CAKE Presents Kalk INK SL

Straight outta Stockholm, the CAKE Kalk INK SL is a blacked-out version of the Swedish company’s electric motorcycles. 

Begin Press Release: 


CAKE Presents Kalk INK SL: A Street-Legal Edition of CAKE’s Latest Electric Motorcycle, Kalk INK

Kalk INK SL

CAKE’s Kalk line features four unique off-road performance motorcycles for clean and silent free-riding, backcountry exploration and, with Kalk INK SL, urban adventure.

(Stockholm, Sweden – April 7, 2020) – CAKE, the Swedish manufacturer of lightweight electric off-road performance motorcycles, today announced the addition of the Kalk INK SL to its expanding line up of off-road electric motorcycles. Kalk INK SL is built to be a fast, hassle-free electric motorcycle that is as capable of backcountry free-riding as it is zipping around paved roads in an urban setting. As a fully street-legal electric motorcycle, Kalk INK SL is an ideal choice for riders looking to explore both on- and off-road.

“We are stoked to be able to expand the urban CAKE presence with the new Kalk INK SL, which combines excellent off-road performance with efficient commuter qualities. This bike stems from the uncompromising and superlight Kalk &, but uses components, wheels, and suspension that are a bit more rigid, which means it’s straightforward to maintain and easy to use,” says founder and CEO of CAKE, Stefan Ytterborn. “With the launch of the Kalk INK SL, we introduce the fourth model of street-legal CAKE bikes next to the Kalk& and recently released Ösa+ and Ösa Lite. Each of these models combines excitement with responsibility to inspire a turn toward zero emissions, whether that’s in remote or urban environments.”

The Kalk INK SL and its off-road-oriented sibling, Kalk INK, stem from the game-changing Kalk OR platform, which debuted in 2018. All four models in the Kalk line (Kalk OR, Kalk&, Kalk INK and Kalk INK SL) utilize the same powerful drivetrain, battery, and robust 6061 aluminum frame/swingarm developed for the performance-oriented Kalk OR and the street-legal model, Kalk&. The Kalk INK and Kalk INK SL, however, employ a non-linkage rear suspension for simplicity, lightweight motocross front suspension for robustness, fenders and bodywork that are made from black, injection-molded polycarbonate and ABS, as well as a sturdy 19-inch wheelset for added durability and less overall maintenance.

With the addition of turn signals, front headlight and rear brake lights, LED display, footbrake, and license plate holder, the Kalk INK SL is fully street-legal in the EU and US. Gearing on the Kalk INK SL also differs slightly and top speeds have been enhanced to reach required highway limits — over 63mph/100kph. Riders can expect up to 3 hours of riding on a single charge.

The Kalk INK retails for $10500 USD / €10500 EUR and will be available direct to consumers via www.ridecake.com and select dealer partners worldwide starting July 2020. Starting today, riders can pre-order the bike with a $200 USD / €200 EUR deposit, the currency depending on the customer’s delivery address. For customers looking for an installment payment solution, CAKE also recently announced the integration of Splitit to its payment options, which allows customers to pay over time with zero interest.

The new Kalk INK SL is engineered for the outback & for your daily commute. Kalk INK SL is based on the same technology as the Kalk& with a simplified but sturdier suspension.

Price: 10,500$/€

Deposit: 200 secures an order. The balance is paid upon shipment.

Worldwide delivery, straight to customers door from the closest CAKE-warehouse, Utah (US) or Rotterdam (EU). Deliveries starts July and onwards. First come, first serve.

Specifications:

Weight:

  • Dry 65kg/132lbs + battery 17kg/37lbs

Speed & Range

  • Top speed: +90km/h / +56mph
  • Range – Trail/Enduro: +3 hours
  • Range – Official according to WMTC-II: 86 km / 53 miles
  • Range – High speed riding (@70 km/h / 44 mph): 35 km / 22 miles

The actual range depends on a number of different aspects, e.g. riding style, rider weight, weather conditions, temperature, road surface and tire pressure.

Drivetrain

  • Power: 10kW motor
  • Torque: 42Nm on shaft / 252Nm on wheel
  • Front sprocket: 12 teeth, rubber infused
  • Rear sprocket: 72 teeth
  • Chain: 420 O-ring

Battery

  • 18650 lithium ion cells
  • 51.8 Volt
  • 50 Ah
  • 2.6 kWh

Charging

  • 0-100% takes 2,5 h to charge in a standard outlet

Controller with 3 riding modes

  • Explore mode: Limited speed to 45 km/h and 3-4h+ battery range
  • Excite mode: Enduro or active trail riding. 1-2 h riding time
  • Excel mode: Track and race mode, maximal torque and speed, riding time up to 1h

3 brake modes:

  • Free wheel
  • 2-stroke like motor braking
  • 4-stroke like motor braking, maximum regeneration of electricity to battery

Display

  • Speedometer, trip meter and odometer
  • Battery status and power usage

Frame

  • 6061 aluminium, extruded, forged, machined and painted

Front suspension

  • Upside down MX spring forks, 200 mm travel

Rear suspension

  • Direct mounted shock for simplicity and robustness, 205 mm travel

Head angle / Fork angle

  • 65 degrees

Wheelbase

  • 1,310 mm

Seat height

  • 910 mm (unloaded)

Ground Clearance

  • 300 mm

Trail and offset

  • 87,4 mm of trail
  • 22 mm offset in triple clamps
  • 36 mm offset in forks

Brakes

  • Motorcycle standard, four pistons calipers and 220 mm/3.2 mm stainless steel discs (Hand lever front, foot pedal rear)

Lighting

  • LED headlight, LED turn signal lights and LED taillight. Easily removable light system for off-road riding.

Handlebar

  • Aerospace grade 7050 aluminium, 800 mm wide, 20 mm rise, 31.8 mm

Stem

  • Aerospace grade 7075 aluminium

Headset

  • SKF Stainless steel conical bearings

Wheels and tires

  • Enlarged 25 mm front axle
  • Aluminium 6061 forged and CNC machined hubs
  • 19×1.85” 7116-T6 aluminium motorcycle rims
  • 19×3.00” dual sport motorcycle tires

Fenders and bodywork

  • All fenders and bodywork are made of painted polycarbonate

Bearings

  • All bearings throughout the bike are SKF’s

Class (valid for EU)

  • L3e-A1E
  • License requirement: A1
  • Street legal motorcycle in USA

About CAKE

CAKE is a Swedish company with a clear mission to contribute to speeding up the transition towards a zero-emission society, by combining excitement and responsibility in its development of light, quiet, and clean high performance electric off-road motorcycles. Its first model, the Kalk, debuted at Denver’s OR and Munich’s ISPO shows in January 2018, and has received numerous accolades, including the 2019 and 2020 Red Dot Design Award and “Best in Show” designation by several outdoor industry publications. In 2019, CAKE launched the Kalk&, a street-legal motorcycle as well as Ösa+ and Ösa Lite, a utility platform with an integrated power station and off-road capabilities. Kalk INK debuted in March 2020 with the street-legal Kalk INK SL entering the line in April 2020.


Kalk INK SL








Kalk INK SL


Kalk INK SL

The post CAKE Presents Kalk INK SL appeared first on Motorcycle.com News.

Ducati Corse signs MotoGP™ eSport World Champion AndrewZH

“Innovation, progress and technology are part of Ducati DNA, and that is why we have decided to commit in this new adventure.” Said Ducati Corse Sporting Director Paolo Ciabatti. “eSport is an entertainment platform that has grown quickly during the last years. We were already discussing this relationship with Andrea before he became World Champion in order to be able to dress him with the official colours of Ducati Corse, riding a virtual Desmosedici GP bike, for the 2020 World Championship.” Adding “We wish him good luck, and we can’t wait for the new championship to begin”.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Italian and Catalan Grands Prix postponed

The FIM, IRTA and Dorna Sports regret to announce the postponement of the Gran Premio d’Italia Oakley and Gran Premi Monster Energy de Catalunya, which were set to be held at the Autodromo del Mugello from the 29th to the 31st of May and at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya from the 5th to the 7th of June, respectively. The ongoing coronavirus outbreak has obliged the two events to be rescheduled.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Bikesportnews.com

🎙”I love spending time with them, but in the same breath I have a higher appreciation of their teacher at school now.”


Jonathan Rea: What are you doing now your day job is postponed? https://www.bikesportnews.com/news/news-detail/jonathan-rea-what-are-you-doing-now-your-day-job-is-postponed
Source: Jonathan Rea On Facebook

National motorcycle sales led by Yamaha through first quarter

News 7 Apr 2020

National motorcycle sales led by Yamaha through first quarter

Brand new Tenere 700 tops road and adventure touring charts.

Image: Supplied.

Yamaha is the strongest-selling motorcycle brand of 2020 to date in Australia, figures from the Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries (FCAI) have confirmed.

A total of 17,977 motorcycles, ATVs and scooters have been sold so far, marking a minor 2.5 percent decline in comparison to 12 months ago.

The four main market categories were split, with ATV/SSV and off-road bikes showing an increase, while road bikes and scooters reported a decrease.

“The first three months of 2020 have seen many issues unfolding in the Australian market, with floods, drought, bushfires and, more recently, the coronavirus pandemic,” FCAI chief executive Tony Weber commented. “The market has been remarkably resilient given the circumstances.”

Taking over as market leader, Yamaha recorded a 21.1 percent share of the national market, followed by Honda with 20.3 percent and Kawasaki in third place at 11.3 percent.

Road bikes suffered a significant 7.8 percent decline over the quarter. Harley-Davidson enjoys leadership in the segment, with a 18.9 percent market share, followed by Yamaha at 17.7 percent and Honda’s 14.1 percent.

It was a particularly strong result for the all-new Yamaha Tenere 700, standing atop road bike sales overall and the adventure touring category with 347 of those models sold.

Detailed results (Top 10)

Detailed results (Comparison report)

Source: CycleOnline.com.au

Yamaha tops national motorcycle sales through first quarter

News 7 Apr 2020

Yamaha tops national motorcycle sales through first quarter

Highest-selling dirt bike the Yamaha WR450F to date in 2020.

Image: Supplied.

Yamaha is the strongest-selling motorcycle brand of 2020 to date in Australia, figures from the Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries (FCAI) have confirmed.

A total of 17,977 motorcycles, ATVs and scooters have been sold so far, marking a minor 2.5 percent decline in comparison to 12 months ago.

The four main market categories were split, with ATV/SSV and off-road bikes showing an increase, while road bikes and scooters reported a decrease.

“The first three months of 2020 have seen many issues unfolding in the Australian market, with floods, drought, bushfires and, more recently, the coronavirus pandemic,” FCAI chief executive Tony Weber commented. “The market has been remarkably resilient given the circumstances.”

Taking over as market leader, Yamaha recorded a 21.1 percent share of the national market, followed by Honda with 20.3 percent and Kawasaki in third place at 11.3 percent.

Off-road motorcycles held their own with a 1.3 percent sales rise, in which Yamaha again topped the segment with a 27.8 percent share, followed by Honda with 24.3 percent and KTM at 20.7 percent.

It was the Yamaha WR450F that topped dirt bike sales overall, also featuring as leading enduro model at 260 models sold. KTM’s 300 EXC was second, the KTM 450 EXC-F third, KTM 350 EXC-F fourth and Yamaha WR250F fifth.

In terms of motocross models, the Honda CRF450R was highest-selling at 161 models sold, followed by the Yamaha YZ250F, KTM 250 SX-F, Yamaha YZ450F and Honda CRF250R.

Detailed results (Top 10)

Detailed results (Comparison report)

Source: MotoOnline.com.au

Updated 2019-2020 EWC calendar released

News 7 Apr 2020

Updated 2019-2020 EWC calendar released

Revamped schedule confirmed due to coronavirus outbreak.

Image: Supplied.

A revised 2019-2020 Endurance World Championship (EWC) calendar has been released in response to the COVID-19 pandemic that has placed the sport on pause.

The 8 Hours of Oschersleben scheduled to take place in Germany on 6 June has been cancelled and will not be rescheduled.

Instead, the EWC series will resume with Japan’s prestigious Suzuka 8 Hours on 19 July. Following that, the Le Mans 24 Hours will take place on the new date of 29-30 August in France.

It has also been revealed that the Bol d’Or 24 Hours at Paul Ricard, France, will be added to the 2019-2020 schedule to complete the championship.

Source: CycleOnline.com.au

2020 Q1 Motorcycle Sales Data Australia

Motorcycles Sales Figures

Australia – 2020 Q1 Motorcycle Sales Data

Not all doom and gloom for the Australian motorcycle industry


Sales data released today by the Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries (FCAI) covering the reporting period from January 1 through March 31 has revealed some interesting numbers.

17,977 motorcycles, ATVs and scooters were sold during the first three months of 2020. This compares with 18,438 for the same period in 2019. That represents an overall 2.5 per cent decline in the market.

ATV and off-road up

The four main market categories were split, with ATV/SSV and off-road bikes showing an increase, while road bikes and scooters reported a decline.

Yamaha #1

Taking over as market leader, Yamaha recorded a 21.1 per cent share of the national market, followed by Honda with 20.3 per cent and in third place and Kawasaki with 11.3 per cent. KTM is Australia’s fourth most popular brand ahead of Harley-Davidson and sixth ranked Suzuki.

Tenere 700 Australia’s favourite motorcycle

Yamaha’s Tenere 700 and WR450F were the two biggest selling motorcycles in Australia during the first quarter of 2020.

KTM, BMW and Husky up

The most positive results in the market were recorded by European brands KTM (up 21.4%), BMW (up 22.6%) and Husqvarna (up 34.8%).  Indian (up 21.8%) was also in positive territory over the first quarter.

Ducati recorded an 18.9 per cent drop in sales so far this year while Suzuki were down 10 per cent. 

While Moto Guzzi was up 42.3 per cent that was from a very low base. Sister brand Aprilia was down 46.7 per cent. The two brands combined only shifted 60 units over the first quarter of 2020.


Overall volume across all sectors (Brands)

COMPARISON REPORT
January – March 2020 compared to January – March 2019
Manufacturer Total
YTD 2020 YTD 2019 % CHAN
Yamaha 3795 3841 -1.2%
Honda 3650 4019 -9.2%
Kawasaki 2038 2176 -6.3%
KTM 1756 1447 21.4%
Harley Davidson 1359 1489 -8.7%
Suzuki 1358 1509 -10.0%
Polaris 968 1003 -3.5%
Husqvarna 678 503 34.8%
BMW 652 532 22.6%
BRP Australia 465 453 2.6%
Triumph 435 465 -6.5%
Ducati 241 297 -18.9%
Vespa 197 224 -12.1%
Indian Motorcycle 190 156 21.8%
Piaggio 136 232 -41.4%
Moto Guzzi 37 26 42.3%
Aprilia 22 66 -66.7%
TOTAL 17977 18438 -2.5%

Road

Road bikes suffered a significant 7.8 per cent decline over the quarter.

Harley-Davidson enjoys leadership in the segment with 18.9 per cent market share after the Street 500 had a particularly strong start to the year.

Sales for Harley-Davidson did decline overall though with the American icon down 8.7 per cent compared to the same time last year.

Yamaha was second on road bike sales (17.7 per cent) and had the highest selling model in the Tenere 700.

Honda placed third (14.1 per cent) and the CB125E was Honda’s top selling road bike. 

Yamaha’s road bike sales were down 10.6 per cent while Honda recorded a more significant 21.2 per cent drop in the road segment of the market.

Kawasaki were down 15.3 per cent and rank fourth on road bike sales.

BMW were up 19 per cent to move in fifth place on the road bike charts.

Suzuki slipped to rank sixth in road bike sales and are in danger of being overtaken by an improving KTM. The Austrian brand moved past Triumph on the road sales charts. 

Road Motorcycle Sales (Brands)

COMPARISON REPORT
January – March 2020 compared to January – March 2019
Manufacturer Road
YTD 2020 YTD 2019 % CHAN
Harley Davidson 1359 1489 -8.7%
Yamaha 1269 1420 -10.6%
Honda 1016 1290 -21.2%
Kawasaki 944 1115 -15.3%
BMW 602 506 19.0%
Suzuki 487 585 -16.8%
KTM 481 345 39.4%
Triumph 435 465 -6.5%
Ducati 241 297 -18.9%
Indian Motorcycle 190 156 21.8%
Husqvarna 105 63 66.7%
Moto Guzzi 37 26 42.3%
Aprilia 16 30 -46.7%
TOTAL 7182 7787 -7.8%

Off-Road Motorcycle Sales

Off-road motorcycles were actually in positive territory with a 1.3 per cent sales increase.

Yamaha again topped the segment with 27.8 per cent share, followed by Honda with 24.3 per cent of the market and KTM in third place with a 20.7 per cent share. Yamaha were up 1.2 per cent, Honda were down 6.8 per cent, while KTM’s off-road sales were up 15.7 per cent.

Kawasaki ranked fourth on off-road sales with only a very slight decline.

Husqvarna recorded a very positive 30.2 increase in sales to move past Suzuki in the off-road sales charts.

While Yamaha topped the enduro sales figures with the WR450F it was Honda that topped motocross sales with the CRF450R. 

KTM’s massive range of enduro machinery all did well with the two-stroke 300 EXC the second biggest selling enduro machine and closely followed by its four-stroke 450 and 350 EXC-F siblings ranking third and fourth respectively on the enduro charts ahead of Yamaha’s WR250F.

Suzuki’s venerable DR-Z400E topped the trail-bike category ahead of Honda’s CRF250F, CRF230F and CRF250L machines.

Off-Road Motorcycle Sales (Brands)

COMPARISON REPORT
January – March 2020 compared to January – March 2019
Manufacturer Off Road
YTD 2020 YTD 2019 % CHAN
Yamaha 1710 1690 1.2%
Honda 1499 1608 -6.8%
KTM 1275 1102 15.7%
Kawasaki 726 735 -1.2%
Husqvarna 573 440 30.2%
Suzuki 379 510 -25.7%
TOTAL 6162 6085 1.3%

Scooter

Across the industry segments, scooters suffered the biggest fall, with a 14.1 per cent decline in sales during the first quarter.

In the scooter segment, Honda held a 33.1 per cent share with the Dio NSC110 topping the category, followed by Suzuki with 21.9 per cent and Vespa with 17 per cent.

Scooter Sales (Brands)

COMPARISON REPORT
January – March 2020 compared to January – March 2019
Manufacturer Scooter
YTD 2020 YTD 2019 % CHAN
Honda 385 495 -22.2%
Suzuki 254 200 27.0%
Vespa 197 224 -12.1%
Piaggio 136 232 -41.4%
Yamaha 134 140 -4.3%
BMW 50 26 92.3%
Aprilia 6 36 -83.3%
TOTAL 1162 1353 -14.1%

ATV

The ATV/SSV segment was the biggest positive for the industry with an overall increase of 8 per cent over the corresponding quarter last year.

A slight ease in drought conditions combined with the looming laws that will see ATV machinery without roll-over protection bars banned from sale. 

Polaris topped the segment with a 27.9 per cent share, followed by Honda with 21.6 per cent share and then Yamaha with 19.6 per cent share.

ATV Sales (Brands)

COMPARISON REPORT
January – March 2020 compared to January – March 2019
Manufacturer ATV
YTD 2020 YTD 2019 % CHAN
Polaris 968 1003 -3.5%
Honda 750 626 19.8%
Yamaha 682 591 15.4%
BRP Australia 465 453 2.6%
Kawasaki 368 326 12.9%
Suzuki 238 214 11.2%
TOTAL 3471 3213 8.0%

Top Ten Selling Motorcycles in Australia (Models)

Top 10 Overall – Excludes ATVs
January – March 2020 compared to January – March 2019
Manufacturer Model Total
YTD 2020 YTD 2019 % CHAN
Yamaha XTZ690 347 0 100%
Yamaha WR450F 260 332 -21.7%
Kawasaki KLX110 257 307 -16.3%
Honda CRF50F 254 400 -36.5%
Honda NSC110 251 270 -7.0%
Kawasaki NINJA 400 224 250 -10.4%
Yamaha PW50 222 234 -5.1%
Suzuki ADDRESS 219 177 23.7%
Honda CRF110F 215 181 18.8%
Harley Davidson XG500 205 8 2,462.5%

What about the other brands….?

It should be noted that some brands are not represented in the official audit figures in relation to motorcycle sales. Brands under the UMI group such as MV Agusta, Royal Enfield and Gas Gas, along with the likes of Sherco, CF Moto, Kymco and SWM which come under the stewardship of Mojo Motorcycles, are not included in the sales figures as these companies choose not to be members of the Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries.

An educated guesstimate suggests that these brands represent around 10-15 per cent of the whole market, thus the data is formulated from audited figures that cover around 85-90 per cent of the motorcycles sold in Australia.

Along with compiling motorcycle sales data, the FCAI is the primary organisation funded by the motorcycle industry to deal with government agencies. FCAI helped lobby for the Learner Approved Motorcycles Scheme and the Recreational Registration Scheme. They also lobby for exemptions on tightening emissions schemes in relation to motorcycles, and helping to prevent governments trying to restrict or ban the use of ATVs.

Source: MCNews.com.au

Top Selling Off-Road Motorcycles 2020 Q1

2020 Motorcycles Sales Figures Australia

Top Selling Off-Road Motorcycles
2020 First Quarter compared to Q1 2019


Off-road motorcycles are in positive territory with a 1.3 per cent sales increase.

Yamaha again topped the segment with 27.8 per cent share, followed by Honda with 24.3 per cent share and KTM in third place with 20.7 per cent share. Yamaha were up 1.2 per cent, Honda were down 6.8 per cent, while KTM’s off-road sales were up 15.7 per cent.

Kawasaki ranked fourth on off-road sales with only a very slight decline.

Husqvarna recorded a very positive 30.2 increase in sales to move past Suzuki in the off-road sales charts.

While Yamaha topped the enduro sales figures with the WR450F it was Honda that topped motocross sales with the CRF450R. 

KTM’s massive range of enduro machinery all did well with the two-stroke 300 EXC the second biggest selling enduro machine and closely followed by its four-stroke 450 and 350 EXC-F siblings ranking third and fourth respectively on the enduro charts ahead of Yamaha’s WR250F.

Suzuki’s venerable DR-Z400E topped the trail-bike category ahead of Honda’s CRF250F, CRF230F and CRF250L machines.


Off-Road Motorcycle Sales (Brand)

COMPARISON REPORT
January – March 2020 compared to January – March 2019
Manufacturer Off Road
YTD 2020 YTD 2019 % CHAN
Yamaha 1710 1690 1.2%
Honda 1499 1608 -6.8%
KTM 1275 1102 15.7%
Kawasaki 726 735 -1.2%
Husqvarna 573 440 30.2%
Suzuki 379 510 -25.7%
TOTAL 6162 6085 1.3%

Top Selling Off-Road Motorcycles

Top 10 by Category – Off Road Bikes
January – March 2020 compared to January – March 2019
Manufacturer Model Total
YTD 2020 YTD 2019 % CHAN
Yamaha WR450F 260 332 -21.7%
Kawasaki KLX110 257 307 -16.3%
Honda CRF50F 254 400 -36.5%
Yamaha PW50 222 234 -5.1%
Honda CRF110F 215 181 18.8%
KTM 300EXC 200 153 30.7%
Honda CRF450R 161 118 36.4%
KTM 450EXC 157 69 127.5%
Yamaha YZ250F 137 167 -18.0%
Yamaha TTR50E 136 118 15.3%

Top Selling Enduro Motorcycles

Top 10 by Category – Enduro
January – March 2020 compared to January – March 2019
Manufacturer Model Total
YTD 2020 YTD 2019 % CHAN
Yamaha WR450F 260 332 -21.7%
KTM 300EXC 200 153 30.7%
KTM 450EXC 157 69 127.5%
KTM 350EXCF 133 102 30.4%
Yamaha WR250F 125 41 204.9%
KTM 500EXC 104 129 -19.4%
Honda CRF450L 100 63 58.7%
Husqvarna TE300 88 54 63.0%
Husqvarna FE350 69 41 68.3%
KTM 250EXC 67 45 48.9%

Top Selling Motocross Motorcycles

Top 10 by Category – Moto Cross
January – March 2020 compared to January – March 2019
Manufacturer Model Total
YTD 2020 YTD 2019 % CHAN
Honda CRF450R 161 118 36.4%
Yamaha YZ250F 137 167 -18.0%
KTM 250SXF 122 85 43.5%
Yamaha YZ450F 116 108 7.4%
Honda CRF250R 100 81 23.5%
KTM 85SX 90 102 -11.8%
Kawasaki KX450 83 115 -27.8%
Yamaha YZ85/LW 78 79 -1.3%
Yamaha YZ65 66 73 -9.6%
KTM 450SXF 65 93 -30.1%

Top Selling Farm Motorcycles

Top 10 by Category – Farm
January – March 2020 compared to January – March 2019
Manufacturer Model Total
YTD 2020 YTD 2019 % CHAN
Honda XR190 114 86 32.6%
Suzuki TROJAN 96 79 21.5%
Yamaha AG200 50 57 -12.3%
Yamaha AG125 33 30 10.0%
Kawasaki Stockman 250 28 40 -30.0%
Honda XR150L 21 57 -63.2%
Suzuki TF125 3 13 -76.9%
Yamaha AG100 0 1 -100.0%
Honda CTX200 0 8 -100.0%

Top Selling Fun Motorcycles

Top 10 by Category – Fun
January – March 2020 compared to January – March 2019
Manufacturer Model Total
YTD 2020 YTD 2019 % CHAN
Kawasaki KLX110 257 307 -16.3%
Honda CRF50F 254 400 -36.5%
Yamaha PW50 222 234 -5.1%
Honda CRF110F 215 181 18.8%
Yamaha TTR50E 136 118 15.3%
Yamaha TTR110E 105 88 19.3%
Kawasaki KLX140 96 110 -12.7%
Honda CRF125FB 73 63 15.9%
Yamaha TTR125E/LWE 49 51 -3.9%
Honda CRF125F 43 41 4.9%

Top Selling Trail Motorcycles

Top 10 by Category – Trail
January – March 2020 compared to January – March 2019
Manufacturer Model Total
YTD 2020 YTD 2019 % CHAN
Suzuki DR-Z400E 131 159 -17.6%
Honda CRF250F 126 53 137.7%
Honda CRF230F 119 222 -46.4%
Honda CRF250L 109 113 -3.5%
Yamaha TTR230/A 53 49 8.2%
Yamaha XT250 48 43 11.6%
Kawasaki KLX300 46 0 100%
Kawasaki KLX230R 39 0 100%
Kawasaki KLX150BF 35 58 -39.7%
Suzuki DR-Z250 21 41 -48.8%

ATV

The ATV/SSV segment was the biggest positive for the industry with an overall increase of 8 per cent over the corresponding quarter last year.

A slight ease in drought conditions combined with the looming laws that will see ATV machinery without roll-over protection bars banned from sale. 

Polaris topped the segment with a 27.9 per cent share, followed by Honda with 21.6 per cent share and then Yamaha with 19.6 per cent share.


2019 ATV Sales (Brand)

COMPARISON REPORT
January – March 2020 compared to January – March 2019
Manufacturer ATV
YTD 2020 YTD 2019 % CHAN
Polaris 968 1003 -3.5%
Honda 750 626 19.8%
Yamaha 682 591 15.4%
BRP Australia 465 453 2.6%
Kawasaki 368 326 12.9%
Suzuki 238 214 11.2%
TOTAL 3471 3213 8.0%

Top Selling ATV’s (Model)

Top 10 by Category – ATVs
January – March 2020 compared to January – March 2019
Manufacturer Model Total
YTD 2020 YTD 2019 % CHAN
Honda TRX420FM 157 66 137.9%
Yamaha YFM450FB/P 156 89 75.3%
Polaris Sportsman 570 117 136 -14.0%
Honda TRX500FM 92 89 3.4%
Honda TRX420FA 87 35 148.6%
Yamaha YFM90R 79 84 -6.0%
Yamaha YFM350F 72 78 -7.7%
Polaris Sportsman 450 65 37 75.7%
Kawasaki Brute Force 300 63 57 10.5%
Honda TRX250TM 62 78 -20.5%

Top Selling Off-Road 4 Wheel SSV  (Model)

Top 10 by Category – Off-Road 4 wheel
January – March 2020 compared to January – March 2019
Manufacturer Model Total
YTD 2020 YTD 2019 % CHAN
Polaris ACE 570 35 28 25.0%
Polaris ACE 500 15 10 50.0%
Polaris ACE 150 8 8 0.0%
Polaris ACE 900 1 2 -50.0%

What about the other brands….?

It should be noted that some brands are not represented in the official audit figures in relation to motorcycle sales. Brands under the UMI group such as MV Agusta, Royal Enfield and Gas Gas, along with the likes of Sherco, CF Moto, Kymco and SWM which come under the stewardship of Mojo Motorcycles, are not included in the sales figures as these companies choose not to be members of the Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries.

An educated guesstimate suggests that these brands represent around 10-15 per cent of the whole market, thus the data is formulated from audited figures that cover around 85-90 per cent of the motorcycles sold in Australia.

Along with compiling motorcycle sales data, the FCAI is the primary organisation funded by the motorcycle industry to deal with government agencies. FCAI helped lobby for the Learner Approved Motorcycles Scheme and the Recreational Registration Scheme. They also lobby for exemptions on tightening emissions schemes in relation to motorcycles, and helping to prevent governments trying to restrict or ban the use of ATVs.

Source: MCNews.com.au