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MOTORCYCLE DESIGN TROPHY 2005 (a little retroactive, I guess)
insidebikes.com ^
| 10 February 2006
Posted on 02/10/2006 1:07:50 PM PST by martin_fierro
MOTORCYCLE DESIGN TROPHY 2005
10 February 2006
The overall winner of the 2005 Motorcycle Design of the Year has been announced;
The winner was the Ducati Hypermotard concept bike, with the runner-up bike being the Yamaha MT-OS. Other bikes which were highly rated by a panel of motorcycle designers included the Yamaha R6, MotoCzysz C1, Aprilia RS125 and the Victory Vision. Presentation of the awards will take place later in the year - full details will be announced on the MDA website.
TOPICS: Chit/Chat; Hobbies; Outdoors
KEYWORDS: ducati; ducatihypermotard; harleydavidson; honda; hooligan; hooligans; kawasaki; motorcycle; motorcycles; polaris; suzuki; victory; yamaha
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To: BansheeBill
PS I like your handle ~ do have a Yamaha Quad?
41
posted on
02/11/2006 11:00:55 AM PST
by
blackie
(Be Well~Be Armed~Be Safe~Molon Labe!)
To: BraveMan
42
posted on
02/11/2006 11:05:40 AM PST
by
StarfireIV
(John Galt was an optimist)
To: martin_fierro
It should be called the Victory Cylon.
43
posted on
02/11/2006 11:06:18 AM PST
by
StarfireIV
(John Galt was an optimist)
To: Dark Skies
"Git yer one-wheel runnin. Head out on the highway..." Um, perhaps not.
44
posted on
02/11/2006 11:07:26 AM PST
by
StarfireIV
(John Galt was an optimist)
To: BraveMan
Does that thing have any turn in the front wheel??
Impressive design, Bellissimo!
To: StarfireIV
46
posted on
02/11/2006 12:13:32 PM PST
by
Dark Skies
("A lie gets halfway around the world before the truth has a chance to get its pants." -- Churchill)
To: JoeSixPack1
It's a variant of the Di Fazio system. Bimota has been using this design for a while now. From what I've read the first Bimota design way back when had this nasty habit of locking in place under certain conditions, making things quite exciting for a moment or two . . .
An author by the name of Tony Foale penned an article many years ago called "STEER FOR THE FUTURE", essentially a primer for alternative motorcycle front suspension systems. A copy of the article can be found here.
http://www.tonyfoale.com/Articles/Steer/STEER.htm
IMHO, telescoping forks, long the mainstay in current motorcycle design, have several design flaws making them a lousy choice for motorcycle front suspensions. Braking severely compromises suspension performance and steering geometry is constantly all over the map. All manner of gedgets and geegaws have been added over the years (dampers, anti-dive valving, supplemental air/oil reservoirs, etc.) to assist this fundamentally flawed system. I suspect Product Liability concerns have prevented manufacturers from straying too far from the current telescopic fork design.
Some time ago (15+ years if memory serves), Harley-Davidson was sued over their "shopping cart" steering geometry, used on Baggers and Road Kings to this day. A friend of mine was on the jury. A newbie rider with about a week's seat time on his new Electra-Glide (!) hit a big pothole on a gravel road, putting the bike into a big tank slapper which pitched him off. He was paralyzed in the accident, and blamed his injuries on the unconventional steering geometry (which puts the axle behind the steering pivot). My friend the juror told me HD didn't even try to defend themselves in the court case.
The newbie won the case and was awarded several million dollars. Harley never changed the geometry though, which is why the heavy Baggers are so easy to deal with at parking lot speeds. They did however limit turn-to-turn travel (which I found out about the hard way).
47
posted on
02/11/2006 12:59:41 PM PST
by
BraveMan
To: MarkL
You are riding what I'm riding. I want one of those fuel injected DS1000 motors in my bike though!
48
posted on
02/11/2006 10:07:50 PM PST
by
SFC Chromey
(We are at war with Islamofascism)
To: BraveMan
I nearly peed my pants when I first saw one of these at Alice's in Woodside.
49
posted on
02/11/2006 10:09:57 PM PST
by
SFC Chromey
(We are at war with Islamofascism)
To: SFC Chromey
And you're wearing the sort of leather that I'd like (maybe not quite the same style or colors, though). Helmut's people do some really nice work at Helimot, and though I've never bought their leathers (they don't make cows big enough! lol), about 4 or 5 years ago, I bought a set of Held summer gloves from them, and I love them, though they're pretty much worn out.
Mark
50
posted on
02/12/2006 5:52:17 PM PST
by
MarkL
(When Kaylee says "No power in the `verse can stop me," it's cute. When River says it, it's scary!)
To: MarkL
Helmut is so cool. I started with gloves, and windowshopped the suits he had on the rack...drooling like a starved puppy. I bought my first suit from him when I raced AFM back in the early 90's. It cost about $1300. I rode a Kawi so it had to match the custom paint (green of course).
This one ran nearly $2500. Same solid quality as always. Sold my 'old' green/white suit through their shop. Never had a bad deal with them in almost 20 years I've been going to him.
51
posted on
02/12/2006 10:43:52 PM PST
by
SFC Chromey
(We are at war with Islamofascism)
To: uglybiker
Now THAT'S impressive. Only wish they didn't have to price it in a category which makes it a plaything of the priviledged.
52
posted on
02/20/2006 10:04:12 PM PST
by
StarfireIV
(John Galt was an optimist)
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