Cycle News

Cycle News 2015 Issue 34 August 25

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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DUCATI 1299 PANIGALE S RIDING IMPRESSION P88 And that means using all the features as they should be used. An example being, if you don't use the Ducati Quickshift System the way it needs – clutchless up and down shifts – gear changes can be notchy and difficult. The Ducati requires you to pay atten- tion to what you're doing –lazi- ness is punished quickly. You only have to look at how hard Chaz Davies has to ride his 1199 R racer to get the most out of it; the standard bike isn't anything close to that recalci- trant, but there are traces of this persona in the 1299. It hates stopped traffic. Gets all hot and pissed off, and the svelte Slovenian Akrapovic piping under the seat suddenly turn the Pani- gale into the world's fastest barbeque, with your thighs the appetizer and your ass the main course. Here it's just like any old Ducati superbike, and a reason why you'd not buy the 1299 if it were to be a commuter. But for the most part, the 1299 is miles, miles better than the old 1199. Especially in the ride and stability. The electronic Öhlins components provide a constantly smooth ride front and back, and the Brembo M50 calipers up front match to provide not just phenomenal stopping prowess but feel and stability. M50s can be found on a few bikes now, but that doesn't make their performance on the 1299 any less impressive. This bike stops as fast as it goes, and it's all backed up by an ABS system that's about as unobtru- sive as it gets. Cornering ABS is one of the best things to come out of motorcycling in years (for a full look at how the system mode disconnects rear ABS and because I was generally riding the bike as a commuter there was really no need to go back- ing it into corners other than for my own stupid enjoyment. Race mode does give the Ducati more oomph in everything from throttle response to firmer suspension and less DTC intervention, to the no rear ABS, but Sport is fine for everyday road use. Wet mode knocks everything down a peg or two, and as SoCal is in the midst of a devastating drought, I didn't use it other than just to see if it worked, which of course it did. Two weeks of living with the 1299 dispelled one thought I'd always had about Ducati su- perbikes for the road. "Nice, but you can have it back." The improvements to the midrange power, better throttle response, nicer ride comfort and exhaus- tive electronic controls make this a very good road superbike. If I put the cash down for one (and if I could ever afford one!), I'd wrap the piping to save the rump, put the stickiest tires I could buy on it and go blitz up and down the canyon near my place each morning before work because, above all else, the 1299 makes you feel special when riding it. There're other bikes out there that are better road bikes, no question of that, but few make you feel as damn well good about yourself as the 1299. Suppose you'd want to feel good if you dropped $25K on a bike! CN "THERE'S OTHER BIKES OUT THERE THAT ARE BETTER ROAD BIKES, NO QUESTION OF THAT, BUT FEW MAKE YOU FEEL AS DAMN WELL GOOD ABOUT YOURSELF AS THE 1299." works, click here), and having it on a bike like the Panigale, that is capable of insane lean angles, is very handy indeed. But to hell with trying the system's limits on the road! At least I know it's there, it works, and that's good enough for me. For the majority of the test I rode around in Sport mode. Race

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