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

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SYLVAIN GUINTOLI'S APRILIA RSV4 RACER TEST P100 on used tires." So look at the photos of me riding the Aprilia, dear reader, and you'll see what I was do- ing wrong. And no, I couldn't persuade Albesiano to let me have another 10 laps to learn how to ride the RSV4 properly. Maybe next year, when lucky lad Leon Haslam will be racing the factory-supported Red Devils Roma Aprilia that will effectively be a revised version of Guintoli's title-winning 2014 bike that ac- counts for the new 2015 rules. As ever, this is a very, very fast motorcycle. And it's smooth with it, thanks to the balance weights in the handlebar ends and the single, gear-driven counterbal- ance. There's no undue vibration from the V4 Superbike motor— just a sense of genuine perfor- mance from this ultra-individual powerplant. 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. And where the ultra-compact RSV4 really scores in terms of handling—compared to any other four-cylinder Superbike—is the way it steers and changes direc- tion from side to side so easily, making this a less tiring bike to race. In spite of the rangy wheel- base, the Aprilia turns more eas- ily than the inline fours, thanks to the compacted mass of its unique V4 architecture. And that in turn makes it a controllable, confidence inspiring, motorcycle that's a deserved three-time World Champion. The combination of the ECU's variable idle-speed program and the mechanical slipper clutch worked well together in harness- ing engine braking from high speed at the end of that .6-mile straight, with no trace of rear wheel chatter. I found quite a bit more engine braking than I expected (perhaps reflect- ing Guintoli's immediate Ducati heritage compared to Biaggi's 250cc GP ancestry) which also helped stop the bike so hard and late. It's no longer crucial to use the rear brake first to load up the back before braking all-out from high speed, to try to counter any instability. This year there was no trace of the Aprilia's The last of the fire-breathing worx Superbikes as the series technical rules change in 2015.

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