Cycle News

Cycle News 2014 Issue 11 March 18 2014

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. 51 ISSUE 11 MARCH 18, 2014 P121 by Suter, and not only because the 5' 5" tall Salom's riding posi- tion actually made it feasible for the 5' 9" me to feel relatively com- fortable when settling aboard the diminutive KTM's grippy rubber seatpad. This after the two Team Ajo mechanics had lifted the 176-pound bike up and turned it around to face the track, then de- posited it on the rear wheel start- er as if it were a plastic model, not a real 152 mph motorcycle, and lit up the engine with a wall of sound from the Akrapovic twin- megga exhaust. The fast 3000 rpm idle, which helps the tiny slipper clutch coun- ter any sign of rear wheel chatter via engine braking and the high 15:1 compression ratio in slowing for a turn, helps getting off the mark with no launch control in the ubiquitous Dell'Orto control ECU issued by Dorna to all Moto3 teams, but even so you have to slip the clutch a good deal to build up momentum from rest. And momentum is the name of the game as far as any single- cylinder racer is concerned, especially when you have only a 250cc four-stroke motor to propel you – although it's worth pointing out that the 56 hp at 13,800 rpm that this factory KTM delivers is 10 percent more than a Manx Norton of twice the ca- pacity did in still finishing on the podium in 500cc GP racing 45 years ago. And with half the weight, too – in spite of which the KTM felt a lot more planted and stable than the much more nervous-seeming Mahindra I'd ridden not long be- fore. In terms of stability and sub- stance, it felt more like a scaled- down 600cc Supermono than a scaled-up four-stroke 125cc GP racer, like the Suter-built bike. This meant increased rider confidence, and at the end of my 10-lap test on the KTM, I was genuinely sorry I had to give it back. I was just getting the hang of riding it. Compact but not cramped, the riding stance still wasn't quite spacious enough for me to get my helmet tucked away behind the domed screen and still see Not quite Moto3 sized, but the author squeezed on to Luis Salom's Red Bull KTM at Almeria in Spain.

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