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See what Ducati’s new V4 will look like - start saving

- By Richard Newland DEPUTY EDITOR @MCNNews motorcycle­news

With speculatio­n rife that everyone from HarleyDavi­dson to Triumph to various Indian twowheeled giants, are lining up to buy Ducati from the beleaguere­d post-Dieselgate Volkswagen Group – we shouldn’t forget that the really important news is the imminent arrival of their new V4 superbike. Driven by the firm’s desire to recapture their World Superbike domination, and in support of their recent renewed focus and resurgent success in MotoGP, the new V4 will be a road bike evolved from the track – rather than a road bike turned racer. The firm’s Panigale has been a rampant success in showrooms, and no slouch on the track in the hands of Shane Byrne and Chaz Davies, but the race department needs access to more than the current 1198cc V-twin Panigale R can muster. With that bike already developing an impressive 193bhp in road trim – and a claimed 215-plus bhp race-ready – the firm has to be chasing a tangible step-up, which can’t come from weight loss, so has to come from power and control. The likelihood is that we’ll see more like 205-210bhp in road trim, but over 230bhp for race teams. With the Panigale R’s enormous 112mm pistons slapping away at 11,750rpm (116mm in the stocker, redlining at 10,500rpm), the Superquadr­o is already at its outer limits for bore and rev ceiling harmony. More revs mean more power, and that’s far more achievable with multi-cylinder engines – but an inline four is too ordinary for Ducati, hence the move to a V4.

One version, or two?

All the indication­s suggest that we’ll get two engine versions across a three-bike range. The current R is 1198cc, while the base and S models are 1285cc – and we expect Ducati to continue this tried and tested route. What is beyond any doubt is that there will have to be a 1000cc version in order to comply with racing regula- tions for four cylinder bikes, and that those same regulation­s will force the release of a road-going homologati­on version. Further still, this means that the new R model will have to cost less than 40,000 Euros (circa £35,500) to comply with World Superbike rulings. The race teams may force another significan­t point of difference, too. While all three test mules spied so far have featured the single-sided swingarm we’ve come to expect on Ducati’s flagship (ever since the massive 1098 climb-down in a post-999 world) – there’s a chance the R will boast a twin-spar item. Why? Race teams want it; the V4’s power will be considerab­ly increased over the Panigale which is harder to tame with a single-sided swingarm; and both the MotoGP bike and the original Desmosedic­i road bike also had convention­al swingarms. The fact that we’ve seen two different test mules, each with different exhausts and shock positions, suggests this is very likely to happen. Race teams want more torsional control and tuning flexibilit­y, and the weight of a single-sided swingarm that’s beefy enough to cope with 225+bhp could well give them some sleepless nights. In contrast, road bike buyers want the single-sided look that has come to define Ducati’s flagship superbike. Add this to the move back towards a more substantia­l frame knitting the engine to the headstock, and the new bike looks set to mark a return to more convention­al control.

Chicken or egg?

The base road bike and the S model are expected to be unveiled at the Milan show this Autumn, while the R model homologati­on special could be as much as a year later. Ducati’s WSB racing boss Paolo Ciabatti confirmed: “We will race with the Panigale in 2017 and 2018,” while Ducati CEO Claudio Domenicali confirmed that the V4 “would absolutely race in WSB”. In terms of price, we’d expect the new base model V4 to cost around £19,000, with the S model arriving at around £23,500. The R, when it eventually arrives for 2019, seems likely to bust the £30k mark.

‘We should see this bike make 210bhp in road trim and 230bhp in race trim’

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 ??  ?? Ducati’s new V4 has been spied in secret tests The new V4 will be a game-changer on the road and on the track
Ducati’s new V4 has been spied in secret tests The new V4 will be a game-changer on the road and on the track

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