Cycle News

Cycle News 2015 Issue 04 January 27

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/452615

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 97 of 123

VOL. 52 ISSUE 4 JANUARY 27, 2015 P97 However, with that many revs to play with, it's hardly a problem. Gunitoli told me he lets the bike run as low as 5,000 rpm in slow turns like Strubben at Assen, or turn one at Sepang. At Mugello I was using 7,000 rpm as a baseline to exit a tight turn like the Correntaio right-hander. At the other end of the rev scale, the soft RBW limiter kicks in at 15,500 rpm. What differs from this year's bike, however, is that there's an extra 300 rpm overrev available for a last-lap dash—if needed. But the biggest advance in 2014 was in the team's elec- tronics package. "Things changed a lot in just one year," Albesiano said. "We developed new strategies which we kept building on all through the season. I think that was why we were able to mount such a serious challenge for the world title in the final races. We were increasingly better able to use the performance that we had built in to the bike." My good fortune in being given the keys to all of the factory Superbikes every year means that I'm able to compare and contrast the latest and great- est with each other as well as with what came before. And very honestly the 2014 Aprilia is the best motorcycle I've ridden yet, as an infinitely refined version of what was already a brilliant bike. It is phenomenally fast, if not exactly easy to ride, with a linear but explosive build of power from way low to way high. It's so refined (that word again) in the way it delivers such serious horsepower—the transition point at which the variable length in- take system operates raised this year to 12,000 rpm from 10,500 revs yet completely undetectable in the way the throttle body trum- pets lift off them at those revs. It's just seamless in the way it does it and I was indeed looking to try to spot it, but couldn't. In the past the payoff for the Aprilia's amazing acceleration and blinding top speed was a fierce pickup from a closed throttle that was just the control- lable side of aggressive. Thanks to electronics, the 2014 World Champion Superbike has a softer, but no less effective low down response. While revised valve timing, altered cylinder head porting and other detail engine mods have delivered that significant step up in horsepow- er, it's not been at the expense of rideability. Quite the reverse, in fact. You can understand why Aprilia decided to keep its software in house and just use Magneti Marelli hardware, rather than risk the fruits of their work being shared among Marelli's other customers—as in, most of the rest of the World Superbike paddock. You can feel that this has led to still better drive out of a slow "IT'S ONE OF THE MOST DISTINCTIVE- SOUNDING SUPERBIKE ENGINES YET MADE, ISSUING AN ULTRA- DISTINCTIVE MEATY BURBLE AT LOW REVS FROM THE AKRAPOVIC CARBON CAN. AS ALWAYS, IT SOUNDS LIKE A HIGH-PITCHED TWIN LOW DOWN, BUT A DEEP-VOICED FOUR UP HIGH." Guintoli won the title over Kawa- saki's Tom Sykes by six points at the final round in Qatar.

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Cycle News - Cycle News 2015 Issue 04 January 27