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Cycle News Issue 48 December 4

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

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VOL. 55 ISSUE 48 DECEMBER 4, 2018 P45 The 2019 Super Duke GT—at the Isle of Man, no less—is a nice example of refining an already excellent product. performance and benchmark handling of the take-no-prisoners 1290 Super Duke R streetfighter, coupled with everyday practi- cality and user-friendly convenience. It's a successful marriage of opposites. Despite being the first-ever KTM V-twin street model with touring pretensions, the GT has been such a hit that KTM has now devoted some extra R&D budget to making it better still. At Intermot 2018, KTM unveiled the seri- ously improved 2019 version of the model that Greiner and his R&D colleagues, led by project manager Tobias Eisele, have been working on ever since the GT Ver- sion 101 was launched three years ago—and just a couple of weeks later they asked me to come and ride it for a day in glorious autumn sunshine along the superb riding roads running up and down the hills and val- leys of KTM's Upper Austria hinterland. The 2019 Super Duke GT is even more fun to ride than before, as a sharper, stron- ger and more refined version in every way of its predecessor. It's a fact underlined by the outgoing 2018 model GT, which my riding companion Luke Brackenbury, KTM's PR Manager, had brought along to compare with the new bike. Swapping back and forth between the two was educational—I'd never have thought the outgoing model would seem quite so dated, having itself set new sector stan- dards on its 2015 release. A lready Europe's largest motorcycle manufacturer, KTM continues to ramp up its sales numbers, with the 126,808 bikes it sold in the first half of this year representing a further 15 percent up on 2017, itself a record year for the company. Perhaps surprisingly, one of its palpable hits helping drive that increase has been the most expensive model in its entire range, the 1290 Super Duke GT, first launched three years ago as the Austrian company's unique take on sports touring with a differ- ence—i.e. with an accent on the "sport!" Those sales say this model has complete- ly addressed KTM president Stefan Pierer's concerns before it appeared. "I don't think a sport tourer in the classic way matches 100 percent with KTM's brand identity," Pierer says. "Our customers expect something sporty made the KTM way, not like other manufacturers do it." That certainly de- scribes the GT, which since its 2015 launch has provided its owners with the dazzling

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