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Cycle News 2023 ADV GUIDE

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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2023 ADV GUIDE P25 that is a gigantic advantage. It's just confidence inspiring to rip on. The traditional "top- mounted" fuel tank strad- dling nearly a liter of Ducati L-twin power somehow hides its weight effectively when the tip-over gremlins appear. And the power is great. Easy to go slow with, easy to slide around like a teenager with, easy to rip down the pave- ment with. Ducati's L-twin delivers more buzz than the parallel Austrian engine does at all rpm, but the power delivery to the rear tire is buttery smooth—a compli- ment to the dynamically stable chassis. It's hard to beat a KTM in off-road performance, and the Ducati is coming damn close. Suspension perfor- mance isn't as over-built for the biggest obstacles, but for as rowdy as you likely want to get, it's very good. KTM holds the advantage in extreme cases here. So, if we're keeping score. The Ducati is more stable, has easy-to-love power, handles nearly as well and arguably looks a whole lot better than the undisputed king of midsize ADV land. Pretty freakin' great start. The one place Ducati has faultered is in the electronics. The navigation and visibility of its dash- board and all the systems it controls is weak. Like, tragically non-intuitive and complicated to get to the settings you want to change. Also, the narrow vertical dash screen is too phone-like and not immersive or easy to read as KTM's fantastic display. It's hard to tell what mode you're in on the Ducati. KTM makes the in- formation you want to know obvious, and its settings are remarkably easy to change in comparison. The other chink in the armor of Ducati is the price tag. It's going to be expensive. Ducati's are and probably should be because they're Italian and freakin' cool. It's a brand that demands a premium price. If you're not into brands and just want performance, cost will be a negative for the Duc.' I'm honestly hung-up on a winner here. Ducati hasn't run the gauntlet of growing pains KTM has here. And KTM had a few with this model. So, the du- rability and dependability question—combined with the electronics confusion and cost premium—makes me resist giving a head-to- head victory to Ducati. But the fact that I'm consider- ing it is a gigantic compli- ment to the DesertX and a surprise to me. I think it might be my favorite ADV bike right now. It only comes down to the unknown keeping Ducati from beating KTM here in the long run. But from what I do know, I'm really impressed with the DesertX. Jesse Ziegler Medium-level backcountry riding is the Ducati's homeland, the relaxed chassis dimensions suiting a wider range of riders compared to the shorter, smaller but more agile KTM.

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