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The bikes of 2010: Ducati 1198 F10

Monday, 20 December 2010 23:28 GMT
The bikes of 2010: Ducati 1198 F10
Funnily enough, the machine that changed most through 2010 may well have been the bike that started out almost exactly as it ended 2009 - the factory Ducati.


Factory spec exhausts gave a little more power compared to 2009; with the ever-updated ride-by-wire system helping the riders control it.


The only big twin in WSBK racing has internal engine architecture of 106 mm x 67.9 mm, making it a torque monster at low and medium revs, despite the adoption of 50mm air restrictors, which are fitted by regulation. The engine is fuelled by a Magneti Marelli Marvel4 EFI unit, and spits petrol via IWP 162 + IWP 189 injectors into each inlet tract. The top power (at the crankshaft) is a claimed 200CV 11,000rpm.


With two reductions of the weight penalty for twins coming along through the year, the Ducatis went from 168kg, to 165kg, then to their current allowable 162kg. The official team claimed it was still just less than a kilo heaver than the 162kg which was possible. A full titanium Termignoni exhaust replaced the steel one used in the earlier rounds, plus lighter fork outers, a smaller battery and a smattering of other titanium parts helped get the 168kg down to 162.8kg.


Öhlins pressurised suspension was all leading edge; TRVP25 or TTX25 forks with 42mm diameters. The rear shock was the RSP40 unit, with a top-out damper fitted.


Brakes were Brembo all the way, with radial P4X34-38 callipers and 320mm floating discs. The rear disc was a 218mm diameter floating version, with a P2X34 calliper.


The Althea Ducati, which won three races in the hands of Carlos Checa in 2010, was of a similar spec to the factory machines, but used customer level Öhlins suspension, and was not quite as light when the rules allowed the drop to 162kg.


Still a devastatingly effective weapon in the right hands, the Ducati took six wins in 2010 in all, and was second in the Manufacturers' Championship.