Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

REVIEW OF THE YEAR’S MOST-LOVED MACHINES

- BY GEOFF HILL

Astonishin­gly, none of the bike magazines over Christmas have dealt with one of the key issues of the festive season – namely, how to make Brussels sprouts edible.

The answer is to remove the bitter hearts, boil for three minutes, then stir-fry with bacon and pine nuts. Lovely. Works with leftovers as well.

There, having got that sorted out, let’s move on to which of the bikes I’ve ridden this year I’ve loved most. Drum roll, please, Cyril...

Every time I ride a GS, I’m reminded of how well they do everything, and this latest version is the best yet. It has flawless handling even at walking pace, the engine’s up from 1170cc to 1254cc, and power up from 125bhp to 136bhp, and you’ve got significan­tly more grunt at your disposal for effortless overtakes. A very honourable mention for the fast and nimble Ducati Multistrad­a 950 which I actually preferred to its heavier big brother the 1260.Best

Furiously fast though it is, the safety systems of cornering ABS, slide control, wheelie control and traction control are so good that you’d need to be a complete idiot to come a cropper. Incredible, stunning and completely mad, but the sort of madness you could happily live with.

In 2011, it shocked all the journalist­s on the launch with brutal accelerati­on and incredible handling thanks to a sports profile back tyre. This latest version is even better, with power up slightly and a much flatter torque curve, and with a slightly shorter wheelbase and steeper fork rake than the original, it has even more precise handling.

One word sums up the RC 390: hilarious. Only KTM could pack so much fun into such a small package.

Engine up from 2.3 litres to 2.5 and 40kg lighter equals laugh-out-loud accelerati­on and handling which is astonishin­g on such a monster.

The previous version was a superb bike anyway, and when the design team at Hinckley sat down to improve on it, four little words were etched into their noggins like acid on steel: light, fast, agile and stylish. They’ve succeeded on all four. It’s the lightest bike in its class, at a piffling 179kg fully fuelled, and with scalpel-like handling, and power and torque up 9% in the mid range, it’s the best naked sports bike in the world.

 ??  ?? Best big bike
Best small bike
Best big bike Best small bike
 ??  ?? Geoff Hill @ghillster Fraser Addecott @Mirrorbike­r
Geoff Hill @ghillster Fraser Addecott @Mirrorbike­r
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 ??  ?? Bike of the year
Bike of the year

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