Cycle News

Cycle News 2014 Issue 31 August 5

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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BIMOTA BB3 FIRST RIDE P78 32.2-inch seat height, it felt as if I were sitting slightly higher on it. However, that could be because of the rear ride height Bimota had chosen, though I could still put both feet flat on the ground at stoplights. Whatever, it's not sufficiently extreme to make the BB3 tiring to ride. Your arms and shoulders don't get stressed by too much body weight on them and, in fact, the bike feels more balanced in terms of riding stance than the DB7. Since Bimota has fitted the same dash as on the BMW, there's a slight sense of déjà vu, until you let your eyes stray to the gorgeous upper triple clamp that is milled from solid alloy, or the carbon protection on the upper face of the 4.2-gallon fuel tank, or… well, the entire bike is eye candy. Nuff said. In spite of the relatively con- servative steering geometry, the BB3 was also very definitely more agile and lighter steering than the S1000RR – and the one I rode was fitted with the same Pirellis. So it's not the tires. Turn-in to is almost intuitive – the Bimota doesn't fall into the apex, but it steers measuredly into it almost on autopilot, and it's also easier to lift it up from side to side through a sequence of S-bends than you'd expect with such a powerful one-liter ultra- bike. Factory Superbike rider Christian Iddon had previously enthused to me about the han- dling in slow and mid-speed turns, warning me I had a treat in store. Turns out he was right. Mind you, he had a hand in that, I suppose, since he and team- mate Badovini are racing identi- cal bikes to the production BB3 and their chassis setup and suspension feedback are being incorporated in the default set- tings for the streetbike. As Bimo- ta boss Daniele Longoni, racing does indeed improve the breed. Talk of suspension leads to ride quality, which on the new Bimota is improbably good for such a hard-edged sportbike. I honestly marveled at how well it shrugged off most of the seri- ous road rash I came across up in the hills; it glided over all but the worst surface imperfections with uncanny compliance. So compliments to Bimota's part- ners Andreani for what must be a very clever choice of spring and damping settings. Yet this wasn't accomplished at the expense of stability on faster turns – and yes, I headed straight to my late, great mate

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