MCN

When two tribes go to war – SP-1 vs 996

It was the superbike battle of a generation as HRC took on Ducati

- By Jon Urry MCN CONTRIBUTO­R

It is not often that the might of HRC gets rattled, but in 2000 this was the case. Despite dominating the premier class of racing with Mick Doohan and the NSR500, Honda were being given a very public bloody nose in the increasing­ly popular World Superbike series by Ducati. Huge R&D investment in the homologati­on-special RC45 had only led to a single title since being introduced in 1994 compared to Ducati’s five and head-to-head the Bologna bike was handing Honda their backsides with 81 race wins compared to 33. In HRC’s mind the issue was not their V4, it was WSB’s rules which allowed V-twins a 250cc advantage over the 750cc fours, so they decided to prove a point… “There was definitely a bit of needle between Ducati and Honda,” remembers Dave Hancock, who was Honda’s Chief Developmen­t Rider at the time, “and there was certainly a feeling of wanting to prove a point but there was more to the SP-1 than that. People see HRC and think it is all about racing but HRC is actually Honda’s R&D area and they take on engineerin­g projects to learn from them. The guys saw Ducati literally swapping an engine after every race and wanted to demonstrat­e that they could build a reliable V-twin superbike – so they did!”

All systems go

With the V-twin superbike project greenlight­ed, the developmen­t team were given a tight timeframe of less than three years to complete the bike, which led to a few issues and is actually the reason why the SP-2 exits, but more of that later.

The fact Honda had already built a big V-twin in the shape of the VTR1000 Firestorm gave them a good foundation as despite the SP-1 having a totally different engine, Honda had already encountere­d a few of the quirks that you get on bigcapacit­y twins that you don’t find on inline fours or V4s.

“We had a terrible time on the VTR trying to sort out its fuelling,” remembers Dave Hancock. “It would stall on the over-run into roundabout­s, which was something we had never encountere­d with an engine before and we used all this knowledge on the SP-1.”

But with the SP-1 Honda needed more than a road bike motor, they needed a superbike engine, which led to more issues.

During the SP-1’s developmen­t reliabilit­y was a concern with crankcases and conrods unable to deal with the huge demands placed upon them through not only the 170bhp-plus the WSB race engines were producing, but also their need to rev to hit these power figures and do so with a huge 100mm diameter piston. On the road bike this wasn’t an issue as it only revved to 10,000rpm but the HRC-kitted bikes were hitting 11,500rpm.

A tale of two halves

“I was testing the SP-1 in early 2000 at Eastern Creek,” remembers WSB legend Colin Edwards. “I headed out and three laps in the engine just went ‘waahh’ on the start/finish straight.

‘There was definitely a bit of needle between Ducati and Honda’

I coasted in and the rod had literally sawn the engine in half – you could see all the way through it!”

But this was nothing to the challenges the road bike developmen­t team were facing. “The SP-1’s chassis was a nightmare,” remembers Hancock. “the bike sat quite flat with little weight on the front and that caused it to wag its head a lot. We had to jack the back end up, change its suspension, so many things. Then, just when we thought we had it right, we took it to a track and it under-steered terribly, running wide out of corners. But by that point production was ready to start and so we had to let it go as it was.” Despite all the issues, the SP-1 road bike hit the streets in March 2000 with a price of £10,000, which was £1000 less than a Ducati 996 Biposto, and Edwards lined up on the WSB grid in South Africa on the Castrol Honda SP-1 alongside Ducati-mounted Carl Fogarty. Which is when fate played its hand…

Unfinished business

Edwards won both of the opening WSB races, giving the SP-1 a dream start. At the next round Fogarty’s career was ended when he collided with Robert Ulm and later that year Yamaha’s Nori Haga, who was Edwards’ closest title challenger, failed a drugs test after weight-loss drug ephedrine was discovered in

‘The rod had literally sawn the engine in half’

his system and he was excluded from one meeting’s results and banned from two rounds. Against this background, Edwards won eight rounds on the SP-1 (more than any other rider) and took the 2000 WSB title by 65 points from Haga. Honda had proved their point. Or had they? With road bike sales slow due to criticisms about the bike’s handling and fuelinject­ion and some dismissing the WSB championsh­ip win due to the unusual circumstan­ces surroundin­g it, Honda did still have a bit of unfinished business.

“The truth is that we never totally finished developing the SP-1 road bike because we ran out of time,” admits Hancock.

“The factory had set a date for production and at that time that was all that mattered. The reason the SP-2 came out just two years after the SP-1 was to correct the issues we had. The SP-2 is the finished version of the SP-1, the bike it should have been in the first place if we had been given more time!” And the race bike? Having lost the 2001 WSB title to Troy Bayliss on the Ducati 998, Honda made one final stand against Ducati and in an epic duel that went down to the last lap of the last round at Imola, Edwards gave Honda their second V-twin WSB title in 2002. This win drew a line under Honda’s V-twin superbike story and the HRC team left the WSB paddock, only returning in an official capacity 19 years later with the inline four Fireblade. Point thoroughly proven, Honda could build a reliable and Ducati-beating V-twin!

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Fed up with Ducati benefittin­g from WSB rules, Honda launched their very own V-twin
Fed up with Ducati benefittin­g from WSB rules, Honda launched their very own V-twin
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? HRC rose to the V-twin challenge
HRC rose to the V-twin challenge
 ??  ?? Edwards was a double champ on the V-twin Honda
Edwards was a double champ on the V-twin Honda
 ??  ?? The SP-2 regained the title for Honda in 2002 after an epic Imola battle
The SP-2 regained the title for Honda in 2002 after an epic Imola battle
 ??  ?? Still so engaging out on the road
Still so engaging out on the road
 ??  ?? The Ducati has old-school dials
The Ducati has old-school dials
 ??  ?? The prettiest rear-end ever?
The prettiest rear-end ever?

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