a little light-on with some double stitching along the fingers and a section of goat leather stitched into the heel of the palm and up to the wrist amounting for the most off it. In fact I can squeeze them into a small ball, so there’s no thermoplastic reinforcement or other bracing to speak of which, it has to be said, can often be uncomfortable. What matters most to me, though, is if they can keep my hands warm and relatively dry. I’ll let you know. KEL BUCKLEY
TOP GEAR. COOL STUFF 2 1 1 HOT HEAD amcn.com.au 3 BOOT IT Cassons Link International $20 $1499.95 $299.95 (02) 8882 1900 araihelmets.net.au (07) 3382 5000 tcxboots.com.au Don’t let the winter blues get you down with this fab Suzuki cable-knit beanie (Navy). It features a comfortable acrylic cable-knit construction with an additional partial fleece liner. So everyone know’s what team you’re on it has an embossed brown leatherette tag clearly displaying the Suzuki logo. 84 IOM TT LID Suzuki Australia na suzukimotorcycles.com.au 3 2 Arai Helmet marked its 40-year presence at the recent IoM TT with a special event and the release of this 2024 RX-7V EVO Limited Edition Isle of Man TT helmet. The top-of-the-range RX-7V EVO features Arai’s peripherally-belted construction and characteristic round shape for “glancing off” in the event of an impact. Available now in sizes XS-XL. The TCX Dartwood waterproof boot features a grain leather upper with rear reflex insert, D3O inserts, reinforcements on the toe and heel, a T-Dry waterproof membrane, lace and side-zip closure, elastic band to store laces, OrthoLite cushioned footbed and Groundtrax outsole for stability. Available in sizes 40-48.
4 4 MINI BLADE NOW HEAR THIS 6 GREEN EYES Honda Australia Moto National Kawasaki Australia $299.95 $409.95 $40 na motorcycles.honda.com.au For those not adverse to throwing their young’uns on an electric bike, but who would never let them stray from Team Red, there’s this beaut Honda Kids Battery Bike, with genuine CBR1000RR sportsbike styling. Suitable for ages 3-plus with a 20kg load capacity, and powered by a 25W motor with a rechargeable 6V battery. 5 5 1300 885 355 interphoneaustralia.com.au The Interphone U-COM 7R features Bluetooth 5.2 technology. It provides comms with up to four units up to 1km, a battery life up to 15 hours, is compatible with OEM TFTs and GPS, allows music sharing and comes with iOS and Android apps. It has an IP67 waterproof rating and multi-button design for ease of use. na www.kawasaki.com.au Kawasaki’s Street Sunglasses are claimed to offer cutting-edge style like no other. They feature a lightweight satin matte-black nylon-finish frame with green UV400 lenses to ensure everyone knows you’re on Team Green. The sunglasses come with a carry bag for protection and cleaning. 6 amcn.com.au 85
MOTORCYCLE SPECIALTIES proudly supplying australian motorcycle retailers & workshops for over 45 years. - LEVERS - TOOLS - MODELS - TUBES - handlebars - RAMPS - INDICATORS - MIRRORS - CIRCUIT - CT110 - BEARINGS - MOTOGOLD - STANDS - hand guards - Grips - FOOTPEGS - FILTERS - oil www.mcsonline.com.au mcsmotorcyclespecialties %ULVEDQHWR$GHODLGH $XJ6HS NPRQDVPDOOPRWRUF\FOH"$ULGHKDOIZD\DFURVV$XVWUDOLD"$QHQGXUDQFHULGHFURVVLQJ VWDWHV DQ LQGLUHFW URXWH WKURXJK UHPRWHFRXQWU\VPDOOWRZQVVHFRQGDU\ URDGV ORQJ VWUHWFKHV RI ELWXPHQDQGVRPHGLUWURDGVPDNHWKLVDJUHDWDGYHQWXUH  (QWU\ SULFH LQFOXGHV XVH RI RXU bike, accom, meals, mechanics, spares, support vehicles. www.postiebikechallenge.org Ph. 
UNC-QP-5190633-TS-369-XCC Full repair & rebuild service on all makes of instruments Ratio boxes, Speedo and tacho cables made to order Bi-metal (hot wire) gauges rewound and calibrated Fuel tank sender units rewound and calibrated Specialising in Chronometric & Magnetic Capillary temperature gauges repaired Specialist in Smiths & Jaeger gauges Dial restoration or replacement Special senders made to order Contact: John Robertson P: 07 3277 3888 F: 07 3277 8520 Email: info@ottoinstruments.com.au 124 Evans Rd, P.O. Box 9, Salisbury, Qld. 4107 www w.ottoinstruments.com.au
BUYER’S GUIDE. A-Z OF NEW BIKE PRICES PRICE $AUD LAMS MODEL APRILIA aprilia.com.au All prices are ride away MODEL PRICE $AUD LAMS PRICE $AUD LAMS M 1000 XR $36,690  700CL-X Adventure $11,490  M 1000 RR $52,440  800NK Sport $10,990  R 1250 R $21,620  800NK Advanced $12,490  Plus on-road costs MODEL MODEL ENERGICA PRICE $AUD LAMS australianelectricmotorco.com/energica-motorcycles SR GT 125 $8040  R 1250 RS $27,240  800MT Sport $13,490  Experia $48,164  SR GT 125 Sport $8140  R 1250 RT $37,840  800MT Touring $14,990  Ego $41,725  RS 660 $22,740  K 1600 GT $42,820  800MT Explore $16,990  Ego+ $52,233  RS 660 LAMS $22,590  K 1600 GTL $44,520  Ego+ RS $55,329  Tuono 660 $21,490  K 1600 B $42,820  Ribelle $50,374  Tuono 660 LAMS $21,490  G 310 R $7990  Plus on-road costs Ribelle RS $52,470  Tuono 660 Extrema $24,990  R 18 $23,140  CJ650B Nomad $26,500  Esseesse9 $35,478  Tuono 660 Factory $19,990  R 18 Classic $25,840  CJ650B Tourer $27,500  Esseesse9+ $46,563  Tuareg 660 $23,490  R 18 B $35,400  Tuono V4 $28,990  R 18 Roctane $27,890  RSV4 $31,990  R 18 Transcontinental $37,940  All prices are ride away RSV4 Factory $39,090  R 12 $20,210  Multistrada V4 $31,300  Arthur $4990  R 12 nineT $23,990  Multistrada V4 S $41,800  NKDs $11,990  G 310 GS $8390  Multistrada V4 S GT $45,200  NKD+ $11,990  F 800 GS $17,820  Multistrada V4 RS $55,800  NKDx $17,490  BENELLI benelli.com.au All prices are ride away CHANJIANG changjiang-australia.com DUCATI ducati.com.au FONZ fonzmoto.com Plus on-road costs TNT125 $3990  F 900 GS $19,580  Multistrada V4 Rally $41,400  TRK 251 $6690  F 900 GS Enduro $23,990  Multistrada V2 $24,400  GASGAS TRK 502 $9990  F 900 GS Adventure $20,850  Multistrada V2 S $27,200  All prices are ride away TRK 502 X $10,690  F 900 GS Adventure Pro $24,190  DesertX $24,700  EC250 $15,599  TRK 702 $12,990  R 1250 GS Adventure $27,260  DesertX Rally $36,600  EC250F $15,599  TRK 702 X $13,590  R 1250 GS Adv Trophy $35,150  Hypermotard 698 Mono $22,800  EC300 $17,069  Leoncino 502 $9890  R 1300 GS $26,000  Hypermotard 698 Mono RVE $24,200  EC350F $16,659  Leoncino 502 Trail $10,390  R 1300 GS Trophy X $33,690  Hypermotard 950 $24,800  SM 700 $19, 840  Leoncino 800 $13,490  C 400 GT $11,740  Hypermotard 950 RVE $26,500  ES 700 $19,840  Leoncino 800 Trail $13,390  C 400 X $10,490  Hypermotard 950 SP $30,300  502C $10,590  CE 04 $21,900  Streetfighter V2 $21,695  Streetfighter V4 $34,900  All prices are ride away Streetfighter V4 S $39,000  X350 $8495  Streetfighter V4 SP $48,400  X500 $11,495  BETA betamotor.com.au Plus on-road costs BRP au.brp.com All prices are ride away H-D gasgasaustralia.com.au harley-davidson.com.au RR 125 2T $12,295  Ryker 600 $15,199  Monster $19,700  Nightster Special $21,495  RR 200 2T $13,395  Ryker 900 $17,749  Monster SP $23,200  Sportster Special $23,995  RR 250 2T $13,595  Ryker Rally 900 $19,799  Monster 659 $19,700  Street Bob 114 $24,995  RR 300 2T $14,395  Spyder F3 S $31,149  Supersport 950 $22,300  Sport Glide $33,250  RR 350 4T EFI $14,195  Spyder F3 LTD $35,699  Supersport 950 S $25,400  Low Rider S $33,250  RR 390 4T EFI $14,495  Spyder RT LTD $41,449  Scrambler Urban Motard $18,900  Low Rider ST $37,995  RR 430 4T EFI $14,695  Scrambler Icon $18,000 Fat Bob 114 $33,750  RR 480 4T EFI $14,995  CFMOTO  Scrambler Full Throttle $20,100  Heritage Classic $38,995  X-Trainer 250 2T $11,195  All prices are ride away Scrambler Nightshift $20,100  Hydra-Glide Revival $42,995  X-Trainer 300 2T $11,495  150NK $4290  Scrambler 1100 Dark Pro $21,100  Fat Boy 114 $37,995  300NK $5790  Scrambler 1100 Tribute Pro $23,100  Breakout 117 $38,995  300CL-X $5490  Scrambler 1100 Sport Pro $26,000  Road King Special $42,495  300SR $5790  Panigale V4 $35,600  Road Glide $46,495  BIMOTA facebook.com/bimotaau All prices are ride away cfmoto.com.au KB4 $55,000  450CL-C $8490  Panigale V4 S $45,000  Road Glide Limited $47,750  Tesi H2 $85,000  450NK $7790  Panigale V4 SP2 $55,490  Street Glide $46,495  450MT $9490  Panigale V4 R $70,200  Street Glide Special $43,995  450SR $8290  Panigale V2 $24,900  Street Glide ST $47,995  450SR S $9290  Diavel 1260 $32,800  Ultra Limited $47,750  BMW bmwmotorrad.com.au Plus on-road costs F 900 R $15,420  650MT $9090  Diavel 1260 S $38,400  Freewheeler $53,995  F 900 XR $18,790  650GT $9590  Diavel V4 $41,900  Tri Glide Ultra $63,995  S 1000 R $22,090  650NK $8590  XDiavel Dark $33,100  Road Glide 3 $59,995  S 1000 XR $29,090  700MT $9990  XDiavel S $40,400  CVO Street Glide $63,995  S 1000 RR $25,750  700CL-X Heritage (2024) $10,490  XDiavel Nera $44,100  CVO Road Glide $63,995  M 1000 R $32,290  700CL-X Sport $9490  CVO Limited $61,750 
PRICE $AUD LAMS MODEL PRICE $AUD LAMS MODEL PRICE $AUD LAMS MODEL PRICE $AUD LAMS MODEL CVO Road Glide ST $62,995  CRF1100 Africa Twin AS DCT $27,499  Scout Classic Ltd +Tech (2025) $24,495  Pan America 1250S $28,995  CRF1100 Africa Twin AS DCT ES $29,899  Sport Scout Base (2025) $23,995  CRF300LRA Rally $9399  Sport Scout Ltd +Tech (2025) $25,995  Plus on-road costs CB500XA $10,199  Super Scout Ltd +Tech (2025) $26,995  Versys-X 300 (LAMS) $7448  CRF300LA $8199  Scout 101 Ltd +Tech (2025) $27,995  Ninja 400 (LAMS) $7544  AG-XR $5399  Chief Dark Horse $28,995  Z400 $7094  Chief Bobber Dark Horse $30,495  Ninja 500 $7544  Sport Chief $32,995  Ninja 650 $11,109  HONDA hondamotorcycles.com.au Plus on-road costs KAWASAKI kawasaki.com.au GL1800 Goldwing DCT $41,999  GL1800 Goldwing Tour Prem DCT $49,999  NT1100 $21,690  NT1100D DCT $22,699  All prices are ride away Super Chief Limited $32,995  Ninja 650 (LAMS) $11,309  CBR1000RR-R SP $52,999  Vitpilen 401 (2024) $8795  Springfield Dark Horse $38,995  Ninja 650 (LAMS Ninja 40th) $11,409  CBR650R $12,499  Svartpilen 401 (2024) $8795  Springfield $39,995  Versys 650L $12,048  CBR600RR $27,599  FS 450 $16,949  Chieftain Dark Horse $42,495  Z650L $11,009  CL500 $8999  701 Supermoto $20,400  Chieftain Limited $42,995  Z650RS $12,009  CBR500R $9999  701 Enduro $20,400  Challenger Dark Horse $44,495  W800 Street $13,848  CB125F $2999  TE 150i $14,959  Challenger Limited $44,995  Z900 $13,398  CB500F $9499  TE 250i $16,789  Challenger Elite $55,995  Z900RS $16,909  CB650R $11,699  TE 300i $18,379  Roadmaster Dark Horse $45,495  Ninja 1000SX $17,759  CB300R $7199  FE 250 $16,789  Roadmaster Limited $45,995  Ninja 1000SX (Ninja 40th) $17,859  GB350 $6999  FE 350 $17,929  Roadmaster Classic $46,995  Versys 1000 S $21,009  CB750F Hornet $12,099  FE 450 $18,269  Pursuit Dark Horse Premium $47,495  Z1000 $16,848  CMX1100 DCT $19,649  FE 501 $18,929  Pursuit Limited Premium $48,495  Ninja ZX-4R $11,794  CMX1100 $18,549  Norden 901 $25,860  FTR $23,995  Ninja ZX-4RR $13,194  CMX500 $9349  Norden 901 Expedition $27,840  FTR Rally $25,995  Ninja ZX-6R $15,909  NSS350A Forza $9749  Svartpilen 801 (2024) $15,990  FTR X RSD SUPER HOOLIGAN $28,995  Ninja ZX-6R (Ninja 40th) $16,159  NSC110 Dio $3349  FTR X 100 % R Carbon $28,995  Ninja H2 (2024) $44,110  MW110 Benly $3999  Ninja H2R (2024) $74,110  NAVi $2349  All prices are ride away Ninja H2 SX $32,810  XL750 Transalp $14,499  Scout Bobber Base (2025) $22,995  All prices are ride away Ninja H2 SX SE $36,910  CRF1100 Africa Twin $22,999  Scout Bobber Ltd +Tech (2025) $23,995  Dragster $8990  Ninja ZX-10R $26,749  CRF1100 Africa Twin AS $26,199  Scout Classic Base (2025) $23,495  Dragster Malossi Edition $9490  Ninja ZX-10R (Ninja 40th) $27,110  HUSQVARNA husqvarnamotorcycles.com.au INDIAN indianmotorcycle.com.au ITALJET italjet.com.au TESTED VOL 73 NO 20 BIKE SPOTLIGHT BMW R12 NINET ENGINE POWER TORQUE WEIGHT PRICE 1170cc opposed-twin 80kW (107hp) @ 7000rpm 115Nm @ 6500rpm 220kg (kerb, claimed) $23,990 (plus onroads) “An expensive but authentic, beautifully finished retrobike with big-bike performance”
BUYER’S GUIDE. A-Z OF NEW BIKE PRICES MODEL PRICE $AUD LAMS MODEL PRICE $AUD LAMS MODEL PRICE $AUD LAMS PRICE $AUD LAMS MODEL Z H2 $24,010  Like 200i (w/ top box) $3990  Ninja ZX-14R SE $23,248  Like 150R ABS (w/ top box) $5590  PIAGGIO Ninja ZX-14R SE (Ninja 40th) $23,309  Like 150 S $5090  All prices are ride away Vulcan S $10,448  Agility 16+ 300 $7490  Typhoon 50 $4140  Vulcan S LAMS $10,648  Downtown 350i ABS $8790  Medley $6540  Kawasaki KLX150BF SE $4663  DT X360 $9290  Medley S $6640  All prices are ride away Kawasaki KLX230S $6563  Xciting S 400i ABS $9990  Beverly 400 S $12,440  Address 110 $4190  KLX230SM $7563  AK550 Premium ABS $15,490  Avenis 125 (2024) $4890  KLX250 $7263  GSX-S125 $5690  KLX450R $11,963  Gixxer 250 $5990  KLR650 ABS $9594  V50 Special Flex $3590  MR Ranger 200 $12,790  Gixxer SF 250 $5990  KLR650 Adventure $10,363  V200 Special Flex $4990  MR Ranger 300 $12,990  V-Strom 250SX $6790  MR Racing 250 $13,990  V-Strom 650XT (2024) $15,090  MR Racing 300 $14,290  V-Strom 650XT LAMS (2024) $15,090  MR Pro 250 $15,690  SV650 $11,490  KTM ktm.com.au All prices are ride away LAMBRETTA lambrettaaustralia.com.au MOTO GUZZI motoguzzi.com.au All prices are ride away RIEJU piaggio.com.au rieju.com.au Plus on-road costs 300 SEF Factory $15,999  450 SEF Factory $16,799  500 SEF Factory $16,999  SUZUKI suzukimotorcycles.com.au 200 Duke ABS $5895  V7 Stone $18,030  MR Pro 300 $15,990  SV650 LAMS $11,490  390 Duke (2024) $8965  V7 Stone Centenario $19,030  MR Six Days $16,990  GSX-8S $13,490  890 Duke $16,850  V7 Special $18,930  GSX-8R $14,990  890 DukeGP $17,925  V9 Bobber Centenario $19,330  GSX-R1000 $25,190  890 Duke R $20,760  V100 Mandello $28,290  All prices are ride away GSX-R1000R $28,190  900 Duke (2024) $20,090  V100 MandelloS $32,290  Bullet 350 Standard Black $7890  GSX-S1000 $18,190  890 SMT $24,475  V85 TT $22,230  Meteor 350 Fireball $8190  GSX-S1000GT $20,190  690 SMC R $20,195  V85 TT Evocative $22,830  Meteor 350 Stellar $8590  GSX-S1000GX (2024) $25,890  RC 390 $8795  V85 TT Travel $24,330  Meteor 350 Supernova $8890  Panorama GT $21,990  RC 390 GP $8995  V85 TT Centenario $22,830  Hunter 350 Dapper $7590  Katana $21,990  1290 Super Duke R $30,915  Hunter 350 Rebel $7690  V-Strom 1050 $22,990  1290 Super Duke R EVO $33,735  Classic 350 Halcyon $7990  V-Strom 1050DE $24,690  1290 Super Duke GT $34,835  All prices are ride away Classic 350 Signals $8290  V-Strom 800 (2024) $17,490  1390 Super Duke R (2024) $31,795  F3 800 Rosso $36,990  Classic 350 Dark $8690  V-Strom 800DE $18,590  1390 Super Duke R Evo (2024) $34,695  F3 800 RR $41,990  Classic 350 Chrome $8790  Hayabusa $28,490  690 Enduro R $20,195  Brutale 800 Rosso $29,990  Scram 411 Base $8240  Boulevard M109R $21,990  390 Adventure $10,250  Brutale 800 RR $34,990  Scram 411 Mid $8340  Trojan $5990  790 Adventure $18,690  Brutale 1000 RS $51,990  Scram 411 Premium $8440  DR-Z400E $10,890  790 Adventure R $19,790  Brutale 1000 RR $63,990  Interceptor 650 Classic $10,990  890 Adventure $24,475  Rush 1000 (+race kit) $76,880  Interceptor 650 Pearl Black $11,290  890 Adventure R $26,575  Dragster 800 Rosso $32,990  Interceptor 650 Chrome $11,790  All prices are ride away 1290 Super Adventure S $33,315  Dragster 800 RR SCS $37,990  Interceptor 650 Dark $11,690  TC – Cafe $5490  1290 Super Adventure R $34,785  Dragster 800 RC SCS $41,990  Continental GT 650 Classic $11,290  TC Max (alloy wheels) $7990  150 EXC $14,559  Superveloce 800 $42,990  Continental GT 650 Custom $11,590  TC Max (wire-spoke wheels) $8290  250 EXC $16,399  Superveloce 800 S $48,990  Continental GT 650 ES Dark $11,790  CUX Scooter $4990  250 EXC-F $16,399  Superveloce 800 S (+race kit) $51,590  Continental GT 650 ES Chrome $11,890  CUX Scooter - Ducati $5490  300 EXC $17,879  Turismo Veloce Rosso $33,990  Himalayan 410 $8390  CPx Scooter $7690  350 EXC-F $17,449  Turismo Veloce Lusso SCS $43,999  Himalayan 450 Kaza Brown $8990  CPx Delivery Scooter $7690  450 EXC-F $17,799  Himalayan 450 Slate $9250  500 EXC-F $18,419  MV AGUSTA PEUGEOT mvagusta.com.au peugeotmotorcycles.com.au All prices are ride away KYMCO kymco.com.au ROYAL ENFIELD royalenfield.com.au Himalayan 450 Hanle Black $9490  $11,590  All prices are ride away $11,990  RS 300 R $8590  RS 500 R $9290  Kisbee 50 2T $2990  Super Meteor 650 Astra Black-Blue Tweet 200 $5790  Super Meteor 650 Interstellar Green $12,190   Tweet 200 GT $5990  Super Meteor 650 Celestial Blue-Red $12,540  Like 50 4T $3090  Django 50 $4190  Agility RS 125 CBS $3190  Django 150 $5490  SHERCO Agility 16+ 125 (w/ top box) $3790  XP400 Allure $15,690  Plus on-road costs Agility 16+ 200i (w/ top box) $4490  XP400 GT $15,990  125 SE Factory $13,499 People S 150 (w/ top box) $5490  250 SE Factory Super 8 50 2T $2790  Like 125 CBS (w/ top box) $3590  Agility 50 SWM supersoco.com.au Shotgun 650 $2690 All prices are ride away SUPER SOCO SYM SCOOTA swmmotorcycles.com.au symscooters.com.au Crox 50 $2490  Mio 50i $2890   Classic 125 $2790  $14,999  Orbit 125 $2790  300 SE Factory $15,499  Orbit II 125i $3190  250 SEF Factory $15,499  Symphony ST 200i $3990  Sherco.com
PRICE $AUD LAMS MODEL MODEL PRICE $AUD LAMS MODEL PRICE $AUD LAMS PRICE $AUD LAMS MODEL Classic 200i $4090  Tiger Sport 660 $15,390  GTV 300 ‘Sei Giorni’ $12,590  YZF-R7 LAMS $14,849  HD300i $6690  Tiger 850 Sport $18,790  GTS 300 75 Anno $13,590  YZF-R7 HO $15,649  GTS300i Sport $7690  Tiger 900 GT $21,850  946 Dragon (limited edition) $22,680  YZF-R1 $29,899  Tiger 900 GT Pro $24,790  YZF-R1M $39,349 $25,990  YAMAHA  Tiger 900 Rally Pro WR250F $15,899  Tiger 1200 GT Pro $30,790  All prices are ride away WR450F $17,999  TRIUMPH triumphmotorcycles.com.au All prices are ride away yamaha-motor.com.au Daytona 660 $14,790  Tiger 1200 GT Explorer $33,390  D’elight 125 White $3949  Tenere 700 $20,349  Speed 400 $8990  Tiger 1200 Rally Pro $32,490  NMAX 155 $6249  Tenere 700 World Raid $25,499  Scrambler 400 X $9990  Tiger 1200 Rally Explorer $34,690  Tricity 155 $7699  Super Tenere $27,499  Speed Twin 900 $16,790  XMAX 300 $10,049  Bonneville T100 $18,790  ural.com Tricity 300 $13,399  Scrambler 900 $18,590  CT $25,299  TMAX 560 $21,049  All prices are ride away Bonneville T120 $21,490  Gear Up $28,599  YZF-R15 $6399  S Street $30,500  Speed Twin 1200 $21,740  Sportsman SE $30,599  YZF-R3 $8699  DSR Dual Sport $40,800  Thruxton RS $26,690  Sahara SE $30,599  MT-03 $8199  SR Street $38,800  Bonneville Speedmaster $23,190  MT-07 LAMS $13,799 DS Dual Sport $32,600  Bonneville Bobber $23,590  VESPA  MT-07 HO $14,699  FX Dual Sport $25,500  2024 Scrambler 1200 X $22,600  All prices are ride away XSR700 $14,599  FXE Street $25,500  2024 Scrambler 1200 XE $24,900  Primavera 50 $6490  Tracer 7 $15,999  SR/F Street $41,800  Rocket 3 R $36,550  Primavera 125 i-Get $7690  MT-09 $17,399  DSR/X Dual Sport $46,800  Rocket 3 GT $37,550  Primavera 150 i-Get $8490  MT-09 SP $18,899  2024 Rocket 3 R Storm R $38,890  Primavera 150 S $8590  XSR900 $18,049  2024 Rocket 3 R Storm GT $39,890  Primavera 150 Red $8990  XSR900 GP $21,499  Trident 660 LAMS $13,150  Primavera 150 SE Picnic $9040  Tracer 9 GT Plus with panniers $27,599  Street Triple S 660 $14,990  Primavera 150 75 Anno $9890  Niken GT with panniers $28,299  Speed Triple 765 R $18,090  Sprint i-Get $8590  MT-10 $24,649  Street Triple 765 RS $20,590  GTS 150 i-Get $9590  MT-10 SP $28,499  Street Triple 765 Moto2 Edition $25,290  GTS 300 Super Sport $12,290  FJR1300 $33,999  Speed Triple 1200 RS $28,490  GTS 300 Super Tech $12,890  YZF-R6 (Race only) $19,849  URAL vespa.com.au ZERO zeromotorcycles.com.au WEB HOT! Check out the website for the latest reviews at amcn.com.au TESTED BIKE SPOTLIGHT VOL 73 NO 22 CFMOTO 450MT ENGINE POWER TORQUE WEIGHT PRICE 449.5cc parallel-twin 31kW (41.5hp) @ 8500rpm 42Nm @ 6500rpm 175kg (dry, claimed) $9490 (ride away) “Exceptional bang for the buck, it’s a no-nonsense machine built to cruise, commute or go bush”
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SCHMICK! WITH MICK MATHESON ALL THAT glitters is sometimes silver but only if you polish it. Silver tarnishes, unlike gold, and if you’re too lazy to give it a buff occasionally it goes dull. You don’t want to over-do it, though, because polishing slowly wears away the metal, gradually erasing any engraving and rounding off sharp edges. It’s a dilemma — a bit like whether to ride the rings out of your classic bike or stick it on a pedestal in the living room. I got around to polishing my silver the other day. It’s probably the third time in 30 years and it needed it. The silver’s sheen was disguised under a psychedelic wash of burnt orange, purple and blues disturbed by the patterns of fingertips and smudges. In other circumstances you might have described it as a colour-case-hardened finish but that would be an easily-detected fraud. There’s only the one piece of silver. I should polish it more often, given it’s always on display in the living room. However, I don’t want to ruin the engraving, which in my mind provides its real value as well as its interest. Without the engraving, it’s a boring rectangular ingot minted by the Italian subsidiary of Johnson Matthey & Co, London, and guaranteed by Metalli Preziosi SpA of Milan. It is 500g of 99.9 percent pure silver with a value today of about $750. But I’ll be buggered if I’m selling it! It’s worth more than that to me because it is engraved with “916 Ducati” and the date, “27/28-1-1994”. It’s a gift presented to me by Ducati when I attended the press launch of the 916 at the Misano racetrack. That was 30 years ago. Anniversaries are a nerdy kinda thing: arbitrary excuses to harp on about something that happened years ago yet keeps popping up on the calendar. But hell, I can use 30 years (ish) as a worthwhile time to bring up the 916, can’t I? The only thing that holds me back is that the damn 916 thing has been done to death. It’s so deeply embedded in modern classic motorcycling that you can’t f lip a page or open a tab without being reminded of the fact that it made Ducati, that it is sex on wheels, that it is the GOAT. Even AMCN ran a 28th-anniversary article and where’s the chronological symmetry in that? At least AMCN’s article provided some well-placed criticism, albeit from the man who inf licted the ugliness of the subsequent 999 on us. Here’s the thing to remember about the 916: it didn’t come out of nowhere but was a development of previous models that ultimately started with the humble 500cc Pantah. Also, Ducati was already winning Superbike races with its 888, which immediately preceded the 916. The 916 wasn’t even the point of perfection of that evolutionary process because Ducati developed it into bigger and better machines such as the 999 (but thank gawd for the 1098!). The 916 was indeed an immensely competitive sportsbike in its unique way, and in January 1994 I was blown away by how easily it could be ridden fast, securely, in the first few laps I did on a very cold, damp track I’d never visited before. But I am certain that half of its instant-classic status came from its unadulterated beauty. Whatever the case, the 916 earned its place in history for all the right reasons. As much as I might espouse using your classic bike as often as possible, if I had a 916 I reckon I’d be reticent about frequent rides. Very few were brought to Australia in the first place and 30 years down the track the numbers are lower. The survivors, from what I’ve seen, appear to be in good nick generally and if I couldn’t ensure I’d keep mine in the same condition I’d be ashamed. So I’d perhaps treat it a bit like my silver ingot and pull it out every now and then for a gentle polish. Riding once a month is a good routine for precious motorcycles because it keeps the seals in good condition (stops them drying out and failing), ensures the engine turns over before rot sets in, and overall keeps things limber and healthy. An hour’s ride up a nice road would do it. And give it a full service with the lot once a year. Preservation is the key yet the biggest dilemma is how to resist the odd ride day?! I mean, how could you resist? amcn.com.au 93
1 2 3 4 Photography: Social Media NT 94 amcn.com.au 1. Callum Norton took his STE Racing KTM to within an agonising 47sec of winner David Walsh, who claimed his fifthconsecutive win 2. Media interviews are all part of the preparation 3. Norton reckons the preruns means he knows every centimetre of the course 4. Norton, at left, just missed out on the $10k cheque but he had a smile on his dial anyway
REVOLVING RACER. WITH CALLUM NORTON “SOMETIMES IT’S TAKEN ME UP TO 50 KILOMETRES TO MAKE A PASS” IT’S BRUTAL in the middle of the desert – either really hot or really cold. If you want top results at the Finke Desert Race you need to prepare early and that means dealing with the heat. Our STE Racing team is based in Mildura and we make the pre-run test trip for one week every month starting in November. The first two days are for suspension and chassis testing. Then we spend the next three days doing full runs ‘down and back’. For safety, we ride Alice Springs to Finke in the morning and then return in the afternoon after a lunch break – we don’t want any collisions. You do have to be careful out there – it’s a massive build up. Getting through the pre-running without incident or injury is a big achievement in itself. In fact, everything was going so well this year I was starting to wonder when something might go wrong! This year was my sixth attempt at the event and I really wanted to go one better than the second-place finish from last year. In 2023 I was 1m50sec off David Walsh after two days, which sounds a lot but over that distance isn’t much – just a second here and a second there. Obviously he is hard to beat but you don’t know what any of your opposition are up to either. You never know if there will be someone new who is also fast. I at least wanted to be up the front in the battle. In the first 60km to Deep Well on day one I was in the lead. It was the first time I’d led the Finke and the crowd is huge the whole way down the track, making it very intense. You’re trying to read the track and commit – telling yourself that you’ve ridden it a million times. The problem is, the buggies that are on before us blow the track apart. With all that going on, I felt I rode a little bit tight. It might have also been nerves creeping in, but I could feel my arms pumping up. Once David got around me I actually relaxed a little bit, trying to zone in and follow him. To combat arm pump we try a few different things like using foam grips, which are a bit thicker and easier on your hands. On the non-throttle side we have what we call a ‘twist grip’. It has that little bit of give in it and I only use them at the Finke. If you do hit a severe bump or something sharp at high speed, it takes that initial shock out of your hands. I tried to latch on to David, but it was dustier than we expected even after the rain the week prior. He was attacking, hitting everything a little bit harder and opening the corners up a little bit better. They are all small things, but they add up and in the end he was just a bit too good for me to stay close enough. The Finke is well known for its dust and you kind of feed off it. If you’re in second or third place and start seeing dust, you naturally think you’re catching or making ground and your confidence grows. But at times it can be frustrating. If there is no wind the dust just sits. I try not to get too excited and send it for a pass as the track is super gnarly and can bite back. It’s about trying to pick the right spot – when you do so much prerunning you know every single whoop. Getting close enough to make a move but not eat too much dust is very tricky. Sometimes it’s taken me up to 50km to make a pass. It’s like a game of chess and also highlights the importance of the prologue. I’ve been back in 10th after the prologue and it’s tough. Having minimal bikes in front of you is a definite advantage. One of my next goals is to get into rallies. It would be great to learn the whole process of navigation, I’m only 23 and I feel like it’s a good time to start. But for now, we’ve got Hattah to think about. amcn.com.au 95
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IN PIT LANE. WITH MICHAEL SCOTT “COULD WE SEE A RESUMPTION OF OPEN HOSTILITY? HERE’S HOPING…” RIVALRY AT ITS peak is always bitter. Like that stuff put on kids’ fingernails to stop them chewing. But who will be the major nail-biter at Ducati in 2025? Marc Marquez, aged 32 next year, a senior citizen in a class where precocious 20-year-old Pedro Acosta will add a full season of experience to his threat? Pecco Bagnaia, for whom the mantra about first having to beat your teammate has just taken on a razor’s edge? Said teammate widely regarded as a timeless racing genius. Or will it be boss Gigi Dall’Igna, fearing that the rivalry between his two factory-team colleagues might cause them to knock each other off or blow each other up? It wouldn’t be the first time something like this has happened. Everyone expected Marquez to get a factory bike next year; also that the second factory seat would go to Jorge Martin. Marquez’s GP25 would be with his current Gresini team, cosy with his younger brother. All this changed the day after the Italian GP, when points leader Martin was revealed as Aleix Espargaro's replacement on the ever-improving Aprilia. There was another candidate… incumbent Enea Bastianini, ever-unlucky and consequently often underrated. He was Bagnaia’s stated choice. Possibly the kiss of death, as far as Dall’Igna was concerned. Why would anyone want their lead rider to be comfortable when he could be edgy? A racing team is a fighting force, not a bed of roses. This clearly is Dall’Igna’s thinking and, as a serial 250-class and Superbike winner with Aprilia before he rescued Ducati, it’s not frivolous. But it’s risky. How should the double champion feel about his new teammate? Angry? Scared? Thwarted? Inspired? Undermined? How about his patron? Valentino Rossi must be apoplectic. Bagnaia is the rider Rossi ushered through Moto2, at the head of the hand-picked troops trained at his famous ranch. The objective was to wrest control of racing back from the Spanish Armada. Marquez, on the other hand, is Rossi’s longstanding bête noire – not just the rider who arrived to take over the premier class, not just the one to challenge his tally of nine titles, but much more besides. It’s very personal. Things came to a head in 2015, with Rossi’s extraordinary attack at the Malaysian GP. First he accused Marquez of some sort of conspiracy, to help his compatriot Jorge Lorenzo. (By beating Lorenzo at the previous race?) Then the mid-race kick-boxing, when he abandoned his own winning prospects to interrupt Marquez’s progress, eventually tipping him off. The aftermath, aside from bodyguards in the paddock and partisan Rossi fans attacking Marquez away from the track, was a back-row start for Rossi at the final round, where Marquez and teammate Dani Pedrosa made darned sure to escort Lorenzo across the line in first place. Vale was fourth, and lost his chance of what would have been his final title by just five points. Could we see a resumption of open hostility? Here’s hoping… And maybe a return to another Rossi speciality: a wall down the middle of the pit, which separated him from Lorenzo, along with a refusal to share data. Meanwhile there is the rest of the season to deal with and still a real chance that Marquez might be the one to depose Bagnaia, in spite of having last year’s bike. There’s no question he’ll be an even bigger threat on the same machinery. All very tasty… even for neutrals, for whom when Marquez crashes it shows indomitable spirit, but when Bagnaia falls it is because he’s unreliable. But the prejudice doesn’t all go the way of Marquez. Errorprone or not, Bagnaia is as intelligent a rider and tactician as his new teammate; and there are those who have already put him on a pedestal, judging him as potentially one of the truly great champions. Now he has the perfect chance to prove it. amcn.com.au 97
2024 ISLE OF MAN TT 2024 ISLE OF MAN TT: PART 2 1 REPORT KEL BUCKLEY + PHOTOGRAPHY IOMTT BLOCKBUSTER! 2 Thrills, spills and astounding skills. This is TT 2024 THE 2024 edition of the Isle of Man TT will be remembered for many reasons. And you can’t talk about this year’s event without first acknowledging the feats of Northern Ireland’s Michael Dunlop. One of the most unique characters in modernday motorcycling, what he lacks in social graces and charisma, at least outwardly, he makes up for in talent, skill, courage and strength. There was probably little doubt that Michael would one day reach and even surpass the long-standing TT win record held by his uncle, Joey Dunlop. But the mental fortitude the 35-year-old showed during this year’s Superbike TT, when an error by his Arai technician in pitlane robbed him of 98 amcn.com.au the win that would have made him the world’s most successful TT rider, revealed a determination quite unlike anything we’ve seen. With a 25.135sec advantage after 240km flat out on the toughest course in the world, Dunlop was dragged out of his racing zone, forced to stop, remove his gloves, then his helmet, fix his visor pod, reverse the process and then try and regroup as he accelerated off down the famous Bray Hill. Not only did he manage all of that as he started the fifth of the six-lap Superbike TT, but he turned all that frustration and disappointment into the concentration required to set a new lap record of 16m38.953s and 135.970mph. And that was only week one. 3 5 4
1. Davey Todd took the biggest prize of the week, the Senior TT, ahead of Dean Harrison and Josh Brookes 2. Brookes built speed and consistency throughout the event 3. He bounced back from a mechanical issue on the FHO Racing BMW M 1000 RR to shine when it mattered most, in the Senior TT 4. Michael Dunlop was the fans’ focus of TT week 5. Kirk Michael: its hard to believe you can still race through vilages iike this! 6. Todd on the way to an historic win 7. Peter Hickman didn’t have the TT he’d planned 8. Todd and Dunlop on the Superstock podium 9. Dunlop on the Paton 10. Hickman on his Yamaha R7 11. Dom Herbertson 12. Michael Dunlop SUPERSTOCK 6 THE CHALLENGER WHILE MICHAEL Dunlop stole the event’s major headlines, Davey Todd’s performance at this year’s TT was nothing short of spectacular, marking a significant milestone in his racing career. With only four years of course experience and a single podium finish to his name leading into the 2024 event, Todd’s achievements this year have firmly established him as a rising star in the world of road racing. Fast out of the blocks, the 28-year-old dominated the practice and qualifying sessions, and his maiden TT victory came in the three-lap Superstock TT race, where he piloted the Milwaukee BMW to a thrilling win. He faced fierce competition from seasoned riders, including the fastest man ever to lap the Mountain Course Peter Hickman. Despite the pressure, Todd held his nerve to clinch his first TT win by a mere 2.2sec. His successes didn’t end there. Todd went on to win the prestigious Senior TT, a race that every rider aspires to conquer. Although Peter Hickman’s unexpected 7 crash while leading the shortened four-lap race contributed to the outcome, Todd’s consistent performance and ability to respond to challenges were evident throughout. His victory in the Senior TT has underscored his growing reputation as a TT force to be reckoned with. As well as his two wins, Todd achieved three more podium finishes this year. He secured a second and third place in the two Supersport races on the untried Powertoolmate Ducati and finished as the runner-up to Hickman in the Superbike TT, showing he’s fast, adaptable and consistent across different categories. Todd made his TT debut in 2018 and had to sit out the 2020 and 2021 events due to Covid cancellations. His first podium came in 2023, competing against established names like Hickman, Dean Harrison and Michael Dunlop. This year’s performance signals that Todd could go on to become one of the most successful riders in TT history. 8 SUPERTWIN 9 A NEW KING THE SUPERTWIN category is owned by Michael Dunlop. Renamed from the Lightweight category in 2022, it was fitting that Dunlop scored an unmatched 27th TT win in the same class that his late uncle Joey scored his 26th and last victory 24 years ago. A three-lapper with a mandatory pitstop after the first, the opening Supertwin race was a cracker. After the Superbike win slipped through his fingers, Dunlop fired his Paton S1-R off the start line with a helluva point to prove. The beneficiary of Dunlop’s visor troubles, Peter Hickman (Swan Racing Yamaha R7), needed three quarters of a lap to find his grove on the small-capacity twin, edging past rising star Dom Herbertson (Burrows Engineering Paton) for second place at the Bungalow’s 31st milestone. Hickman left pitlane 10.235sec behind Dunlop, with Herbertson a further five in arrears. By the time they reached the Grandstand to start the last lap, Dunlop’s lead was 12.027sec. He stretched it out to 17.351sec at Glen Helen and was under lap-record pace at Ramsay, a full 21.796sec clear of the fastest man around the iconic and unique mountain course. 10 11 12 Dunlop crossed the line to become the TT’s most successful-ever rider, notching up 27 wins and 41 podiums from 83 TT starts. “I don’t like to be cocky, but it should have been 28 today,” he said in the winner’s circle. ”I’ve broken a lot of records during my lifetime, but that’s one that I’ve always wanted.” Hickman held on for second, while Herbertson celebrated his first-ever TT podium. Dunlop secured his fourth TT victory of the event, bringing his tally to 29, when he was declared the winner of the redflagged second Supertwin race. The two-lap race was halted on the final lap due to an incident, with results being declared based on positions at the end of the first lap. Well on pace to break his own lap record set in 2018, Dunlop was leading Hickman when the flags were thrown. Mike Browne (Scott Racing Aprilia RS660) finished third, achieving his second TT podium. Herbertson was the biggest loser of stoppage. He was on track to pick up his second TT podium, having passed Browne on the last lap, and was half a second up on him in the race for third at the time of the flag. It was later confirmed the flag was a result of a crash by Jack Petrie, who was later listed as being in a stable condition. amcn.com.au 99
RACE REPORT. YOUR FORTNIGHTLY FIX 2024 ISLE OF MAN TT: PART 2 SUPERSPORT SIDECAR LOCAL HEROES 1 DOMINANCE! IF MICHAEL Dunlop owns the Supertwins category, he positively possesses the Supersport class. Thirteen of his 29 wins have come from his Supersport successes and his Supersport Race 2 victory was his sixth on the trot in the category. His win in the four-lap opening bout, on his self-prepared Yamaha YZF-R6, was the race in which he equalled uncle Joey’s long-standing record, but he was pushed all the way by Davey Todd (Powertoolmate Ducati), impressive considering the Ducati had never been raced around the gruelling mountain course before. Similarly, after so many years with Dao Kawasaki, the fact that Dean Harrison put his Team Honda UK CBR600RR on the box after struggling with set-up issues in practice and qualifying was a fine effort too. 2 100 amcn.com.au While both riders lined up for the second Superport race – this one shortened to just a two-lap dash with no pitstop thanks to weather interruptions – with far more data and know-how, it didn’t make a difference to the winner, such is Dunlop’s dominance in this category. Dunlop had half a second in hand after the first sector. Despite revealing later that he felt as if he had lost gas compression in the front fork, he increased his lead at every split, becoming the TT’s most successful rider when crossing the line for the final time. “I knew it was going to be hard work,” he said afterwards. “It was a wee bit windy and I couldn’t push as hard as I wanted to.” Todd led from Harrison for the opening lap in the race for the final podium places, but Harrison had passed Todd on the leaderboard by half-race distance, a lead he hung on to until the end. “Over the moon,” Harrison said after going one better than Race 1 to finish second in the final Supersport contest, while Todd too, said: “A new bike coming to the TT, two podiums, I’m really over the moon with that.” Jamie Coward (KTS Racing) recorded his fastest ever Supersport lap to finish fourth ahead of Peter Hickman (Trooper Beer Triumph), whose second Supersport race was his 50th TT start. 3 THE TT Sidecar races were marked by the impressive performances of local brothers Ryan and Callum Crowe (Kelproperties Honda), who dominated both legs to secure their first-ever TT victories as well as breaking into the 120mph club for the first time. Proving their opening TT win, where they finished almost 27 seconds ahead Pete Founds and Jevan Walmsley (FHO Racing Honda), was no fluke, their hardfought victory in the second Sidecar race solidified their rise. Despite a restart due to a red flag incident, the Crowes maintained their composure and pace, ultimately winning by 20.491sec over 14-time TT winner Ben Birchall and his new passenger Kevin Rousseau (Wyckham Blackwell/Hager LCR Honda). It was an awe-inspiring return for the duo, who had missed the first race after a big qualifying crash on the mountain. Clocking 120.335mph lap on the way to their second TT victory hands the popular Crowes the second-fastest sidecar lap in TT history. Veteran 60-year-old Dave Molyneux and his 20-year-old passenger Jake Roberts (Kelproperties DMR Racing Kawasaki) completed the podium. This gave Molyneaux his first rostrum finish since 2014. Soon after the 17-time TT winner announced his retirement, almost 40 years after his maiden Sidecar TT in 1985. 4 6 5 7
1. Michael Dunlop is an often misunderstood roadracing genius 2. Dean Harrison surprised with his adaptation to Honda machinery 3. Davey Todd put in a stellar performance on an untried Ducati 4. Dunlop has made the Supersport class his own 5. Harrison is apex-perfect on the Honda 6. Ryan and Callum Crowe are the new TT Sidecar heroes 7. The brothers Crowe soak up their win 8. Todd has joined the TT greats 9. Todd airborne in the Senior 10. Josh Brookes celebrates with his team 11. John McGuinness did his fastest ever Superstock lap and finished top-five in the Senior SENIOR TT 9 GAME ON THE SENIOR TT had it all. Delays, damp patches, dilemma, drama and DNFs. Chasing down his 30th TT win, after Michael Dunlop’s (Hawk Racing Honda) performance in the Superbike TT had the Northern Irishman coming in as the favourite, and after already winning two races earlier in the day, he was on track to become the first man ever to win three TTs in a day. After a lacklustre week by his standards, Peter Hickman (FHO BMW) blasted out of the blocks to lead from Davey Todd (Milwaukee BMW) and Dunlop to Ballaugh Bridge. He then put in the fastest-ever sector time from Ballaugh to Ramsay. With Dunlop retiring at Hailwood Heights with clutch issues, it was clear the biggest prize of the TT fortnight was going to be battled out by Hickman and Todd. Aussie Josh Brookes (FHO BMW) had a great start to the blue-riband event, too. He was up to third by the end of the opening lap, 13.343sec down on Todd, and just 3.158sec clear of Harrison (Honda UK) in fourth. This was an impressive showing from the Aussie considering he had suffered a mechanical DNF early on in the Superbike TT, minimising his set-up and data acquisition on the M 1000 RR. 8 WINNER’S CIRCLE A wrap of the podium places and win tallies of TT 2024 SUPERBIKE TT 1 Peter Hickman (14th win) 2 Davey Todd 3 Dean Harrison SUPERTWIN TT 1 1 Michael Dunlop (26th win) 2 Peter Hickman 3 Dom Herbertson SUPERSTOCK TT 10 11 1 Davey Todd (first win) 2 Peter Hickman 3 Michael Dunlop SIDECAR TT 1 1 Ryan Crowe/Callum Crowe (first win) 2 Pete Founds/Jevan Walmsley 3 Alan Founds/Rhys Gibbons “This is a different Peter Hickman than we’ve seen all fortnight,” marvelled the commentators as his posted fastest sector after fastest sector. Hickman had stretched an 8.3sec lead over Todd by the time he reached Ballaugh Bridge on the second of the four-lap race. As onlookers waited to see what he could increase it to by Ramsay, the arrival of riders behind the Englishman on the road signalled trouble. A uncharacteristic crash at Ginger’s Hall put paid to the BMW rider’s hopes of celebrating his third consecutive Senior TT in 2024. Thankfully he was unhurt and watched the rest of the race unfold from a nearby pub. At the end of the second lap, Todd entered the only pitstop of the race 18.698sec clear of Brookes, who was 15.1sec ahead of Harrison. Despite some traffic, the final two laps were relatively uneventful. Todd held on for the win to give his Milwaukee BMW by TAS Racing team its first Senior TT victory since 2004, a feat team owner Hector Neil called “a dream come true”. Todd had come into the 2024 event with a single podium but left with five more, including two wins that included the biggest of them all. “Those last two laps were the longest two laps of my life,” he said. “It doesn’t feel real – I (only) got my first TT win a few days ago. I can’t wait until next year already, I honestly can’t wait.” Brookes retained the focus required to further extend his lead over Harrison to an impressive 39.084sec. “It’s amazing. I feel like I’ve won it, it’s unreal,” beamed Brookes. “I’m thrilled. I went the quickest I’ve ever been around the course.” James Hiller (WTF Racing Honda) and John McGuinness (Honda UK) completed the top five. SUPERSPORT TT 1 1 Michael Dunlop (27th win) 2 Davey Todd 3 Dean Harrison SIDECAR TT 2 1 Ryan Crowe/Callum Crowe (second win) 2 Ben Birchall/ Kevin Rousseau 3 Dave Molyneaux/Jake Roberts SUPERSPORT TT 2 1 Michael Dunlop (28th win) 2 Dean Harrison 3 Davey Todd SUPERTWIN TT 2 1 Michael Dunlop (29th win) 2 Peter Hickman 3 Mike Browne SENIOR TT 1 Davey Todd (second win) 2 Josh Brookes 3 Dean Harrison amcn.com.au 101
YOUR FORTNIGHTLY FIX ROUND 04 MISANO, ITALY - 14-16 JUNE// 2024 WORLDSBK CHAMPIONSHIP WSBK 1 REPORT GORDON RITCHIE + PHOTOGRAPHY GOLD&GOOSE TRIPLE TOPRAK Razgatlioglu overcomes the heat and dust to take the spoils THE POWERS- that-be in WorldSBK declared a threeday weekend attendance of 75,688 at a broiling and passion-filled Misano, but the only people who left dissatisfied were the diehard Ducatisti. Neither their hero Alvaro Bautista or their new race winner Nicolo Bulega (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) could dent the truly transcendental pace of Toprak Razgatlioglu (ROKiT BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team). After local residents had assured race teams that 2024’s had been the most grey and rainy summer in this part of the usually sunny Italian Adriatic coast, Misano turned on a blisteringly hot weekend. STATEMENT OF THE WEEKEND Andrea Iannone used his home race to make a political statement via a one-off rainbow-coloured helmet design. According to the team, the 34-year-old wanted to “send a message of peace, respect, equality and global brotherhood which is much needed today”. 102 amcn.com.au Saturday Superpole qualifying ended up being a record-smashing festival, with Toprak setting a 1m32.320s new track best to lead a front row of Bulega and the ever-improving Remy Gardner (GRT Yamaha). Gardner, pushing hard from a good start, took an early lead in Saturday’s Race 1 and stayed out in front for three laps, making Toprak push to catch and then pass him. When he did the result was a fast formality. Bulega pushed hard, after passing teammate Bautista, but finished 1.7sec adrift of the phenomenal Razgatlioglu. In just a few months Razgatlioglu has single- ROUGH START OF THE WEEKEND The inaugural Women’s Circuit Racing World Championship was blighted by two crashes that hospitalised Mia Rusthen and Jessica Howden. Rusthen remains in an induced coma after undergoing surgery but both riders are expected to make a full recovery.
WorldSBK Round 4 results and standings 11 8 12 16 13 15 10 14 9 7 5 6 2 1 3 4 Misano, Italy 4.226km WorldSSP Race 1 WorldSBK Race 1 2 POS RIDER NAT BIKE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 T RAZGATLIOGLU N BULEGA A BAUTISTA A LOCATELLI A LOWES R GARDNER A IANNONE M VAN DER MARK D PETRUCCI I LECUONA A BASSANI G GERLOFF M PIRRO M RINALDI S REDDING X VIERGE P OETTL B RAY T RABAT A NORRODIN TUR ITA SPA ITA GBR AUS ITA NED ITA SPA ITA USA ITA ITA GBR SPA GER GBR ESP MAS BMW DUC DUC YAM KAW YAM DUC BMW DUC HON KAW BMW DUC DUC BMW HON YAM YAM KAW HON TIME 33m07.016s +1.782s +3.176s +10.337s +11.671s +14.822s +16.637s +19.044s +20.686s +24.041s +26.233s +30.303s +32.536s +35.186s +35.566s +45.895s +48.811s +54.387s +1m04.508s +1m10.077s DNF S LOWES (GBR, DUC), T MACKENZIE (GBR, HON), D AEGERTER (SUI, YAM), J REA (GBR, YAM) POLE POSITION T RAZGATLIOGLU 1m32.320s 3 1. You'd expect nothing less from flamboyant Toprak Razgatlioglu, who has turned BMW from also-ran into a championship leader 2. Razgatlioglu is a bit loose but always in control 3. Remy Gardner leads Andrea Locatelli 4. Andrea Iannone's soft-tyre choice didn't work out 5. Gardner showed speed but bad luck pulled him back NAT BIKE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24` 25 26 A HUERTAS Y MONTELLA S MANZI V DEBISE J NAVARRO M SCHROETTER F CARICASULO O BAYLISS N TUULI G VAN STRAALEN L OTTAVIANI T EDWARDS F FULIGNI L BALDASSARRI L MAHIAS Y RUIZ A SCIARRETTA P BIESIEKIRSKI O VOSTATEK S JESPERSEN K BIN PAWI K KEANKUM N ANTONELLI R DE ROSA M BRENNER K TOBA SPA ITA ITA FRA SPA GER ITA AUS FIN NED ITA AUS ITA ITA FRA ESP ITA POL CZE DEN MAS THA ITA ITA SUI JPN DUC DUC YAM YAM TRI MVA MVA DUC DUC YAM MVA DUC DUC TRI YAM YAM DUC DUC TRI KAW HON YAM DUC QJM KAW HON TIME 29m30.653s +0.021s +4.667s +5.892s +14.686s +17.884s +20.092s +23.887s +25.354s +27.410s +35.672s +35.691s +35.830s +35.991s +36.659s +39.830s +39.895s +40.717s +45.853s +55.178s +1m03.398s +1m04.464s +1m05.176s +1m10.530s +1m16.416s 3 LAPS DNF J MCPHEE (GBR, TRI), B SOFUOGLU (TUR, MVA), L POWER (AUS, MVA), G GIANNINI (ITA,KAW), T BOOTH-AMOS (GBR, TRI), A SARMOON (THA, YAM), S CORSI (ITA, DUC), C ONCU (TUR, KAW), WorldSBK Superpole Race POS RIDER NAT BIKE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 8 9 10 T RAZGATLIOGLU N BULEGA A LOWES A LOCATELLI A IANNONE A BASSANI I LECUONA J REA S LOWES D PETRUCCI D AEGERTER TUR ITA GBR ITA ITA ITA SPA GBR GBR ITA SUI BMW DUC KAW YAM DUC KAW HON YAM DUC DUC YAM TIME 15m36.088s +1.651s +4.779s +8.061s +10.913s +12.013s +12.436s +14.981s +0.876s +15.255s +16.071s FASTEST LAP (NEW RECORD) 5 WorldSBK Race 2 handedly transformed BMW’s prospects of a championship. With Bautista third, Andrea Locatelli (Pata Yamaha Prometeon WorldSBK Team) was a good fourth, after breaking the pressure from Alex Lowes (Kawasaki Racing Team). The British rider has grown into his lead role for Kawasaki so much in such a short time he (and his teammate Axel Bassani) have RIDER FASTEST LAP A BAUTISTA 1m35.473s T RAZGATLIOGLU 1m32.687s 4 POS been retained to front up the new Bimota by Kawasaki Racing Team project for 2025. Gardner crossed the line in sixth after losing front grip and confidence, having made his unmissable early mark with self belief and pace. Andrea Iannone (Team Go Eleven) was seventh and Michael van der Mark eighth. Jonathan Rea (Pata Yamaha Prometeon WorldSBK Team) POS RIDER NAT BIKE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 T RAZGATLIOGLU N BULEGA A BAUTISTA A LOWES A LOCATELLI D PETRUCCI A BASSANI R GARDNER I LECUONA J REA A IANNONE S REDDING S LOWES T RABAT P OETTL M RINALDI B RAY G GERLOFF T MACKENZIE TUR ITA SPA GBR ITA ITA ITA AUS SPA GBR ITA GBR GBR ESP GER ITA GBR USA GBR BMW DUC DUC KAW YAM DUC KAW YAM HON YAM DUC BMW DUC KAW YAM DUC YAM BMW HON TIME 33m06.338s +2.980s +6.920s +9.951s +11.974s +15.900s +16.055s +19.125s +22.535s +27.237s +27.292s +29.948s +31.044s +38.090s +43.840s +43.852s +44.363s +45.078s +48.580s DNF M PIRRO (ITA, DUC), X VIERGE (ESP, HON), M VAN DER MARK (NED, BMW), D AEGERTER (SUI, YAM), A NORRODIN (MAS, HON) FASTEST LAP T RAZGATLIOGLU 1m33.307s RIDER STANDINGS AFTER 4 OF 12 ROUNDS 1 RAZGATLIOUGLU 179, 2 BULEGA 158, 3 BAUTISTA 155, 4 A LOWES 124, 5 LOCATELLI 94, 6 IANNONE 83, 7 GARDNER 72, 8 VAN DER MARK 66, 9 PETRUCCI 65, 10 AEGERTER 46, 11 BASSINI 40, 12 S LOWES 34, 13 GERLOFF 33, 14 REA 31 15 SPINELLI 25 POLE POSITION Y MONTELLA 1m36.876s FASTEST LAP A HUERTAS 1m37.404s WorldSSP Race 2 POS RIDER NAT BIKE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25` 26 27 28 29 A HUERTAS Y MONTELLA V DEBISE S MANZI J NAVARRO M SCHROETTER F CARICASULO N TUULI N ANTONELLI T BOOTH-AMOS S CORSI L OTTAVIANI O BAYLISS G VAN STRAALEN P BIESIEKIRSKI Y RUIZ A SCIARRETTA F FULIGNI J MCPHEE L POWER L BALDASSARRI K TOBA S JESPERSEN K BIN PAWI R DE ROSA M BRENNER O VOSTATEK A SARMOON C ONCU SPA ITA FRA ITA SPA GER ITA FIN ITA GBR ITA ITA AUS NED POL ESP ITA ITA GBR AUS ITA JPN DEN MAS ITA SUI CZE THA TUR DUC DUC YAM YAM TRI MVA MVA DUC DUC TRI DUC MVA DUC YAM DUC YAM DUC DUC TRI MVA TRI HON KAW HON QJM KAW TRI YAM KAW TIME 24m58.358s +1.213s +2.118s +3.082s +4.105s +10.547s 1 sector 1 sector 1 sector 1 sector 1 sector 1 sector 1 sector 1 sector 2 sectors 2 sectors 2 sectors 2 sectors 2 sectors 2 sectors 2 sectors 1 lap 1 lap 1 lap 1 lap 1 lap 1 lap 1 lap 1 lap DNF B SOFUOGLU (TUR, MVA), T EDWARDS (AUS, DUC), K KEANKUM (THA, YAM), L MAHIAS (FRA, YAM) DSQ G GIANNINI (ITA, KAWA) FASTEST LAP (NEW RECORD) A HUERTAS 1m37.114s RIDER STANDINGS AFTER 4 OF 12 ROUNDS 1 HUERTAS 136, 2 MONTELLA 125, 3 MANZI 114, 4 SCHROETTER 104, 5 DEBISE 78, 6 CARICASULO 72, 7 NAVARRO 67, 8 SOFUOGLU 55, 9 VAN STRAALEN 46, 10 MAHIAS 40, 11 TUULI 33, 12 O BAYLISS 33, 13 ANTONELLI 28, 14 J MCPHEE 25, 15 ONCU 22, 16 EDWARDS 19, 25 POWER 6 amcn.com.au 103
RACE REPORT. YOUR FORTNIGHTLY FIX 1. Iker Lecuona finished seventh in the Superpole race 2. It's ‘make war, not peace' as Andrea Iannone hunts down Sam Lowes 3. Alvaro Bautista leads Alex Lowes in Race 2 ROUND 04 MISANO, ITALY - 14-16 JUNE// 2024 WORLDSBK CHAMPIONSHIP WSBK 1 NONE OF THE OTHER RIDERS ON FACTORY-SPEC BMWS CAN GET THE M 1000 RR TO DO WHAT RAZGATLIOGLU DOES crashed and injured his left hand and wrist. The six-time champ gridded up for the Superpole race but no one had anything in the 10-lap sprint to challenge Razgatlioglu. Bulega led for three laps, but Toprak made short work of the young Italian and went on to win by 1.651sec from the Ducati rider with Alex Lowes in third. Lowes held off the challenge of Bautista for some time, until the Ducati rider fell on lap five. He remounted to finish well out of the points in 17th. This was not the kind of Ducati home round Bautista had hoped to have in what is now a three-way fight for the championship. Locatelli, Iannone and a revitalised Bassani finished fourth, fifth and sixth respectively. The final race of the weekend offered a lot of hope for Bulega as he took a strong lead from the start, looking like he may have the pace to keep Toprak at bay. But it was Remy Gardner ON FORM from the off, qualifying third in Superpole, Remy Gardner led Race 1 only to finish sixth, then got tangled with Garret Gerloff and fell in the 104 amcn.com.au a dream that lasted seven laps as Razgatlioglu caught, passed and then eased away from Bulega for another career weekend triple. Bulega was a strong second, well ahead of teammate Bautista, who started from 11th. Lowes took his Ninja to a strong fourth place, ahead of Locatelli, Petrucci and Bassani, with Bassani once again finding progress in his first season in a factory team. It was a difficult weekend 2 for Iannone, who went a different way from some with his super-soft tyre choices to try and find an edge. Seventh, fifth and 11th were poor reward for a rider who was on a podium at Rounds 1 and 2. Razgatlioglu was on-form and untouchable at Misano. His talent is impressive and concerning for his championship rivals, especially since none of the other three riders equipped with factory-spec BMWs can get the M 1000 RR to do what he does, and two of them are serial WorldSBK race winners of recent times. Even more ominous is the fact that the series now heads to Razgatlioglu’s favourite track of Donington Park over 12-14 July. In the championship points Razgatlioglu has 179 points, Bulega 158, Bautista 155 and Lowes 124. There is another gap to Locatelli on 94 and then Iannone on 83. “Unfortunately in the sprint race I had to go wide at the start and I lost some positions. I felt then we could have a good race anyway, but I got involved in an incident and that was the end. That finale compromised Race 2 as well as it’s tough to have a good run starting from behind, but I still managed to score some points.” 3 WSBK 6th, DNF, 8th Superpole Race. He was eighth in Race 2. “Not the Sunday we were looking for after a strong weekend," he said.
4. Adrian Huertas and Yari Montella lead SSP Race 2 start 5. Double-winner Huertas 6. Close action in the inaugural WCRWC race 7. Maria Herrera 8. Jeffrey Buis in WSSP300 Race 2 9. Inigo Iglesias Bravo and Aldi Mahendra duel in Race 1 10. Bravo returns after Race 2 11. WSSP300 Race 2 podium HUERTAS DOUBLE THE HOT WE ATHER played a major part for all at Misano, with Superpole winner Yari Montella (Barni Spark Ducati) not quite able to match lap-record pace. Montella and Adrian Huertas (Aruba. It Ducati) battled for the win the entire race but it was Huertas who saw the flag first. The Race 1 winning margin was just 0.021sec after he pounced on his rival late in the 18-lap race. A three-rider breakaway saw Stefano Manzi tail the top two but not get quite near enough. He was third, with Valentin Debise (Evan Bros Yamaha) Oli Bayliss OLI BAYLIS S qualified a strong eighth and repeated that result in Race 1 after a great start. He was 13th in the Luke Power QUALIF YING 32nd determined Luke Power's weekend. He crashed at T2 in Race 1 and improved to 20th in Race 2, Tom Edwards SADLY a tech issue ruled Tom Edwards out of Race 2 early on after he had qualified 20th in Friday’s Superpole and finished 12th in Race 1. “We did a test here WCRWC 4 CLOSE CALL 5 fourth and Jorge Navarro (Orelac Racing Verdnatura Ducati) fifth. A red flag stopped the Race 2 after 16 laps, with Huertas the declared winner and Montella second. Huertas set a new lap record of 1m37.114sec. Debise was third with Manzi fourth and Navarro again fifth. In the championship points, Huertas sits on 136, Montella 123 and Manzi 114. WorldSSP 8th/13th red-flagged Race 2. “I finally got a good qualifying," he said. "If I started from where I usually start and finished where I did, I think I would be a lot more happy. But then I realised we still need to work a lot to try and make me able to fight with some of the guys at the front. We are getting there, for sure.” THE WORLDS SP300 class offered up two spectacular races, but the first one was so close they called it wrong to begin with. Aldi Mahendra (Team BR Corse Yamaha) looked to have won the fight to the line with Inigo Iglesias Bravo (Fusport-RT Motorsport by SKM Kawasaki) but the final result was given to the Kawasaki rider. By 0.007 seconds! Mirko Gennai (MTM Kawasaki) was in third place. In Race 2 the contest was not quite that close, with Mahendra 1.02sec ahead of Jeffrey Buis (Freudenberg KTM Paligo Racing) and the closely following Iglesias Bravo. Iglesias Bravo leads the points table on 98, with Mahendra on 86 and Misano pole man Daniel Mogeda 63. 8 WorldSSP DNF/20th but was third in the WorldSSP Challenge on Sunday. “In the first practice session I had an electronics issue," he said. "In the second Q session I had almost no track time after quite a big highside. In the first race I got taken out in the first lap. I only did about 15 laps before the second race so it was like an FP2 session.” WorldSSP 12th/DNFth recently where we made a lot of changes," he said. “But the pace of the test was not there and when we came back here I picked up a heap of time and felt more comfortable. Unfortunately in qualifying 6 9 I was only a couple of tenths from being 11 places higher than where I started. I had a good start. I gained positions but I had a couple of people crash into me. I stayed on and I managed to finish P12.” 7 10 MARIA’S! MARIA HERRER A (Klint Forward Team) took the historic first race win, but at the third attempt and after many delays. In a final five-lap race Herrera put in a tough pass on eventual second placed Ana Carrasco (Evan Bros Racing) to win, with Sara Sanchez (511 Terra and Vita Racing) third. Tayla Relph A HARSH introduction for Tayla Relph to the new Womens’ Circuit Racing World Championship after qualifying 16th from 26 riders. She hurt her left shoulder in a Race 1 crash, but gritted In the second race, which made it to the full 12-lap duration, another fourway Spanish fight had a wonderfully competitive finish. Herrera and second placed Sanchez battled it out on the scary final corners to be separated by just 0.085sec at the finish. Carrasco was third. Aussie Tayla Relph crashed in Race 1 and finished a gutsy 12th in the second. Herrera leads the standings with 50 points to Sanchez and Carrasco’s tied totals of 36. Relph is 15th. 11 WCRWC DNF/12th her teeth and return and race in the second to finish 12th. “I have a grade II AC ligament in my left shoulder stretched - so I am very lucky," she said. “I started 16th in Race 1 but I know I am better than that. I made up some positions in a lot of spots and by Turn 2 I was up in eighth position. I had a clear line and a really good run but next thing I knew I was on the ground. The data guy told me someone had hit my rear tyre and caused me crash.” amcn.com.au 105
1. Jack Miller crashes at the Qatar round. Now he's crashing out of KTM 2. However, with an astute manager and many rider contracts up for grabs the future isn't all grim 3. Maverick Viñales with his new boss Pit Beirer 4. These three blokes have put Miller out of a job 5. Marc Marquez is exactly where he wants to be for 2025 6. Could it be ‘back to the future' for MV? 7. Troy Herfoss binned the Bagger… 8. … but he finished ninth and eighth as a stand-in for the MotoAmerica Superbike championship 2 MOTOGP 1 3 Rider shake-up sends Jack to the unemployment queue THE ROLL-ON effect of eight- time world champion Marc Marquez joining the factory Ducati squad for 2025 alongside reigning world champ Pecco Bagnaia sees Aussie Jack Miller looking for a job next year. The confirmation that Marquez had signed came after a frantic few days of rider changes. It started when Jorge Martin – widely tipped to be Ducati’s first pick for the factory seat – blindsided the Italian squad by signing a two-year deal to replace friend and mentor Aleix Espargaro at Aprilia’s ever improving factory outfit. The next cards to fall were when factory Ducati rider Enea Bastianini and factory Aprilia rider Maverick Viñales were named as teammates in the new-look Red Bull KTM Tech3 squad. They’ll receive the same machinery as Brad Binder and Pedro Acosta in the toptiered Red Bull KTM team. And 106 amcn.com.au with all four KTM seats now accounted for, Jack Miller’s hopes of staying within the fold are dashed. “With Enea and Maverick, we have two more very strong riders on board, but this also means giving up on two riders,” said KTM Motorsport Director Pit Beirer, referring to Miller and former Moto2 and GasGas Tech3 rider Augusto Fernandez. As AMCN went to print, there were still 12 seats to be confirmed for 2025. Luckily for Miller, this means 12 riders still without a signed contract. The retirement of Aleix Espargaro has made way for new Ducati recruit Fermin Aldeguer in terms of numbers, but which satellite Ducati team the young Spanish talent will 4 land in next season is still a big unknown. With a string of poor results and a points tally of just 27 – a significant 74 less than what rookie Pedro Acosta has accumulated in the same time on the same machinery – Miller’s prospects aren’t where they probably should be. “I really was hoping that we could get Jack back on the level where he should be,” Bierer said. “In Mugello, being out of the points, that’s not where Jack Miller should be. And no matter what the future brings, we have to turn that around, because that’s not how we’re going to end our relationship.” Miller is managed by one of the wisest heads in the paddock, Aki Ajo, who you LUCKILY FOR JACK MILLER, THERE ARE CURRENTLY 12 RIDERS STILL WITHOUT A SIGNED CONTRACT FOR 2025 5 can be sure is working hard to secure a seat for the 29-yearold. Many are speculating his experience on a Honda, Ducati and, most recently, KTM will make him a valuable addition to the struggling factory Honda squad. It faces an uphill battle as it continues its development phase in a bid to make the once-dominant RC213V competitive again. Current rider Luca Marini has a two-year contract with HRC, while teammate Joan Mir has said he has no desire to stay. The same reasoning could make him an attractive bid for Yamaha, as only Fabio Quartararo currently has a contract with the Iwata factory. But incumbent Alex Rins’ successes and six years experience with the inlinefour-cylinder Suzuki GSX-RR, as well as the impressive onelap pace he’s shown on the Yamaha, indicates his services are likely to be retained. KEL BUCKLEY
MOTOGP NEW RULES ATTRACTING NEW BRANDS DORNA’S CEO Carmelo Ezpeleta has confirmed he’s been approached by manufacturers not currently competing in MotoGP since releasing the new rulebook that will take effect from 2027. The new set of rules, which are aimed at both slowing current-spec MotoGP machinery as well as reducing the costs involved in the high-end tech stakes, makes MotoGP more approachable for brands like BMW, which is currently enjoying resurgence success in the WorldSBK championship. “There have been different manufacturers who have shown interest in being part of the championship in the future,” Ezpeleta said. However, he was quick to point out Dorna isn’t necessarily looking to increase the number of grid slots, instead having more diversity across the current line-up. “For 2027 we are not thinking to increase a lot the numbers of bikes, because we think it’s important to maintain this sustainability of the 6 championship,” he said. “If new manufacturers come in, then there are (also) possibilities to be part of one of the existing Independent teams.” A board member of the Pierer Mobility Group recently confirmed the group’s plans to reintroduce MV Agusta to the premier class. “That is still our intention,” Hubert Trunkenpolz told Italian website GpOne, but also made it clear it doesn’t have the resources to develop a new MV Agusta engine to power the prototype. It would most likely be based around KTM’s existing RC16 engine. “Maybe we’ll develop different frames and different aerodynamics, all of that is feasible and imaginable,” he said. “It’ll be then up to Dorna to tell us whether it considered us as its own constructor or as a satellite team.” MV Agusta has enjoyed enormous success in the road racing world championship down the years, amassing a total of 75 titles made up of 38 rider titles and 37 constructor prizes. KB MOTOAMERICA 7 HERFOSS STILL KING AFTER BRAINERD TROY HERFOSS has weathered an intense weekend of action at Brainerd International Raceway, pulling double duty to ride in both the King of the Baggers and Superbike classes. Herfoss crashed spectacularly on Saturday in Baggers practice but walked away uninjured, eventually landing third in the non-points Challenge race. Hayden Gillim (RevZilla Harley Davidson) was the class of the field all weekend, taking victory in the opening championship race while Gillim’s Revzilla teammate Rocco Landers relegated Herfoss to third on the final lap. 8 Crucially, Herfoss’s main points rival Kyle Wyman (Harley Davidson) finished fourth. “To have one-two Vance & Hines, it’s really good for the team,” Gillim said. “Good for this kid’s (Rocco Landers) confidence – he’s a confidence wave, man. If he’s on it, he’s confident and he’s going to be tough. “Obviously, being up here with Troy (Herfoss) is really good for my confidence too. I’ve got a lot of work to do to even hope of trying to get back in this championship.” Gillim again dominated Race 2, with Herfoss finishing second-last after crashing and then remounting. Again, he crucially finished in front of Wyman, boosting his championship lead to 13 points. It was a heavy schedule for the Aussie, who was also filling in for the injured Cameron Beaubier on the Tytlers Cycle Racing BMW M 1000 RR in the MotoAmerica Superbike championship. The Superbike class was dominated by Bobby Fong, who incidentally has an Australian connection riding for the ‘Aussie Dave’ Anthony-operated Wrench Motorcycles. Herfoss finished ninth in Race 1 and improved to eighth in Race 2. Sean Dylan-Kelly is the other rider with an Aussie connection, with Jake Skate chief mechanic at his Top Pro Racing BMW team. ‘SDK’ has had a solid rookie season so far and took fourth in Race 1 at Brainerd before high-siding savagely in Race 2, leaving him sixth in the points. The next Superbike round will be held at Ridge Motorsports Park, Washington on 28-30 June and the next Baggers round is a fortnight later at Laguna Seca over 12-14 July. MATT O’CONNELL KING OF THE BAGGERS (AFTER 5 OF 9 ROUNDS) 1 2 3 4 5 T Herfoss K Wyman T O’Hara H Gillim J Rispoli Ind HD Ind HD HD amcn.com.au 205 192 142 135 108 107
1. Tommy Bridewell on the podium with Honda teammate Andrew Irwin 2. Josh Brookes struggled at Knockhill 3. The sun shone occasionally at the Scottish venue 4. Ben Currie is defending SSP champion 5. Jason O’Halloran on the charge 6. Billy McConnell had his best weekend this season SPORT. YOU HEARD IT HERE FIRST BSB 1 2 5 3 6 4 RESULTS AFTER 4 OF 12 ROUNDS SBK 1 2 3 4 7 11 17 - THREE SHARE THE SPOILS Bridewell ahead with first Honda win as Irwin gets penalised TOMMY BRIDEWELL produced his first British Superbike Championship win for Honda Racing UK at Knockhill on a soggy Scottish summer weekend that saw three different race winners. Bridewell took the opener in tricky conditions, capitalising on his pole position on the tight Knockhill layout. While the reigning champion was safely out front, chief rival Glenn Irwin was caught up in late drama with oil intermittently ejecting from his PBM Hager Ducati. Jason O’Halloran (Completely Motorbikes Kawasaki) took evasive action but Irwin failed to notice the problem as well as the flags summoning him to the pits. He eventually retired but was given a penalty that put him to the back of the grid for Race 2. 108 amcn.com.au After finishing second in Race 1, local Rory Skinner (Cheshire Mouldings BMW Motorrad) went one better in the wet second race, breaking through for his maiden BSB victory. “Over the last few laps I kept looking at my pitboard and I kept thinking, ‘is this right?’, but I got into a flow state and I was really chilled out.” he said. “I wasn’t too stressed, which was nice, as I usually put a lot of pressure on myself here.” Christian Iddon (Oxford Products Racing Ducati) and Bridewell completed the podium, with Iddon going one better in a red-flagged Race 3 after Leon Haslam (ROKiT Haslam Racing BMW) had crashed heavily. Glenn Irwin’s black-flag penalty has gifted Tommy Bridewell the lead in the Superbike standings. It was a tough weekend for the Aussies, however Billy McConnell (C&L Fairburn Honda) took his best result of the year with fifth in Race 3 after running as high as third following a strong seventh in Race 2. Jason O’Halloran and Josh Brookes (FHO Racing BMW Motorrad) both endured a difficult weekend, with the pair taking a best of fifth and sixth respectively in Race 1. Ben Currie (Oxford Racing Products Ducati) produced a stunning ride from P27 on the grid to sixth in the opening Supersport race, backing that up in the feature race with a gallant second place behind main championship rival Jack Kennedy (Honda Racing UK). T Bridewell G Irwin D Kent C Iddon J O’Halloran J Brookes B McConnell B Elliott Hon Duc Yam Duc Kaw BMW Hon Kaw 141 130 125 118 81 62 30 0 B Currie Duc 153 BMW 24 Kaw Kaw 106 44 Tri 33 SSP 2 BMW F 900 R CUP 7 P Young SUPERTEEN 3 9 B Gawith H Snell SPORTBIKE 9 J Martin “It was a crazy weekend, a technical gremlin made for a terrible qualifying and I also fell out of the caravan and destroyed my ankle!” Currie revealed later. “Hopefully at the end of the year when we have the number one cup, we can look back at this weekend and say we took everything we could.” Brodie Gawith and Henry Snell continue to impress in the Kawasaki British Superteen class. Gawith is sitting third in the points after three top-five finishes in Scotland, including a podium in Race 1. In the National Sportbike class Jayden Martin took a best result of 11th in Race 2 after crashing out of a wet Race 1. There is now a small break before the series heads to Snetterton over 5-7 July MATT O’CONNELL
7. Sam Clarke leads off the line in WA Superbike Race 1 followed by Ben Stronach (#35) and Bronson Picket (#5) 8. Clarke didn't hang around 9. Calvin Moylan won Production Race 2 and 3 10. Callum O’Brien make a clean sweep of the Superport class 11. Martin Calley had a threepeat of wins in the Clubman 600 class 12. Andrew Baker won the Clubman 1000 round 13. Darren Nash/Cooper Mapstone had three Sidecar wins WA STATE CHAMPS 8 7 PADDOCK PASS With Matt O’Connell 9 ONE UP! 10 CLARK IN CHARGE SAM CLARKE is on a roll, winning all three races in Round 3 of the WA State Road Racing Championships at Wanneroo Raceway on 3 June. Clarke (RS36 Suzuki GSX-R1000) dominated the first Superbike race of the day from pole position. After his quick start it was left to Ben Stronach (VRT Signs Yamaha YZF-R1), Adam Senior (Silkolene Yamaha YZF-R1) and Bronson Pickett (Aark Suspension Yamaha YZF-R1) to fight it out for the podium. While Clarke took the wins in all three races the minor placings were divided between the other three. Clarke won the round from Stronach and leads the championship with 150 points to Stronach’s 141 and Senior’s 125. Pickett (108) sits fifth overall on 55 points after finishing third for the round. Callum O’Brien (Road 2 Race Kawasaki ZX-6R) also had three wins to dominate the Supersport class round. Adam Senior (Kelly Transport Honda CBR600RR), Jordan White (INVIEW TV Yamaha YZF-R6), Josh Cook (CMS Yamaha YZF-R6) and Calvin Moylan (HydroPneumatics Kawasaki ZX-6R) shared the minor placings. O’Brien won the round and leads the standings on 125 points from Senior (121) and Cook (117). Two riders shared the Production spoils with Rossi McAdam (Martin17Coaching Kawasaki Ninja 400) claiming the first race while Calvin Moylan (Westsliders Kawasaki Ninja 400) took the wins in Races 2 and 3. Joel Jenzen (GHR Yamaha R3) and Lauchy Williams (Turn 1 Motorsports Yamaha R3) shared the remaining podium places. Moylan leads the points table with 137 ahead of McAdam (124), Jenzen (108) and Williams (102). Krystal Biffen (GoMoto Store Kawasaki Ninja 300) was the round winner in the Production Lites, while Lexie McAdam (Australind Mobile Mechanics Kawasaki Ninja 300) leads the series on 120 points. The Sidecar championship saw Darren Nash/Cooper Mapstone (Nashtec ZX-10R) pull off another meeting threepeat. Their wins saw Sam Watson/Eamon Hegarty (ETC Paving LCR GSX-R 1000) finish second in the three races. The Murray Stronach/Darryl McLeod (Turnapart Engineering GSX-R 1000) duo ended the round third overall with a third and two fourth places. Nash/Mapstone lead the series standings with 170 points ahead of Watson/Hegarty (145) and Rob and Hamish Taylor (123). Andrew Baker (Mintox Racing Suzuki GSX-R1000) took top spot in the Clubman 1000 division, while Martin Calley (Motorcycle Studio Kawasaki ZX-6R) took the three wins in the Clubman 600 class to add another threepeat to the meeting. 11 12 LAST WEEKEND I went road racing after a seven-year hiatus – and what better way than a four-hour endurance event at Pheasant Wood, south of Sydney? It was an awesome day and I’ll write more about what happened soon, but my first thought was that if Pheasant Wood Circuit is any indication of how One Raceway (formerly Wakefield Park) will operate, then I can’t wait for it to open. Track manager Cameron Shelley thanked everyone and gave an update on One Raceway’s construction. “We’re all very excited, it’ll be a world-class, billiard-table finish and the new asphalt goes down next Monday (24 June)," he said. “The pit buildings have been raised, there are brand-new roller doors so you don’t hit your head, there’s new cladding, new amenities, new carparks… the list goes on and on. “ASBK is definitely confirmed for 4-6 October. If we run the track clockwise in its original format, we’ll call it the Wakefield loop. If we run anti-clockwise it will be called the Shelley Loop.” The first public event at One Raceway will be the day after ASBK (inquire now). There are plans to also run regular endurance events with slightly bigger bikes than the 150cc class at Pheasant Wood. Fun times are ahead! 13 amcn.com.au 109
SPORT. YOU HEARD IT HERE FIRST SGP YOUTHFUL OPTIMISM THERE WAS another sign that the future of Australian speedway is bright when the Youth World Cup for 11-13-year-olds was staged at Malilla, Sweden, on 15 June. American Brady Landon won the Cup with a maximum score while Albury Wodonga rider Cooper Antone finished second, for the second year in a row, on 13 points and Sonny Spurgin from Kempsey was fourth after a countback on nine points, having been excluded from one of his heats. PB UNDER 21S THE THREE rounds of the SGP2 series (World Under 21 Championship) for 2024 has kicked off with the opening round at Malilla on 14 June resulting in a Polish clean-sweep of the rostrum as Wiktor Przyjemski headed Bartosz Banbor and Sebastian Szostak. The three qualifying rounds each featured an Australian rider with Tate Zischke doing best to finish midfield in the round at Macon, France. This led to him being named as second reserve for the SGP2 series. Michael West and Harrison Ryan finished in the bottom half of their rounds at Ludwigslust, Germany, and Terenzano, Italy, respectively. PB 1 24 FOR ZMARZLIK Zmarzlik extends title lead as fill-in Fricke surges BARTOSZ ZMARZLIK just keeps rolling along, this time ticking off more milestones by winning the rain-delayed Speedway GP of Sweden at Malilla on 15 June. Not only did he maintain his record of qualifying for every final so far this year, he won his first final of the year, which was his 24th grand prix to surpass the record he had had shared with Australia’s Jason Crump since the end of last season. The win for Zmarzlik extended his lead in the 2024 championship after a night where both Australian riders were prominent in the action. Jack Holder started with a last place before he reeled off four straight heat wins to top a congested score chart. 110 amcn.com.au Four riders scored 11 – Robert Lambert, Zmarzlik, Max Fricke (two wins, two seconds and a third) and Andzejs Lebedevs – with three on nine - Mikkel Michelsen, Dan Bewley and Dominik Kubera. Fricke and Holder were in control in the first semi-final as Michelsen and Bewley bowed out, before Zmarzlik had to pass Kubera and then Lambert to win the second as Lebedevs trailed. In the final, Fricke beat Zmarzlik to the first corner and they then swapped the lead three times before Zmarzlik asserted himself while Lambert held Holder off for third. Zmarzlik extended his lead in the championship as he pursues a fifth world title while Lambert moved to second ahead of Holder. Fricke, who only replaced injured countryman Jason Doyle after three rounds, has laid a great foundation to move towards a top-six finish this year. This would guarantee him a place in the 2025 line-up. Fricke is already seven points ahead of triple world champion Tai Woffinden, who has contested all five rounds. The next round is the GP of Poland on 29 June. PETER BAKER SGP STANDINGS AFTER 5 OF 11 ROUNDS 1 2 3 8 14 B Zmarzlik R Lambert J Holder J Doyle M Fricke POL GB AUS AUS AUS 86 69 68 47 28 2
1. Bartosz Zmarzlik leads recent arrival Max Fricke, who has laid a great foundation to move towards a top-six finish this year 2. Fricke has replaced injured Jason Doyle after three rounds 3. Dallas Daniels leaves no one in doubt about who has won as he stands on the AFT Super Twins podium 4. Max Whale broke his tibia but plans to be back within a month! 5. Kody Kopp (KTM) and Tom Drane (Yamaha) on the startline 6. Daniels was in a class of his own 7. Liam Walsh and Callum Norton on the Finke startline 8. David Walsh does it again 9. It's now five wins for Walsh AFT 3 DANIELS DOMINATES ORANGE COUNTY, New York, was the venue for the seventh round of the American Flat Track Championship with Dallas Daniels taking out the Super Twins Half Mile to extend his points lead over Jared Mees. The Estenson Yamaha MT-07 of Daniels was unstoppable all weekend, topping qualifying and winning his heat and then the Mission Challenge. Things were no different in the main event, with Daniels romping away to a 5.293sec victory. “It was one of those days when you’re just on, and you feel it no matter what,” Daniels said. Briar Bauman finished second on his KTM 790 Duke but the performance of the night belonged to Dalton Gauthier, standing in on the Moto Anatomy X Royal Enfield 650. In his first ride on the Royal Enfield, Gauthier took third by the barest of margins at the last corner with Billy Ross fourth on the Mission Foods Kawasaki Ninja 650. Jared Mees had to work his way through the pack to fifth on his Indian 7 8 amcn.com.au 111
SPORT. GRID TALK 1 INTERVIEW MATT O’CONNELL + PHOTOGRAPHY SUPPLIED MATT SWAAB We chat to the bloke responsible for beaming live ASBK and ProMX broadcasts on to our devices How did you find yourself in the world of directing live motorsport TV? My journey started when I left school about 20 years ago. I got interested in the video side of things after I did a TAFE media course and started filming weddings. It was really just a way to earn money. I worked out that motorsport was where I wanted to be and began working on DVDs in magazines. After DVDs died I landed a role as editor at AVE (a Sydney-based multi-media television production company). I never dreamed I’d be a broadcast director, but here we are 15 years later! You look after both ASBK and ProMX, how many cameras are typically used at each event? Obviously ASBK is very different to ProMX – it is 112 amcn.com.au very track dependant but as an average you would be looking at eight to 10 cameras on track for ASBK and five to seven for ProMX. Then you have roaming cameras and specialty cameras like drones and slow-motion cameras. ASBK has a set track layout and generally allows me to cut cameras in order. For example, standby camera 1, take 1, standby camera 2, take 2 etc., whereas with ProMX you’re trying to cover as much distance with as few cameras as possible. And because the tracks turn back on themselves the camera cut becomes much more challenging. For example, Maitland ProMX cut order is cam 1, cam 2, cam 3, cam 1, cam 4, cam 3, cam 4, cam 5, cam 4, cam 6, cam 4, with some camera operators needing to offer four different shots throughout a lap. To bring the signal back to the truck where it’s all controlled, you’re talking about tens of thousands of dollars for each camera and they are all cabled, so that’s kilometres of cable to deploy at each event. The OB (outside broadcast) truck must be chaotic and stressful at times. How many people work inside? Generally speaking, you’ve got a director/switcher, director’s assistant, replay operator, graphics operator, audio operator, CCU operator and a producer. At all events we have direct communication with timing and race control to ensure we have all the necessary information. Motorcycling Australia is very hands-on with the production and provides us great assistance throughout. We have built a well-oiled machine over the years. Are you the one switching cameras during an event? Yeah, during the Motorcycling Australia events I switch, direct and produce – it’s multiple jobs in one. I steer the ship in every direction from preproduction through to the live event itself. I have a broadcast schedule of what’s happening minuteby-minute – trying to follow the script once we’re live. I also co-ordinate all the preproduction to bring in colour stories and track coverage to help bring the event to life. During a race how do you possibly keep your eye on everything? It’s not easy! I guess the idea is that a race has a start and finish and we tell the story in between. Always, there
1. Matt Swaab with ProMX TV hosts Lee Hogan, Kate Peck and Danny Ham 2. One of the biggest challenges is filling coverage during a break in the racing schedule 3. Fitting into the vast program of an international event, such as WorldSBK, is another challenge 4. Capturing candid moments is key 5. Swaab with ASBK hosts Peck and Steve Martin 5. ProMX is non-stop action 2 3 4 "THE WEEKEND IS JUST GO, GO, GO. THEN I COME CRASHING DOWN ON THE MONDAY… IT'S BRUTAL" are stories within stories – championship battles, that type of thing. I have a great team around me at AVE, so there are plenty of eyes to help out if required. We work our commentary, pitlane reporters and graphics into the story as a whole. The goal is to make sure the viewers are entertained and informed. If you get red flags or medicals you need to be thinking on your feet as to how you can fill time and keep the viewers entertained. Live TV can be stressful because everybody operates on split-second decisions – DGUHQDOLQHLVRQDKLJKb How on earth do you guys get highlight packages put together so quickly? That comes down to the replay operator. They have access to all the camera feeds as well as my switch. Once the race starts they create a playlist that will include all the interesting bits like overtakes or crashes. Also during a race they will be on standby listening to me in the headphones. I might ask for a replay of an overtake at turn five on camera three, for example. Then they wait for me to set it up and cue it in. There’s a little bit of a rush at the end of a race where 5 you’re trying to include celebration shots into DSDFNDJHb How difficult would it be to include on-board footage? It is definitely possible but it’s purely a budget constraint. To go to that next level requires big dollars. These days people have easy access to GoProstyle cameras. From a quality point of view, they are definitely worthy of broadcast but the big thing is transmitting the signal and switching it live – those style of cameras don’t have that technology yet. At the moment you’d have to use a specialist product that minimises weight and aero. As a director, who do you draw inspiration from? I’m a motorsport freak! I’m always looking for new ideas 6 and how other people do things but definitely MotoGP and Formula 1 are the kings of our sport. I’m always looking to see how they incorporate different all the aspects into a broadcast. MotoGP is a great example of how things can be done if \RXKDYHWKHEXGJHWb Is it possible for you to ever enjoy the racing, or are you too stressed? I’m so immersed I don’t really get to enjoy it. I do get little bits of enjoyment when I see a great pass or something – and it does help for me to look through the viewer's lens to keep things exciting. But really, the weekend is just go, go, go. Then I come crashing down on the Monday. It’s an adrenaline-based job and once we’re off air, the comedown is brutal. amcn.com.au 113
REAR VIEW. FROM THE ARCHIVES Motorcycle s fi role in Wor r s t as sumed a milit ar ld gun-arme War I when machin y d e the ba ttle sidecar s were use d in o f Neu ve C hap Tens of tho us ands we elle in 1915. r e us ed ov t he nex t f o er u this image r year s as depicted in of a sea of awaiting o m verhaul be otorcycles hind the li ne s .
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