Cycle News

Cycle News 2015 Issue 49 December 8

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. 52 ISSUE 49 DECEMBER 8, 2015 P69 S P E C I F I C A T I O N S MUGEN SHINDEN YON ENGINE: .................410V oil-cooled three- phase IPM/interior permanent magnet brushless DC motor with liquid-cooled inverter/controller BATTERIES: .. Hitachi Maxell high-energy aluminium laminated Lithium-ion pouch cell batteries with integrated air-cooled thermal management system RANGE: ....38 miles at TT Zero race speed RECHARGE FROM ZERO: 5 hours at 240V, 8 hours at 110V TRANSMISSION: ....... Direct single-speed with gear-driven primary reduction and chain final drive HORSEPOWER: ........ 148 hp @ 8000 rpm TORQUE: ....................... 220 lb-ft @ 1 rpm CHASSIS: .. Carbon fiber twin-spar frame FRONT SUSPENSION: .............48mm fully adjustable Showa BFP fork REAR SUSPENSION: ............. Carbon fiber swingarm with adjustable-rate vari- able link, and fully adjustable Showa monoshock FRONT BRAKE: .................... Twin 320mm Nissin steel discs with radially mounted six-piston Nissin calipers REAR BRAKE:...........Single 220mm Nissin steel disc with twin-piston Nissin caliper, and supplementary regenerative braking FRONT TIRE: ..........................120/70ZR17 Dunlop Sportmax D812 GP on 3.50-in Marchesini forged magnesium wheel REAR TIRE: ...................195/65-17 Dunlop slick (or 200/70-17 Sportmax D812 GP treaded) on 6.00-in. Marchesini forged magnesium wheel RAKE: .................................................... 23° TRAIL: ............................................. 4.13 in. WHEELBASE: ................................. 58.4 in. SEAT HEIGHT: .................................31.1 in. WEIGHT: ........................................ 451 lbs. a lifted rear wheel, no weav- ing around my chosen line, the Mugen just stopped level and poised (there's that word again). But I did help that happen by using the rear brake first, as it's easy to do with the handlebar- mounted lever—John McGuin- ness must have liked that, being used to a thumb brake on his combustion Hondas—for a hard stop from high speed, so as to load up the back wheel first before hitting the front six-pot brakes. But on what would have been a third-gear sweeper on a 600 supersport at the end of the pit straight, the Mugen's forward weight bias gave loads of confidence in keeping up turn speed. This is just a very addic- tive motorcycle that it would be great to take on a twisty country road ride. And that's where I hope the Mugen Shinden is headed one of these days—to a country road near you, or to be honest, near me! Mugen CEO Tomoyuki Hashimoto says this is what the company is indeed working on. "We are considering to go into production with the Shinden, to sell all over the world," he says. "We are considering every pos- sibility, but this probably takes a minimum of two or three years before we can achieve this ambi- tion. But we would like to find a way to bring this technology to customers." Watch this space! CN McPint on his way to a second TT Zero victory earlier this year.

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