MV AGUSTA BRUTALE 800
Breaking cover in November 2012, the MV Agusta Rivale 800 is the Italian brand’s newest addition to its motorbike family, and features a new 800cc three-cylinder engine, which also powers the mid-rangeMV Agusta Brutale 800.
Whereas most brands debut a model at the INTERMOT or EICMA shows in the fall, and then release that models in the spring of the following year, MV Agusta has a slightly different timeline, which could make things interesting for when the Rivale actually makes it onto dealership floors.
Our history lesson starts with the MV Agusta F3, which debuted after a long bout of teasing at the 2010 EICMA show. Slated to be available a year later, the MV Agusta F3 didn’t enter production until February 2012, and even then that was only the premium MV Agusta F3 Serie Oro. June would see the arrival of the F3 pushed back again in the USA, with bikes finally arriving in the early fall.
The MV Agusta Brutale 675 was a similar story, with the bike’s existence leaked in August 2010. Over a year later at the 2011 EICMA show, MV Agusta debuted the near-production Brutale 675 to the assembled press and two-wheeled enthusiasts. Now almost a year and a half later from that point in time, the 2013 MV Agusta Brutale 675 is set to hit US dealers in April of this year, though that arrival date could get pushed into the summer months, if history is any indication.
That brings us to MV Agusta’s latest announcement that the MV Agusta Rivale 800 will start production in the second-half of this year, which depending on what month that actually ends up being, could make the Rivale 800 a 2014 model for the Italian brand, though we suspect MV Agusta will have another new model at the 2013 EICMA show to distract us from that fact.
It’s not that MV Agusta makes bad motorcycles (though the F3 should never have been let out of the factory with its originally fueling issues), in fact that company is making some of the most compelling bikes in the industry right now. However, when you create a reputation of missing deadlines and producing vaporware, it only takes away from the forward-motion you have created. Other brands would do well to learn from this lesson.
As the old saying goes, if you want to extract all of the potential from an engine, stroke it! Well, that’s exactly what MV Agusta has done with its three-cylinder Brutale 675 to create a new, higher-performing 800cc middleweight naked bike.
MV’s engineers kept bore at 79mm and increased stroke from 45.9mm to 54.3. Everything else in the engine went untouched. It has identical 31.8mm inlet and 26.7mm exhaust valves and even breathes through the same 47mm throttle bodies. Because the combustion chamber is unchanged (theoretically, the heads interchange), compression increased from 12.0:1 to a rather staggering 13.3:1, which is even higher than that of the fully faired 675 F3.
The result is an engine that feels significantly different than that of the 675. Claimed power has gone up from 110 horsepower at 12,500 rpm to a substantial 125 hp at a relatively moderate 11,600 rpm, while torque jumped from 48 foot-pounds at a peaky 12,000 rpm to 60 ft.-lb. at just 8600 rpm. With peak torque and power separated by just 3000 rpm, it’s no surprise this engine feels so flexible.
As in most higher-spec Italian bikes, electronics plays an important role. The Brutale 800 is equipped with what MV calls “Full Ride-by-Wire,” with three throttle-response settings (Performance, Road and Rain) and eight traction-control choices. Tipping the scales at a claimed 368 pounds, the Brutale 800 weighs the same as the 675. Rolling gear got one upgrade: Pirelli Diablo Rosso IIs have replaced lower-performance Pirelli Angels.
For my track-only test, the tarmac was dry but temperature never exceeded 50 degrees. After a few get-acquainted laps, I asked the MV technicians to lower the tire pressures slightly so the compound would work better. Otherwise, I left the bike as it was delivered.
This new 800cc Triple is a monster of efficiency. It never coughed or shuddered, even when I opened the throttle below 3000 rpm in sixth gear. That is incredible because the final transmission ratio is much taller than that of the 675. In fact, at 60 mph, the bigger engine is turning only 4000 rpm. On the 675, I had to wait until 7000 rpm to hear the exhaust note switch from a gentle purr to the scream of a real MV Agusta Triple. On the 800, the sound is exciting from nearly any rpm.
The CRC-developed chassis is one of the best balanced I have ever tested, and the extra power and torque of the 800cc Triple extract the most out of it. Though set on the slightly harsh side, the fully adjustable Marzocchi 43mm fork performed superbly, as did the Sachs shock. The bike skidded just a bit on the uneven surface of a fast bend negotiated at a whisker below 120 mph, which is a speed that could be broken with ease down the track’s short main straight.
At the end of an increasingly wild ride, I can think of only two shortcomings: 1) Riding with my toes on the footpegs, I caught the heels of my size-10 1/2 boots on the passenger pegs; and 2) under hard braking, the rear wheel locks easily.
0 komentar:
Posting Komentar