Category Archives: Motorcycle News

Ducati DesertX Deliveries To Start in May 2022

The Ducati DesertX was unveiled during the sixth and final episode of the company’s World Première 2022 series. The highly anticipated model is Ducati’s interpretation of the rally bikes that competed in the golden age of the Dakar Rally. 

The inspiration for the styling is evident with the twin-pod LED headlights and relatively slim proportions. However, under all that new bodywork is a motorcycle that we’re pretty familiar with. At the heart of the new DesertX is the same 937cc Testastretta V-twin engine that powers multiple models in the Italian marquee’s lineup — like the Multistrada V2. That said, peak output figures at 110hp at 9,250rpm and 68lb-ft of torque at 6,500rpm are slightly lower than on the Multistrada. The DesertX also features shorter gearing, which should translate to better performance earlier on in the rev band — vital while off-roading. 

While the Multistrada is a road-biased adventure tourer, the DesertX has been designed with the dirt in mind. Autocar India reports that the bike features a 21-inch/18-inch wire-spoke wheel setup that not even the Multistrada 1260 Enduro gets. Given its intentions, the DesertX also boasts of some seriously impressive off-road-centric figures; 230mm and 220mm of suspension travel at the front and rear, respectively, and 250mm of ground clearance. 

Consequently, this is a tall motorcycle. A seat height that’s 875mm off the ground is going to deter less experienced riders from hopping on. There’s also the weight — with the 21-liter fuel tank topped up, the DesertX tips the scales at 223kg.

Like with every Ducati, this one features a host of electronics. There’s a total of six riding modes, including Enduro and Rally modes dedicated to off-road use. Riders also can choose from four power modes via a 5-inch TFT dash with optional Bluetooth connectivity. 

You also have the option to choose from a wide range of add-on accessories that include panniers, heated grips, fog lamps, and even an 8-liter auxiliary fuel tank. 

The DesertX will be available in North American dealerships from May 2022, with prices starting at $16,795.



Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

2021 MotoGP™ recap: Spanish Grand Prix

Jack Miller (Ducati Lenovo Team) was the first to overtake Quartararo, with the Australian able to hold on to P1 to beat teammate Francesco Bagnaia by just under two seconds. It was Miller’s first victory since that legendary victory at Assen in 2016, his first in the dry conditions. Pecco’s P2 was his third podium in four races, as Franco Morbidelli (Petronas Yamaha SRT) – on two-year-old equipment – claimed a fantastic third place. Quartararo crossed the line in P13, seeing his title lead slashed to two points over Pecco.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Fasthouse x Hot Wheels Collection Debuts at Day in the Dirt

Fasthouse and Hot Wheels? Uh, yeah that’s a collaboration we can get behind!

Begin Press Release: 


A CELEBRATION OF ACCELERATION

At the crossroads of high speed and good times, you’ll find the timeless cool of the Southern California motocross community. We pay tribute to tradition with the new Fasthouse x Hot Wheels capsule collection. 
In 1968 when Hot Wheels was born, it became the toy that would spark the passion of generations of gear heads, forever ingrained in the memories of their youth. Perhaps it’s no coincidence that 1968 was also the year Kenny Alexander was tossed a hand-made jersey from his grandma under the roof of what became the inspiration for Fasthouse – where some of the fastest racers from the desert racing scene and later from the legendary Indian Dunes would gather to tell war stories and grab race jerseys and vests made the old-fashioned way.

Fast forward to the present day and both iconic brands have joined forces to create a product line for the tight-knit community of dirt bike lovers, young and old alike. And to continue kickstarting the hearts of the next generation, Hot Wheels and Fasthouse teamed up to select a crew of young rockstars that embody the spirit of speed, style, and good times that those who grew up riding remember so fondly. This is the FH X Hot Wheels youth crew, and it was on full display at the recent 2021 Day In the Dirt.

hot wheels fast house

Also founded by Kenny Alexander, Day in the Dirt is something special that taps into the spirit of Hot Wheels. What started as a one-day event in 1998 has turned into what some people call the “MX Woodstock”. It’s a gathering of family and friends and what they love most – dirt bikes.  It attracts the greats, the near-greats and the not-so-greats, but also the Hollywood stunt community and moto fanatics worldwide. It’s a gathering for everyone, and a big part of that community is the stoked-out kids. Since the debut of the FH x Hot Wheels youth crew out at Mammoth MX back in June, there has been a buzz about this one of kind collaboration. The vibe out at Day in the Dirt was no different. The Hot Wheels youth crew hit the scene, ready to ride and just have a good time.

“Day in the dirt has always been a special race for the Grant family, it was extra special to me this year having all our Hot Wheels groms there representing what the race is really all about… having fun, looking good, and spreading good vibes,” said Josh Grant. “I really liked that Fasthouse brought Moto 4 Kids in to organize racing for the younger generations and get them involved the funnest race of the year.”

hot wheels fasthouse

Day in the Dirt isn’t all about podium finishes, it’s really about racing with your friends and making long time memories. The FH x Hot Wheels youth crew did just that, paired with cool style that the whole community felt a part of. From the race track to the campsites these young rippers were spreading the message of speed, style, and good times. The new FH x Hot Wheels casual collection embodies this lifestyle with its assortment of beanies, T-shirts, hoodies and more in classic SoCal style; with something for everyone to keep warm in the pits, shielded from the sun on a hot track day or just repping your love of two wheel culture around town.

“I love seeing the FH x Hot wheels crew living life and tearing it up, It puts a smile on my face, said Kenny Alexander, Founder of Fasthouse. “Looking forward to the next one!”

As for the product line, this is just the beginning. Coming in 2022, look out for some awesome riding gear to accompany the recent casual apparel drop.

Shop for the Fasthouse X Hot Wheels casual collection here


 

hot wheels fasthouse
hot wheels fasthouse
hot wheels fasthouse






 

The post Fasthouse x Hot Wheels Collection Debuts at Day in the Dirt appeared first on Motorcycle.com News.

Vespas scoot around the bay for charity

Melbourne Vespa riders will celebrate the iconic scooter marque’s 75th anniversary on Sunday, 19 December, with the ninth annual Vespa Day Around the Bay.

The event, organised by the Vespa Club of Melbourne, allows participants to choose from eight departure points around the bay.

Riders can do one or two legs of the trip or ride the full 322.6km right around Port Phillip Bay.

Cost is $10 per rider with funds raised going to the Khmer Association for Development (KAD).

The local Cambodian non-governmental, non-profit, non-political and non-religious organisation conducts several community programs in health, education, vocational training, media, governance, agriculture and children’s rights.

The Vespa Club of Melbourne has donated more than $40,000 to the Cambodian charity in the past eight years.

Among the classic Vespa models expected at the event will be several 75th editions of the latest Vespa Primavera 150 and GTS 300 models, distinguished by their historic ‘Giallo Zolfo’ livery, intuitive TFT display and iconic leather wheel bags.

Vespa has built more than 19 million scooters over the past 75 years, including almost two million in the past decade alone.

Image from previous Vespa Vespa Days

Vespa Day Around the Bay itinerary

6.45am Geelong: The Edge Cafe. Refuel at Yarraville so you can make it home.

8.30am Yarraville: Main ride leaves from Dad and Dave’s Cafe (Bus station).

9am St Kilda: Shakespeare Grove car park along Luna Park. Be ready to go when the ride arrives.

10.40am Chelsea: Morning tea from 10am by members Stefan and Ira at their home at 8 Village Crescent, Chelsea. Thank them very much.

Touratech Desierto5 fairing for BMW R 12100 GSv

11.30am Mornington: Wilson’s Road. Regroup only. Don’t gear down. Ride begins as soon as the tail rider arrives.

1pm Sorrento Ferry: $20 cash for Vespa Club members/$30 cash others (usually $39). Have small notes ready to pay Julie as you pass through the gate. Lunch on the ferry is BYO or you can buy from the kiosk.

1.45pm Queenscliff: Ride to Portarlington where riders will refuel.

3.30pm Leave Geelong, through Corio and Lara: North of Little River the ride joins the freeway for 15 minutes.

4.30pm: Main ride arrives for drinks at Vault bar, Yarraville.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

2021 MotoGP™ recap: Portuguese Grand Prix

After winning the Doha GP, Quartararo came into the Portuguese GP full of confidence. The Frenchman and his YZR-M1 were singing from the same hymn sheet, and Quartararo bagged pole position. Slipping back from the start, El Diablo managed to expertly pick his way through the pack – just like he did in Doha – to eventually claim a comfortable victory. Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar) crashed out of second place, as Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team) climbed his way up the pecking order from 11th on the grid – after a cancelled lap in Q2 – to finish P2. 2020 World Champion Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar) notched up his first podium of the season, as Quartararo’s second win on the bounce saw him take an early 15-point lead in the title race.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

COMING SOON: Behind The Stars & Stripes

In this four-part series, we watch as Roberts finds himself closer than ever to victory, and Beaubier shows exactly why he’s a five-time national Champion. It’s not always plain sailing for our American heroes, though, as after starting the year with high expectations and beginning to meet them, Roberts and Beaubier find themselves in the school of hard knocks.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Alex Escrig set for MotoE™ debut with Tech3

“Clearly the FIM Enel MotoE World Cup is becoming more and more attractive for the riders, and we are proud to be bringing a mix of experience and youth with our new line-up into the electric class. Alex will dispute his rookie season and will have a lot to learn, but I am sure that we can count on Hector to give him a few tips as they know each other already, both being from Valencia. We can’t wait to be in Jerez for the first test session of 2022, and I am sure that our riders will be fighting for podiums and victories next year.”

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

AMX Open entries top 260 with stacked classes

2021 AMX Open entries top 260


The 2021 AMX MX Open preparations are well underway, with over 260 riders entered, including stacked Pro classes, and Junior classes near capacity.

The Wonthaggi track will test motocross bikes and riders, with Club President Chris Townsend excited to see racing return with such strong entries.

Chris Townsend

“It’s a stacked field in most classes. The Pro Open and Pro Lite is set to showcase Australia’s best riders. We can’t wait to watch Ferris, Clout, Webster, Metcalfe, Tanti and Mellross go head-to-head in the 450 class. The Dandenong Motorcycle Club have been busy preparing the track after one of their most challenging years. Everyone at the club is excited to see racing again and it’s been a team effort to get the track back to a international standard. We welcome the AMX MX OPEN and look forward to seeing people enjoying racing and riding again.”

The event has captured the interest from riders all over Australia and two riders who have something to prove are Factory Honda’s Brett Metcalfe and CDR Yamaha Monster Energy’s Hayden Mellross. Both riders have not signed deals for 2022 and this is their last chance to show case their talent before the season ends.

Brett Metcalfe

“I want to race next year and believe I have a lot to offer. I am in discussions with my current team, and I am exploring other opportunities as well. This weekend is important as it’s an opportunity to remind everyone that I am still competitive.”

Brett Metcalfe
Brett Metcalfe

Mellross feels that he hasn’t had the opportunity to really prove himself in the MX1 class because of the pandemic.

Hayden Mellross

“I have raced 3 national races in two years, so it’s been near impossible to prove myself in the MX1 class. This weekend will give me that opportunity.”

Hayden Mellross

The AMX MX OPEN runs over two days, gates open at 7am tomorrow (December 11). For more information go to www.mxopen.com.au.

Source: MCNews.com.au

Australian BMW GS Safaris announced

Over more than 40 years, BMW Motorrad in Australia has offered riding safaris for road, dirt and extreme off-road situations.

Last year, the GS Safari headed to Far North Queensland while the more extreme Enduro Safari headed west from Longreach.

In 2022, both five-day safaris return to Tasmania for the first time in eight years with registrations open from 18 January at 9am AEDT.

Click here for the GS Safari and Enduro Safari.

The reason they announce the exact time for the opening of online registrations is that the capped events are so popular, they usually sell out within hours or even minutes.

Both will start in Hobart and feature a variety of twisty bitumen roads that rival the best in Australia as well as some dirt roads.

However, the Enduro will include more dirt and a lot of technical off-road terrain.

Touratech Desierto5 fairing for BMW R 12100 GSv

Also, attendees in the Enduro event must first complete their two-day BMW Off Road Training Pre-Safari course, located not far from Hobart.

I’ve participated in several TS (road only), GS and GS Enduro safaris over the years and found them to be well-organised events.

Fees cover route notes, welcome and farewell dinners, baggage back-up, expert advice, recovery vehicles and discounts on accommodation.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Custom Livewire One Motorcycles Debut At Autopia 2099

Curious what the future of e-bike customization might look like? Here’s a good start.

Begin press release:


The customization potential of the LiveWire One™ electric motorcycle was on full display on Saturday, Dec. 4 at Autopia 2099, a new and dedicated EV event held at Optimist Studios in Los Angeles designed to showcase electric cars, trucks, motorcycles, bicycles, and other mobility solutions. The event featured more than 80 vehicles, from home-built and conversion EVs to brand new cars and trucks, plus a display of what the event organizers called retrofuturism. Two custom motorcycle builders, SMCO and Earle Motors, presented the first fully customized LiveWire One motorcycles, both of which originated in Los Angeles, a city rapidly becoming LiveWire’s most successful market.

“The custom bikes showcased at Autopia make a big statement on behalf of LiveWire,” said Ryan Morrissey, Chief Electric Vehicle Officer. “Personalization has always been an element of motorcycle culture, and this weekend SMCO and Earle Motors demonstrated the customization potential of LiveWire One. These custom bikes and components are early indicators of our intent to incorporate limited edition builds and accessories into the digital bike builder on LiveWire.com.”

SMCO: LiveWire One Hooligan Racer

Brothers Aaron and Shaun Guardado started racing as young teenagers, first in shifter karts and then in high performance import cars before they turned their attention to motorcycles. They founded SMCO in 2010 to sell branded T-shirts and started building custom competition motorcycles in their Long Beach, Calif., shop to back up the brand and feed their appetite for racing and performance. Now in their mid-30s, the brothers have built serious Harley-Davidson flat trackers and performance bikes for hooligan racing, and even converted a pair of Harley-Davidson® Street Rod® motorcycles into snow bikes for a winter hill climb at the ESPN X Games.

“When we got our hands on the LiveWire One, we immediately wanted to race it,” said Aaron Guardado.

This past July, Shaun and Aaron entered a pair of LiveWire One bikes in the Roland Sands Super Hooligan Championship at the Laguna Seca race course in California. The series is open to almost any motorcycle, and for the event the bikes were stripped of lighting but were otherwise stock.

“The bikes are so fast and so much fun to ride, but we wanted to find ways to improve on that performance,” said Aaron. “We started by reducing rotating mass with a set of carbon fiber wheels from BST. Then we removed all the stock bodywork and used it to make molds for our own lightweight carbon fiber body pieces. We also designed our own rear-set foot controls to put us in a more-aggressive posture for road racing the bike.”

The SMCO race-prepped LiveWire One bikes were displayed this past weekend at Autopia in the unpainted carbon bodywork.

“This project really pushed us into some new technology,” said Aaron. “We learned to use CAD and a 3D printer to create the rear sets, for example.”

All of the carbon bodywork created by the Guardado brothers uses the stock mounting points on a LiveWire One, and if there’s interest from other owners, the parts may show up for sale in the future.

Earle Motors: E/MULHOLLAND CUSTOM
When designer Alex Earle needs to unwind, he often does it on his LiveWire One electric motorcycle.

“I’ve spent a lot of time riding off road, but I discovered the LiveWire One was the perfect stress-relief street ride,” said Earle, who teaches powersports design at the ArtCenter College of Design in Pasadena, Calif. “I live near the base of Mulholland Drive, a famous and very curvy road winding from Los Angeles up into the mountains. On weekends it’s nuts with cars and bikes, but on an evening during the week nobody is there. It’s like my private road. Unlike an internal combustion bike, the LiveWire One is quiet, and smooth, and cool. I can make a run up Mulholland, or Decker Canyon Road, stop at Old Place or the Rock Store. It’s a great escape.”

Earle Motors is more of an outlet for Earle’s creativity than it is a business, and he turned that creative design bent on his LiveWire One, in a very dramatic way.

“Initially this bike was intimidating, because it’s electric,” said Earle. “There’s no exhaust, for example, which is always an easy starting point for customization. And no fuel tank. I had two goals in mind – to consolidate the design and adjust the ergonomics for my own comfort. I want it to fit like a tailored suit.”

Earle replaced most of the bodywork with pieces of his own design, created in composite on a 3D printer, except for the “fuel tank” in front of the seat, which covers tightly packed electronics that can’t be reshaped. He removed the rear fender and lighting, and replaced the tail section with one he formed of welded steel.

“I painted the electronics cover, which looks like a fuel tank, in Synthetic Haze, a gray-to-blue fade developed during World War II to help airplanes appear less visible in the sky, which lowers the profile of the entire bike,” said Earle. “I filled in the space below that cover with a new finned piece that wraps around in front of the seat. The fins are the same shape as those on the battery case in the center of the bike.”

The part Earle removed incorporates air scoops to cool electronic components, and to replace that cooling capacity he created hollow galleries within the fins in which coolant might circulate. Two small hoses on the show bike would carry that coolant to a finned heat exchanger located between the forks. To create this part, Earle made detailed drawings, and had the entire motorcycle digitally scanned by Mimic 3D. His drawing and the scan was handed off to PROTOTYP3, a firm founded by two of his former students, who recreated it in CAD and then made the part in one piece with a 3D printer.

“It was amazing that when I got the part the holes lined up perfectly with the mounting points on the bike.” said Earle. “Right now, this is an idea, not a functional feature. I have no way of testing it, but I designed it so that I think it could be functional. The next step would be to 3D print it in aluminum.”

The lower bodywork behind the front wheel is shaped to be an air curtain to smooth flow around the battery case. Its bright orange color is meant to draw the eye down and lower the perceived profile of the bike. Earle removed the stock headlamp and its nacelle to fit three LED lights.

“The new tail section and a custom motard-style seat I designed raise the seat height several inches, which is perfect for my six-foot three-inch frame,” said Earle. “Saddlemen covered the seat in black leather, and it looks great. I also installed a chrome handlebar that’s lower than stock, chrome because it doesn’t get scuffed up when I transport the bike.”

A final custom detail can be found on a logo Earle created for a new charging port cover, which combines the number 23 – which he has always used on his competition-style customs – with an elk antler design that’s also used by the Old Place on Mulholland.

“Some of the inspiration for this project comes from my students, who show up in class with these computers they have built themselves, and they are liquid cooled,” said Earle. “People have been hot rodding motorcycles the same way for 70 years, but how will that happen in the future, when bikes are electric? How will this generation customize a bike? They can 3D print their own parts. They could liquid cool the electronics. I’m hoping this project gets on Instagram and some 17-year-old in Portugal sees it and gets a spark of inspiration. That will be the future of customization.”

The post Custom Livewire One Motorcycles Debut At Autopia 2099 appeared first on Motorcycle.com News.