Most Speed Motorcycle

Most Speed Motorcycle


10. MV Agusta F4 1000 MT Tamburini (307 km/h)9. MV Agusta F4 1100 CC (315 km/h)
8. Ducati Desmosedici RR (320 km/h)
7. Kawasaki ZX10-R (321 km/h)
6. Yamaha R1 (321 km/h)

5. Suzuki GSX-R 1000 (323 km/h)
4. Honda CBR 1100-XX Fireblade (326 km/h)
3. Kawasaki ZX14-R (331 km/h)2. Kawasaki ZX12-R (336 km/h)
1. Suzuki Hayabusa 1300 GSX-R
(342 km/h Non limiter)

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Starting on Sunday 27th February, Ducati Manchester, Washway Road, Sale will have a proffessional catering van serving top quality food and drinks. From Full breakfasts in bread, there is a great selection of food and makes Ducati MAnchester the ideal place to ride to on your Sunday ride.
We would like to invite you all to our weekend of pure indulgence at Manchester and Preston. We will have the all new fleet of 2011 Ducati Models on demonstrator for you to try including the all new Diavel. As long as you are over 21 years old and have held a full motorcycle license for over 1 year and have no more than 9 points on your license then bring your license (both parts) and book a demo on one of our range. On Sunday we will have our all new BUTTY VAN on site at Manchester. There will be prizes, giveaways and more.... Call now for full details


We would like to invite you to the all new Diavel Launch evening at Ducati in Manchester and Preston. The all new Diavel will be on show for you to look at and sit on and learn all abvout the Diavels features. There will be light refreshments served and a prize draw to WIN A DIAVEL for the day*

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Monday, February 7, 2011

Report courtesy of Kevin Ash.


Phenomenal. Never mind starting this review with some background and building up to the conclusion, you have to know right now: the new Ducati Diavel delivers way beyond the most optimistic expectations.

So much so, this is the most unexpectedly brilliant machine I´ve ridden for many years, and that´s not simply because my expectations were low to start with – I always though it was going to be fun – but because it handles superbly and is powered by the best engine Ducati has ever made.

It came from a good starting point of course, as the engine is exactly the same as the one which powers the hugely and deservedly successful Multistrada, with the added benefit of another year´s worth of development of the fuelling. On top of that, the Diavel´s airbox is more efficient and the exhaust system is more conventional by Ducati standards than the Multistrada´s complex arrangement, with the result that this supposed Harley V-Rod and Yamaha V-Max rival produces almost 12bhp more than the Multi at 159bhp (162PS).

I say supposed because the Diavel blows those other two muscle cruisers into the weeds in just about every respect. Okay, it makes less power than the Yamaha´s 197bhp, but it weighs almost 220lb (100kg) less, a huge difference even before you take into account the £7,500 price advantage. Ducati´s performance claims say it all: the Diaval is compared not with those rivals but with the Bologna factory´s own superbike, the 1198. And the Diavel wins: it has a 0-100km (62mph) time of 2.6 seconds, faster than the 1198, and has the shortest braking distance of any production Ducati ever made. The V-Max will be left well behind, the V-Rod will just look plain silly, and the improvement over the Multistrada´s even is way beyond what mere numbers suggest.

Of course in these performance specifics the 1198 is hampered by its high centre of gravity and short wheelbase, which it needs for sharp handling and agility, but for many riders, breathtaking acceleration and braking are enough. Then the Diavel goes on to give them so, so much more. There´s the sound first of all, an aggressive, snarling tenor as you wind up the revs that curdles the blood, then with the throttle closed the bike responds with a demonic, frustrated awwww as if goading you for shutting it down.

It´s a visceral, animated soundtrack that´s more than matched by the astonishing response from the Diavel´s engine. The torque at any point in the rev range is massive, the thrust huge when you turn the twistgrip, but more than that it´s the immediacy of the motor´s reaction that makes this the most compelling engine in motorcycling. Brush the throttle with the palm of your hand and the bike thunders forward with a crash of sound and muscle that would have the horsemen of the apocalypse turning tail and heading back into the darkness.

For charging along sinuous backroads the engine is perfection, happy to trickle down to less than 2,000rpm without complaint, wrenching your arms and neck with its explosive torque as the tacho climbs, then revving eagerly to its maximum where that 159bhp has it hurtling along like a missile. There´s no flatness at the top end, no zone of weakness anywhere in the rev range, just a tsunami of power at every level, made all the more compulsive by its liquid smoothness – the handlebars are rubber mounted and only the shuddering lumps of torque at low revs can fight their way through, the rest of the time you´re rewarded with a delicious creaminess.

The sensation is more addictive than crack cocaine, and if you thought the experience might be spoiled by the compromises imposed on the chassis through the necessity of competing in the cruiser sector, then you couldn´t be more wrong. Despite that longest Ducati wheelbase, the most raked out forks, the fat 240 section rear Pirelli (a Diablo for the Diavel, what else?), this bike handles, and it handles superbly. At low speeds the steering is slow but beautifully balanced and natural, with feet-up, walking pace U-turns easy even for inexperienced riders. Up the pace (and that siren of an engine makes it impossible not to) and the bike turns and changes direction in an intuitive, willing fashion that´ll have you hunting down corners until you drop with fatigue.

Never on a press launch have I seen so many journalists ride off at the end of the scheduled route to put more miles on a bike just for the sake of it... sorry, it´s a Diavel, Bologna dialect for devil… for the hell of it. Most of the British contingent did the main section of the route all over again, the fabulous A397 from Marbella to Ronda, and still they wanted more.

There are imperfections (about time…). At high motorway speeds the ride quality is not good as the bike jiggles and jumps over bumpy surfaces rather than absorbing them. That raked out fork angle is to blame, along with the shortish travel and firm suspension. You´d not want to sustain high speeds into a headwind for very long either, as the riding position is more upright even than the entry-level Monster 696´s, and despite sitting low on the bike you do cop a fair amount of windblast.

It´s remarkably comfortable though. At first the seat feels like it holds you tight in one position, and after 15 minutes its rounded shape was putting pressure on me in slightly odd places, but a full day´s riding later and I would still have been happy to spend more hours on the bike, and would have done if Ducati hadn´t insisted on getting it back to prepare for the next group. Bear in mind that I´m 6´3” (1.91m), yet my legs weren´t cramped, while shorter riders were very happy with the low seat and easy reach to the ground.

The view from the saddle is unusual as the tank appears vast and flat, stretched out in front of you around the headstock – Ducati was aiming to mimic the look of the expansive bonnet of an American muscle car, and you really can appreciate that. There are two levels of clocks, a small, conventional LCD display mounted on the bars and a second, high definition, full colour display on the top of the tank, used to change the bike´s engine modes (which like the Multistrada´s are operated via the indicator kill switch). You get three in place of the Multi’s four as there’s no off-road option, and do note the suspension is not affected by the modes, as it is on the Multistrada S models.

The display itself is exceptionally clear and easy to read, which makes the omission of any sort of fuel gauge or mileage range reading all the more unforgiveable. All you get is the old fashioned combination of low level warning light and trip, which on a bike at this price and sophistication level is not good enough. Ducati says there wasn´t room in the dash, but I would much rather the generally irrelevant engine temperature reading was replaced by a fuel gauge – a warning light would suffice for that.

Economy might well be an issue for some anyway. It was hard to judge on this first ride exactly how much the bike was using, and bear in mind it was being thrashed mercilessly for most of the time too, but I´d imagine in more realistic, everyday riding you´d get around 40mpg, with that dropping significantly when you give in to the overwhelming urge to go wild with the throttle. With a capacity of 3.75 gallons (17 litres), that´s maybe 120 miles before the warning light flicks on, so any kind of touring will mean plenty of refueling stops on the way.

Maybe the bike will use less in the Touring or Urban engine modes. In Sport it has a hard edge and instant response that riders moving over from cruisers rather than sports bikes might find intimidating at first, although in the end the throttle control is precise and dependable. What can feel like glitches in the response often are the traction control cutting in: if you crack open the throttle in the lower gears the bike lunges forward so suddenly the back tyre starts to spin up even in quite grippy conditions.

In Touring you get the same power (flagged in the dash as 162PS – Low) but doled out more gently, while Urban feels relatively tame and places a 100PS (98bhp) ceiling on the output. In practice, experienced riders will remain in Sport or Touring most of the time.

The traction control can be kept busy on twisty roads too as the drive out of corners is epic - even that fat Pirelli is troubled by the torque. Heel the bike over and you need some quite severe lean angles to get the bike around corners – a long wheelbase, wide tyre and low C of G all increase cornering lean angles on a bike – but unlike conventional performance cruisers like the V-Rod or Victory Hammer S, the Diavel achieves them effortlessly and pretty rapidly too. Then it sits on its line like anything with a Ducati badge should, unflustered, neutral and entirely faithful to your bar inputs. Give it a series of turns to deal with and it sweeps through with an athletic majesty that´s as rewarding as the engine, while ground clearance isn´t an issue and there´s plenty of feedback too as to how the rubber is coping.

The braking makes you laugh manically at its ferocity. Grab the front lever, stamp on the back and the bike stops so hard it makes your nose bleed. You´ll fully believe an 1198 couldn´t match this, although the flaw is that the uncompliant suspension has the front skipping and jumping on bumpy surfaces, and then the ABS starts to cut in regularly and extends the distances considerably. But stability is exemplary throughout, and it´s yet another hugely satisfying aspect of the Diavel´s performance.

Then there´s the looks. When the Diavel first appeared it was difficult to know what to make of it. But familiarity has a very positive effect: as you get used to the style the bike becomes more and more dramatically good looking, with a powerful visual balance that hunches everything forward over the front wheel, leaving the rear end lean and exposing the massive tyre to stunning effect. The detailing is fabulous, as cruisers need to have, with for example shaped aluminium fluid reservoirs for brake and clutch where a sports bike would have functional plastic items, while the rear footrests and passenger grab rail fold away out of sight to keep the back end clean.

The finish quality and fit is outstanding too, fully justifying Ducati´s premium brand status and the £12,995 starting price. The dark and aggressive Carbon Black version is £15,495 while the stunning Carbon Red will set you back £15,895. The raised paint on this where the red has been applied over the carbon fibre will annoy some, but it´s difficult to see how else it could have been done without lacquering the whole tank cover, which would then detract from the carbon fibre´s appearance.

The Diavel manages to score a bullseye in places you´d expect, then perform breathtakingly well in other areas too. It has huge visual presence and looks absolutely knockout; its soundtrack is marked by the most evocative, angry voice in motorcycling; it is exceptionally comfortable, it handles beautifully and compellingly, and it has eye-watering performance in absolute terms, braking and accelerating up there with some of the fastest bikes on the planet… indeed, very often beating them.

The question of exactly what it is – performance cruiser, Monster on steroids, street drag bike or whatever – ends up as irrelevant, overshadowed by something much more simple to understand: this is the most exciting and rewarding motorcycle you can buy.

Ducati UK has already said the key to selling this bike is getting bums on seats, and I’d strongly recommend that too. The problem is going to be getting them off again... The Diavel deserves to be huge for Ducati.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011



If there’s one man in motorcycle racing who needs no introduction, it’s Valentino Rossi, one of Grand Prix racing’s most successful and popular riders in history. A nine-time World Champion and a household name all over the world, “The Doctor” has a long list of accomplishments including: fifteen years with at least one win in one of the Grand Prix classes; only rider to win consecutive premier-class races with different manufacturers; seventy-nine premier-class Grand Prix victories entering the 2011 season; 105 Grand Prix wins across all classes entering 2011, second only to Giacomo Agostini; most consecutive Grand Prix starts (230); most podium finishes across all classes in Grand Prix history (174 entering the 2011 season); longest sequence of Grand Prix podium finishes (twenty-three, between 2002 and 2004).

Valentino was born to Graziano and Stefania on February 16, 1979, in Urbino, Italy, about a half-hour from where he grew up, in Tavullia. When one considers that Graziano was then beginning the second season of his own Grand Prix career (he earned his first win that same year), it comes as no surprise that Vale took up motorcycles as a child, first riding a mini dirt bike in his family’s backyard before he was even 3. That said, in part because Graziano’s career was cut short at just five years by an injury, his parents weren’t initially enthusiastic about the idea of their son racing motorcycles. His first competitions were in 60cc go-karts, with which he won a regional title in 1990. Nonetheless, Valentino had received a mini road racer for Christmas of 1989 (when he was 10), and he began racing it with some regularity, immediately demonstrating his considerable talent: in 1992, he earned a regional minibike championship.

After trying out a friend’s Aprilia 125 at Misano, he decided to leave karting for real motorcycle road racing, a choice his parents eventually supported. Valentino’s new career direction became possible in 1993, when Rossi turned 14—the minimum age to race a 125 in Italy. Valentino was placed on Cagiva’s Claudio Lusuardi-run team for the Sport Production 125cc class, and his first race was a regional event in Magione. It was an unfortunate debut, as Rossi crashed on the first lap, remounted, and crashed again six laps later, but he still managed to finish in ninth place. Improving steadily over the course of the season, Rossi qualified for the series finale at Misano, where he qualified on pole—ahead of the title contenders. Despite a botched start in the race, he finished on the podium.

Valentino’s performance in the ’93 season finale earned him a factory Cagiva the next year, and Graziano also entered him in the Italian GP series aboard a Sandroni 125. In the second Sport Production race—again at Misano—Rossi posted the first victory of his career, and he would go on to earn the national title in that class. Meanwhile, campaigning the Italian GP series allowed him to also learn the ropes on real race bikes, experience that would prove valuable in ’95. That’s when Vale signed a three-year deal with Aprilia in a Mauro Noccioli-run team and advanced to the European championship, which at the time ran concurrently with the Continental rounds of the world championship Grand Prix series. Valentino easily won the crown in the Italian series, which he continued to compete in, and although he crashed often on the international stage, he still managed to take third in the final points of the European championship, virtually guaranteeing him a move to world championship racing.

Rossi made his Grand Prix debut in 1996 aboard an Aprilia RS250, still in Noccioli’s squad. He finished an impressive sixth at the season opener in Malaysia, and by the fourth round, in Spain, he was fighting for the podium, an objective he eventually achieved at the tenth round, in Austria. Vale took his first pole position at the very next race, in Brno, and followed that up the next day by climbing the top step of the podium. Valentino completed his rookie year ninth in the final points.

Still with Aprilia, Valentino dominated his sophomore year: he collected eleven victories in the fifteen races, in all kinds of conditions (in the other four, he crashed out of one, finished on the podium in two, and finished sixth in the other. Gathering four pole positions along the way, Rossi earned his first world championship in the 125cc class with an eighty-three-point margin.

For 1998, Rossi advanced to the 250cc class, riding for the Aprilia team run by Rossano Brazzi. He collected three second-place finishes in the first six races before notching his first victory, at Assen. His wins at the last four races of the year—Imola, Catalonia, Phillip Island, and Argentina—left him just short of the title, three points behind compatriot Loris Capirossi.

Rossi showed his competition no mercy the next year, and with nine race wins and three additional podium finishes, he collected the quarter-liter class title, confirming his dominance and growing his popularity even further.

The 2000 season brought Valentino Rossi’s passage to the 500cc class, along with the start of what would prove to be a long partnership with the Australian crew chief Jeremy Burgess. It took the 21-year-old some time to come to terms with the power delivery of the four-cylinder “screamer,” but he nonetheless earned ten podiums that year (including wins at Donington Park and Rio) and finished runner-up to Kenny Roberts Jr. in the final points standings. That same year, Valentino made his debut in the Suzuka 8 Hours with Colin Edwards, but after both riders crashed, they pulled out of the race.

Continuing his established routine of learning a class for one season before topping it the next, Rossi added the prestigious 500cc crown to his résumé in 2001 by notching no fewer than eleven race wins, plus a further two podium finishes. It was a fantastic season, made even better by a victory at the Suzuka 8 Hours, again teamed with Colin Edwards.

For 2002, the inaugural year of the MotoGP era, Honda fielded Rossi on a 990cc factory RC211V. Now running inside HRC’s factory team, the Italian won the new platform’s first round and at eight of the first nine races. By season’s end, he had amassed eleven wins in sixteen events, taking the crown by a commanding 140 points.

The 2003 season was similarly lopsided, as Valentino climbed the top step of the podium on nine occasions, earning the fifth world championship of his career.

The 2004 season was historic: Valentino decided to leave the most dominant motorcycle of the time to ride for Yamaha, which hadn’t won a title in twelve years, taking Burgess and his crew along with him. After completely changing the bike during winter testing Valentino wrote another page in the history books, winning his very first race aboard his new YZR-M1, in South Africa, and becoming the first rider ever to win two consecutive premier-class races aboard bikes from different manufacturers. That win was followed by a further eight throughout the course of the season, and Valentino beat Spaniard Sete Gibernau for the title.

The 2005 season once again saw the MotoGP world championship go to Rossi. With eleven victories and just one result off the podium, Valentino earned his seventh title, with 147 points to spare over compatriot Marco Melandri.

The 2006 season saw the Italian plagued by a number of technical problems, but he still managed to post five wins—more than any other rider that season. In the end, Valentino lost the championship to the more consistent Nicky Hayden by just five points.

In the first year of the 800cc MotoGP era, Rossi once again faced daunting competition, this time mainly from new Ducati rider Casey Stoner. Once again plagued by a few too many technical problems, Valentino topped four of eighteen races and scored an additional four podium finishes, but he finished the season third behind the Australian and—by just one point—Spaniard Dani Pedrosa.

The ’08 season marked a return to glory: having switched from Michelin tires to Bridgestone, the incomparable Italian won nine races on his way to world championship number eight (six in the premier class), enjoying other successes along the way, such as his seventh consecutive win at Mugello, his first win of his career at Laguna Seca, and victory at legendary Indianapolis Motor Speedway’s inaugural Grand Prix, in challenging weather conditions.

The 2009 season would see Rossi’s title count extended to nine, thanks to six victories and a further six podiums, giving him a 45 point margin over teammate Jorge Lorenzo.

That teammate rivalry wouldn’t continue in 2010, except for the very first part of the season, which Valentino started off with a win at the Qatar night race. Shortly after that—on April 15, to be specific—Rossi suffered a shoulder injury while practicing on a motocross bike. When, during practice for his home race at Mugello, he crashed and suffered an exposed fracture of his right tibia, Rossi lost any chance of a successful title defense. Nonetheless, after undergoing an operation to repair the fracture, he worked hard on his rehabilitation, with the objective of returning as quickly as possible. Initially, optimistic guesses had The Doctor coming back at the Brno round, a little over two months after his injury, but after undergoing intensive therapy (including time in a hyperbaric chamber) and doing two status-confirming tests aboard a superbike, Valentino returned to action at the Sachsenring, just forty-one days after his crash. Rossi rode to a heroic fourth-place result in his comeback race, then finished on the podium in the next round, at Laguna Seca. Still plagued by both of his injuries, Valentino nonetheless climbed the podium six more times, including a win at Sepang, and finished third on the year behind new champion Lorenzo and Pedrosa.

Immediately after the Brno Grand Prix in the Czech Republic, it was announced that Valentino Rossi would be moving to Ducati MotoGP for 2011, with a two-year agreement. Thanks to special permission from Yamaha, he was allowed to take part in the post-season test at Valencia. The next Sunday, Valentino underwent an extensive operation to the shoulder injured in the motocross crash. The procedure was carried out at Cattolica’s Cervesi Hospital, by Dr. Alex Castagna, from Milan’s Humanitas Institute, and Dr. Giuseppe Porcellini, from the Shoulder and Elbow Surgery Unit at Rimini’s Azienda USL.

During the two-hour arthroscopic surgery, the surgeons repaired the supraspinatus tendon and the long head of biceps tendon, as well as cartilage in the Glenoid Labrum.". Over the winter, the Italian once again underwent an intensive rehabilitation program in the gym and swimming pool in preparation for the off-season tests on the Ducati GP11, scheduled for February 1-3 at the Sepang circuit in Malaysia.
RACING CAREER

Bike:
Ducati MotoGP Team Desmosedici GP11
Racing Number:
46.

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