Cycle News

Cycle News 2014 Issue 07 February 19 2014

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

Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/262687

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 90 of 113

DUCATI PANIGALE 1199 RS13 RACER TEST P90 (which lets their engines behave like twins in turns, but faster fours in a straight line). The Ducati only enjoys 50 percent of those benefits, which means it's vital to maximize cor- nering speed all you can via the Panigale's more forward 53/47 percent weight distribution ver- sus the evenly balanced 1098R – but that invites disaster, once the tires get worn, or you try too hard. Checa's Phillip Island race crash was a fine example of the frustrations, and dangers, of that. So, when Sykes passed me into the first turn at the end of the Jerez pit straight (easily done, for him), leaving me yards behind his Kawasaki's back wheel as we hit the apex, he then took four times that amount out of the Ducati ac- celerating along the short straight to turn two. Okay, part of this was rider talent, but I can twist the wrist as well as anyone once I'm straightened up and flying right. It's not a question of weight, either, because all Superbikes now scale the same give or take a couple of pounds – and Sykes isn't a lot lighter than me. It's en- gine performance. Riding the RS13 – no longer fit- ted, be it noted, with any restric- tors as it was for what amounted to political reasons until the Imola round midway through the season - it simply felt very similar in accel- eration and overall performance to the Canepa Superstock I'd just been riding. With that being so, it's easy to believe that there's just seven horsepower differ- ence in peak power between the two, as is apparently the case. At the point that Kawasaki boss Ichiro Yoda says the title-winning ZX-10R makes 240 hp at 15,500 rpm at the gearbox, the V-twin Ducati's 216 hp at 11,700 rpm is exactly 10 percent less powerful. That's a big cross to bear when at the same time you don't anymore have the legendary torque and above all rideability that was the trump card of successive desmo V-twin World Champions. So not only is the new Ducati Superbike now missing its pre- decessor's legendary grunt out of turns, it also has a serious top end speed deficit that comes into play on faster tracks. It's not that the Panigale RS13 wasn't flexible and easy to ride out of a turn with the engine run- ning as low as 5000 rpm – it pulled cleanly from down low, but just not very fast. It seemed I had to get the engine turning above 8500 rpm before there was seri- ous power on tap, without how- ever the same jump out of a turn

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of Cycle News - Cycle News 2014 Issue 07 February 19 2014