Tag Archives: ASBK 2020

DesmoSport Ducati’s Ben Henry on ASBK and Ducati

2020 Mi-Bike ASBK


It was a Ducati 1-2 at the top of the charts after the two-day ASBK Test at Phillip Island last week. Wayne Maxwell led the way from DesmoSport Ducati’s defending champion Mike Jones. As the test sessions drew to a close we sat down with DesmoSport Ducati Team Owner Ben Henry for an in-depth discussion about ASBK, and his experience with the Ducati Panigale V4 R.

Originally from Western Australia, where he first started racing and preparing motorcycles, the 38-year-old is now a long-time Queensland resident and runs Cube Performance Centre out of the Gold Coast suburb of Burleigh.

Ben hung up his competitive leathers a few years ago while still able to run a top ten pace in Australian Superbike, all the while managing and running his own team and riders. He then turned his focus to concentrating on his Cube Performance workshop along with expanding Cube Racing. He then went on to develop the DesmoSport Ducati Team in conjunction with Troy Bayliss and the team won the Australian Superbike Championship with Mike Jones in 2019.

Always forthcoming with insightful observations, that are for the most part refreshingly non-partisan, Ben was generous with his time and candid with his thoughts.

ASBK Test Phillip Island RbMotoLens ASBK Test SBK Pits Ben Henry

ASBK Test Phillip Island RbMotoLens ASBK Test SBK Pits Ben Henry

Ben Henry at work on the DesmoSport Ducati at the front, Troy Bayliss at the rear – Image by Rob Mott


Trevor Hedge: What were the most extreme of the challenges you faced in getting the V4 up to the speed of the 1299 V-Twin that Mike raced to great success last year?

Ben Henry: “The biggest challenge is the chassis, getting it to work as well as we had the twin dialled in, the motor – obviously they aren’t the same, but the power isn’t too far different, it’s just dialling in the chassis and probably electronics, that’s currently our patch.”

ASBK Test Phillip Island RbMotoLens ASBK Test SBK Mike Jones

ASBK Test Phillip Island RbMotoLens ASBK Test SBK Mike Jones

Mike Jones – Image by Rob Mott


Trevor: That’s a time consuming process isn’t it?

BH: “Yes it is, it is time consuming. The electronics aren’t that bad, we’re going pretty fast, and Wayne is going pretty quick on his, and that’s all on standard stuff, so it’s clearly not too bad.”


Trevor: Wayne said his team are waiting on an ECU and a few bits and pieces, are you waiting for anything before the start of the season as well?

BH: “In ASBK they’ve homologated the MoTeC ECU for our bike, so we need to get that and make it work. That’s definitely the road they (Wayne Maxwell and his team), are going to go down, and we probably will. We just need to see if it’s better than what we already run.

“I mean it’s hard to argue with what we’ve got when we are running low 32s on it, and Wayne’s just done a 31.7, I mean that’s the fastest lap ever on a domestic superbike around here.

“So it’s hard to say that putting something else on there will be markedly better. We will wait and see what happens.”

ASBK TBG JanTest PI Mike Jones TBG

ASBK TBG JanTest PI Mike Jones TBG

Mike Jones – TBG Image


Trevor: Do you get much help from Ducati Australia at all?

BH: “They are in a funny spot, NF Importers are theoretically finishing up, Ducati AU/NZ, which is essentially Ducati Italy coming into Australia to run the show, but yes they are helping us.

“It’s basically going to be a better situation once they get here, but while they are not here I’m dealing through Italy, everything has to come through Italy and it’s a little bit slower. But once they get here and have stock here, and a warehouse, it will be much better.”

ASBK Test Phillip Island RbMotoLens ASBK Test SBK Mike JONES

ASBK Test Phillip Island RbMotoLens ASBK Test SBK Mike JONES

Mike Jones – Image by Rob Mott


Trevor: How difficult is it to get the budget for the season and what’s the ballpark figure, without giving too much away, to run Mike in Superbikes and Oli in Supersport.

BH: “It’s really difficult, it’s a strange time, with winning the championship last year you would think things would be easier, but it just didn’t pan out that way. Our major sponsor QBE left straight away – the next day – and our support from within the industry isn’t as strong, because they just don’t have the money. They are not trying to bullshit me, it’s just a different time now for the importers, it’s definitely difficult.

“How much… for a cash figure on top of everything else… you wouldn’t get away with anything less than 350k in cash, that you can spend on whatever you need. But then on top of that the tyres, everything else that goes into it is probably another… bike and parts and all that… it must be another couple of hundred, and then with the stuff we are getting given. It would have to be half a million bucks, it really would.”

ASBK Test Phillip Island RbMotoLens ASBK Test SBK Mike JONES

ASBK Test Phillip Island RbMotoLens ASBK Test SBK Mike JONES

Mike Jones – Image by Rob Mott


Trevor: And that’s with you having your own premises, and not really adding up your time…

BH: “Yea, exactly, I mean I’m not making money out of it, obviously people come to my shop, but it’s a trade-off that’s for sure.”

ASBK TBG Round SMP Mike Jones TBG FinalRnd

ASBK TBG Round SMP Mike Jones TBG FinalRnd

Even winning the championship does not translate to less budgetary worries…. – Mike Jones – 2019 ASBK Superbike Champion – TBG Image


Trevor: You raced and worked on various models of ZX-10R Kawasaki when you yourself were racing, and the riders on your team through those years were Kawasaki riders, including Mike himself when he won the title in 2015, the year the series was at perhaps its lowest ebb. What’s the main difference working with the Italian bike, on the Ducati, compared to the then more street bike focused Kawasaki and other Japanese machines?

BH: “They are much more basic – the Kawasaki – in short I always said this, if you can see a bolt on a Japanese bike, you can undo it. It’s not like that on a Ducati. Just because you can see a bolt does not mean you’ll be able to undo it.

“But the good thing about Ducati is that they are very, very focused on racing, and if you understand the way they build things, they are quite fast to work on. You pull big sections of the bike off in one hit, and things like that once you understand and think a bit more laterally about how you approach them.

“They are probably faster to work on once you get the hang of them. And notice the little bits here and little bits there, and you basically pull the bike apart in sections.”

ASBK JanTest PI TH Jones Ducati Front

ASBK JanTest PI TH Jones Ducati Front

Mike Jones will defend his #1 plate with Ducati but has switched from V-Twin to V-Four power for season 2020


Trevor: I’ve heard it’s about a 12 hour operation to fit a full exhaust on the V4…?

BH: “If you didn’t know what you’re doing, then yes, and honestly my toolbox has quadrupled since I started working on Ducati motorcycles, and it’s the tricky little tools, and the odd little thing you’ll make to help you. It has got to the point now where through my shop I am putting exhausts on in about five hours, something like that.”

ASBK Test Phillip Island RbMotoLens ASBK Test SBK Wayne MAXWELL Bike

ASBK Test Phillip Island RbMotoLens ASBK Test SBK Wayne MAXWELL Bike

Ducati Panigale V4 R – Image by Rob Mott


Trevor: So if a punter turned up at your shop in Queensland, they’d expect to pay five to six hours to get one fitted?

BH: “Yea they would, I always quote eight as that’s what Ducati quote, in case we get into trouble, but generally the punters go home a bit happier.”


Trevor: It’s good you bought up the nuts and bolts, the rear wheel on that Ducati….I see your boys swing off some pretty big bars putting that big wheel nut on, there’s 230 nm of torque or something put on that nut..?

BH: “That’s right, I don’t even tighten it up as much as you’re meant to, as we take it on and off all the time, and it gets too much.”

ASBK TBG JanTest PI Racers Edge Nut TBG

ASBK TBG JanTest PI Racers Edge Nut TBG

Ducati Panigale rear wheel nut – TBG Image


Trevor: It’s almost horrifying to watch, how much force gets put through the big bar, to put that nut on.

BH: “I can’t remember what it’s called, there’s a basic engineering thing, but if you have a threaded pipe and put a nut on the top of it, and torque that nut, it strengthens the pipe like ten-fold, and that’s why they do it. I can’t remember, it was so long ago that I learnt it.”


Trevor: So it effects the rigidity of the bike?

BH: “Absolutely, when you look at the axle, it’s so thin, the bit the wheel is hanging off is just so thin, and you would think not strong enough, it’s no special metal, there’s no magic there, but it’s the engineering that goes into it. When you do something like that and torque it that tight, the structural strength it gives the axle is incredible.”

ASBK Test Phillip Island RbMotoLens ASBK Test SBK Mike Jones

ASBK Test Phillip Island RbMotoLens ASBK Test SBK Mike Jones

Mike Jones – Image by Rob Mott


Trevor: What are the power and torque figures of the V4 in ASBK race trim, compared to the 1299?

BH: “The 1299 was a little bit stronger…”

Trevor: You’d expect that with a bit more torque..?

BH: “The 1299 was stronger up top, maybe five horsepower up top, just over 220-ish. The V4 is making peak power at 15,800rpm.”


Trevor: Overall, I guess this goes for everyone in Aussie Superbike, that race winners seem to be decided by who can make their back tyre last a race distance. Just how exacting is the suspension set-up required to give your rider the tyre longevity to race for the win in ASBK?

BH: “One mm, a click, half a turn of preload, it’s so so close, but I sometimes think that’s half in the rider’s mind. Put half a turn of preload and is it any different? You’d be doing well to tell. Tyre life is a combination of so many things, if I could put a percentage on it, I think its 70 per cent suspension, 30 per cent electronics, or say 20 per cent electronics, and 10 per cent good tyre management by the rider.

“You could vary those figures sometimes, different riders, some guys just roast the tyre out of it, no matter what you do. Some make tyres last longer, they just have a different technique.”

ASBK JanTest PI TH Pirelli

ASBK JanTest PI TH Pirelli

Pirelli runners were fastest at P.I. – Image TH


Trevor: In what specific ways does the machine setup vary between Mike and TB. I would imagine it would be a big difference between the two?

BH: “Honestly, not really, like when Mike rode our bike for the first time – on Troy’s set up – he was immediately fast on it, and there was just little stuff to tweak. Even this one (V4 R), Troy rode this one first, and did his thing, and pretty much from what Troy had to say from all the notes, is very similar to what Mike had to say.

“They do a few little things differently, like gearing, Troy really lets the bike do a lot of work, letting the bike go down and lug from low, but Mike revs them a lot more. If I could pick one thing that’s markedly different, Jones likes it stiffer in the front. They are actually pretty similar, yet they ride nothing like each other.

“They ride different, Troy can use a tyre, Jones is really good at looking after a tyre, everything is so different, but I really believe if Troy rode Jonesy’s set up, he’d be happy. And Jonesy, even when he’s not completely happy has the same thing to say about the bike as Troy.”

ASBK TBG JanTest PI Mike Jones TBG

ASBK TBG JanTest PI Mike Jones TBG

Mike Jones – TBG Image


Trevor: What’s your expectations for Oli in Supersport this year?

BH: “I think he needs to knuckle down and he could win it. He certainly has the resources around him, and he’s a pretty talented fella when everything clicks for him, then he’s unreal. I’ve seen it happen for him a few times and it’s a bit special, which is nice for him. I reckon he could win it for sure, he has some really good people around him now this year, that should see him in the right direction more often, last year he was just learning, and there was nothing wrong with the team from last year, they were perfectly fine, but he is just trying to learn at 15, and have a crack at it.”

ASBK TBG FebTest PI Oli Bayliss TBG

ASBK TBG FebTest PI Oli Bayliss TBG

Oli Bayliss – TBG Image


Trevor: What ASBK rules would you change if you could?

BH: **Long pause**

“To be honest, I like it just how it is. It’s quite good, and the proof is in the pudding, as there’s a lot of good riders on all different brands going fast. Really any brand can potentially win here.

“What would I change, currently not much. What I can see happening moving forward in ASBK, I can see a change is coming and I think it will be bad for the sport.

“For instance, the way the electronics side of things is moving forward, if they don’t make an effort to reign that in, we are probably two seasons away from privateers not being able to afford to race to win anything. And currently as it stands, it’s already hard enough for them, like I’ve been there but if they (M.A.) are not careful – and they are not careful – because sometimes *pauses*…. they have the right people, just not quite *pauses*…. it’s hard to say without sounding rough, but they perhaps don’t have enough resources, and they maybe don’t have quite the experience on the latest machinery. People like this, someone like me can manipulate very simply, and they don’t understand what I’m doing to them. And I don’t do it, but I know I can for sure.”

ASBK Rnd SMP RbMotoLens Jamie STAUFFER Ducati FinalRnd

ASBK Rnd SMP RbMotoLens Jamie STAUFFER Ducati FinalRnd

Ducati V4 R instrumentation – Image by Rob Mott


Trevor: So what would you suggest is the answer, going down the line of a control ECU like BSB use or something along those lines?

BH: “It’s nice for everyone to have a race, and you know you have a race in all aspects, I like the tyre war that maybe is going to happen. It’s going to happen, I don’t know who’s going to be best or what yet. I like all the different things that go down, and it is a race.

“It’s nice to race in all aspects of the term, but for sure if they are not careful, very soon I think they will find some of the manufacturers are not going to be that interested in racing in a race that then they can’t win. It just doesn’t make good sense. It’s not good for their brand, doesn’t make good economic sense and that’s why you see people ending up pissing off to do their own thing, that suits them, and that’s just business.

“So that’s a strange way to answer your question. But as it was last year it was much better but what I see happening rolling into this year will open a can of worms.”

ASBK Test Phillip Island RbMotoLens ASBK Test SBK Mike JONES

ASBK Test Phillip Island RbMotoLens ASBK Test SBK Mike JONES

Mike Jones – Image by Rob Mott


Trevor: What is different this year?

BH: *long pause*

“Sort of the progress the electronics are making, in short, and I would say there will be a change as new models roll out, if M.A. aren’t careful, then I think they’ll find people will struggle to continue to compete fairly. At least not throughout a whole year.

“A privateer is not going to be able to turn up and win. Looking at Jonesy at the beginning of last year, as a privateer busting their ass like usual, and he turned up and banged the thing on the box and did the fastest lap here. That’s good, it’s great to see that. We already knew what he was capable of, but that gave us another opportunity to see it again, and then for him to ride our bike. If things move forward the way they eventually will, then you won’t see that again. It’ll be more like a handful of guys, always the same…. that’s what I think.”

ASBK Test Phillip Island RbMotoLens ASBK Test SBK Mike JONES

ASBK Test Phillip Island RbMotoLens ASBK Test SBK Mike JONES

Mike Jones – Image by Rob Mott


The 2020 Mi-Bike ASBK Championship season gets underway in conjunction with the WorldSBK season opener at Phillip Island over the March 1 weekend.

Source: MCNews.com.au

Wayne Maxwell talks ASBK Testing and the V4 Ducati

Wayne Maxwell Interview

Wayne Maxwell has kicked off the 2020 ASBK season on a strong note, dominating the official two-day test at Phillip Island on board the Craig McMartin prepared Ducati V4R, after moving to the Italian marque for 2020 from Yamaha.

Maxwell and the new Ducati V4 proved a force to be reckoned with.

The Boost Mobile backed team worked through options with the K-Tech suspension over the two days and obviously made plenty of progress as Maxwell topped the test by almost seven-tenths of a second.

ASBK Test Phillip Island RbMotoLens ASBK Test SBK Wayne MAXWELL

ASBK Test Phillip Island RbMotoLens ASBK Test SBK Wayne MAXWELL

Wayne Maxwell – 2020 Phillip Island ASBK Test – Image by Rob Mott

Having been the only rider to dip into the 1:32s on Day 1, Maxwell topped off the two-day test as the only rider in the 1:31s on Day 2, with a 1:31.776, well clear of fellow Ducati rider Jones, who was next fastest with a 1:32.434.

Trevor Hedge caught up with Maxwell to pick his brain on the move to the Ducati, and his thoughts on how the season is shaping up.


Trevor Hedge: So Wayne, you put a lot of fast laps in and really set the pace over the duration of this test, you must be very happy.

Wayne Maxwell: “I’m super stoked, the Boost Mobile Ducati was excellent, Craig, Adrian, Dale, Greg and the team worked really well. We were also lucky to have James here from K-Tech HQ inEngland, with some updated K-Tech components. He was here with us, helping install and finding settings that worked on the bike, so I was really happy with that. Obviously again, this week exceeded my expectations, and has put us in a really good position to be in, right in the mix for the first race.”

ASBK TBG JanTest PI Wayne Maxwell TBG

ASBK TBG JanTest PI Wayne Maxwell TBG

Wayne Maxwell – 2020 Phillip Island ASBK Test – Image by TBG

Trevor: How does testing here relate to the other circuits we go to during the year? We know this is ‘your’ circuit, we could probably put you on a moped and you’d still go okay, but the pace you have set here is really, really fast, do you think it will translate to the other circuits?

Maxwell: “I first tried the bike at Wakefield, spent the whole day there and it exceeded my expectations immediately and didn’t really change anything that day. We’ve got some updates and have changed a few things, and I feel really confident. Wakefield has been a circuit which has maybe eluded me, and Troy is so strong there, while I haven’t been strong enough to get it over the line there as many times as I maybe should have.

“But I’m confident and we’ve got a fast bike, so we’ll get Phillip Island out of the way and see how we shape up. We have some updates on the way with the electronics, now that’ we’ve had the ECU homologated, so it’s just step by step. We’ve got this bike and it’s good now, so we need to then start work on the new package as bits and pieces come through.”

ASBK Test Phillip Island RbMotoLens ASBK Test SBK Wayne MAXWELL

ASBK Test Phillip Island RbMotoLens ASBK Test SBK Wayne MAXWELL

Wayne Maxwell – 2020 Phillip Island ASBK Test – Image by Rob Mott

Trevor: So you’ve come from the other most evocative bike in the field, the cross-plane crank Yamaha, sounds great, feels great, and now you’re on the V4 – another bike the really stirs the senses – what’s the comparison between the two? Looking at your bike, the riding position looks so stretched out and flat, is that apparent when on the bike?

Maxwell: “I still don’t feel 100 per cent comfortable, we’ve just sent some foot pegs back to the guys from KH Engineering to make some different ones. I don’t know how all the other Ducati riders ride the bike like that elsewhere around the world, they must do yoga 30 times a week.

“I’ll just to try and get a bit more comfortable, this circuit isn’t so bad, but other places where you’ve got to climb over the top of it a bit more with faster changes of direction, the old body will tighten up and be no good at the end of the race unless we can get the riding position a little more comfortable. So we’ll get my feet out in front a bit and be nice and relaxed. It won’t make us any faster, but perhaps more comfortable and consistent over the duration of a race.”

Trevor: Get some foot forward controls so they aren’t slowing you down perhaps…

Maxwell: “That’s it mate.”

ASBK Test Phillip Island RbMotoLens ASBK Test SBK Wayne Maxwell

ASBK Test Phillip Island RbMotoLens ASBK Test SBK Wayne Maxwell

Wayne Maxwell – 2020 Phillip Island ASBK Test – Image by Rob Mott

Trevor: The Yamaha has always got out of the corner quite well, how does the V4 compare, and how does it compare to what you’ve ridden in recent years? Picking up the throttle on the way out of the turn etc?

Maxwell: “Picking up the drive it seems okay for sure, but that’s definitely not the strongest part of my riding, out of the stop-go corners, I’m more of a fast flowing sort of guy, that’s why Phillip Island is good for me. I managed to get out of the stop-go corners okay though here this week. It has really good grip with the K-Tech on the side of the tyre, and the V4 provides quite a flat and linear power. When I was a kid, my dad had a VFR750 and I always remember it taking off from home and having that V-Four sound, so it reminds me of being a kid and I’m loving it.”

ASBK Test Phillip Island RbMotoLens ASBK Test SBK Wayne Maxwell

ASBK Test Phillip Island RbMotoLens ASBK Test SBK Wayne Maxwell

Wayne Maxwell – 2020 Phillip Island ASBK Test – Image by Rob Mott

Kawasaki Superbike Times

Pos Rider Bike Time
1 Wayne MAXWELL  Ducati V4R 1m31.776
2 Mike JONES  Ducati V4R 1m32.434
3 Troy HERFOSS  Honda CBR RR 1m32.497
4 Bryan STARING  Kawasaki ZX10R 1m32.603
5 Aiden WAGNER Yamaha YZF-R1 1m32.792
6 Daniel FALZON  Yamaha YZF-R1 1m32.813
7 Josh WATERS Suzuki GSX RR 1m33.052
8 Cru HALLIDAY  Yamaha YZF-R1 1m33.112
9 Matt WALTERS  Kawasaki ZX10R 1m33.278
10 Lachlan EPIS  Suzuki GSX RR 1m33.477
11 Glenn SCOTT . Kawasaki ZX10R 1m33.616
12 Max CROKER Suzuki GSX RR 1m34.142
13 Glenn ALLERTON  BMW S RR 1m34.192
14 Jed METCHER Suzuki GSXR 1m34.438
15 Sloan FROST  Suzuki GSX RR 1m34.860
16 Brendan MCINTYRE  Suzuki GSX RR 1m36.191
17 Nathan SPITERI  Suzuki GSX RR 1m39.939

Source: MCNews.com.au

Halliday & Wagner to head YRT 2020 ASBK efforts on YZF-R1M

Halliday & Wagner to head YRT ASBK efforts in 2020


Aiden Wagner will join Cru Halliday as the two pilots locked in for the Yamaha Racing Team (YRT) to contest the 2020 Australian Superbike Championship, starting in February at Phillip Island.

ASBK TBG Round SMP Cru Halliday TBG FinalRnd
Cru Halliday returns with YRT in 2020 – Image by TBG

Competing on the Yamaha YZF- R1M, Halliday and Wagner are primed for a successful season and already preparations have begun as both riders chase that elusive ASBK Superbike championship trophy.

Halliday continues his relationship with YRT for another season and after making huge strides forward in 2019, he is out for the ultimate prize in 2020. After winning the 600cc Supersport Championship in 2018, Halliday stepped back into the Superbike class in 2019 and instantly became a contender as he mixed it up with the more established names.

ASBK TBG Round SMP Cru Halliday TBG
Cru Halliday – TBG Image

He led the championship at stages during 2019 on his way to claim fourth but feels he has learnt and grown from his experiences this season and that will put in him good shape heading into the 2020 season.

Cru Halliday

“It’s great to be back with the YRT crew and with the same bike and people that have been a big part of my racing in recent years. I have familiarity in everything around me and both the bike and myself has been developed to the point where I think winning the 2020 Superbike championship is a realistic and achievable goal. I gained valuable experience in 2019 and maybe the biggest thing is consistency and that every point is valuable. Mike won the championship this year with an average third place finish across the season, so you need to be up the front in every race of every round to be in contention. I know we have a great starting point with the Yamaha R1M and that YRT will continue to work hard and give me the best motorcycle on the track. We start racing again in February but I’m motivated and have already started training for a huge season ahead and can’t wait to be back on the grid and racing again.”

ASBK Rnd SMP RbMotoLens SBK R Grid Cru HALLIDAY
Cru Halliday – Image by Rob Mott

25-year-old Queenslander, Aiden Wagner, will join YRT for the 2020 season and keen to establish himself in the premier road racing division in Australia. Wagner was competing in Europe for the past few seasons before returning to Australia at the start of the 2019 Superbike Championship.

ASBK TBG ASBK Round Wakefield Park Aiden Wagner TBG
Aiden Wagner – TBG Image

Wagner showed he had the speed to mix it up with the big names in the Australian Superbike Championship when in his only 2019 appearance at the opening round at Phillip Island, Wagner dominated proceedings, taking all three race wins and impressing with his aggressive, take no prisoners, style of racing.

Injuries hampered his results in recent years, but he took the majority of the 2019 season off to recover and rehab his injuries and is now 100 per cent fit and desperate to make the most of his opportunity with YRT.

ASBK TBG ASBK Round Wakefield Park Aiden Wagner
Aiden Wagner’s big off at Wakefield Park while taking evasive action to miss riders that had exited pit-lane at an inopportune moment, leading to shoulder surgery – TBG Image
Aiden Wagner

“I’m excited and proud to have come to an arrangement with the Yamaha Racing Team and look forward to working with an experienced and professional race team to take my racing to the next level. Last year when I returned to Australia, I wanted to race the Yamaha R1 as it was the bike I felt most comfortable on and now to get a reward to be on the factory team is amazing and takes a lot of pressure from my shoulders. All I have to worry about now is going fast and staying on.

ASBK Rnd Wakefield RbMotoLens Aiden WAGNER
Aiden Wagner – Image by Rob Mott

“Its great that the team is also based here in Queensland near me so I can build a good relationship with everyone and believe this will be the start of a long and successful relationship for both myself and YRT. I started the championship strongly in 2019 before I got injured, but I’m now back to full fitness and my body is in good shape, so now my goal is to carry that throughout the season and do my best to secure the Superbike championship for Yamaha and myself in 2020.”

The 2020 Australian Superbike Championship gets underway at Philip Island when it is run in-conjunction with the first round of the World Superbike Championships on February 27 before moving through a seven round championship, finishing again at Phillip Island.


2020 ASBK Calendar

  • Round 1 – WSBK – Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC 27 Feb – 1 March
  • Round 2 – Wakefield Park Raceway – Goulburn, NSW 27 – 29 March
  • Round 3 – The Bend Motorsport Park – Tailem Bend, SA 7 – 10 May *4 day
    *with Asia Road Race Championship (ARRC) & Idemitsu Asia Talent Cup (IATC)
  • Round 4 – Supercars – Barbagallo Raceway, Perth WA 15 – 17 May
    (Superbike Class Only)
  • Round 5 – Morgan Park Raceway – Warwick, QLD 7 – 9 August
  • Round 6 – Winton Motor Raceway, Benalla VIC 11 – 13 September
  • Round 7 – Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, Cowes VIC 2 – 4 October

Source: MCNews.com.au