- Joined
- Oct 27, 2013
- Messages
- 309
- Location
- Salem, Germany
It will be interesting to see if you can see the cam lift changes in the midrange. Other than the cams and exhaust there seems to be no other significant changes so all things being equal the torque should improve some. I seem to remember you posted an earlier one over 220 (but my memory is a thing of the past)? If I can make a request, could you post your results with what you consider a representative example of an earlier ones. Thanks.So my bike is all fitted with the full Akra system but I have not found time yet to tune it. From the data collected with the Ducati Performance map I am estimating about 215hp at the wheel after retune.
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I look display at dealer and wondering is there corner degrees saving like Bmw had or only see in motionIf it works well…the features are phenomenal, need to see how it is ergonomically in application.
You can actually get less of a pressure drop with 2 versus one at the same decibel level.I don’t get the dual silencers when a single one would be sufficient and look better
I agree with all above except for the condition of the motorcycles after they sit. Several friends and myself only buy 2nd hand poseur specials (typically with all the good stuff, rearsets, full exhaust systems etc.) and surprisingly they never need much. Even after 10 plus years of sitting (belt drive desmoquattro's and testaretta's mostly now). Change the fluids and tires and away you go pretty much. In the US you have to check to see if it was parked with a tank of E10 (the crap we are forced to use in a lot of the US to help subsidize corporate corn farming) which turns into a yellow cake like mess. If they're parked with gas normally OK. The greed that Ducati is currently exhibiting will undo them ultimately if they aren't legislated out of existence first.Not a fan of the front end "Catfish" look, or the CBR-esque fairings. Seems as if the bike was dipped into a vat of character dissolving fluid. Each to their own. As for the £75,000 Bagnaia "special" and the £48,000 Tricolore...Hmmm. Ducati will doubtless sell them all but they churn them out so often the word "special" is a bit of a mis-noma these days. Christ you don't even get a carbon front mudguard on the "mere-mortal" S model, as was once the norm on previous iterations. It's all structured to appeal to the most affluent buyer, many of whom won't even start the bike let alone ride it, destined to gather dust in some collection, until it surfaces on the market again in a few years, with gummed up fuel lines, cracked and deteriorated rubber and hardened oil seals. Still Ducati won't care at that point, as by then they will have already released another batch of parts bin limited editions. Back in the day when the SPS was the bike to have amongst model variants, you actually got something that was tangiabally good value for money. Now it is whatever Bologna think you are willing to pay.