Category Archives: Motorcycle News

Lenovo™ announced as MotoGP™ Technical Partner

Effective for the rest of the 2019 season and continuing into 2020, Lenovo will be the key technology partner for Dorna, which will include equipping staff with Lenovo desktop PCs, laptops, workstations, tablets, monitors, and data center solutions. From day-to-day office operations to analyzing computations from high-tech sensors, like the gyroscopic 4K cameras on each bike, the collaboration with Lenovo will also enable Dorna engineers to explore new and better ways of packaging video in dynamic formats, allowing TV viewers to see what’s happening in the moment from all angles.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

#Dovi300: The best three races of my career

Desmo Dovi did admit that “it’s not easy to find just three from 300” but he started his top three with his one and only victory at Mugello from two years ago. After waiting sixteen years, and finishing on the podium on four occasions during that wait, Dovizioso finally tasted victory at Mugello after breaking clear of Maverick Viñales in 2017.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Ducati set sights on home hat-trick

“Arriving in Mugello after a result like Le Mans, with three Ducati in the first four positions, is very positive but we still want more,” said Dovizioso. “This is our home race and I think we will be competitive and fast, so our main objective will be the podium again. As we have seen in the first races this year, our rivals are also very strong, so it is very difficult to make predictions.”

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

SKY Racing Team VR46 unveil traditional Mugello livery

Pablo Nieto, Team Manager: “As a rider, I remember that the sequence Arrabbiata 1-2 was perhaps the most beautiful and at the same time technical turn of the whole Championship. To be done full gas. Today, as a Team Manager, we arrive at Mugello with many expectations: it is the home GP for the Team and it will be a crescendo of emotions till Sunday when we will show to everybody the special livery for the race. After Le Mans, we spent two days in Barcelona for testing. A track, the Catalan one, very similar to Mugello and where we worked hard to better face the next two races. In Moto2, Luca and Nicolo can still reduce the distance from the very first guys and hit important placements. In Moto3, Dennis and Celestino, after a great recovery, want to confirm themselves among the protagonists.”

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

MotoGP Stats update heading to Mugello

2019 MotoGP Mugello Statistics

With Dr. Thomas Morsellino


This is the 34th occasion that a GP has been held at the Mugello circuit, including 28 times in a row from 1991.

Mugello hosted a Grand Prix event for the first time in 1976. The 500cc race was won by Barry Sheene by the narrow margin of 0.1 sec ahead of Phil Read in a race lasting over 62 minutes.

Barry Sheene
Barry Sheene

This was at a time when Suzuki riders dominated the premier class; the first non-Suzuki rider home was Waerum Borge Nielsen in tenth place on a Yamaha. The layout of the Mugello circuit has remained basically the same since 1976 with the official track length of 5.245km unchanged.

Mugello MotoGP - Image by AJRN
Mugello MotoGP – Image by AJRN

A total of 105 Grand Prix races for solo motorcycles have been held at the Mugello circuit since 1976: MotoGP – 17, 500cc – 16, Moto2 – 9, 350cc – 2, 250cc – 24, Moto3 – 7, 125cc – 25, 80cc – 2, 50cc – 3. Misano is the only other circuit that has hosted the Italian GP,in 1991 and 1993.

The Mugello circuit also hosted the Nations GP (1976, 1978 and 1985) and the San Marino GP (1982, 1984, 1991 and 1993).

Honda is the most successful manufacturer with 16 premier class wins, the last of which was in 2014 with Marc Marquez.

Marc Marquez
Marc Marquez – 2018 Mugello

Yamaha have had 12 wins in the premier class including with Kenny Roberts (1978) and Wayne Rainey (1991) on 500cc machinery, five successive victories with Valentino Rossi from 2004 to 2008 and five wins with Jorge Lorenzo in 2011, 2012, 2013, 2015 and 2016..

Last year at Mugello, Jorge Lorenzo gave Ducati their third MotoGP win at Mugello, after Casey Stoner back in 2009 and Andrea Dovizioso in 2017 when he became the first Italian rider to win on an Italian bike at the track in the premier class.

Jorge Lorenzo back on top after is 2018 Mugello win
Jorge Lorenzo back on top after his 2018 Mugello win over Dovizioso

The best result for Suzuki in the MotoGP era is fourth, which was achieved by Andrea Iannone last year. Prior to that, Suzuki won twice at Mugello in the premier class, with Barry Sheene (1976) and Kevin Schwantz (1992).

Loris Capirossi is the only Italian rider other than Rossi and Dovizioso to win in the premier class at Mugello, taking victory in the 500cc race in 2000 after a race-long battle with countrymen Max Biaggi and Valentino Rossi, both of whom crashed in the closing stages.

The MotoGP race at Mugello in 2004 is the shortest ever premier class Grand Prix race: just six laps. The first attempt to run the race was stopped due to rain and it was restarted for the remaining laps as per the rules at the time.

Italy, the Netherlands and the UK are the only three countries that have hosted a motorcycle Grand Prix each year since the motorcycling world championship started in 1949.

Valentino Rossi
Valentino Rossi leads Mugello race wins

The MotoGP race victories at Mugello since the category was introduced as the premier class of Grand Prix racing are shared by just six riders: Valentino Rossi (7 wins), Jorge Lorenzo (6 wins); and Dani Pedrosa, Casey Stoner, Marc Marquez and Andrea Dovizioso all have a single win at Mugello.

The winning margin for Jorge Lorenzo over Marc Marquez at Mugello in 2016 was just 0.019 seconds, making it the seventh closest finish of all time in the premier class The nine Moto2 races that have taken place at Mugello have been won by seven different riders: Andrea Iannone (2010 and 2012), Marc Marquez (2011), Scott Redding (2013), Tito Rabat (2014 and 2015), Johann Zarco (2016), Mattia Pasini (2017) and Miguel Oliveira (2018).

Jorge Lorenzo beats Marc Marquez to the flag at Mugello MotoGP 2016
Jorge Lorenzo beats Marc Marquez to the flag at Mugello MotoGP 2016

The seven Moto3 races that have taken place at Mugello have been won by seven different riders: Maverick Viñales, Luis Salom, Romano Fenati, Miguel Oliveira, Brad Binder, Andrea Migno and Jorge Martin. Only two of them have been won by non-KTM riders: Maverick Viñales (FTR Honda–2012) and Jorge Martin (Honda–2018)


Previously… in MotoGP
300  At the French GP, Marc Marquez gave Honda their 300th premier class win. Yamaha are their closest rival with 227 victories.
120 In France, Marc Marquez took his 120th Grand Prix podium, one less than Phil Read who is in sixth place on the list of riders with most podium finishes.
100 Cal Crutchlow finished in ninth place at Le Mans, becoming the first British rider to reach the milestone of 100-point scoring races in the premier class.
95 Andrea Dovizioso’s second place in France was the 95th time he has been on the podium in Grand Prix racing, equalling five-time World Champion Mick Doohan.
47 The win by Marc Marquez at the French GP was the 47th since he stepped up to the MotoGP class in 2013, equalling his teammate Jorge Lorenzo.
26 Since the opening Grand Prix in Qatar, 26 different riders have stood on the podium across all classes. Only Marc Marquez has finished on the podium more than three times in the opening five Grand Prix of the season.
11 Since the opening race in Qatar, there have been 11 different winners across all three classes for the first time since 2016 (11 different winners in all classes).
3 Marc and Alex Marquez won on the same day for the third time in their Grand Prix career along with Catalunya and Assen back in 2014, and for the first time with Alex competing in Moto2.
3 This is the second time there were three Ducati riders within the top four across the line of a MotoGP race, with the first time Turkey back in 2007.

MotoGP Facts and Stats

Following Le Mans, Marc Marquez leads the MotoGP World Championship with 95 points, equalling last year at this stage of the season. This is the highest score for a rider leading the Championship after the opening five races since 2015 when Valentino Rossi (102 points) led Jorge Lorenzo.

Marc Marquez’ win at Le Mans is the eighth successive win for a Spanish rider in the premier class at the track.

Andrea Dovizioso’s second place in France was the 95th time he was on the podium in Grand Prix racing, equalling five-time World Champion Mick Doohan who is in 12th place on the list of riders with most podium finishes. In addition, it was Andrea Dovizioso’s 54th podium finish in the premier class, equalling Randy Mamola and four less than Max Biaggi, who is in 10th place on the list of riders with most podium finishes in the class.

Danilo Petrucci was on the podium for the seventh time in his Grand Prix career, equalling Andrea Iannone and Jorge Lorenzo in fourth place on the list of Ducati riders with most podium finishes in MotoGP behind Casey Stoner (42), Andrea Dovizioso (32) and Loris Capirossi (23).

MotoGP Rnd LeMans Miller Rossi
Jack Miller pipping Valentino Rossi to the line at Le Mans

Eight different riders have already been on the podium after the opening five races of the season, one less than at this stage of the 2018 season. Jack Miller crossed the line in fourth place as the third Ducati rider in France, which is the second time there have been three Ducati riders within the top four since the introduction of the MotoGP class in 2002; the other being Turkey in 2007 with Casey Stoner winning the race, Loris Capirossi in third and Alex Barros in fourth.

Jack Miller is now leading the Independent Team riders’ classification with 42 points ahead of Cal Crutchlow, who is tied with Franco Morbidelli on 34 points.

Valentino Rossi is the most successful rider across all the classes at Mugello, with a total of nine victories; one each in 125cc and 250cc classes to add to his seven successive MotoGP wins (2 x Honda and 5 x Yamaha), the last of which came in 2008. Neither of the two Yamaha factory riders have won at least one of the five opening races for the second successive year. The last time the Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP team did not have a win in any of the first five races of the year in two successive seasons was in 2002 and 2003. Following the French GP, Yamaha have scored 78 points in the Constructor’s World Championship classification, which is the lowest points accumulated after the opening five races by Yamaha since 2006 when the Japanese manufacturer had 69 points after the French GP.

MotoGP Rnd Jerez Crutchlow GP AN
Cal Crutchlow

Cal Crutchlow finished in ninth place at Le Mans, becoming the first British rider to reach the milestone of 100 point-scoring races in the premier class. With Takaaki Nakagami crashing out of the race in France, only six riders have scored points in all four of the MotoGP races in 2019: Danilo Petrucci, Alex Rins, Valentino Rossi, Andrea Dovizioso, Johann Zarco and Pol Espargaro.

Premier Class Wins and Titles

Pos Riders Premier Class Wins Premier Class Titles
1 Valentino Rossi 89 7
2 Giacomo Agostini 68 8
3 Mick Doohan 54 5
4 Jorge Lorenzo 47 3
4 Marc Marquez 47 5
6 Casey Stoner 38 2
7 Mike Hailwood 37 4
8 Eddie Lawson 31 4
9 Dani Pedrosa 31
10 Kevin Schwantz 25 1

Andrea Iannone qualified on pole in 2015 at Mugello riding a Ducati–his first pole in the MotoGP class. This was the first time that an Italian rider on an Italian bike had qualified on pole for a premier class Grand Prix in Italy since Giacomo Agostini was on pole for the 500cc GP at the Nations GP in Imola back in 1972.

With his 12th-place finish at Le Mans, Aleix Espargaro scored his 993rd point since the beginning of his career. In Mugello, he will be aiming to reach the milestone of 1000 points.

At the Italian GP, wildcard Michele Pirro is scheduled to make the 100th start of his Grand Prix career. The only one of the four rookies in the MotoGP class this year to have previously won in any of the smaller classes in Mugello is Miguel Oliveira, who won in Moto3 back in 2015–the first of his 12 GP wins so far–and in Moto2 last year.

Fabio Quartararo finished in eighth place in Le Mans behind his teammate Franco Morbidelli, setting the fastest lap of the race for the second time this year along with Qatar. He is still leading the fight for Rookie of the Year with 25 points followed by Francesco Bagnaia (9 points), Joan Mir (8) and Miguel Oliveira (8).

MotoGP Rnd LeMans Marquez Flag
Marquez dominated the #FrenchGP

Marc Marquez closes in on Phil Read

The win by Marc Marquez at the French GP was the 120th time he was on the podium in his Grand Prix career, one less than Phil Read. Only five riders have been on the podium on more occasions than Read in Grand Prix racing

Pos Rider Total  Wins Seconds Thirds
1 Valentino Rossi 234 115 67 52
2 Giacomo Agostini 159 122 35 2
3 Dani Pedrosa 153 54 52 47
4 Jorge Lorenzo 152 68 51 33
5 Angel Nieto 139 90 35 14
6 Phil Read 121 52 44 25
7 Marc Marquez 120 73 30 17
8 Mike Hailwood 112 76 25 11
9 Max Biaggi 111 42 41 28
10 Loris Capirossi 99 29 34 36

On this day…

May 30th
At the Italian GP back in 2002, Ducati revealed the Desmosedici, their MotoGP bike to compete in the premier class from the 2003 season on.
In 1954, at the French GP held in Reims, Pierre Monneret won the 500cc race to become the first of the three French riders to have won in the premier class so far.
May 31st
Ten years ago, at the Italian GP, Casey Stoner won from Jorge Lorenzo and Valentino Rossi, which was the first win for a Ducati rider in the premier class at Mugello.
At the same GP, Mattia Pasini won his second race in the intermediate category from Marco Simoncelli and Alvaro Bautista.
In 1998, Alex Criville won the French GP held at Le Castellet, from Mick Doohan and Carlos Checa, to become the first Spanish rider to lead the premier class standings.
June 1st
At the 2008 Italian GP, Marco Simoncelli won his first race in the intermediate category following a spectacular collision with Hector Barbera on the straight. This was the first win for a Gilera rider in the class.
June 2nd
At the 2013 Italian GP, Johann Zarco finished third in the Moto2 race behind Scott Redding and Nico Terol for his first podium finish in the class.
Andrea Dovizioso Qualifying Mugello 2018
Andrea Dovizioso Qualifying Mugello 2018

Andrea Dovizioso scheduled for 300th Grand Prix start

Andrea Dovizioso
At the Italian Grand Prix, Andrea Dovizioso is scheduled to become the third rider in the history of Grand Prix racing to make 300 Grand Prix starts, including 299 successive races. Below are a collection of statistics relating to Doviziozo’s Grand Prix career.
Andrea Dovizioso has taken part in 32.3% of the 928 Grand Prix events staged since the start of the World Championship series back in 1949.
Andrea Dovizioso has the fifth longest winning career of all time, tied with Jorge Lorenzo: it’s 14 years 326 days between his first win in the 125cc class in South Africa in 2004 and his latest MotoGP win in Qatar earlier this year.
Andrea Dovizioso has finished in a point-scoring position 259 times.
2019 is his 18th year as a full-time GP rider. Valentino Rossi holds the record with 24 seasons so far.
During his career, Dovizioso has competed at 28 different Grand Prix circuits. Of these 28 circuits, he has taken at least one GP win at 16 of them.
The circuit at which Dovizioso has had most GP wins is Donington, where he has won three times. He has won GP races on four different motorcycles: 125cc Honda, 250cc Honda, 800cc Honda (RC212V) and 990cc Ducati.
The circuit at which Dovizioso has made most GP starts is Mugello, where he has appeared 18 times since his first Grand Prix appearance at the Italian GP back in 2001.
He is still in sixth place on the list of the youngest riders to win the lightweight World Championship at the age of 18 years 201 days.
Dovizioso, who is equal with Mick Doohan with 95 podium finishes, needs just five more top three finishes to become just the 10th rider in GP history to reach the milestone of 100 podium finishes.
Dovizioso is in third place in the following table of all riders who have made more than 250 Grand Prix starts since the beginning of the World Championship Grand Prix racing 70 years ago:
Rider Total 500/MGP 350 250/M2 125/M3 80/50
V Rossi 388 328 30 30
L Capirossi 328 217 84 27
A Dovizioso 299 201 49 49
D Pedrosa 295 217 32 46
J Lorenzo 287 193 48 46
J Findlay 282 157 83 34 6 2
A Barros 276 245 14 17
Á Bautista 274 158 49 67
T Lüthi 272 18 187 67
H Barberá 267 139 81 47
S Corsi 267 172 95
A D Angelis 265 61 139 65
A Nieto 265 1 16 160 88
B Kneubühler 264 71 46 52 86 9
R D Puniet 253 140 80 33
MotoGP Rnd Argentina Rossi Celebrate
Rossi has the most premier class starts racking up 388 over his 21 year career

MotoGP World Championship Standings

Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Marc Marquez Honda 70
2 Alex Rins Suzuki 69
3 Andrea Dovizioso Ducati 67
4 Valentino Rossi Yamaha 61
5 Danilo Petrucci Ducati 41
6 Maverick Viñales Yamaha 30
7 Jack Miller Ducati 29
8 Takaaki Nakagami Honda 29
9 Cal Crutchlow Honda 27
10 Franco Morbidelli Yamaha 25
11 Pol Espargaro KTM 21
12 Aleix Espargaro Aprilia 18
13 Fabio Quartararo Yamaha 17
14 Jorge Lorenzo Honda 11
15 Francesco Bagnaia Ducati 9
16 Joan Mir Suzuki 8
17 Miguel Oliveira KTM 7
18 Johann Zarco KTM 7
19 Stefan Bradl Honda 6
20 Andrea Iannone Aprilia 6
21 Tito Rabat Ducati 2
22 Karel Abraham Ducati 0
23 Hafizh Syahrin KTM 0
24 Bradley Smith Aprilia 0

Mugello

MotoGP weekend schedule

Times in AEST

Source: MCNews.com.au

George Clooney opens up on scooter crash

Movie star George Clooney says he is giving motorcycling a rest after a scooter crash in Italy last year that split his helmet in half.

Clooney, along with his friend Brad Pitt, is a great lover of motorcycles. He has been photographed on a variety of bikes including BMWs, Moto Guzzis, Harleys and Triumphs.

George Clooney crash accident
Clooney riding with a friend

Even though he crashed in Sardinia in June last year, he is only now talking about the incident because he is spruiking his new Stan series Catch 22.

He has been telling various media organisations that the crash happened while he was filming the TV series.

Clooney’s scooter crash

George Clooney crash accident
Clooney’s crashed scooter

Clooney says a Mercedes driver pulled out in front of his max-scooter when he was travelling at about 110km/h.

He was thrown from the scooter and the impact split his helmet in two and knocked him out of his shoes.

Now, we have two questions: What sort of helmet was it and was he wearing sneakers or elasticised boots?

We’ve seen photos of him on motorbikes and he doesn’t seem to be wearing decent motorcycle gear. Sometimes he just wears sneakers, jeans, no jacket and even no helmet!

George Clooney crash accident
At least the boots look sturdy!

That may be fine for putt-putting around Lake Como’s quaint villages where he lives.

However, if he’s travelling 110km/h on a maxi-scooter, surely he should be wearing proper motorcycle protective gear.

Set an exampleGeorge Clooney crash accident

Having celebrities riding motorcycles is great for motorcycling as it inspires people to follow suit.

But it’s not a great advertisement for motorcycling if they crash without wearing proper gear.

He needs to set an example to other riders.

It’s also not great for motorcycling when he says he may be giving up on riding.

He actually says: “If you get nine lives, I got all of them used up at once — so I can let go of motorcycle riding for a while.”

Notice he is not giving up for ever!

Hopefully, if he gets back on a motorcycle or scooter he will wear proper gear and promote the importance of wearing the correct protection.

If he’s still concerned about riding again, maybe he should read our tips for getting back in the saddle after a crash!

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Mythbusting: Green Light Trigger

We recently received a Green Light Trigger unit which is basically two powerful magnets that attach to the underside of your motorcycle and promise to trigger a green light.

Read on and find out if the Green Light Trigger actually works!

Why lights won’t change

Most riders have experienced the frustration of a traffic light that won’t budge off red because it cannot detect their motorcycle which is smaller than a car.

We contacted several state transport departments for their technical advice.

They say these lights are controlled by an inductor loop cut into the pavement.

It creates an electro-magnetic field and detects ferromagnetic metals such as iron, cobalt, nickel, steel and manganese.

Some people erroneously believe these rectangles are actually scales that detract the weight of vehicles and therefore don’t pick up light motorcycles!

For the best possible detection of the metal in your motorcycle, you should position your bike longitudinally right above one of the cut lines.

GReen LIght Trigger traffic lights detect
Stop over that centre longitudinal cut line

If there are two rectangles cut into the pavement, line up over the centre line for the best effect.

Be aware that lining up over a side cut line next to a running lane exposes you to the danger of being rear-ended by an errant driver straying out of their lane.

It has also been suggested that if you deploy your side stand directly over a cut line it will help trigger the lights.

We tried it and it doesn’t seem to work, but it may depend on the metal composition of your sidestand. Some modern motorcycles have non-ferromagnetic alloy sidestands to save weight.

Sensitive issue

The transport departments tell us the the sensitivity of the loops is set to detect all vehicles.

However, sensitivity is a delicate balancing act: too low and it won’t pick up a motorcycle or bicycle; too high and it will pick up false readings for cars in adjacent lanes.

If you believe the sensitivity is set too low at a set of lights, you can contact the relevant department in your state or local council area and ask for it to be increased.

Green Light Trigger

But what about this $US30 Green Light Trigger which is basically two powerful neodymium or rare-earth magnets?

The science suggests they could work because the inductor loop creates a magnetic effect which should detect other magnets: either attracting or repelling.

I tried it out on my Triumph Street Scrambler and a Kawasaki Versys 1000 test bike which do not trigger a set of lights near my home in western Brisbane.

The Green Light Trigger made no difference.

Believing the sensitivity is just too low, I tried another set of lights where my bike does trigger green.

GReen LIght Trigger traffic lights detect
Green Light Trigger can be attached by the magnet or a cable tie

Instead of using my motorcycle which I know is detected, I placed two of the Green Light Trigger magnets directly on the cut lines. They failed to trigger the lights.

I gave the device to a friend who has complained about lights near his house which don’t detect his bike and he says it worked.

However, RACQ technical officer Steve Spalding is sceptical, believing that the lights may simply have changed as part of the scheduled traffic pattern.

Traffic phasesred light cameras trigger

RACQ Principal Traffic and Safety Engineer Gregory Miszkowycz says if your motorcycle is detected, it won’t necessarily speed up the light change process.

“It just registers a demand for that movement in the traffic controller,” he says.

“If all movements at the intersection have a vehicle waiting, the traffic controller will move through its usual pattern or phases of traffic movements at the intersection.

“There may be three to four movement phases at a typical intersection as all the different movements receive their turn before it returns to the first phase again, which is one complete cycle, usually 60-100 seconds in total. 

“Some intersections at certain times of the day will ‘skip’ certain phases where there are no waiting vehicles. This improves the efficiency of the intersection and reduces delays for motorists by not wasting green time.

“In essence, this speeds up the light change, but only because the traffic controller has skipped other unnecessary phases. 

“There are other intricacies of vehicle detection, like terminating a right turn movement as soon as the queue has gone. It is all to squeeze the most out of the intersections and minimise lost time.”

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Mugello offers potential for breakthrough Lorenzo result

News 30 May 2019

Mugello offers potential for breakthrough Lorenzo result

Spaniard’s feeling progressing with Repsol Honda RC213V.

Image: Supplied.

This weekend’s sixth round of the 2019 MotoGP World Championship at Mugello could serve as the venue that Jorge Lorenzo experiences a breakthrough result with Repsol Honda, having claimed six victories at the Italian circuit.

The Spaniard has finished outside of the top two in the premier class just twice in his career at Mugello, and with recent improvements in form aboard the RC213V, there’s potential on offer for the number 99 to make headlines on Sunday.

A key to Lorenzo’s recent enhanced feeling with the Honda is switching to the standard RC213V seat, which he reverted to for Le Mans’ fifth round.

“We made good progress in Le Mans with the setting of the bike and were able to be much closer to the front,” said Lorenzo. “I’ve had similar success in the past in Mugello as to Le Mans, so I am hopefully of continuing to improve our position. The Repsol Honda Team has been working very hard and I am sure soon I will be able to achieve some results to thank them.”

Yet to finish inside the top 10 this season, Lorenzo sits 14th in the championship standings. Teammate and reigning world champion Marc Marquez currently tops the points rankings.

Source: CycleOnline.com.au

Bimota BB1 Supermono

With Phil Aynsley

The BB1 Supermono was Bimota’s only single cylinder motorcycle. First displayed at the Cologne Show in 1994, production began the following year with 524 made, including 140 of the Biposto version (with pillion seat and painted dark blue in production from 1996).

Bimota BB SupermonoPA BimotaBB
Bimota BB1 Supermono

The BB1 used the same Rotax 650cc four-stroke motor that was used by BMW for their F650. The twin carburettor motor made 48 hp at 6500 rpm and gave the 145 kg machine a top speed of 177 km/h.

Bimota BB SupermonoPA BimotaBB
The Bimota BB1 Supermono was powered by a Rotax 650
Bimota BB SupermonoPA BimotaBB
Fuel tank in the bellypan!

A single front disc was standard but a second was an option. One interesting design feature was the placement of the fuel tank under the motor for a lower centre of gravity.

Bimota BB SupermonoPA BimotaBB
A single front disc brake was offered, with an option to add a second
Bimota BB SupermonoPA BimotaBB
Dual undertail exhausts

A €10,000 race kit was offered that included magnesium wheels, upgraded suspension, fuel-injection and other go-fast bits.

Bimota BB SupermonoPA BimotaBB
A race kit was also available
Bimota BB SupermonoPA BimotaBB
Bimota BB1 Supermono dash
Bimota BB SupermonoPA BimotaBB
Bimota BB1 Supermono fuel cap

Bimota campaigned a modified BB1 in the Italian Super Mono series which used a 725cc motor that made 75hp.

Bimota BB SupermonoPA BimotaBB
Bimota BB1 Supermono
Bimota BB SupermonoPA BimotaBB
Bimota BB1 Supermono
Bimota BB SupermonoPA BimotaBB
Bimota BB1 Supermono rear sprocket
Bimota BB SupermonoPA BimotaBB
Bimota BB1 Supermono

Source: MCNews.com.au

Dovizioso to celebrate 300th grand prix at Mugello

News 30 May 2019

Dovizioso to celebrate 300th grand prix at Mugello

Ducati ace to mark milestone at home Italian round this weekend.

Image: Supplied.

Mission Winnow Ducati’s Andrea Dovizioso will celebrate his 300th grand prix this weekend at Mugello’s sixth round of the 2019 MotoGP World Championship in Italy.

Dovizioso, who started his full-time grand prix career in 2002, has contested 49 races in the both the former 125cc and 250cc classes, and a staggering 201 races in the premier category since graduating to MotoGP in 2008.

The milestone will be made even more special this weekend, as Mugello plays host to Dovizioso’s home round and will deliver a passionate Italian crowd to mark the occasion.

“300 is a big number,” Dovizioso stated. “I’m really happy to be in Mugello at this moment in the Championship because it’s for sure our good track, and we need a good result. I think after a good result in Le Mans with three Ducatis, we can be really competitive here to fight with Marc.

“For sure he’ll really want to win here in Mugello but I think we have every chance to fight with him and all the other riders. This is our home race and I believe we can be competitive and fast, so our goal is first of all to step on the podium once again.

“As we’ve seen in these first races, this year our rivals are also particularly fast, so it’s difficult to make predictions. As for us, we will not settle for what we achieved so far and we’ll try our best, analysing the data, to keep working and understand where we can make further improvements.”

With one victory to his name this year, Dovizioso is ranked second in the championship standings.

Source: CycleOnline.com.au