Steve Parrish’s MotoGP column - BBC Sport


BBC Sport
Steve Parrish's MotoGP column
BBC Sport, UK - 22 hours ago
Motorbike racing has always been known for its close races, battles and people passing one another and we just are not getting that recently. ...

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[Source: race motorbikes - Google News ]

MotoGP: Misano Preview - MotorcycleUSA.com


BBC Sport
MotoGP: Misano Preview
MotorcycleUSA.com, OR - Aug 29, 2007
Loris and I did two display laps at the World Ducati Weekend because the fans wanted to see the Desmosedici race bike. The track isn't too bad but I feel it ...
Misano MotoGP: Casey Stoner critical of bumpy Misano motorcyclenews.com
Stoner airs Misano safety worries TVNZ
Stoner says Ducati are still improving autosport.com
Sydney Morning Herald  - motorcyclenews.com
all 59 news articles

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[Source: race bikes - Google News ]

Brother set to race in memory of Ollie - Gazette & Herald

Brother set to race in memory of Ollie
Gazette & Herald, UK - 22 hours ago
He believes racing the Mini will be a fitting tribute to his brother and revealed he is likely to return to racing motorbikes. He said: "Ollie wanted to do ...

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[Source: race motorbikes - Google News ]

Outline for the 40th Tokyo Motor Show 2007

The Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association (“JAMA,” Chairman: Fujio Cho) will hold the 40th Tokyo Motor Show 2007 at Makuhari Messe in Chiba City for 17 days from October 26th (Friday) through November 11th (Sunday) this year. The show will be opened to the public from October 27th (Saturday). There are two press days, October 24th (Wednesday) and 25th (Thursday). The Special Guest Day (Opening Ceremony) will be on October 26th (Friday).

The theme this year is “Catch the News, Touch the Future.” Vehicles from all over the world that provide our lives with diversified joy and excitement in addition to a focus on the environment, safety and comfort will gather at the Tokyo Motor Show. This theme directly expresses that this show is the place to encounter exciting and thrilling vehicles, while also expressing the show organizer's wish to convey the "joy and meaning of coming to the show."
Exhibitors lined up at this point include 4 governments, 1 organization, and 242 companies from 11 countries and 1 region. This is an increase of two companies compared to the previous show (39th show in 2005, Passenger Cars and Motorcycles). Besides using all of the Makuhari Messe facilities, outdoor exhibits will be set up for exhibition space amounting to a total of 44,687 m2 . This will be 11% larger than the 39th show.

The new integrated show making its debut this year will encompass passenger cars, motorcycles, commercial vehicles, commercial vehicle bodies, parts, as well as machinery and tools etc., and will be held every other year hereafter. The Tokyo Motor Show aims to provide the maximum amount of information, all in one compact space where cutting-edge products and technologies gather, including many world premieres across a wide range of automotive categories.

One of the basic policies of JAMA activities is to materialize and appeal the dreams, joy, and wonder of cars. From this perspective, upgraded special events that involve audience participation and experiences will be offered to generate excitement about vehicles, such as five types of test ride programs where visitors can actually come in contact with cars. The entertainment aspect will be heightened so that a wide range of visitors including women and youth, as well as families, can enjoy a full day at the show. Services for visitors have also been enhanced by introducing an official travel agency and making the online ticket system “E-tix.” available.

TxOffroadTrader.com: 2007 Suzuki RMZ450 LTD RC

2007 Suzuki RMZ450 LTD RC 2007 Suzuki RMZ450 LTD RC (450cc)
This bike has only about 8 hrs on it..Very well taken care of..Perfect cond. yosh pipe .Stock tires 85% left.Need to sell..This bike will sell fast..
$4,000.00

TxOffroadTrader Home - Motorcycle Ads - ATV Ads

Triumph Street Triple


Born of thoroughbred stock, the new Street Triple offers the heart of the thrilling Daytona 675 and the soul of the lawless Speed Triple

Some motorcycles need long, flowery introductions to ease into an amusing, anecdote filled report on its ability. The new Triumph Street Triple is no such machine, for to waste words on setting dramatic scenes or carefully constructed stories would be doing the most exciting bike of 2007 a huge injustice. I’m sorry to ruin the end of this tale, but after one of the best day’s riding I’ll ever have I can’t keep you in suspense as to the Street Triple’s talents until my fi nal paragraph. Too often we talk about naked middleweight machines as being dumbed down and stripped bare. The recipe is simple enough, but the execution of it is hard to master. Some bikes end up being too revvy and unsuitable for their new application, while other bikes finish up as dreary, soulless shadows of their former selves. But once in a generation a bike comes along and blows every preconceived notion about the class into smithereens.

And that bike is the Street Triple. With the heritage of the Speed Triple as one
parent and the dynamism of the Daytona 675 as the other, the Street Triple always had the potential to be a wild child. It’s like having a rockstar dad and a swimsuit model mother. And so it came to pass...Launched on the shores of Lake Garda, and using roads that the renowned Trento-Bondone hill climb route scorches up, the test for this naked machine couldn’t have been sterner. Any corner cutting, so obvious in this class, would be cruelly exposed through a route whose corners ranged in speed for 20mph to 120mph. Its unadjustable suspension would feel mushy and imprecise, its cheap two-piston sliding brake clippers would fade and capitulate and its revised engine would wheeze meekly at altitudes that reached 1,700 metres
surely? On other machines maybe, but not the Street Triple. The day started
brilliantly with Lake Garda disappearing in the rear-view mirrors. The lake wasn’t replaced by more stunning scenery, but rather with Tarmac as the fi rst of what felt
like a hundred wheelies was executed out of the swish Italian resort. My wheelies are normally unspectacular in both height and length, but the bike loaned me talent for the rest of the day. But stunts would have to wait as almost immediately into the
120km ride the route took us up a blissful ribbon of road into the stunning Dolomites scenery. The surface was unusually good for an Italian road, but the challenge was anything but easy – and this is where the Street Triple’s Daytona 675 DNA comes into its own. The 675 is an amazingly lithe and exact bike, classleading
in fact, and given that the Street Triple shares almost everything of the 675’s chassis it comes as no surprise that the Triple made light work of this harsh terrain. I had coffee and croissants for breakfast. The Street Triple had this tortuous strada. Even if Triumph had lavished the Triple with the same adjustable
suspension as the 675, I wouldn’t have touched a thing on this bike. And the unadjustable suspension (except for preload on the rear) seemed to offer easy compliance to a wide range of shapes and sizes with the rear Dunlop Qualifi er tyre being the first to buckle. Sublime stoppers Quick to turn, especially with the wider bars, the Triple offers amazing feedback and precision through a huge range of
corners. Feeling solid and stable in quick turns, but responsive and easysteering
through slower ones, the Street Triple breeds confi dence like a contagious infection – and within a few corners you’ll be the next victim of this horrendously fun disease. But those cheap, nasty brakes were nagging away at me. But what better
way to test them than to charge up to a dozen hairpin bends at anything up to 100mph and then shed 80mph in as shorter time as you dare. That’ll show Triumph up to be
the corner cutters that they are, surely? Well, no actually. The brakes are amazing. Yes, the two piston Nissin sliding calipers work as well in this context as the 675’s
do on the race track. Friendly, but ultimately forceful, they suit the bike to a tee.
OK, so Triumph has got the chassis and suspension spot-on, they’ve sorted the brakes
too. Surely they’ve messed up the engine, detuning the soul from the Daytona 675? Not
a bit of it. The engine has been worked on, but nothing like to the extent it would take to mess with the 675’s amazing triple confi guration delivery. Revisions, small that they are, come in the form of a revised camshaft that reduces cam lift slightly
and new pistons that are better suited to the slightly lower revving engine. In fact, the motor is actually stronger to 9,000rpm than the 675 – just where you want a naked bike to excel – and it’s hardly shy above this, pumping out a (claimed) hugely satisfying 107bhp at nearly 12,000rpm and offering crisp, clean delivery on
every throttle opening. What this translates to on the road is a fl exible motor that offers response in almost every gear in almost every situation – whether it be pulling in third out of a hairpin bend and still keeping in touch with other hell-bent riders or riding the bike on the redline. Cost effective So far the linage of the Daytona 675 is clear. Borrowing the frame and the engine, this is bound to be the case, but the legacy of the Speed Triple, beyond that of its looks, is never far away. And that legacy is a very naughty one indeed. Yes, as well as doing a great impression of a utilitarian machine for the masses, suitable for novices and experts
alike, the Street Triple can turn a green stunter into an expert in the space of a
day. As Triumph’s product manager, Simon Warburton puts it, “We anticipate it getting abuse.” The Street Triple makes its Speed Triple brother feel like a lardy old bus as it wheelies with ease from the fi rst two gears, before turning you into a stoppie-meister in the space of a few passes. But even this isn’t the best thing about the Street Triple. No, the fact that it is 10 800 $ (£5,350) is the best thing about it. I can’t see how Triumph has done it for the money – and even Triumph’s bean counters are wondering how they let this one through the books. Margins on the Street Triple are low for everyone – the factory, importers and dealers – so Triumph are hoping that volume will make fi ll the potential black hole where profit once was. And if there’s any justice in the world the Street Triple will sell by the thousands because I can see no better way to commute, scratch or stunt than this.

Big Dog Motorcycles Recalls 2006-2007 Models for Sissy Bar Problem

Big Dog Motorcycles has issued a recall of certain 2006 K-9 and 2007 K-9, Bulldog, and Mastiff models for an equipment problem with an accessory sissy bar.

Certain Big Dog aftermarket sissy bar assemblies were sold as an accessory part for the motorcycles associated with this recall. The sissy bar assemblies may be undersized, allowing excessive movement of the sissy bar. Over time, this could cause the bolts that retain the sissy bar to break allowing the sissy bar to detach from the motorcycle. This condition could occur without warning and could result in injury and/or a crash.

1800 units are affected.

Check out my Motorcycle Recalls feature for more details.

Honda IAA Frankfurt Preview

Author:Evander Klum

Honda Motors is poised to present a host of automotive products at the 2007 International Motor Show (IAA) in Frankfurt, Germany this coming September. The main highlight at the Honda display in Hall 5 is the Accord Tourer Concept, making its world debut at the event. Honda expects that this concept model will stir up the European crowd.

According to a Honda press release, "The Accord Tourer Concept will give a strong indication of the design direction of the all-new generation Accord Tourer set to debut in mid-2008 and its wider, lower look signals a more sporty, more emotional styling approach. This will be matched by a range of advanced, low emissions engines and innovative new chassis technology that will deliver exceptional handling without compromising ride comfort."

Honda did not yet release the full details of the Accord Tourer Concept. Hopefully, the Japanese automaker will reveal the list of its full features and other technical specs (like Honda sway bar link) of this concept car at the IAA Frankfurt, and release it to the public.

In addition, Honda also said that it will showcase two sections at IAA Frankfurt focusing on "Sports" and "Environment." Sports will display Honda's super car and other high performance models, currently used in Honda motor sport teams. These include the Honda RA107 race car competing at the FIA Formula One World Championship (F1). Honda drivers Jenson Button and Rubens Barrichello currently drive the RA107 for the 2007 season of F1 GP. Honda will also showcase their very first F1 car, the 1967 RA300. Other vehicle models in "Sports" include the Civic Type R and Honda S2000.

Meanwhile, in the "Environment" section, Honda will showcase its development for alternative fuel and environmental friendly powertrain systems. Unveiled at the 2007 Geneva Motor Show, Honda's Small Hybrid Sports Concept will once again hit a European stage and present its unique characteristics - that is - advanced hybrid technology combined with sporty and high performance nature. Other models in this section include Honda's next-generation clean diesel engine, Honda Civic Hybrid, and the Honda FCX Concept.

Moreover, Honda will extend its product display in IAA Frankfurt with the company's motorcycle model, the Repsol Honda RC212V that currently competes in the 2007 season of MotoGP with riders Dani Pedrosa and 2006 champ Nicky Hayden aboard. The HM Plant Honda CBR1000RR Fireblades is also on display. Honda will also demonstrate the very first airbag for motorcycles. This innovative safety system will be installed in the new Honda Gold Wing model.
Finally, the Japanese automaker will also showcase some of its innovative achievements in the past years like the popular robot ASIMO, Honda solar panels, and the high flying HondaJet. Watch out for the IAA Frankfurt to see detailed specs and feats of these models.

Evander Klum is a Business Administration graduate who hails from Alabama. He enjoys extreme sports and he is also a car racing fanatic. At present, he works as a marketing manager at an advertising agency in Cleveland.

Tributes to tragic York rider - York Press

Tributes to tragic York rider
York Press, UK - 22 hours ago
... stopped him from racing. She said: "Biking was his passion. He owned and raced motorbikes from the age of 16, and he also used to build his own machines ...

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[Source: race motorbikes - Google News ]

Tributes to tragic York rider - York Press

Tributes to tragic York rider
York Press, UK - 22 hours ago
... stopped him from racing. She said: "Biking was his passion. He owned and raced motorbikes from the age of 16, and he also used to build his own machines ...

Read More...

[Source: race motorbikes - Google News ]

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