MotoGP – Moto GP Valence Warm-up: Marquez takes the cool –

Aprilia RSV4 R, Tuono V4 R, BMW HP4, S 1000 R, KTM RC8 R, 1290 Super Duke R in the test

Super nakeds versus superbikes

Aprilia Tuono V4 R, BMW S 1000 R, KTM 1290 Super Duke R – how much of the potential of their gene donors are they really – and which one is the fastest? A comparison with the Aprilia RSV4 R, BMW HP4 and KTM RC8 R on the racetrack will show that.

Super nakeds versus superbikes

It’s rumbling in the realm of sports motorcycles. Not just because sales are falling overall. Now uncovered offshoots are on their way on the country road. Up until now, it was mainly Japanese irons with discarded engines from last year’s superbikes that were stuck in rather comfortably designed chassis, now the upright are competing with race-ready chassis and complete electronics packages, combined with the latest generation of engines, and enticing with a relaxed seating position. And then KTM poured reports of tough racetrack performance and fabulous lap times of the KTM 1290 Super Duke R at the Goodwood Festival of Speed ​​Add fuel to the discussion of whether Nakeds can really hold a candle to the stub handlebars.

Aprilia RSV4 R, Tuono V4 R, BMW HP4, S 1000 R, KTM RC8 R, 1290 Super Duke R in the test

Super nakeds versus superbikes

MOTORRAD 9/2014 proved. But is the last bastion of the athletes, the racetrack, falling? Are performance disadvantages and poor aerodynamics too big a mortgage? Or do a relaxed seating position and easy handling thanks to wide handlebars count here? There’s only one thing to do: Try it out, hit the racetrack!

Uniform tires

In this case to Alcarrás, Spain. Also involved: three highly explosive pairings. Aprilia Tuono V4 R and Aprilia RSV4 APRC, BMW HP4 and BMW S 1000 R, both with partially active chassis. And from Austria, the KTM RC8 R and KTM 1290 Super Duke R compete against each other.

Uniformly soled with the finest Pirelli racing rubbers, ex-Supersport World Championship pilot Christian “Kelle” Kellner is supposed to whip all six around the course. Here and now it’s only about one thing: the lap times and the performance on the racetrack. After all, we have already examined in detail what the latest generation of the upright can do in everyday life (issue 9/2014), now it’s: shower on!

Aprilia duo

www.jkuenstle.de

Aprilia RSV4 R versus Aprilia Tuono V4 R.

It all starts with the Aprilia duo. First, the Aprilia RSV4 R superbike roars out onto the track. In contrast to the more noble Factory model, it has no variable engine and swing arm mounts, springs and dampens with Sachs instead of Ohlins and rolls on cast instead of forged wheels. But the RSV4 also has the growling V4 with variable intake funnels, the tuning of which has been refined again for this year. Just as light Brembo M50 monoblock pliers and, above all, this cream chassis. Christian literally flies around the course, turns into the pit lane at the end of his turn and does not seem one hundred percent convinced of the performance. His first spontaneous comment: "It didn’t feel that fast now." Well, Kelle, you can be mistaken.

The stopwatches stopped at a whopping 1.41.52 minutes. So only 0.7 seconds slower than the much more expensive, Ohlins and forged wheel reinforced “Factory” version a year earlier (MOTORRAD 12/2013). Respect! And then it gushes out of him: “It’s wonderful how I can play with the line in the curves, vary it.” In fact, the Aprilia RSV4 R shines with its playful agility and precision. At the exit of the bend, crisp lines and thus early acceleration are possible. The traction control regulates super smoothly. The sparkling revving and the robust 182 hp can be used in a well-measured manner, and the throttle response at the top of the bend is good. “You have everything under control, you feel right at home,” beamed Christian. The compact seating position and the excellent feedback convey the feeling of sitting on a genuine GP racer. "Sound, feeling, the fun factor on the thing is enormous," says Kelle happily. And, cheered on by it, will go down the long, steeply sloping downhill left at such an angle that the side stand gently scratches the asphalt. The performance of the front brake is also excellent.

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Aprilia RSV4 R APRC ABS in the test

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Aprilia Tuono V4 R with softer cushioning

The bar is already quite high for the Aprilia Tuono V4 R, which is now being freed from its tire warmers. The chassis is largely identical to that of the superbike. Spring rates and rear deflection the same, only the damping is softer. In addition, the steering head angle is one degree flatter, the caster is three millimeters longer at 108, and the wheelbase is 25. For a naked bike, your seating position is very sporty. Flat handlebars, slightly lower notches than the Aprilia RSV4 R. But even if its handiness is actually impeccable: As it was the day before when driving photos on series tires, the Tuono does not zap through the chicane quite as quickly on racing tires as the RSV4, it drives at the exit of the bend further lines, therefore it cannot be accelerated so early and hard.

More has to be done, even if the upright rider on the Aprilia Tuono V4 R puts less pressure on the front wheel than on the RSV4. So a short pit stop, screwdriver unpacked. Rear pressure stage closed to half a turn, plus the fork pushed through four millimeters.

The Aprilia Tuono V4 R zips around corners more readily, holds the line more precisely at the exit of a curve, even when the stand grinds down the mountain properly. “More would be possible without the stand,” Kelle puffs. The chassis is too soft for him for the ultimate time chase, although the soft design in the nasty, undulating downhill section is not a disadvantage.

The first three courses are designed to be shorter

It has the same electronic driving aids as the RSV4 plus an automatic switch. But it has to get by without a variable intake funnel, rotates at 12,000 rpm a good 1000 rpm lower than its racing sister and is a good 17 hp weaker with measured 165 hp. But decent throttle response and the shorter first three gears make up for that, at least at the corner exit.

Only on the home straight does she noticeably stir the handlebars. On a lush bump in the ground, the driver can hardly find a hold on the bench step. Nevertheless, the top speed disadvantage at the braking point of 8 km / h remains within narrow limits. She leaves springs in the braking zone. Compared to the high-end brakes of the RSV4, its brake cocktail consisting of a conventional brake pump and screwed-on calipers requires significantly more manual force without developing the same bite. And even through the chicane, she cannot develop an advantage. The upright sitting position costs a bit of contact with the front wheel. If the Tuono hits the line precisely in the chicane, the more tightly tuned RSV4 hits it even more precisely and takes a lead of three tenths here alone. Chasing the times on the Tuono is definitely more relaxed, and real fun too. Seen in this way, despite the performance disadvantage, the gap to the real superbike remains astonishingly small at 2.6 seconds.

Naked bike

Aprilia Tuono V4 R APRC ABS and KTM 1290 Super Duke R in comparison

Close combat on the street

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Naked bike

Aprilia Tuono V4R APRC ABS in the driving report

Simulated everyday operation on a wet racetrack

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Naked bike

Premiere Aprilia Tuono v4 R APRC ABS and RSV4 R APRC ABS

Absolution

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Bmw duo

www.jkuenstle.de

BMW S 1000 R against BMW HP4.

Let’s see if at BMW the naked woman in disguise can get closer to her skin. Since the BMW S 1000 R competes with a semi-active chassis, it had to be the BMW HP4 as an opponent. And it starts like the fire brigade. The brutal power of the HP4 has now been adequately described, and yet it continues to amaze you. "Is that an animal", Christian puffs at the end of his rounds. The thing doesn’t stop sliding. Aisle by aisle. The traction control, which can be finely adjusted using a rocker switch, has the power safely under control, although you always feel a little more than with the Aprilia that you are being slowed down. Nevertheless, she works confidently. The brakes are simply awesome, and the handling for this car is astonishing. How she zigzags through the chicane and then fires out is a show.

"In addition, the HP4 is extremely precise," Kelle reports. And not even excessively hard. The semi-active chassis swallows the abundant bumps with ease. “It almost feels like a sofa compared to the Aprilia RSV4,” ponders Christian, “at first glance that doesn’t seem to match the brutal performance and yet it works perfectly.” So well that the BMW HP4 slacks off by a few hundredths of a second RSV4 goes by. And so the BMW S 1000 R puts a lot of pressure.

She had to struggle a lot during the voting drives the day before. For chasing times, the “Dynamic Pro” mode came into question from the lavish set-up arsenal for the engine and chassis that the “Sport” and “Dynamic” packages (together 1700 euros) offer. That means: maximum power, wheelie detection and rear wheel ABS switched off, front wheel ABS calibrated for maximum deceleration. To do this, the “Hard” suspension set-up was selected. The BMW S 1000 R was extremely fed up with it. Just not in this terrifyingly fast, steeply downhill left bend. Their waves and compression apparently pushed the production tires to their limits with the hard chassis set-up. With the handlebars jerking and bucking, the S 1000 R plunged down the nine percent gradient.

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Test: BMW S 1000 RR against HP4 and Ducati 1199 Panigale against Panigale S.

Race track comparison: BMW and Ducati super sports cars

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BMW S 1000 RR, Ducati Multistrada, Kawasaki Z 1000 SX and KTM 1290 Super Duke R in the test

A test in three acts

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Used purchase

Second-hand advice BMW S 1000 RR

The top dog among the superbikes

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BMW S 1000 R with the greatest performance disadvantage

A softer set-up did bring some improvement, but robbed the BMW S 1000 R of the necessary tautness on the other sections of the route. Only the racing tires, thanks to their better self-damping properties on this certainly extreme section of the track, proved to be an adequate partner for the tough chassis setup and brought calm. And Kelle was finally able to load up there courageously.

But there was still the performance disadvantage of 32 hp that the test bench had spat out. The largest of the three pairings. Does that mean the duel has already been decided before the R rolls onto the slopes? Christian storms across the home straight with the BMW S 1000 R. Although the steering head angle is 0.6 degrees flatter, the wheelbase is 16 mm longer and the swing arm is three millimeters lower, the swing arm is more flat, it is not as stable on the bumps as the superbike BMW HP4, and like the Aprilia Tuono, it moves slightly with the handlebars.

Like the Italian, she slams into the braking zone at 237 km / h. The BMW HP4 is a whopping 19 km / h faster when the brakes are applied. Brutal, like the radial brembos bite, but the R lies like a board when anchored. The feedback from the road when turning on the brake is flawless. But the R only delivers this transparency with a lot of pressure on the front wheel. If it is missing, the feedback disappears. In this respect, it does not come close to the Aprilia Tuono, which also zigzags through the chicane than the already handy BMW S 1000 R. On the other hand, the white-blue is calm than the undisguised Italian when changing jagged lean angles.

Naked bike

BMW S 1000 R and KTM 1290 Super Duke R in comparison test

Who pulls the fur over whose ears??

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Naked bike

BMW S 1000 R in the PS driving report

Wolf in sheep’s clothing? Nah, wolf without fur!

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Naked bike

BMW S 1000 R in the driving report

"Maybe we calculated the price a bit cheap"

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There is no herb against the BMW HP4

The semi-active chassis effectively prevents excessive compression and rebound when it is folded quickly. But the BMW S 1000 R tends a little to the wide line at the exit of the chicane. And yet it rushes through the chicane only a tenth of a second slower than the Superbike HP4. And even a tenth faster than the Tuono. In addition, thanks to the torque-oriented engine tuning, the S 1000 R sprints out of tight corners much more energetically than the BMW HP4 or Aprilia Tuono.

In the end, however, the overwhelming power of the BMW HP4 is no match. The stopwatch for the BMW S 1000 R stops at 1: 45.13 minutes. Strong performance, strong time. Even if it wasn’t quite enough to crack the equally strong Aprilia. Christian does not challenge that, he has a big grin on his face after the time hunt. "It’s just great fun ironing through the curves so upright."

KTM duo

www.jkuenstle.de

KTM 1190 RC8 R versus KTM 1290 Super Duke R.

When it comes to pure engine performance, the KTM 1290 Super Duke R shouldn’t be afraid of comparing it with the KTM 1190 RC8 R. On the contrary, the superbike would have to shudder. Because the Super Duke R practically draws on the test bench with 172 to 174 hp with the RC8 R. But thanks to the displacement advantage it offers the much richer torque curve, plus traction control and ABS. Who is the hunter here, who is the hunted?

Christian first sets out with the KTM 1190 RC8 R to clarify this question. With a throaty throat, she turns onto the home straight. Compared to the naked Aprilias and BMWs, it can hardly convert its better aerodynamics and slightly higher performance into a higher top speed at the braking point. The recording at the braking point reports 238 km / h. This is where the RC8 R shows its trump cards: first-class brakes, great feel for the front wheel and excellent accuracy. In addition, the tendency to fold into the curve from medium lean angles, which it showed on production tires, has practically disappeared with the racing rubbers. As if pulled on a string, the thunder bolt turns by the curb by a hair-cut margin and crashes out of the curve. "But there is simply a lack of performance," reports Christian Kellner afterwards. The 72-degree twin turns spirited up and gets really angry from 8500 rpm. But it also provides plenty of vibrations.

Excellent "Ass-to-grip connection"

It snaps out of the corners, and the fact that it has no traction control is only half as wild. Because the KTM 1190 RC8 R offers plenty of grip on the rear wheel. The feeling for the same thing, the "ass-to-grip connection" as Christian jokingly calls it: excellent. Likewise the handling.

The less racing-like seating position bothers him more. The open knee angle is relaxed, but in the bumps of the downhill section, the toe of your boot and rest touch the ground early. In addition, the gearbox of the KTM 1190 RC8 R is not geared to race, the individual gears are quickly turned out. Frequent shifting in the somewhat hard gear is necessary. However, she does not have an automatic gearshift like the Aprilias and BMWs bring with them. So the stopwatches ultimately stop at 1: 43.12 minutes.

Will it now become prey for “The Beast”, as KTM has somberly named the 1290 Super Duke R? In this comparison it occupies a special position. While Aprilia and BMW use the chassis and engine base of the athletes, only tailored for road use, the KTM 1290 Super Duke R has a completely different chassis than the RC8 R. Although it uses the same engine base, but with more Displacement. And step into the ring with traction control and ABS.

The attack by the KTM 1290 Super Duke R takes two quick laps, then Kelle is back in the pits. Too little lean angle, too little precision. It does not have a spring strut redirection with an eccentric to adjust the rear height like the RC8 R. The only thing that helps is to strongly increase the spring preload at the rear.

KTM 1290 Super Duke R regulates too early

The adjustment ring on the shock absorber is made of plain plastic, whereas the RC8 R relies on aluminum. And offers other useful details, such as adjustable footrests, seat height and spring preload on the fork. Things the KTM 1290 Super Duke R boggles, which begs the question of where its higher price tag comes from. But the result counts. And with a more strongly pretensioned spring at the rear, contacting parts are no longer an issue. Trowel can therefore bend heartily.

The 1.3-liter Vau-Zwo reaches the corner exit like a wrecking ball, catapults the KTM 1290 Super Duke R onto the next straight and hangs on the accelerator. The traction control has its hands full, but regulates a little early. It cannot be adjusted. But it is better not to switch it off in view of the torrent of torque. As much as Christian shuns the naked KTM, more than 1.45.8 min. are not in it. “The sitting position is too inactive, I can’t get enough pressure on the front wheel,” he puffs at the end. It’s not the engine, it’s under a lot of pressure and great fun. But Kelle doesn’t hit the corners as precisely as desired: “I just can’t get where I want to go.” In addition, there is always a little more movement in the KTM than with the other two Nakeds. Especially on the home stretch, where the stirring is much stronger. The brakes, on the other hand, grapple with courage and class, but the ABS should regulate a little later. In addition, the Super Duke R lacks an automatic gearshift to make the bony gear changes faster and smoother.

In the third pairing, the sport bike repels the attack of the undisguised. But they are closer to the racetrack than expected. In any case, there have never been more powerful nakeds off the shelf.

Naked bike

KTM 1290 Super Duke R in the top test

Even the neighbors get curious

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numbers, data, facts

TRILLION

The lap times of the track test.

Bumps, compressions, hanging downhill curves and an endlessly long curve followed by chicane: Alcarrás near Lleida is a really tricky course. Made to put the chassis to the test.

If you look at the recordings of the three pairings, the first thing you notice is how clearly the superbikes convert their performance advantage on the longer straights into higher top speed. But on closer inspection you can see that the naked women are not standing there with their pants down. The Aprilia Tuono V4 R cuts a few corners faster than the Aprilia RSV4 R, especially in the first third of the route.

But Alcarrás is a route on which one thing is particularly important: a lot of feeling for and trust in the front wheel. With all the maneuverability of the naked because of their relaxed sitting position and the larger lever arm of their wide handlebars, are
the athletes have an advantage because of their stiffer chassis. In addition, the forward-leaning riders put much more pressure on the front wheel than their upright colleagues. This results in more intensive feedback from the front wheel and confidence for large lean angles. This becomes particularly clear in the selective, fast downhill links (Vmax in depression 3).

TRILLION

Speed ​​and distance of the track test.

Without crystal clear feedback from the front wheel and the grip, nothing works there. And because there is also a need for lean angles, the Aprilia RSV4 R and KTM 1190 RC8 R in particular take a few meters off their undisguised comrades here.

In principle, the naked bikes have good cards in the chicane (red area). The upright sitting position and wide handlebars support the swift turning. But there the athletes maintain their lead because they tend to drive even tighter lines at the exit of a curve. Only the BMW S 1000 R masters this passage as quickly as the BMW HP4 thanks to the partially active chassis.

Performance measurement

TRILLION

Performance measurement

Clearly recognizable: the street-oriented set-up of the nakeds and the performance-oriented one of the athletes, who add a few more briquettes at high speeds. The torque curve of the KTM 1290 Super Duke R thrones respectfully above all others. And this is how it goes at the exit of the curve. It delivers more power than the RC8 R over the entire speed range.

The BMW S 1000 R also shows the superbike what a rake is when it comes to torque. It is clearly ahead of the HP4 at up to 10,000 rpm, the area relevant on the country road.

At Aprilia, the RSV4 R can only set itself apart from the Tuono V4 R from 9500 rpm, thanks to the variable intake funnel, whose performance curve drops again at 500 rpm before the gently starting limiter, while the RSV4 runs into the limiter quite suddenly.

Set up

  Aprilia
RSV4 R
 
Aprilia
Tuono V4 R
 
Bmw  
HP4
Bmw
S 1000 R
 
KTM
RC8 R
 
KTM
1290 super
Duke R
Fork *
Rebound 6K 5K semi-active
landing gear,
attitude
"Slick"
semi-active
landing gear,
attitude
"Hard"
10K 10K
Pressure level 2K 4K 10K 2K
Spring base 5 U 5 U 2.5 U
Shock absorber *
Rebound 8K 8K semi-active
landing gear,
"Slick" setting, 
Damping + 4
semi-active 
landing gear,
attitude
"Hard"
12 K 10K
Low compression 0.5 U 0.5 U 12 K 3K
Pressure level high 1.5 U 1 U
Stat. Negative travel  5 mm 5 mm 15 mm 12 mm 15 mm 12 mm
* K = clicks; U = revolutions, counted from the closed state;
with spring base: U = revolutions, counted from the open position

Aprilia RSV4 R

www.jkuenstle.de

For a 1000cc, the Aprilia RSV4 R is incredibly compact.

engine

type design
Four-cylinder four-stroke-
65 degree V engine
injection 4 x Ø 48 mm
coupling

Multi-panes-
Oil bath clutch
(Anti-hopping)
Boron x stroke  78.0 x 52.3 mm
Displacement 1000 cc
compression 13.0: 1
power
135.3 kW (184 hp)
at 12,500 rpm
Torque 114 Nm at 10,000 rpm

landing gear

frame Bridge frame made of aluminum
fork Upside-down fork,
Ø 43 mm
Steering damper hydraulically
Brakes front / rear  Ø 320/220 mm
Systems assistance ABS, traction control
bikes 3.50 x 17; 6.00 x 17
tires
120/70 ZR 17;
200/55 ZR 17
Tires
Pirelli
Diablo Supercorsa SC2

mass and weight

wheelbase 1420 mm
Steering head angle 65.5 degrees
trailing 105 mm
Front / rear suspension travel  120/130 mm
Seat height * 840 mm
Weight with full tank * 209 kg
Payload * 197 kg
Tank capacity / reserve 18.5 / 4.0 liters
Service intervals 10,000 km
price 17,703 euros
Price test motorcycle 17,703 euros
Additional costs 287 euros
* MOTORCYCLE measurements

MOTORCYCLE readings

Top speed * 290 km / h
acceleration
0-100 km / h
0-140 km / h
0-200 km / h
3.2 sec
4.5 sec
7.5 sec
Draft
60-100 km / h
100-140 km / h
140-180 km / h
3.7 sec
3.5 sec
3.4 sec
Consumption country road / 100 km  6.1 liters
Reach country road 303 km
* Manufacturer information

Aprilia Tuono V4 R

www.jkuenstle.de

For a naked bike, the seating position on the Aprilia Tuono V4 R is very sporty. Flat handlebar, slightly lower notches than with the RSV4.

engine

www.jkuenstle.de

It has a slightly more moderate geometry than the RSV4 R, which is why the fork has been pushed through one ring further for even more agile handling and more steering precision.

type design

Four-cylinder four-stroke-
65 degree V engine
injection
4 x Ø 48 mm
coupling

Multi-panes-
Oil bath clutch
(Anti-hopping)
Boron x stroke 
78.0 x 52.3 mm
Displacement
1000 cc
compression
13.0: 1
power

125.0 kW (170 hp)
at 11,500 rpm
Torque
112 Nm at 9500 rpm

landing gear

frame
Bridge frame made of aluminum
fork

Upside-down fork,
Ø 43 mm
Steering damper
hydraulically
Brakes front / rear 
Ø 320/220 mm
Systems assistance
ABS, traction control
bikes
3.50 x 17; 6.00 x 17
tires

120/70 ZR 17;
190/55 ZR 17
Tires

Pirelli
Diablo Supercorsa SC2

mass and weight

wheelbase
1445 mm
Steering head angle
63.0 degrees
trailing
107 mm
Front / rear suspension travel 
120/130 mm
Seat height *
840 mm
Weight with full tank *
216 kg
Payload *
185 kg
Tank capacity / reserve
18.5 / 4.0 liters
Service intervals
10,000 km
price
15,213 euros
Price test motorcycle
15,213 euros
Additional costs
287 euros
* MOTORCYCLE measurements

MOTORCYCLE readings

Top speed * 270 km / h
acceleration
0-100 km / h
0-140 km / h
0-200 km / h
3.2 sec
4.9 sec
8.7 sec
Draft
60-100 km / h
100-140 km / h
140-180 km / h
3.8 sec
3.7 sec
3.8 sec
Consumption country road / 100 km 
6.7 liters
Reach country road
276 km
* Manufacturer information

BMW HP4

www.jkuenstle.de

Drive quickly and relaxed, the BMW HP4 makes it possible.

engine

type design

Four-cylinder four-stroke-
In-line engine
injection
4 x Ø 48 mm
coupling

Multi-panes-
Oil bath clutch
(Anti-hopping)
Boron x stroke 
80.0 x 49.7 mm
Displacement
999 cc
compression
13.0: 1
power

142.0 kW (193 hp)
at 13,000 rpm
Torque
112 Nm at 9750 rpm

landing gear

frame
Bridge frame made of aluminum
fork

Upside-down fork,
Ø 46 mm
Steering damper
hydraulically
Brakes front / rear 
Ø 320/220 mm
Systems assistance
ABS, traction control
bikes
3.50 x 17; 6.00 x 17
tires

120/70 ZR 17;
200/55 ZR 17
Tires

Pirelli
Diablo Supercorsa SC2

mass and weight

www.jkuenstle.de

The swing arm pivot point can be changed via inserts, the swing arm is at 8.5 degrees (fully extended) 1.4 degrees steeper than the R.

wheelbase
1423 mm
Steering head angle
66.0 degrees
trailing
99 mm
Front / rear suspension travel 
120/130 mm
Seat height *
810 mm
Weight with full tank *
203 kg
Payload *
205 kg
Tank capacity / reserve
17.5 / 4.0 liters
Service intervals
10,000 km
price
20,800 euros
Price test motorcycle
24,500 euros²
Additional costs
269 ​​euros
* MOTORCYCLE measurements; ²incl. Competition package (3500 euros),
consisting of: HP brake and clutch lever, HP footrest system,
Sponsor sticker set and forged wheels in racing blue; Heated grips (200 euros)

MOTORCYCLE readings

Top speed * 299 km / h
acceleration
0-100 km / h
0-140 km / h
0-200 km / h
3.2 sec
4.6 sec
7.2 sec
Draft
60-100 km / h
100-140 km / h
140-180 km / h
3.3 sec
2.9 sec
2.8 sec
Consumption country road / 100 km 
5.6 liters
Reach country road
313 km
* Manufacturer information

BMW S 1000 R.

www.jkuenstle.de

The engine of the BMW S 1000 R is a real fun maker, but not a quiet one.

engine

www.jkuenstle.de

The pivot point is fixed in the R frame and is three millimeters lower than on the HP4.

type design

Four-cylinder four-stroke-
In-line engine
injection
4 x Ø 48 mm
coupling

Multi-panes-
Oil bath clutch
(Anti-hopping)
Boron x stroke 
80.0 x 49.7 mm
Displacement
999 cc
compression
12.0: 1
power

118.0 kW (161 hp)
at 11,000 rpm
Torque
112 Nm at 9250 rpm

landing gear

frame Bridge frame made of aluminum
fork
Upside-down fork,
Ø 46 mm
Steering damper hydraulically
Brakes front / rear  Ø 320/220 mm
Systems assistance ABS, traction control
bikes 3.50 x 17; 6.00 x 17
tires

120/70 ZR 17;
190/55 ZR 17
Tires

Pirelli
Diablo Supercorsa SC2

mass and weight

www.jkuenstle.de

The traction control of the HP4 can be fine-tuned in several stages from the handlebars, which the S 1000 R cannot.

wheelbase
1439 mm
Steering head angle
65.4 degrees
trailing
99 mm
Front / rear suspension travel 
120/120 mm
Seat height *
820 mm
Weight with full tank *
207 kg
Payload *
200 kg
Tank capacity / reserve
17.5 / 4.0 liters
Service intervals
10,000 km
price
12,800 euros
Price test motorcycle
14,500 euros³
Additional costs
390 euros
* MOTORCYCLE measurements; ³incl. Sports package (790 euros),
consisting of: shift assistant, DTC, cruise control and
Driving Modes Pro; Dynamic package (910 euros), consisting of:
DDC, heated grips, engine spoiler and LED indicators

MOTORCYCLE readings

Top speed * 258 km / h
acceleration
0-100 km / h
0-140 km / h
0-200 km / h
3.3 sec
4.9 sec
8.1 sec
Draft
60-100 km / h
100-140 km / h
140-180 km / h

2.8 sec
2.9 sec
2.8 sec

Consumption country road / 100 km 
5.9 liters Reach country road
297 km * Manufacturer information

KTM 1190 RC8 R.

www.jkuenstle.de

With its angular exterior, the KTM 1190 RC8 R opened a new design era at KTM.

engine

type design

Two-cylinder four-stroke-
75 degree V engine
injection
2 x Ø 52 mm
coupling

Multi-panes-
Oil bath clutch
(Anti-hopping)
Boron x stroke 
105.0 x 69.0 mm
Displacement
1195 cc
compression
13.5: 1
power

129.0 kW (175 hp)
at 10,250 rpm
Torque
127 Nm at 8000 rpm

landing gear

frame Steel tubular frame
fork

Upside-down fork,
Ø 43 mm
Steering damper hydraulically
Brakes front / rear  Ø 320/220 mm
Systems assistance
bikes 3.50 x 17; 6.00 x 17
tires

120/70 ZR 17;
190/55 ZR 17
Tires

Pirelli
Diablo Supercorsa SC2

measurements and weight

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The suspension of the KTM RC8 R.

wheelbase
1425 mm
Steering head angle
66.7 degrees
trailing
97 mm
Front / rear suspension travel 
120/120 mm
Seat height *
805-825 mm
Weight with full tank *
205 kg
Payload *
175 kg
Tank capacity / reserve
16.5 / 3.5 liters
Service intervals
10,000 km
price
16,545 euros
Price test motorcycle
16,545 euros
Additional costs
200 euros
* MOTORCYCLE measurements

MOTORCYCLE readings

Top speed * 287 km / h
acceleration
0-100 km / h
0-140 km / h
0-200 km / h
3.2 sec
4.8 sec
8.2 sec
Draft
60-100 km / h
100-140 km / h
140-180 km / h
3.1 sec
3.2 sec
3.3 sec
Consumption country road / 100 km 
5.6 liters
Reach country road
295 km
* Manufacturer information

KTM 1290 Super Duke R.

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The KTM 1290 Super Duke R does not have a spring strut redirection with an eccentric to adjust the rear height like the RC8 R..

engine

type design

Two-cylinder four-stroke-
75 degree V engine
injection
2 x Ø 56 mm
coupling

Multi-panes-
Oil bath clutch
(Anti-hopping)
Boron x stroke 
108.0 x 71.0 mm
Displacement
1301 cc
compression
13.2: 1
power

127.0 kW (173 hp)
at 8870 rpm
Torque
144 Nm at 6500 rpm

landing gear

frame Steel tubular frame
fork

Upside-down fork,
Ø 48 mm
Steering damper hydraulically
Brakes front / rear  Ø 320/240 mm
Systems assistance ABS, traction control
bikes 3.50 x 17; 6.00 x 17
tires

120/70 ZR 17;
190/55 ZR 17
Tires

Pirelli
Diablo Supercorsa SC2

mass and weight

wheelbase
1482 mm
Steering head angle
65.1 degrees
trailing
107 mm
Front / rear suspension travel 
125/156 mm
Seat height *
830 mm
Weight with full tank *
213 kg
Payload *
193 kg
Tank capacity / reserve
18.0 / 3.5 liters
Service intervals
15,000 km
price
15,495 euros
Price test motorcycle
15,495 euros
Additional costs
200 euros
* MOTORCYCLE measurements

MOTORCYCLE readings

Top speed * 290 km / h
acceleration
0-100 km / h
0-140 km / h
0-200 km / h
3.3 sec
4.9 sec
8.8 sec
Draft
60-100 km / h
100-140 km / h
140-180 km / h
3.4 sec
3.4 sec
3.8 sec
Consumption country road / 100 km 
6.0 liters
Reach country road
300 km
* Manufacturer information

Conclusion

65 Pictures

Pictures: Aprilia RSV4 R, Tuono V4 R, BMW HP4, S 1000 R, KTM RC8 R, 1290 Super Duke R in the test

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