I'm thinking that the reason that they are releasing it now is that Moto-GP rules state that there can be no-street bike parts in any machines in that class. The WCM had originally been found to have a super-modified R-1 engine in their bike and they were shut down because of it. The new 800cc bikes must be significantly different for Ducati to get around this rule.kabob983 wrote:$65,000? That's less than I heard.
Anyways, how long is it going to be before we start seeing these in the AMA/WSBK races? Once they're a production bike, they'll be legal, so Ducati will have the option to run their ex-GP bike in these races.
I figured that since everyone was moving to 800cc's for MotoGP that more makers would offer their GP-replicas to the public though...
I agree. The "production" bikes the AMA and WSBK riders are on are...well, they're closer to GP bikes than street bikes by the time they stop modifying. I mean, look at alot of the parts, you'll see the same on both. Ohlin's forks, brembo brakes, etc. I think you can find them on both sides of the fence.High_Side wrote:Now the blur begins:
With manufacturers building street bikes based on Moto-GP bikes and Superbikes based "very losely" off of production bikes the two series will begin to cause fans to wonder what came first, the chicken or the egg. I can forsee some required rule changes in order to differentiate the series enough for both to succeed. This could be interesting....
that's insane!kabob983 wrote:Yeah, I heard that last week. They sold all 400 of 2007's stock in under 5 hours. People were running out and buying 999R Xerox's so they'd be high up in line. A guy in my riding club's neighbor bought a 999R Xerox and put a down payment on a Desmosedici RR. The 999R is sitting in a crate in his garage. Oh the humanity!
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