Tag Archives: Ducati

Triumph launch Trekker GT e-bike

Triumph started in 1889 as a bicycle company and now they are returning to bicycles with an e-bike called the Trekker GT.

They are not the only motorcycle manufacturer looking to ebikes as a supplement to their motorcycle business.

Ducati and even Harley-Davidson are getting into the ebikes trend.

It all comes as some riders are calling for ebikes to be registered before they dominate bike lanes, chew up available parking space and lawless riders give all motorcycle and scooter riders a bad name.

The move to add ebikes also comes as Triumph Motorcycle recently announced it would slash 400 jobs globally, blaming the pandemic for falling sales.

Triumph also made bicycles in the 1970s, but this is a modern pedal-assisted electric model with some hi-tech features such as digital instruments.

Triumph Trekker GT ebikeTrekker GT weighs just 2.88kg and is powered by a 250w 60Nm Shimano Steps E6100 motor and Shimano E8035 504Wh battery, all neatly hidden in the front stem of the frame.Triumph Trekker GT ebike

It was designed in-house and will be available in Europe with other markets to follow.

There is no word yet on price.

Triumph Trekker GT E-bike tech specs

Frame

6061 Hydro-formed aluminium frame with integrated lockable battery

Suspension

RockShox Paragon forks with 65mm travel

Drivetrain

Shimano Steps E6100 250w motor

Fully integrated Shimano E8035 504Wh battery

Wheels

Shimano hubs & Alex Volar rims 27.5”

Tyres

Schwalbe Energizer Green Guard 27.5 x 2.0 tyres

Rear Mech

Super-silent Shimano Deore Shadow 10-speed rear mechanism

Brakes

High-performance Shimano Deore M6000 180/160 brakes

Saddle

Ultra-comfortable Selle Royal Vivo saddle

Grips

Triumph branded lock-on grips

Standard-fit Specification

LED lighting, full length mudguards, side stand,
pannier rack & ABUS Proshield lock

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Ducati gives Hypermotard airbrush look

Ducati has a launched the new Hypermotard 950 RVE with a “Graffiti” livery that includes an airbrush style of paintwork and required specially skilled labour.

It will be available in Australia and New Zealand in “very limited numbers” in September 2020 with pricing confirmed closer to the date of release.Ducati Hypermotard 950 RVE

RVE price

As an indication of price, the RVE sits between the entry model Hypermotard 950 at $21,200 (ride away)and the flagship SP at $26,600.

The bike is based on the Hypermotard 950 Concept, customised by the company’s styling shop, Centro Stile Ducati.

It won first place in the Concept Bikes: New Design and Prototypes by Manufacturers and Independents category at the prestigious Concorso d’Eleganza Villa d’Este held at Cernobbio on Lake Como, Italy, in May 2019.

Ducati naked Hypermotard 950 ConceptDucati Hypermotard 950 Concept Ducati naked Hypermotard 950 ConceptConcept red-and-black wheels

The concept featured a compact full LED projector plus styling and technology inspired by the MotoGP bike plus those gaudy red-and-black wheels which made it through to the limited-edition production model.

Airbrush paintwork

Ducati Hypermotard 950 RVE airbrushAirbrush style paintwork

The most interesting facet of the RVE is the “Graffiti” airbrush style of paintwork which carries over from the concept bike.

Ducati describes the process:

It was necessary, in the painting phases, to employ highly skilled labour, use very low thickness decals and adopt a particularly long and complex process. The result is comparable to that of an airbrushed bodywork.

While it is difficult to see in the photos, we imagine the effect6 is t make it look like it was all the work of a talented airbrush painter.

Hopefully, this process will flow through to the rest of the models in future.

Extra kitDucati Hypermotard 950 RVE

Apart from airbrush style paint, the RVE also gets extra standard equipment.

The electronic package adds the Ducati Quick Shift (DQS) Up and Down EVO,  to the standard version which has Bosch Cornering ABS with Slide by Brake function (in setting 1), Ducati Traction Control Evo (DTC EVO) and Ducati Wheelie Control (DWC) EVO.

Hypermotard was introduced as a new Ducati family member in 2005 and has been through many iterations.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

2020 Ducati Hypermotard 950 RVE

2020 Ducati Hypermotard 950 RVE

2020 Ducati Hypermotard 950 RVE

Overnight the boys, and girls, in Bologna took the wraps off a new model in the Hypermotard range, with even more hype!

2020 Ducati Hypermotard 950 RVE

Here we have the 2020 Ducati Hypermotard 950 RVE and it will be coming to Australian Ducati dealers this September.

2020 Ducati Hypermotard 950 RVE

Unfortunately we can’t put a price tag on the new model just yet but in specification the RVE slots between the $21,200 standard Hypermotard and the $26,600 Hypermotard SP so one would imagine the ticket for admission to be also somewhere between those two markers.

2020 Ducati Hypermotard 950 RVE

The Hypermotard 950 RVE version is characterized by special “Graffiti” livery inspired by that of the Hypermotard 950 Concept presented in 2019 at the Concorso d’Eleganza Villa d’Este.

2020 Ducati Hypermotard 950 RVE

This finish Ducati tells us required them to ’employ highly skilled labour, use very low thickness decals and adopt a particularly long and complex process. The result is comparable to that of an airbrushed bodywork.’

2020 Ducati Hypermotard 950 RVE

The electronic package of the Hypermotard 950 RVE is enhanced by the Ducati Quick Shift (DQS) Up and Down EVO, which is added to the components already present in the standard version, namely Bosch Cornering ABS with Slide by Brake function (in setting 1), Ducati Traction Control Evo (DTC EVO) and Ducati Wheelie Control (DWC) EVO.

This takes a fair bit of control…

The aggressive design of the bike, inspired by the motard look, revolves around the twin exhausts under the minimalist tapered seat and the smaller superstructures that leave the mechanical components visible, including the trellis rear frame.

2020 Ducati Hypermotard 950 RVE

The Hypermotard 950 RVE is powered by the twin-cylinder 937 cc Testastretta 11° engine, which with its 114 hp at 9,000 rpm and 9.8 kgm of torque, of which over 80% is already available at 3,000 rpm.

2020 Ducati Hypermotard 950 RVE

The Ducati Hypermotard 950 RVE will be available in Australia and New Zealand in very limited numbers and will arrive in September 2020. Pricing for this model will be confirmed closer to the date of release.

2020 Ducati Hypermotard 950 RVE

Sitting above the Hypermotard 950 RVE  is the Hypermotard 950 SP with racing graphics and Öhlins suspension with increased travel, Marchesini forged rims and Ducati Quick Shift (DQS) Up and Down EVO.

2020 Ducati Hypermotard 950 RVE
Source: MCNews.com.au

Bike noise crackdown intensifies

The news just gets worse and worse for riders who enjoy a fruity exhaust note as the noise crackdown intensifies across Europe.

We recently reported on Germany’s crackdown with special noise cameras, no-go areas and an 80dB limit on motorcycle exhausts that could make all BMW motorcycles quieter.

Now Austria will ban specific motorcycles with exhaust noise over 95dB on a popular 100km motorcycle route through the Tyrol mountains after receiving complaints from residents.

Bike noise crackdown intensifiesTyrol mountains are popular among riders (Image: www.touring-italy.net)

Bikes that will be barred from this road include the Aprilia Tuono, Aprilia RSV4, BMW S 1000 RR, Ducati Hypermotard, Ducati Multistrada 1260, Ducati Diavel, Kawasaki Z900 and KTM 890 Duke.

Police will do spot checks on motorcycles and can hand out €220 (about $A350) on-the-spot fines.

Crackdown intensifies

We could appreciate a crackdown on exceedingly loud aftermarket exhausts, but these bikes are all legally allowed to have more than 95dB under European regulations.

Somehow Austria thinks this area is exempt from European laws.

And what is worse is that the ban only applies to motorcycles, not cars or trucks or buses! That’s discrimination, pure and simple.

Like the German example, this is a sobering precedent that could be picked up by safety and noise pollution Nazis across the world.

It follows moves by several other European countries to close roads to motorcycles because of noise and banning them from certain areas over weekends and public holidays.

Quieter roads

Call to challenge exhaust noise fines sign noise camerasPolice conduct roadside noise test at Mt Tamborine

While Australia is yet to introduce Draconian laws like the road bans in Europe, police and transport officers do occasionally operate noise monitoring checks on popular motorcycle routes.

It may seem heavy handed, discriminatory and ignoring the perceived safety benefits of “loud pipes save lives”, but it’s nothing compared with Indian police methods.

In India, police make a subjective assessment followed by smashing the offending exhaust pipe on the roadside.If you think the cops are tough on noisy aftermarket exhausts here, try India where they hammer them flat by the roadside, or confiscated them and flattened them with a backhoe.

They have also made an example of their crackdown by steam rolling confiscated pipes.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Ducati recalls Superleggera on brake issue

Ducati Australia has recalled the 2017 1299 Superleggera motorcycles over an issue with the front brake pad material may separate from the brake pad.

The official notice issued through the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission says if the issue occurs, there is “an increased risk of an accident and/or injury to the rider and other road users”.

Owners will be notified in writing to contact their closest Ducati dealer or service agent and arrange an appointment to replace the front brake pad, free of charge.

Consumers who are unsure whether they are affected can also check their VIN by clicking here. Only 32 bikes are affected.

For further information, consumers can contact an authorised Ducati dealer or email [email protected].

2017 Ducati Superleggera2017 Ducati Superleggera

Even though manufacturers and importers contact owners when a recall is issued, the bike may have been sold privately to a rider unknown to the company.

Therefore, Motorbike Writer publishes all motorcycle recalls as a service to all riders.

In Australia, recall notices are issued by the manufacturer and the Department of Infrastructure through a voluntary industry code under the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission.

While any recall is not good news for the manufacturer, it shows that they are largely diligent in fixing problems.

If you believe there is an endemic problem with your bike that should be recalled, contact the ACCC on 1300 302 502.

To check whether your motorcycle has been recalled, click on these sites:

• Australia

• USA

• New Zealand

• Canada

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Ducati 1299 Superleggera recalled for brake issue

Motorcycle Recall Notice


PRA No. – 2020/18336
Date published – 2 June 2020

Supplier – NF Importers LTD
Traders who sold this product – Authorised Ducati Motorcycle dealers
Where the product was sold – Nationally
Dates available for sale1 July 2017 – 30 April 2018

Ducati 1299 Superleggera Motorcycle MY2017

Click here for VIN List

32 affected motorcycles

Ducati Panigale Superleggera PA SuperleggeraWith a price tag over $100,000 the 1299 Panigale Superleggera is not your regular motorcycle


What are the defects?

Due to an improper manufacturing process, the front brake pad material may separate from the brake pad.

What are the hazards?

If the brake pad material separates from the brake pad, there is an increased risk of an accident and/or injury to the rider and other road users.

Ducati Panigale Superleggera PA SuperleggeraDucati Panigale 1299 Superleggera recalled due to possible brake failure due to faulty pads

What should consumers do?

Consumers will be notified in writing to contact their closest Ducati dealer or service agent and arrange an appointment to replace the front brake pad, free of charge.

For further information, consumers can contact an authorised Ducati dealer or email [email protected]

Source: MCNews.com.au

A wide ranging and humorous chat with Jack Miller

Jack Miller Interview


25-year-old Jack Miller was officially confirmed this week as signing to the full factory Ducati MotoGP Team in season 2021. We caught up with him today for a chat about that development, and many other things…


How much do you think your working life is going to change next year with moving to the factory team. Just how much more support will you have, and how much larger do you think your workload might be over the course of a race week now you will be at the top echelon of Ducati’s racing activities around the world? That is some responsibility..

Yeah definitely, I mean there is a lot more pressure no doubt that comes with the factory team, but you know I think we are fortunate enough now they they have got such great people there these days working with the company to help guide the direction let’s say, and that might also help take some of those pressures off the rider in regards to the workload, especially with the sponsors and whatnot.  I think the biggest thing is to try, well the main focus on me for the moment is just trying to get back to racing the 2020 season at the moment with the Pramac Team, you know I am fortunate enough to have signed this deal but still have unfinished business with Pramac Ducati so to try and get that done, then once 2021 rolls around, the testing beforehand etc. comes up will focus on that.”

MotoGP Rnd Valencia Miller GP ANJack Miller was stoked with his final round podium at Valencia in 2019 – Image AJRN

And why do you think they chose you? Do you think that the fond memories that so much of the senior management have from working towards great success with straight shooters like Troy Bayliss and Casey Stoner lean them towards working with Aussies?

For sure, that helps I think. But I have been riding for Ducati now for two years, I think my results more than anything help to justify why they chose me, but for sure they all love Australians there is no doubt about that, but I think the results I put in, especially the second half of last year definitely helped secure me the job.

Obviously you are stoked with the new contract, your family, I bet they are even more overwhelmed and excited for you, and proud that Ducati have put so much faith in you.

Definitely it is still kinda weird, sat here at home in Australia. Kind of weird to be thinking about 2021, as we haven’t even started the 2020 season yet and I am signed up and thinking about the 2021 season. But it’s been unreal to be here with the family to have this dream come true. I definitely wouldn’t be here without them, they backed me through thick and thin, it is not only me that has got the contract it is all of us so it is pretty cool.”

MotoGP Rnd Valencia Miller GP ANJack Miller with mum Sonya and family in Valencia last year – Image AJRN

Who do you think your team-mate will be, and do you have a preference as to who that would be?

Not really, I mean I get along with everybody I think. But the best team-mate for me would perhaps be Dovi, he is such a great rider and somebody I feel I could learn off, but I also feel like perhaps help I could also help push him along too. But we will just have to wait and see what Ducati management have planned and what Dovi wants to do and I am sure they will make the right decision.”

So Jack, you getting yourself a Ducati or two to play with outside of the MotoGP bikes…?

Already got one in Europe a V4, but I was actually meant to get Diavel for the street already, the team were going to bring it down on their way through to Jerez, but I think it is sat there in the team workshop as we haven’t got there yet, so will have to wait.”

I understand that the KTM MotoGP Team had shown an interest in signing you in recent years, the Austrian brand was good to you in your earlier years and it must have been tempting to join KTM again, despite the Ducati being a much stronger package, what were the deciding factors in the decision to stick with Ducati, I guess there is quite a sense of loyalty now to Ducati with the faith and support they have put behind you during your time with Pramac?

“Definitely, for sure the loyalty is there, but I want the results. And it was the same when I went with KTM in Moto3 back in the day, I wasn’t looking for money but for decent results, I wanted to ride well and have a good package underneath me. I could have signed with many other teams in Moto3 when I went to KTM but I decided on them because Aki (Ajo) ran such a great team and I really wanted to ride for that team. And it is the same you know, I took a massive pay-cut to go with Ducati back when I did, but I saw a future there and I am continuing on that path.”

At Losail in 2014, it was Australia’s Jack Miller who became a brand-new race winner in his first event with Red Bull KTM Ajo. The popular Queensland rider claimed his first podium finish as well as a race win, with Alex Marquez having run wide to lose the lead on the final lap. This time, the Honda rider will be looking to have the last laugh but will be chased all the way by team-mate Alex Rins; last season, the eventual title contender claimed his very first win in Austin, as the race was split into two halves following a red flag for Jasper Iwema’s accident - Image by AJRNAt Losail in 2014, Jack Miller became a brand-new race winner in his first event with Red Bull KTM Ajo. Claiming his first podium finish as well as a race win – Image AJRN

Who would you like to see fill your seat at Pramac Ducati?

“Hard one to say… A lot of people probably don’t know Marcel too well, Marcel Schrotter, but I would like to see him in there, we need another German in MotoGP and I think he has got talent. He is sort of one of those guys that is stuck in Moto2 at the minute which you can do you know, that class is a tough one, if you get stuck in there for too long it is hard to kind of get out. I would like to see him but it doesn’t really bother me to be honest.”

Following things on socials it seems as though quite a few of your fellow MotoGP riders have been more than a little bit jealous about you being able to get out on a dirt bike over these past couple of months. Cal was recently quoted as saying you’ve been the only racer on a bike during isolation so you should be miles ahead of everyone else. Seriously though, do you think the dirt squirters have helped you keep in some sort of practice for racing and keep your eye in?

“It has been nice being back here and I am very fortunate to have the set up I have got here on the farm, being able to ride pretty much every day, it is the best time of year to be riding up here (Townsville) it is not too hot and I have been making the most of it while I am here.  I don’t generally get to be home here at this time of the year, haven’t been for ten years so it has been good catching up.”

MotoGP Rnd Valencia Miller GP ANJack Miller leading Dovizioso and Morbidelli at Valencia last year – Image by AJRN

Ducati don’t make dirt bikes, so I believe you just buy yours at your local motorcycle dealership like anyone else?

“Yep, exactly, I just go down there (Future Sport Motorcycles), they give me a little bit of a deal but definitely nothing too special. But it does help the local shop and it makes it a lot easier for me to as I don’t have to be pleasing anybody or owing anybody anything and can just buy what ever I want and don’t have to rep it as such.”

Been building up a couple of two-stroke project bikes too haven’t you?

“I have got a few there now, a 2000 model KX125, 2008 the last one, KX125, 2002 KX500 done. They are all done. An RM125 from 2007 that’s done.. What else is there.  I bought a 2020 KTM 250 two-stroke which is my new favourite thing to ride at this point in time. Then I bought a CR500 from 1997, from Facebook got a good deal on some lady was selling it for cash really close by so couldn’t pass that one up as they are starting to go through the roof, so that is the next project on the chopping block you could say.”

Which of your dirt bikes has given you the biggest crash in the last few months…?

“If anyone knows me I am always crashing so it is hard to put it down to one…(laughs)”

Who in your isolation crew has had the funniest stack?

“Probably Billy, young Billy Van Eerde, he had a good one, hit a false neutral before a jump and went over the bars and I think he got smacked in the chest so that was pretty decent.”

In the last 2 years we have seen such a significant improvement in your consistency and performance. What do you attribute that to?

“More time than anything, I had the consistency in Moto3, step by step got it, and I think the same thing in MotoGP. It’s taken an extra couple of years than what it did in Moto3 as you can imagine being in the premier class. Step by step just getting closer and closer. And it is great to come in to a season now not only hoping to get a couple of podiums but expecting that and more is kind of cool.”

MotoGP QatarTest Day MillerJack Miller – Qatar Test 2020

When you are back in Oz and you go to a Mexican restaurant with family or friends, do you use your Spanish style accent when ordering?

“I actually do find myself, even if I go, you know just dealing with so many foreign people all the time, I go into a Chinese or what ever and I am talking real slow and putting that accent on and my mates are like ‘talk fucking normal’.. I can’t help it (laughs).”

I was actually going to start out the interview by asking which language we were going to use so I could set up google translate (Jack cracks up). Seriously though, have you picked up how to speak another language during your now almost decade living and racing in Europe?

“I have got a little Spanish, enough to get by, don’t be asking me to write you a report in Spanish, I can not write it but I can speak it a little bit and read it, but the rest of it is pretty difficult, and I think I sound even more retarded in their language.”

You have been living in Andorra for quite some time now. And also putting up your young countryman Billy Van Eerde and looking after him quite a bit during his European ventures, giving him plenty of support and taking him training with you etc. So pleasing to see you taking him under your wing as that support would be so invaluable to him, even from just a mental aspect with friendly faces while being so far away from home. You knock about a fair bit with Josh Hook over there too don’t you? So a good little Aussie crew to hang with in Andorra, tell us a bit about that lifestyle and the place? I know some other Aussies like Shane Stratton and his family also call Andorra home these days.

“Yeah they are up there, Shane and Di, they are great. Broc was up there before, Broc Parkes, and Garry McCoy was probably one of the first of the Aussies up there. My place is sort of like a sanctuary, like a house of misfits sort of thing… Myself and could be anyone in any week but there is but generally it is like Australian embassy of Andorra. Billy, Hooky, Parkesy and sometimes we end up with people on the floor. We have got a great crew of people up there and like you say it just makes it so much easier to go through the year when you have good mates to hang out with, especially Australians with the same sense of humour and in some ways it makes everything a lot easier.”

MotoGP QatarTest Day MillerJack Miller – Qatar Test 2020

Riding that Ducati, I saw some onboard recently that focussed on your right hand while testing, and the inputs look so smooth and small, and the visual representation might be wrong, but it seems as though there is so little finger pressure applied to those brakes to have the thing haul up, is that impression correct?

“No, we are squeezing them, really squeezing them, no cameras ever really show it but the thing is near on popping blood vessels out of your eyeballs, you can squeeze it so hard, that said though the thing is with the Michelins is that you do have to be more gentle than you could be on the Bridgestones, with that front tyre being absolutely unreal.”

And the throttle, how much horsepower we talking about these days, even with the electronics, how much of the game is still really down to that right hand control, and just how much of a lap is the real tyre actually spinning?

“Over 300 horsepower now, well over 300 now. With the electronics and that we have now it is not crazy but it still you know…you can have all the electronic there in the world but you have still got to be as smooth as possible. Again coming back to this thing with the Michelins even with the electronics, once you create the spin it does not recover, there is not some magic angle where it hooks up, if you start to spin with the Michelin it will carry on spinning pretty much halfway down the straight, if not more…So the biggest thing is trying not to create that spin, too much over-spin I should say on the exit of the corner, that is probably the biggest thing. A lot of people say you know you have got traction control and this that and the other, but yeah we have traction control but we also have 300 horsepower… Back in the day they had 150 so we are at double the horsepower that they had so it does help to have that little bit of a hand.”

What you can tell us about the recent mechanical devices fitted to the Ducati that caused a stir, first the hole-shot device, and now another system that lowers the bike on acceleration.

“I have had that on for quite a while, it just another thing Ducati has developed, and then everyone else will copy like everything else. The big three, Suzuki, Yamaha and Honda they all go on about being the premier bike builders and whatnot but they keep copying the Italians who are working out of a comparatively tiny factory.”

MotoGP QatarTest Day MillerJack Miller – Qatar Test 2020

It must be hard to also have enough zen space left in your brain to operate that anti squat as the same time as putting up with the g-forces, throttle inputs and body positioning. I guess there is no real way to train yourself for that other than seat time on the MotoGP bike, or is there?

“Exactly. Seat time makes the biggest difference. Thailand last year you know what happened there on the grid, It felt as though I was flying Apollo 14 and I managed to mess it up but I definitely only did that once.”

You haven’t had a dip in the Virtual MotoGP competition as yet?

“No it doesn’t interest me, plus my internet up here is that woeful, we only came off dial-up a few years ago.”

When do you fly back to Europe and when do you expect to be back on the Desmosedici?

“If it is all going to happen then will probably end up going back sort of mid-June, do quarantine and have a couple of weeks there to train and then be ready to Jerez as that is what they are currently talking, do two weeks there and they are talking about locking us in for two weeks at the same track so we stay there on track for the whole time from mid-July.”

MotoGP QatarTest Day MillerJack Miller – Qatar Test 2020

Following on from my recent Twisted ASBK Interview series that I have done with our local Superbike guys and earlier this week with BSB rider Josh Brookes, let’s go through the same sort of twisted questions but instead with the angle on MotoGP for a bit of fun?
Who is the dirtiest rider you least trust when racing against?

“Probably have to say Morbidelli, you just never really know which way he is going with him, so yeah Morbidelli.”

Who would you most like to punch in the MotoGP paddock?

“Awww…. That is a hard one… Definitely used to be the race direction guys back in the Moto3 days a few time that’s for sure.”

Who would you least like to be punched by in the MotoGP paddock?

“Probably Danilo (Petrucci).”

If you were stuck on a deserted island, which of the MotoGP riders would you choose to be stuck with?

“Probably Cal. At least we could have some banter.”

Who is the king of swiping right during MotoGP race weekends?

“Definitely Lorenzo.”

Who is the biggest princess in the MotoGP paddock?

“Fabio has got to be winning on that score at the minute, he loves a selfie…honestly, surely enough is enough, how many pictures can you take of yourself…”

MotoGP Rnd Valencia Race Miller Quartararo PodiumQuartararo and Miller in Parc Ferme at the 2019 season finale at Valencia

Who has the most fitting nickname in the paddock?

“Dunno. That is a hard one. Nobody really uses nicknames any more do they… Well of course there is The Doctor, but that doesn’t really suit him anyway I think, not now.”

What is the worst track MotoGP visits?

“Hard one. I love the German GP itself, it is great, but the Sachsenring is probably the worst ones for our MotoGP bikes as it is so small.  Especially nowadays with these bikes, the whole time you are on partial throttle you never really get to open the thing up at all.”

Which corner on the calendar is your favourite?

“Turn three, Phillip Island. Stoner Corner, it’s unreal.”

Which corner would you liked to see nuked from orbit?

“Turn one at Le Mans.”

If you could overtake one rider, on one corner, who would it be, and where, and how?

“Marc Marquez at the last corner in Jerez. Just to sort of keep the tradition going.”

Which animal would you most liken yourself to?

“Bull in a china shop.”

MotoGP Rnd Valencia Miller GP ANJack Miller was stoked with his final round podium at Valencia in 2019 – Image AJRN

You need to borrow tools. Who would you ask first? Who would you never ask?

“Probably ask Dovi first, as he would be organised and have it. Would not ask Cal, I would know I would never hear the end of it.”

If you weren’t racing, what would you be in jail for?

“Dunno. Maybe drunk and Disorderly.“

If someone wrote a biography about you, what do you think the title should be?

“Woops. A story by Jack.”

How would you describe yourself in three words?

“I would like to think Funny…. Charismatic. Energetic.”

If you won a few million dollars on Lotto what would be the first thing you would buy?

“Bitumen track at my house.”

If you could keep one of your race bikes from throughout your career which one would it be? And why?

“I would definitely love to have the Honda I won Assen on, simply because nobody has Honda MotoGP bikes so that would be real important.”

What is your plan for life after racing…?

“Try not to go broke.”

Australian SX Rnd Melbourne JackMillerJack Miller spectacting at the Australian Supercross in Melbourne late last year
Source: MCNews.com.au

Jack Miller to ride for factory Ducati team

Aussie MotoGP rider Jack Miller, 25, has signed with the official Ducati Team for the 2021 MotoGP World Championship.

The agreement for next season includes an option to extend the contract for 2022.

Miller won the German IDM 125ccc championship in 2011 and was runner-up in the 2014 Moto3 championship.

The Townsville racer made his MotoGP debut in 2015 at the age of 20 and joined Ducati in 2018 with the Pramac Racing Team, the factory-supported team of the Bologna manufacturer.

He has one MotoGP win to his name and finished last season eighth overall in the standings last year, taking five podiums.

Miller follows former MotoGP champ and fellow Australian Casey Stoner who last gave Ducati a taste of championship victory in 2007.

Dream come trueJack Miller helmet motoGP biushfire appeal

Dream come true for Miller

“I always had dreams of becoming a fully-fledged factory rider,” he says.

“Fair to say I didn’t think it would happen with me sitting at home in Townsville having not raced for six months, but 2020 has been a strange old year.

“But it’s done, and having my 2021 plans sorted out so early is so exciting with what I’ll be doing, and in many ways a dream come true for me.

“When I got to MotoGP in 2015, this is what I was always chasing, so to have it actually happening is a bit surreal. But it’s the reality, and it feels bloody good.”

Ducati boss Claudio Domenicali says that since Jack arrived in the Pramac Racing Team, he has “grown steadily, proving himself one of the fastest and most talented riders in the championship”.

“So we are happy that he has agreed to ride the official Desmosedici GP bike of the Ducati Team next year,” he says.

“We are convinced that Jack has all the right skills to fight continuously for the positions that matter, in every race, starting already this season with the Desmosedici GP20 of the Pramac Racing Team, and taking a further step forward next year thanks to the support of the Ducati Team.”

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Ducati Custom Rumble competition winner announced

Custom Rumble

The Scrambler 1100 FT customized by Italian Marco Graziani of CC Racing Garage is the winning bike of the third edition of Custom Rumble, the contest organized by Scrambler Ducati dedicated exclusively to custom bikes.

Scrambler 1100 FT customized by Italian Marco Graziani of CC Racing Garage

The live streaming award ceremony, presented by Scrambler Ducati Ambassador Dominika Grnova, was attended by 16,000 users. The jury of experts, composed by the actor Nicholas Hoult, the riders Chaz Davies and Andrea Dovizioso, the founder of BikeShed Dutch Van Someren and the Italian customizer of Officine Rossopuro Filippo Barbacane, chose the winning custom motorcycle by voting among the five finalists.

Scrambler 1100 FT customized by Italian Marco Graziani of CC Racing Garage

The bike customised by Marco Graziani of CC Racing Garage is part of the Bully category, the one dedicated to the Scrambler Ducati 1100, without any restrictions on the type of bike or style. The Italian customiser started from a Scrambler Ducati 1100 Special of which he customised the color, graphics, exhaust and seat. Instead he decided to keep the headlight, the rear and the tank similar to the original as he considers them as the key elements of a Scrambler Ducati.

Scrambler 1100 FT customized by Italian Marco Graziani of CC Racing Garage

The Scrambler 1100 FT had received the highest number of votes even during the qualification phase, when almost five thousand users of the Scrambler Ducati community voted on Scramblerducati.com.

Scrambler 1100 FT customized by Italian Marco Graziani of CC Racing Garage

As a prize the winner will receive a Beta workbench including the complete tool kit, a valuable and functional tool to continue to transform production bikes into something unique.

Scrambler 1100 FT customized by Italian Marco Graziani of CC Racing Garage
Source: MCNews.com.au

Ducati to kickstart Superleggera V4 production

Ducati has come out firing on all cylinders after a two-month factory closure and is about to start of production of their fastest bike yet, the Superleggera V4.

The 167kW (224hp) Superleggera V4 was unveiled in February just before the pandemic shut down the factory and put the project on ice.

Now Ducati CEO Claudio Domenicali has tweeted that their fastest and lightest bike yet is about to hit the production line:

The third week after the restart is nearly complete. Dreams are becoming reality: this is the first unit of preproduction of the Superleggera, that is now ready to move into the final stages of quality control. No other street homologated motorcycle comes close the Superleggera: 224HP and a dry weight of 159 kilograms. This bike is a true dream for every passionate motorcyclist.

Ducati Superleggera V4 Twitter - Claudio DomenicaliFirst Ducati Superleggera V4 pre-production bike rolls off the assembly line

Superleggera: fast, light and sexy

The super-sexy bike is wrapped in exposed carbon-fibre and other exotic materials with a Desmosedici GP19-inspired livery and is limited to 500 numbered units.

There is no price tag yet announced.  But as they say, if you have to ask the price, you can’t afford it.

Owners will also receive the opportunity to ride the Panigale V4 R that competes in the World Superbike Championship, while 30 Superleggera V4 owners will get to ride the

Desmosedici GP20 used by Dovizioso and Petrucci with support of Ducati Corse technicians.Ducati Superleggera V4

They can also buy a Dainese leather suit with integrated air-bag and a carbonfibre helmet from Arai which were specifically designed for the Superleggera V4 and incorporate the colours and graphics.

The Superleggera is the only street-legal motorcycle that features a carbon fibre chassis, swingarm and wheels.

Powered by a 998 cm3 90° V4 and accompanied by biplane wings and extreme aerodynamics, the Superleggera V4 offers a power-to-weight ratio of 1.54hp/kg in racing kit configuration.

Alessandro Valia, official Ducati test rider, took the Superleggera V4 that was fitted with the racing kit and slick tires to complete a lap of the Mugello circuit.

His time was 1:52:45 which is two seconds faster than Michele Pirro set on the V4 R SBK in the 2019 Italian Motorspeed Championship (CIV).

Supergeleggera V4 videos

You can check out these videos showing all aspects of the Ducati Superleggera V4 Model (if viewing on mobile, touch the video to isolate it, then turn your phone sideways to get the full width):

Racing accessories

Ducati Panigale V4R Abu DhabiDucati Panigale V4R

Meanwhile, Ducati has released its racing accessory package for the Panigale V4.

The Racing accessories package for the Panigale V4 includes: complete exhaust system, lower and upper racing fairings, oversized headlight fairing, swingarm cover, carbon protection for generator cover, mirror hole covers, license plate holder removal set, frame cover set, carbon chain guard, brake lever protection, brake lever protection adapter, side stickers for tank.

Customers can visit the Ducati.com website and use the Configurator to customise their motorbike with the racing accessories.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com