All posts by mcnews

Yamaha Europe collection launched in Amsterdam

Yamaha Motor Europe Collection Hall Launched

The collection marks Yamaha Motor Europe’s efforts to preserve both the racing and production history of the brand, containing a broad spectrum of significant machines from 1961 to the present day.

Yamaha Europe Collection s
Yamaha Motor Europe Collection Hall

Present alongside the historic consumer products are an impressive selection of fabled racing machines, whose histories are littered with success, from the early days of Dakar, to the tarmac tracks of the Grand Prix Championship.

Yamaha Europe Collection Hall
Yamaha Motor Europe Collection Hall

Stephan Peterhansel’s 1991 Dakar winning Yamaha YZE750 can be seen alongside the 2009 World Superbike Championship dominating YZF-R1 that Ben Spies took to victory in his maiden year on the world stage.

Yamaha Europe Collection s
Yamaha Motor Europe Collection Hall

Motocross fans can enjoy many legendary race machines, including Stefan Everts 2006 MX World Championship winning Yamaha YZ450F, and an evolution of that machine that kept up the victory achievements, Adrien Van Beveren’s 2015 l’Enduropale du Touquet winning YZ450F.

Yamaha Europe Collection Everts
Yamaha Motor Europe Collection Hall

The Yamaha Motor Europe Collection also provides a unique insight into Yamaha’s development past, with the 2007 MT-03 concept on display, along with icons from the past, including the 1961 Yamaha MF1, 1969 YL1 and the 1968 YAS1. Add in the 1986 XJ650 Turbo amongst many others and the collection is truly a feast for a two-wheel enthusiast.

Yamaha Europe Collection Hall
Yamaha Motor Europe Collection Hall

Racing legends from Yamaha’s on- and off-road history, including Giacomo Agostini, Christian Sarron, Stephan Peterhansel and Stefan Everts were present at the launch alongside Yamaha Motor Racing Managing Director Lin Jarvis, YART Yamaha EWC Team Manager Mandy Kainz and Yamaha Classic Racing Team founder Ferry Brouwer.

Yamaha Europe Collection Ago
Yamaha Motor Europe Collection Hall

Eric de Seynes, President Yamaha Motor Europe N.V.

“The Yamaha Motor Europe Collection Hall is dedicated to the memory of our past in racing, and to the memory of what has revved the heart of our customers. A “home” for our iconic models and it has two vocations: first to inspire our engineers and designers in their process of creating future models, and second, support the credibility and the emotional value of our novelties, in the respect of our past creations.”

Yamaha Europe Collection s
Yamaha Motor Europe Collection Hall

Not open to the public…

The Yamaha Motor Europe Collection Hall is not open to the general public. The collection units will be travelling around Europe and can be viewed at various shows and events organized by the national Yamaha Motor distributor.

Source: MCNews.com.au

MotoGP heads to Thailand with Marquez on cusp of Championship victory

2019 MotoGP

Round 15 – Thailand, Buriram International Circuit


Thailand will mark the 15th round of the season and the precursor to the three-week back-to-back tour which takes in Japan, Australia and Malaysia, making this a very busy time both in terms of logistics and racing action for the whole MotoGP paddock. 

The first time MotoGP visited Buriram, the race was a duel to remember. To add a little more to the history books at the PTT Thailand Grand Prix second time around, this year the Championship hangs in the balance as Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team) has the chance to win title number eight. So what are the chances? Fairly high.

The reigning Champion won here last year and he’s 98 points clear with only four races remaining. To boil the maths down to its simplest form, Marquez has to score two or more points more than Andrea Dovizioso (Ducati Team) and be 100 points or more clear when the flag falls on Sunday. He already has too many wins to be caught on that count.

Marc Marquez

“We had a great weekend in Aragon and it was a delight to win in front of the home crowd. I want to carry this confidence and energy to Thailand so we can put in a strong weekend. Our approach doesn’t change even with the circumstances, we will do our work to be as strong as possible come Sunday. Last year we had a very exciting race here in Thailand so hopefully we can put on another good show for the fans!”

MotoGP Rnd Aragon Podium Marquez Dovi Miller
2019 Aragon MotoGP Race results:
1 – Marc Marquez (SPA – Honda) 41’57.221
2 – Andrea Dovizioso (ITA – Ducati) +4.836
3 – Jack Miller* (AUS – Ducati) +5.430

Winning races and Championships is far more than a numbers game, however. It’s no mean feat beating Dovizioso, and Marquez knows that better than anyone. Buriram 2018 is the one last corner duel against the Italian Marquez has won, so if we’re on for a repeat performance, the number 93 will have to pull it off again and upend the last corner statistics once more…

Grands Prix aren’t just about the title fight though. Last year Yamaha weren’t far behind the leading duo and Maverick Viñales and Valentino Rossi will be gunning to put Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP back on the podium, and Danilo Petrucci, Dovizioso’s teammate, needs a result. After a tougher run of form in the last few races, Buriram could be a good track for the Ducati man to bounce back, and he’ll want to – quickly.

Thailand MotoGP Podium
Thailand MotoGP 2018 – Image © Chang
International Circuit

Why? His fight for third with Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar). After Rins’ stunning win at Silverstone, the Spaniard has floundered on race day and he’s another who needs a good haul of points, although it could be tougher going for the Hamamatsu factory machines at the venue. He’ll want to at least try and take the fight to Petrucci though, with the two close in the standings fighting for third overall – just a point apart.

Jack Miller (Pramac Racing) is another who will want to maximise the Ducati’s potential at Buriram and take some good points. An impressive third podium of the year at MotorLand saw him deny Viñales the chance to finish on the podium three times in a row for the first time in the premier class, and crucially Miller also finished two places ahead of Fabio Quartararo (Petronas Yamaha SRT).

The ever impressive Quartararo is well on top in the fight for Rookie of the Year, but he’s also fighting for top Independent Team rider and Miller is his key rival as it stands. The Frenchman is only six points clear of the Australian as we head into the flyaways…

Fabio Quartararo

“I think it’ll be a little better for us than Aragon was because there’s a lot of long, slow corners that will suit our bike. The more-experienced riders have less of an advantage there as it’s only the second time racing there, so we’ll work hard to adapt quickly and do our best. This is my favourite time of the year, heading into the four races in Asia and Australia, because I love travelling and I’ll have a chance to rest after Thailand too.”

MotoGP Rnd Aragon Quartararo Miller
Fabio Quartararo – Aragon 2019

Meanwhile, KTM will want to use Buriram to hopefully see Pol Espargaro (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) back on track – but also to gain some more daylight over Aprilia in the manufacturers’ Championship.

With Pol Espargaro sidelined through injury in Aragon and Aleix Espargaro and Andrea Iannone putting on an impressive show for Aprilia Racing Team Gresini, the Noale factory closed in a little – and it will be interesting to see how Mika Kallio, replacing Johann Zarco, can go in Thailand as he aims to score for KTM as well.

Of course there is also the KTM Tech3 squad of Miguel Oliveira and Hafizh Syahrin, and as always Tech3 Team Manager Hervé Poncharal gave us a great preview of the event from their pit garage. 

Hervé Poncharal – Red Bull KTM Tech3 Team Manager

“The next round of the calendar is the Thailand GP in Buriram, which is a place, where we have great memories from last year and myself personally I have to give away the trophy for the best Grand Prix organization in 2018, because it was clearly an incredible event, it was well organized, we had a nice paddock, saw great racing, met friendly people and they were very efficient. I think the whole paddock will travel to Thailand with a smile on their faces, as last year nobody knew what to expect and now we know it and we are positive about rediscovering everything there. This is obviously an important round being the first on in South-East Asia, which is the place in the world where anything related to the motorcycle business is booming and it is an important market, where all the manufacturers want to shine. We’d love to do well with KTM there. I believe that Miguel will be almost 100% fit, because he already felt so much better after just one week in Aragon, so we are quite confident, that he is almost back to his form and the understanding of the bike we’ve had in Spielberg and Silverstone. We are positive and confident, that Miguel can do well, also because I think he likes that circuit. This will be another interesting place to rediscover everything with our new bike and a new rider coming from Moto2. We are looking forward to see this. Hafizh, is almost a local boy there with a lot of support and fans coming to cheer for him. I know, that there’s almost a love story between him and the Buriram circuit, because it was the first time he tested a GP bike in February 2018 there, he felt really good and was fast. We were truly impressed and decided to hire him for the full season, so for him everything started in this place. He likes the circuit and sure, he aims to please the crowd, plus the heat will be no problem for him, because he already flew to Malaysia straight after Aragon, therefore he will be better accustomed to the weather and the time than the other riders coming over from Europe. We also expect a lot from him, in addition he could be pleasantly surprised by a few updates coming from KTM for Hafizh. Hopefully we manage to handle that well and will receive a great result. Now it’s time to pack our suitcases, leave to the airport and fly to beautiful Thailand.”

MotoGP Rnd Aragon Oliveira Iannone Nakagami
Miguel Oliveira

After a crash ruled Jorge Lorenzo out of the 2018 Thai GP, the five-time World Champion is looking forward to the prospect of racing in Buriram for the first time. Consistent times in practice during the Aragon GP showed that Lorenzo’s condition and feeling with the RC213V is improving and he is aiming to continue this trend in Thailand.

Jorge Lorenzo

“Last year I did not have the best weekend in Thailand with a big crash ruling me out of the race. I am looking forward to completing the race there and we saw from Marc last year that the RC213V is strong at this circuit. After the difficult race in Aragon, I am hoping we can have a good weekend. During practice we showed that our pace is getting better and delivering on this potential is our objective for Thailand.”

MotoGP Rnd Aragon Lorenzo
Jorge Lorenzo

Talking Tyres

Michelin has already despatched its ranges of tyres for these four fly-away races via a mixture of sea and air freight, where the range of Michelin tyres travel in temperature-controlled containers so they arrive at the circuits in the ideal condition ready for race-action.

The first race of this fly-away tour is an especially testing one for Michelin, as the specific layout of the 4,554m, 12-turn Buriram circuit demands a special rear tyre to contend with the high temperatures that are produced due to the track’s long straights.

Available in a soft, medium and hard compound with an asymmetric design with a harder right-hand side, the Michelin Power Slick rear for the Thailand circuit has a different construction to that which is used all other racetracks throughout the season, with the exception of Spielberg in Austria. These two tracks have similar configurations and use this specific construction to control the build-up of heat that is generated and give the riders the drive and control they need and expect from a Michelin rear tyre, without any compromise to performance from overheating. 

Piero Taramasso
Michelin Motorsport Two-Wheel Manager

“This is our third visit to Buriram following the test and race there last year and each time we have learned more and been able to assess the tyres and makes changes for the next visit. It is a very severe track on rear tyres and creates a lot of heat for the rubber, so we have a special construction – which we also use just in Austria – to counteract this situation. Last year we were told it would be cooler and wet during October, but it was hot and dry, so we have prepared a range of tyres that can contend with all conditions. There was a big crowd at Buriram last year and it was a great event, we are sure it will be the same this year and that Michelin will play a part in giving the fans a race to enjoy.”


Time Schedule

Tune in on Sunday 6th October as lights go out for the MotoGP race at 1800 Sunday night for those Australian states that are lucky enough to enjoy the change to Daylight Savings Time this weekend.  Full time schedule further down the page. 


MotoGP Championship Standings

Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Marc Marquez Honda 300
2 Andrea Dovizioso Ducati 202
3 Alex Rins Suzuki 156
4 Danilo Petrucci Ducati 155
5 Maverick Viñales Yamaha 147
6 Valentino Rossi Yamaha 137
7 Fabio Quartararo Yamaha 123
8 Jack Miller Ducati 117
9 Cal Crutchlow Honda 98
10 Franco Morbidelli Yamaha 80
11 Pol Espargaro KTM 77
12 Takaaki Nakagami Honda 68
13 Joan Mir Suzuki 49
14 Aleix Espargaro Aprilia 46
15 Andrea Iannone Aprilia 32
16 Francesco Bagnaia Ducati 29
17 Miguel Oliveira KTM 29
18 Johann Zarco KTM 27
19 Jorge Lorenzo Honda 23
20 Tito Rabat Ducati 18
21 Stefan Bradl Honda 16
22 Michele Pirro Ducati 9
23 Sylvain Guintoli Suzuki 7
24 Hafizh Syahrin KTM 7
25 Karel Abraham Ducati 5
26 Bradley Smith Aprilia 0
27 Mika Kallio KTM 0

Moto2

Two wins on the bounce had given Augusto Fernandez (Flexbox HP 40) some serious momentum in Moto2, but a mistake at MotorLand Aragon has seen the Spaniard slip to third overall and over 40 points off the top – now leap-frogged by Jorge Navarro (Beta Tools Speed Up).

Is time running out for those on the chase to catch Alex Marquez?

MotoGP Brno QP Moto Alex Marquez
Alex Marquez

Mathematically, it isn’t, but it would likely need some serious drama to intervene in the rest of the races to really derail the story of the season so far.

That story, ultimately, is one of consistency. Marquez has lost out once through a mistake of his own, and he’s reaping the rewards of the combination of speed and settling when it’s necessary. Navarro just behind him has been a fairly consistent presence each race weekend too, although he’s yet to stand on the top step. That means that if Marquez does start to feel the pressure, Navarro could end up challenging for the crown from the rare position of not being a race winner…yet.

Others have seared their way to glory, however, and there’s something to be said for reeling in the wins – that’s what put Fernandez where he is. And Brad Binder’s (Red Bull KTM Ajo) two wins in the latter half of the season have helped put him just 53 points down, in fifth. Given an incredibly tough start to the season for Austrian factory KTM, that’s something to really write home about – and the tracks coming next get the South African grinning.

Tom Lüthi (Dynavolt Intact GP), meanwhile, is still looking for a bit more of his early season form. The Swiss rider has kept reeling in the points, but he’s not been on the charge like we’ve seen. Can he bounce back as we head into the flyaways? Will teammate Marcel Schrötter mix it up with the frontrunners again once he’s back from injury? And what of Luca Marini (Sky Racing Team VR46), the only man on the grid who’s previously been on the podium at the track?

Home hero Somkiat Chantra (Idemitsu Honda Team Asia), though, will likely have most of the crowd on his side. There may be a title fight happening at the top, but the intermediate class rookie will be the true hero of the hour for the Thai crowd. 

Moto2 Championship Standings

Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Alex Marquez Kalex 213
2 Jorge Navarro Speed Up 175
3 Augusto Fernandez Kalex 171
4 Thomas Luthi Kalex 169
5 Brad Binder KTM 160
6 Lorenzo Baldassarri Kalex 138
7 Luca Marini Kalex 126
8 Marcel Schrotter Kalex 116
9 Fabio Di Giannantonio Speed Up 94
10 Enea Bastianini Kalex 81
11 Tetsuta Nagashima Kalex 63
12 Remy Gardner Kalex 60
13 Sam Lowes Kalex 60
14 Xavi Vierge Kalex 59
15 Iker Lecuona KTM 55
16 Andrea Locatelli Kalex 42
17 Jorge Martin KTM 37
18 Nicolo Bulega Kalex 32
19 Mattia Pasini Kalex 27
20 Stefano Manzi MV Agusta 13
21 Somkiat Chantra Kalex 13
22 Dominique Aegerter MV Agusta 12
23 Marco Bezzecchi KTM 11
24 Simone Corsi NTS 10
25 Bo Bendsneyder NTS 6
26 Jake Dixon KTM 4
27 Joe Roberts KTM 4
28 Lukas Tulovic KTM 3
29 Khairul Idham Pawi Kalex 3
30 Jesko Raffin Kalex 3

Moto3

At MotorLand Aragon, Aron Canet (Sterilgarda Max Racing Team) was on fire and key rival Lorenzo Dalla Porta (Leopard Racing) had a difficult day at the office. In short, 25 points for Canet vs an eleventh place for the Championship leader mean it’s almost as you were in the tightest title fight of the season, with just two points separating them on the way to Thailand. The see-saw rivalry of the summer is back and Buriram could be an interesting place to head next.

We’ve only raced once at the Thai track and last year’s first contact makes good reading for Dalla Porta. He came second, only a tenth down, and Canet? He didn’t race. The Spaniard arrives with no former knowledge of the venue after he missed the event last year due to injury, so it could prove more of an uphill struggle for him. With the rest of the grid, minus the rookies, joining Dalla Porta in having more experience, that only adds to Canet’s challenge.

Tony Arbolino (VNE Snipers), especially, is not yet out of reach of a charge for the top, although the Italian had a more difficult first race at Chang International Circuit last season. John McPhee (Petronas Sprinta Racing) did too, but the likes of Gabriel Rodrigo (Kömmerling Gresini Moto3) and Marcos Ramirez (Leopard Racing) showed some good form – as did Dennis Foggia (Sky Racing Team VR46), who took his first podium. Will the rest of the field avoid the attrition of 2019?

Championship standings

Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Lorenzo Dalla Porta Honda 184
2 Aron Canet KTM 182
3 Tony Arbolino Honda 155
4 John Mcphee Honda 126
5 Marcos Ramirez Honda 123
6 Niccolò Antonelli Honda 118
7 Jaume Masia KTM 96
8 Celestino Vietti KTM 90
9 Ai Ogura Honda 86
10 Tatsuki Suzuki Honda 85
11 Dennis Foggia KTM 81
12 Jakub Kornfeil KTM 72
13 Romano Fenati Honda 67
14 Gabriel Rodrigo Honda 67
15 Andrea Migno KTM 52
16 Kaito Toba Honda 51
17 Raul Fernandez KTM 51
18 Ayumu Sasaki Honda 50
19 Alonso Lopez Honda 45
20 Darryn Binder KTM 44
21 Albert Arenas KTM 43
22 Sergio Garcia Honda 18
23 Makar Yurchenko KTM 16
24 Kazuki Masaki KTM 14
25 Filip Salac KTM 13
26 Carlos Tatay KTM 8
27 Ryusei Yamanaka Honda 7
28 Stefano Nepa KTM 5
29 Can Oncu KTM 4
30 Tom Booth-Amos KTM 2
31 Riccardo Rossi Honda 2
32 Jeremy Alcoba Honda 2
33 Elia Bartolini KTM 1

Source: MCNews.com.au

Toprak Razgatlioglu joins Yamaha for WorldSBK 2020

Toprak Razgatlioglu to Partner Michael van der Mark at Yamaha in 2020

Toprak Razgatlioglu will join Michael van der Mark at Yamaha for the 2020 FIM Superbike World Championship.

Razgatlioglu, who claimed his first WorldSBK race victory in Magny-Cours at the weekend, will partner Michael van der Mark in the Pata Yamaha WorldSBK Team.

hi MagnyCours WSBK SprintRace Razgatlioglu JM
Toprak Razgatlioglu – 2019 WorldSBK Round 11, Magny-Cours

Razgatlioglu arrived in the WorldSBK paddock in 2015 to contest the European 600 Superstock Championship, which he won in his debut season. A move up the European 1000 Superstock Championship followed, where the young Turkish rider was a title contender for two years before stepping up to the WorldSBK class in 2018.

Razgatlioglu immediately made his mark in the premier production class, securing two podium finishes in his debut season with second place at Donington Park and third place in the penultimate round in Argentina.

The 22-year-old has developed even more strongly in 2019, securing his first top-three finish of the season at the Italian WorldSBK round in Imola and finishing on the podium at every round since. Razgatlioglu secured his maiden WorldSBK win with a scintillating performance in Race 1 at Magny-Cours, which he started from 16th position on the grid. The young Turk backed that up with victory in the Superpole sprint race the following day.

Eric de Seynes – President, Yamaha Motor Europe

“Toprak Razgatlioglu is the most exciting young rider in WorldSBK and I’m both happy and proud that he will race for Yamaha in 2020. When you consider Toprak’s progression this year, only his second in WorldSBK, his prodigious talent is obvious, but so is his warrior spirit. Like his teammate for next season, Michael van der Mark, he’s a rider who always finds that little bit extra on race day and is prepared to push to the limit to overcome any obstacle. We saw that clearly in Magny-Cours, where he came from the sixth row of the grid to claim his first WorldSBK race win. We have also seen this season that Yamaha has closed the gap to our rivals on track and I’m excited to see what Toprak can do on our Yamaha YZF-R1 in 2020. With Michael and Toprak I think we will have one of the strongest and most dynamic rider line ups on the WorldSBK grid next year.”

WSBK Rnd Donington Sun Toprak Razgatlioglu
Toprak Razgatlioglu

Source: MCNews.com.au

Red Bull Ring type rear tyre to be used in Thailand

Available in soft, medium and hard compounds, the tyre will feature a harder right-hand side. Both the Chang International Circuit and the Red Bull Ring use this specific construction to control the build-up of heat that is generated, giving the riders maximum performance without any compromise from overheating. Accompanying the rear tyres will be symmetric designed front soft, medium and hard slicks, compounds that have been chosen based on data from last season’s race and the test in Thailand.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Marquez will win the 2019 Championship in Thailand if…

– He wins, regardless of where Dovizioso finishes.
– He finishes 2nd, 3rd or 4th and Dovizioso finishes behind him.
– He finishes 5th and Dovizioso finishes worse than 6th (7th or lower).
– He finishes 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th, 11th, 12th or 13th and Dovizioso finishes at least two places behind in each case.
– He finishes 14th and Dovizioso doesn’t score any points.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Time schedule: PTT Thailand Grand Prix

For the fans in Europe who are used to the 8/9am FP1 start, get ready to set your alarm clocks earlier, with Thailand’s time zone being GMT+7. As usual, Moto3™ FP1 will begin at 09:00 local time, with the MotoGP™ riders roaring out of pitlane at 09:55. MotoGP™ FP2 takes place at 14:10 local time.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Riding the 2019 BMW GS Safari Enduro | Mildura to Alice Springs

By Trevor Hedge
Images by Damien Ashenhurst and Trev


2019 BMW GS Safari Enduro saw over 80 riders head on an adventure taking them from the banks of the Murray River at Mildura in north-western Victoria, through to the inland heart of Australia, Alice Springs, in what is the 25th year of GS Safari.

The route chosen was a balance between the most intrepid and the most inspiring. As this is the more challenging of the two GS Safari events held each year, thus the ‘Enduro’ suffix added to the GS Safari moniker, this is certainly no walk in the park for most participants. The regular GS Safari takes almost 200 riders but Safari Enduro gets a bit more extreme thus numbers are generally less than half that of the more mainstream option.

In preparation for some of the sand riding and trials ahead, many riders also signed up for the BMW GS Off-Road Training Course that was staged in Mildura across the immediate two-days prior to Safari getting underway.

BMW RGS Rallye GSsafari
Travelling in style – My mount for the trip, a brand new BMW R 1250 GS Rallye X

Dinner on the opening night was a chance for riders to reconnect with other participants they’d met on previous GS Safari adventures. For many these Safari events are simply a must-do every year, and plenty have a dozen or more GS Safaris under their belt.

Some riders are on their GS all the time, others are lucky to get out once every couple of months due to various family commitments or work pressures. Some are doctors, some are tradies, others head up large companies and between riding stints on Safari are on the phone back to the office co-ordinating bids for government contracts.

BMW GS Safari Enduro RGS Witjira National Park
BMW R 1250 GS Rallye X

Some are obviously quite well off, while others are still paying off their motorcycle and their attendance at GS Safari Enduro is very much a treat they have to strive quite hard to be able to afford.

Some are travelling on their own, some are with a group of friends or work-mates. Out on the trail though, everyone is equal, everyone chips in and generally egos and competitive machismo are largely kept in check.

BMW GS Safari Enduro Damo Arkaroola Climb
Always somebody around to lend a hand when the going gets tough

It is somewhat of a team effort as there is always someone ready to chip in and help to fix a puncture, help you pick your bike up, or give you a shove from behind to assist getting up a snotty incline. All that help is given without any snide remarks or put-downs and this helps ensure that no matter what, a positive vibe pervades, and people remain energised. Even when the going gets a little tough.


GS Safari Enduro Day One
Mildura to Peterborough – 475 km

BMW GS Safari Enduro Day
2019 BMW GS Safari Enduro Day One
Mildura to Peterborough – 475 km

It was a brisk morning when we sporadically filed out of Mildura. To help spread the 80-odd riders out there was a sixty-minute departure window, so riders could leave at various times rather than en masse. This is not a ride where people follow nose to tail, you can often ride for half an hour or more without seeing another rider.

BMW GS Safari Enduro South Australia Borders
South Australian border

After crossing the Murray and Darling Rivers, we turned northwards and headed for the Danggali Conservation Park and Wilderness Protection Area, Australia’s first UN recognised Biosphere Reserve.

BMW GS Safari Enduro Damo Ddangalli
Danggali Conservation Park and Wilderness Protection Area

The landscape switches back and forth between Mallee wilderness to arid wetlands, and at the time we passed through Chowilla Track it was looking very arid indeed.

BMW GS Safari Enduro Day
2019 BMW GS Safari Enduro

In fact, many sections of the track were much sandier than they had been only a few weeks earlier when the recce for the route was ridden by organisers. The sand led to somewhat of a baptism of fire for plenty of riders.

BMW GS Safari Enduro Day Onboard Crash
Trev helped four riders pick up their bikes in the sand on day one

We were already getting into the proper outback on our basically all-dirt route via tracks generally less travelled. Until we met up with our makeshift fuel stop at the intersection of two tracks I had not seen another soul outside of our own group all day.  The fuel drop was required as only GS Adventures would have the 400+ km fuel range to make it through to camp safely, the rest of us had our steeds replenished with ten-litres each poured from jerry cans.

BMW GS Safari Enduro Fuel Stop
Fuel stop on day one

The remainder of the day was on wide and quite reasonable tracks, but they still had the odd patch of bull-dust to keep you on your toes.

BMW GS Safari Enduro Day Dust
Bulldust was an omnipresent threat throughout the event

Our stop for the night was the Peterborough Caravan Park. Peterborough itself is a traditional old-style Australian country town. With a quite charming main street lined by pubs and buildings with balconies. The Indian Pacific train no longer stops in Peterborough so the lifeblood of the town these days relies primarily on grey nomad tourism.

BMW GS Safari Enduro Damo Camp
Camp at Peterborough

Tents and swags were unpacked before tales were told around the campfire while the local RSL served up dinner out of a makeshift canteen erected in the grounds.

BMW GS Safari Enduro Damo Camp
Camp at Peterborough

GS Safari Enduro Day Two
Peterborough to Arkaroola – 459 km

BMW GS Safari Enduro Day
2019 BMW GS Safari Enduro Day Two
Peterborough to Arkaroola – 459 km

Riders woke up to another brisk morning as the smell of bacon and eggs prevaded the air as again the men and women from the local RSL prepared breakfast. Coffee was served for those that require caffeine to function of a morning, while camp was packed up ahead of another big day on the bikes.

BMW GS Safari Enduro Day Onboard Crash Pickup Bulldust
Bulldust patches always require care. I stopped to help this fella get up and going again.

Heading out past Black Rock Conservation Area we then traversed a series of twisty tracks that criss-crossed private land holdings. It felt like I opened and shut about fifty gates, which turned out to be good stretching practice as I swung a leg over the R 1250 GS Rallye X each time.

BMW RGS Rallye GSsafari
The BMW R 1250 GS Rallye X just out of Hawker

Lunch and fuel was at Hawker, a town with a permanent residence of around 350, but frequented by many travellers as they make their way up into the Flinders Ranges.

BMW GS Safari Enduro Day Onboard
There was even a rare patch of green growth early on day two

The terrain heading in and out of Hawker is rugged and rocky, but remarkably this 140-year-old town is only just over an hour from the sea where the Indian Ocean juts into the warm embrace of Spencer Gulf.

BMW RGS Rallye GSsafari
Just out of Hawker looking back at the western flank of the Flinders Ranges

Heading north after lunch saw us bomb along a quite enjoyable few kilometres of winding bitumen. ESA into Dynamic and ride mode ‘Sport’ it would have been quite easy to make short work of the rear Metzeler Karoo III hoop.

BMW GS Safari Enduro Day
A rare bit of tarmac was in good condition and offered a few curves that would have been easy to burn up too much Karoo on

Still it was nice for a moment to flow along a lovely bit of tarmac with the edge of the Flinders Ranges a stunning backdrop to our west.

BMW GS Safari Enduro Damo Flinders
2019 BMW GS Safari Enduro

We passed Wilpena Pound but instead of heading towards Blinman we turned west on to tracks that led us to Wirrealpa Rd.

BMW GS Safari Enduro Damo Hills
2019 BMW GS Safari Enduro

This was easy enough going but then later in the day we deviated in to Nantawarrina Aboriginal territory. These were some tight and at times quite technical trails before joining the main tracks towards Arkaroola.

BMW RGS Rallye GSsafari
Nantawarrina Aboriginal territory

The terrain through Nantawarrina would be truly something incredible to behold after any major rains. The downside would be though that the tracks would also become incredibly difficult and in any truly major downpours would be impassable.

There were a few spots along here though where I wouldn’t have minded being stranded, as long as I had a swag on the back, a bit of tucker and a cask of chateau de cardboard, I would have been well set.  In some of my earlier adventures throughout Western Australia I have been known to blow up the empty wine bladder from the cask and used it as a pillow of an evening! #multitasking #class

Instead we were set for proper beds at Arkaroola, a modern oasis suddenly appeared in the desert complete with a large bar….well all but one of us anyway…

BMW GS Safari Enduro Peterborough Beer
A well stocked bar in the middle of nowhere – Arkaroola

One poor fella had suffered a broken ankle, along with a few other injuries in an afternoon crash and was being prepared for a medical evacuation. Royal Flying Doctor Service is your only hope of getting to a hospital out here, and even then it can take 12-24 hours for them to get to you…


GS Safari Enduro Day Three
Arkaroola Loop – 122 km

BMW GS Safari Enduro Day
2019 BMW GS Safari Enduro Day Three
Arkaroola Loop Day – 122 km

GS Safari Enduro riders had the option of either using this as a rest day, or heading out to explore some tracks in the Vulkathunha-Gammon Ranges. It was nice not to have break camp at the crack of dawn.

How were the the rivulets and landscape around Arkaroola created..? Well according to Adnyamathanha dreamtime stories, a mythical giant creature named Arkaroo drank the nearby Lake Frome dry before then proceeding to climb up into the mountains before then pissing it all out, thereby creating Arkaroola Creek…. Don’t know exactly what herbs were growing in the area when that was dreamed up…

BMW GS Safari Enduro Damo Arkaroola Rain
There were threats of rain that never really eventuated

The area was first settled by Europeans as a mining area in 1860 before major drought saw the settlers pull up stumps in 1863. It was not until the early 1900s that white settlement started again and the catalyst for that happening was the discovery of rich deposits of rubies and sapphires. Uranium was then discovered in the area by Douglas Mawson, a great man more well known for his exploits in Antarctica than in the outback.

BMW GS Safari Enduro Damo Bulldust
Bulldust holes can appear anywhere in an instant and it pays to be alert

Uranium was almost the death of the Arkaroola Wilderness Sanctuary that had been developed in the area by geologist Reg Sprigg in 1968. Sprigg had purchased a 610 square-kilometre lease on the land but it was not until 2011 that this area was well and truly protected from mining. The South Australian government enacted special purpose legislation prohibiting mining, mining exploration and grazing amidst the Arkaroola ranges. The South Australian populace had been up in arms after a mining company had dumped radioactive waste in the region after exploratory drilling which forced the government to act.

While the miners are not welcome, motorcyclists and four-wheel-drive enthusiasts certainly are and Arkaroola has a network of tracks that can test just about anyone’s mettle.

BMW GS Safari Enduro Day
Some of the Arkaroola Tracks tested your mettle

There were a few riders that wished they had taken the option of sitting the day out as the dry conditions caused some of the planned routes to be quite a bit more treacherous than expected. There were also countless punctures from the sharp and jagged rocks.

BMW GS Safari Enduro Damo Puncture
This shot was from an earlier day but was a countless example of punctures that required fixing over the course of the week

Still, as a testament to the communal effort, everyone survived the day to work up a hearty thirst for the nights BBQ dinner.


GS Safari Enduro Day Four
Arkaroola to William Creek – 450km

BMW GS Safari Enduro Day
2019 BMW GS Safari Enduro Day Four
Arkaroola to William Creek – 450km

A generous breakfast from the Arkaroola Village kitchen had the riders well prepared for two options, a testing back exit from Arkaroola, or a run back out from Arkaroola the way we had come in.

Bravely, most riders plumped for the harder option, they had come to to put the ‘Enduro’ in GS Safari after all and despite the difficulty, many were really relishing the challenge and enjoying putting themselves and their machines to the test. I mean what better time to do it? On Safari you have medical and technical back-up, along with 80 or so helpers should you get in way too deep.

Thus some were more tired than others as we rolled into Copley for a pie and some fuel before what was perhaps the only real mundane part of the experience over the first few days.  A 100km or so of bitumen took us into Marree and the terrain was starting to become flatter as we progressed and left the ranges in the dust behind us.

BMW GS Safari Enduro Oodnadatta Track Sign
2019 BMW GS Safari Enduro – William Creek

We then joined the Oodnadatta Track for an easy roll into William Creek for the night.

Accomodation here was primarily in shared dongers and the William Creek Hotel was hit hard by all and sundry.

BMW GS Safari Enduro Damo William Creek Hotel
William Creek Hotel

The biggest lamb shanks I have ever seen were served up for dinner and were washed down with many a beer.

BMW GS Safari Enduro William Creek Lamb Shanks
Lamb shanks at the William Creek Hotel

Everyone was in good spirits and I heard there might have been a few middle aged men that stripped off a few clothes and danced on the bar! Allegedly!

When it came for closing time more than a few of the GS Safari boys were not done. A hat was passed around to come up with enough cash to talk the two ladies behind the bar in to working late. The figure rasied was, allegedly, over $500….  But what happens in the bush stays in the bush….Sometimes…. My silence can be bought…. LOL


GS Safari Enduro Day Five
William Creek to Mount Dare – 460 km

BMW GS Safari Enduro Day
2019 BMW GS Safari Enduro Day Five
William Creek to Mount Dare – 460 km

The next morning we worked our way north on the Oodnadatta Track towards, funnily enough, Oodnadatta…

GS Safari Enduro Day William Creek Sunrise
2019 GS Safari Enduro – Day 5 – Sunrise

I have done this track a few times and mostly it has been really easy going, two-wheel drive car type easy going, but it was in a shitful state the day we traversed it. 

BMW GS Safari Enduro Damo Oodnadatta Track
Oodnadatta Track was in the worst state I have seen it in and this image shows one of the better sections north of William Creek. In some parts it was very messy

Loose gravel sections everywhere ,with mounds pushed up either side of wheel tracks, turned what would normally have been a relaxing cruise, into something that could go pear shaped awful quickly from any momentary lapse of attention.  One rim got squashed so badly from a rock impact it was beyond repair and had to be replaced by the support crew.

BMW GS Safari Enduro Coward Springs
Some of the boys detoured off the Oodnadatta Track into Coward Springs for a dip!

Not far out of Oodnadatta we turned right on Mount Dare Road. This was a proper flat and barren landscape like something out of a movie set on Mars. I say Mars as that is known as the red planet and this terrain had pretty much every shade of red known to man.

BMW GS Safari Enduro RGS Witjira National Park
Witjira National Park offers a pretty stark landscape

All except for one spring fed oasis that appeared like a a hallucination as it had been so long since we had seen any body of water. This beautiful spot appeared in what felt like the middle of nowhere thus I had to stop for a photo, gee the flies were friendly!

BMW GS Safari Enduro BMW RGS Rallye X Eringa Waterhole Witjira
Eringa Waterhole

This is known as Eringa Waterhole in the outback area known as Marla. It was originally part of Eringa Station which was established in the 1870s before being purchased by Sidney Kidman in 1899. Station buildings are now derelict and the land is now part of the greater Hamilton Station.

Others that passed through when we did said they had never seen the waterhole that dry, and that it normally stretches right out to the dip in the road we traversed through Witjira National Park on our way to Mount Dare for the night.

BMW GS Safari Enduro BMW RGS Rallye X Eringa Waterhole
Eringa Waterhole

It was a truly magical contrast after miles and miles of largely nothing to have this amazing gum tree lined waterhole appear out of the dust.

We then continued on through a few sandy sections before arriving at Mount Dare where we made camp for the night. Mount Dare consists of a pub on the edge of the Simpson Desert with a couple of fuel bowsers, and that’s about it…

Sounds like a recipe for a good time, although this fella at the bar was quite rude and demanding at times.

BMW GS Safari Enduro Mount Dare Dog
This fella was so vocal at the bar I am surprised he didn’t get barred… His good looks must have saved him..

It was an earlier one for most as we crawled into our respective swags or tents for the night.

BMW GS Safari Enduro Mount Dare Swag
My set-up for the night at Mount Dare

One fella though had a pretty big off before Mount Dare. His Shoei Hornet helmet clearly saved his life. His head had visible marks all across one side where the patterns from the padding inside the helmet had compressed and spread the impact load right across the side of his head. I have never seen anything like it. Come morning those marks were purple lines of bruising. The accompanying GS Safari medics checked him over and gave him the all clear. He liked his Shoei Hornet before, but is now a sworn Shoei customer for life.

BMW GS Safari Enduro Shoei Adventure Helmet Impact
Shoei Hornet Adventure helmet copped a hiding but despite the bruised marks to his head this fella had a lucky escape – Safari technicians got his bike rideable again but post event his machine was deemed a write-off by the insurance company

GS Safari Enduro Day Six
Mount Dare to Alice Springs – 577 km

BMW GS Safari Enduro Day
2019 BMW GS Safari Enduro Day Six
Mount Dare to Alice Springs – 577 km

BMW GS Safari Enduro Damo Windmill
Leaving Mount Dare behind we headed for Finke

Day six was always going to be a litmus test for some, those that were brave enough to attempt the Finke access track after lunch were in for a real challenge.

BMW GS Safari Enduro Damo Mount Dare Sand Drop
The road out of Mount Dare towards Finke threw up quite a few challenging sections

But it turned out that everyone was going to have to negotiate some long and soft sand sections, complete with some testing sand drifts, as Abminga Road presented much more of a challenge than expected even before we got to Finke.

BMW GS Safari Enduro Damo Mount Dare
Mount Dare to Finke

There were plenty of falls but no injuries and everyone rolled into Finke in good shape. I was in early so was lucky enough to get some of the last litres of fuel from the Finke Service Station tanks before they ran dry….

BMW GS Safari Enduro Damo Finke Sign copy
A somewhat fitting take on outback art is the Finke sign

Those on the big tank Adventure models would be okay from here but anyone on a regular GS was going to need fuel. Fuel bladders were emptied and nearly all the remaining gerry cans from the support vehicles were drained to give everyone enough fuel to make it to the next stop.

BMW GS Safari Enduro Finke Locals
Some of the locals at Finke

From here everyone had a decision to make. Take the easier option, which still had enough hazards to keep you on your toes, or attempt the infamous Finke Track. Around a quarter of the riders decided to take the hard option.

I was in two minds at this point. I honestly had hardly really raised a sweat all week, had not come close to falling off, and had picked up many fallen riders through the sand sections that I had sailed through.

GS Safari Enduro Day Finke Access Track
2019 GS Safari Enduro – Day 6 – Getting ready to take on the Finke Access Track

But there is sand, and then there is ‘sand’… Would the track be in good shape, or would it be chopped up and really, really soft?  I was ready to take the simpler option, to be on the safe side, but a few riders that had ridden with me during the week boosted me up enough to take on the challenge. I should have taken the easier option.

Only a few kilometres into the track the sand was diabolical. The fact that it was deep was okay, sort of, the real problem was how chopped up and messy it was.  To ride sand like this you have to be on the pipe, so to speak. Weight back and power on as the bike pretty much wriggles all over the place and follows whatever is the course of least resistance.

Now on a 120 kg enduro bike that is fair enough, but it does take some proper confidence and balls to hold it on when 240 kg of GS is threatening to batter you into the sand every few seconds. It also takes fitness, and 15km in I was done. I hadn’t crashed, but I was going to, and thus I thought it best to pull out and ride the 15km back out, rather than end up being evacuated by chopper or support vehicle. There was another 180km of that track to go, in what could have been the same, or perhaps even worse conditions.

BMW GS Safari Enduro Finke RGS Rallye X
2019 BMW GS Safari Enduro

I pulled up and spoke to the chase four-wheel-drive and the decision was made that we would try and ride the bike back out and let those up ahead know that I was going back out and switching to Option B. We had not stopped long before a lead rider came back, and then another lead rider came back. It turned out that in fact more than half of the group were in real trouble a few kilometres further on. The decision to abandon the attempt was made. But we still had to get back out the way we came, which was quite a challenge in itself. The track now even more chopped up than it had been when we went in.

We regrouped back at Finke and then headed out on a long gravel track towards Kulgera Roadhouse. Here we refuelled the bike and ourselves. A few riders had suffered punctures on the run out from Finke, and more yet then suffered punctures on the final highway run up to Alice Springs.

Puncture Repair Safari
Puncture repairs on the track were a regular occurrence throughout safari

There is no reliable measure of how many puncture repairs were made during the week but we are talking triple digits.

The guys in the support truck, primarily Stu Tait, had completed 148 tyre changes throughout the trip. When on the clock he got it down to under four-minutes! He had worked harder than any of us!

BMW GS Safari Enduro Damo Tyres
Participants burned up plenty of rubber

The wind-up dinner in Alice Springs was a celebratory affair tinged with a note of sadness that it was all over. Most were flying out from here, their bikes being transported back to their chosen port of origin, but many still had to ride 2000 kilometres or more to get home.

Among them was the fella that had smacked his head real hard on day five. His helmet looked reasonably okay, externally, but it had clearly done its job and would have had no more compression inside left to give. He still had a few thousand kilometre ride home to do and I could not, in good conscience, let him ride that distance in a helmet that was no longer fit for purpose, so handed him my own Shoei to make his way home in. My good deed done for the day, but so many on Safari had done plenty of favours for others. It was just another gesture in the spirit of the event.

BMW GS Safari Enduro GGS Nick Mount Dare
Nick arriving into the Mount Dare camp-site on the penultimate evening of GS Safari Enduro 2019

Another rider also taking the long way home was relatively new to motorcycling and had just completed GS Safari Enduro on a G 310 GS! Read Nick’s story here, it is a cracker!

BMW GS Safari Enduro Shaun Terblanche GS Trophy Team Aus
BMW Australia’s Team Representatives for International GS Trophy 2020 joined GS Safari Enduro as a team building exercise – Tysen Haley (left of picture), Wes and Shaun

Only a fairly recent convert to GS riding, after riding motocross as a junior and then turning his hand at enduro, 25-year-old Tysen Haley was the youngest on Safari.

BMW GS Safari Enduro Damo Ruins Safari
Some happy GS Safari Enduro riders

At the other end of the scale was 66-year-old Paul Malcolm. However, most riders were closer to Paul in age than Tysen, as the average across all participants was 56. An old man’s game then? Certainly not, it is just that until people get to that age it can be a struggle to come up with the disposable money to buy a late model adventure bike, and also be able to find the time off from work and away from their family.

BMW GS Safari Enduro Day Onboard Passing GS
2019 BMW GS Safari Enduro

All in all it was a great experience, on a great motorcycle, in great company and with a great support team backing us up.  Of course you could do this kind of trip on an old XT Yamaha or the like, camping all the way and also having a great time. But there really is nothing like taking on this type of trek on a big adventure bike like the GS. 

BMW RGS Rallye GSsafari
Dynamic ESA in its latest generation is a revelation and set-up is available on the fly at the push of a button #luxury

Especially when on the straight bits you can set the ESA to its plushest mode and just roll on in relative comfort. That’s sort of important now that I am not as young as what I was when exploring the Pilbara on an old XT more than 25 years ago. 

BMW GS Safari Enduro Day
The sun sets on the 2019 BMW GS Safari Enduro

Source: MCNews.com.au

All prepared and you won’t need the scissors – Nick Harris

Often a new helmet miraculously appears on his lap of honour, while, in more recent years, a little pantomime is often played out trackside to make a poignant point or celebrate the exact number of World titles achieved. While all the celebrations are going on at the circuit, the World Champion’s biography with pictures has already been beamed around the world to millions of media outlets.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Guintoli completes two-day Motegi private test

Guintoli has completed three Suzuki wildcards in 2019 at the Catalan, Czech and British GPs, with the Frenchman scoring points in both Barcelona and Silverstone. But as well as preparing himself, Guintoli also undertook some vital test work as 2020 preparations start to ramp up for the Hamamatsu factory. 

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Idemitsu Asia Talent Cup back in business at Buriram

Sho Nishimura arrives as the man in charge in the standings, with the Japanese youngster on 115 points at the top – 18 clear of his nearest challenger, Indonesian Afridza Munandar. Then there’s another gap of 14 points back to Adenanta Putra and Takuma Matsuyama, but with 50 points in play per weekend and 150 left this season, everything can still turn on its head. The good news for Nishimura is the consistency he’s shown, as are the two second places he came away with the last time the IATC raced at Buriram earlier in the year – but that means, therefore, someone else took those wins…

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here