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There are a few of us that don't have to own 996/998/999s or travel to Italy to know a bit about bikes and fully understand what and why we bought a specific bike like the Capo.... plusssss some of us can understand the potential of a the bike like the Capo that is far beyond the marketing niche the manufacturer and marketing talking heads intended.
My point is very simple.........I was surprised the Capo stayed up with the ST4 on rollons. I guess I was naive and thought for 15k the 112hp ST4 would be stronger on a rollon starting at 5,000 rpm or so....I was wrong.... and admit it now that you have enlighted us with the technicals, though I am still amazed at the result.>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Mike, forgive me if I sounded like I was bragging - for in truth I was. I had just returned from the trip of my lifetime - my wife gave me this trip for my 50th birthday - and all I can say is I am still in wonder over the whole thing, so if I sounded like I was gloating a little, please forgive, OK?
However, at the risk of being contentious, my point was even simpler - I would have been astounded IF YOU HADN"T beat the ST4 in a roll-on. The ST4 has a smaller engine (916) is LESS powerful, heavier, and geared higher than the Capo so there should have been no contest. The 112hp figure you quoted, is the claimed hp for the "s" version, a much stronger bike with the 996 motor. That is not the "ST4" which, in the real world, was not much more than the 2-valve ST2 in performance and then ONLY at the upper end.
believe me, I'm not beating up on the Capo - I bought one! I owned BOTH the ST4 and the Capo at the same time, briefly. I bought my Capo while working at MotoBritalia in Atlanta (Hi Ergo!) after lowsiding and waiting for plastic bits to come in for my ST4. I already owned a 996 Superbike and so after riding the Capo for awhile, I decided it did more for me in combination wiht the 996 than the ST4 did, and so I sold the ST4. I still have the Capo and I still have the 996. I also have a 1980 Ducati Darmah which I will be bringing to MidOhio Vintage Days and hope to cross paths with you if it works out.
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One of the amazing things about motorcycling is that there are those rare and fun times when things just dont turn out the way most of us think or have been told it should be.
Ian gave good examples and just one example I have is one of the fastest guys at Deals Gap rides a Goldwing which has put plenty of the latest and greatest sport bikes on the trailer .....and I am sure everyone else has many other examples.
Owning the latest, greatest and most expensive bike doesnt ensure one always comes home first because we all know an above average rider on an average bike will always pass a below average rider on an above average bike....it's just the way it is and that might be reason the ST4 also got whupppped going 8 miles up to the Blue Ridge in the twisties and straights..... and again coming down the hill.>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
True. True. But don't believe toooo much about that Goldie at Deals. Yeah, he's notorious, I live in Alpharetta, GA, just south that area, and yeah that guy can embarass squids on those roads but that says more about the general piss-poor skills of the majority of "sport" riders. Trust me, I see it all the time. Most of these wankers are point-and-shoot artists with 1" chicken-strips and they live as legends in their own mind but when they meet up with that particular rider and his familiarity with THAT road, well it's pretty predictable. But honestly, if that Goldie tried to hang with an equal rider on a set-up sport bike, well, I don't care how you spread it, you can't make chicken salad out of chicken shit...
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When I was young no one could go to the dealer and buy a bike like the 996 ......if you wanted a bike like this during that era; you built it yourself or bought a road racer someone else built and slowly set it up to do what you wanted.... and add some lights to make riding it on the street possible>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Been There Done That. I started in the late 60's, as everyone did on dirt-bikes, mini-bikes, step-throughs and scooters but I cut my road riding teeth on a 1976 Honda XL250 with "Universal" trials tires. This was the perfect bike for a Bradford County, PA boy to learn how to make a slow bike go fast. I got used to how it felt when those nubs started finger-walking to the outside of a turn cuz the brakes sure as shit wouldn't slow or stop you. Thrown into that mix was a CL, a vicious little RD400, and a couple of CB450 barnyard basketcases married into one working bike until I was able to move up to my first real road bike - a 1980 Honda 750F. Yessir, 549lbs.dryweight, bias ply tires, with all of 75 horsepower, and it was the trickest thing out there at that time for roadcarving.
I raced this bike stock in WERA and AAMRR races in the NorthEast, sometimes in the South, and with 1" extended Works Performance shocks I learned how to grind down the footpegs into nubs, and the engine covers till they leaked oil. Just this weekend while digging around in my parts box, I came across one of my old engine cover screws from that bike, ground down to a bevel. I'll bring it with me to Vintage days.
On the weekend that I threw my F-bike away in turn 4 at Bridgehampton Raceway on Long Island, NY, I had the Pirelli Phanom tires worn down to the cords on the edges. I raced that bike in 24 races that year and trophied 19 times, and all but 3 of those trophies say "National" on them. If this sounds like so much bragging, well, so be it, but I don't think it's a bad thing to establish your bonafides so anyway, this is who I am.
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I rode a BSA Goldstar Road Racer on the roads which was rewarding in many ways and here is a story of how it was way back then.
http://www.thumperpage.com/articles/rocket.html >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
well, that's pretty cool, nice article. Motobritalia is also a triumph dealer and we had a Triton and several very sweet bikes of that vintage pass through there. neat bikes but i found myself, early on, worshipping at the altar of the Italian brands - Ducati (pre- cagiva and beyond), Moto-Guzzi, and now Aprilia as well. I still lust for a red '79 CBX, though (shhhhh....)
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Most importantly during this time, I learned alot about what worked, didnt work and setting bikes up since this was the only option vs buying the latest and greatest speed/handling option via mail order.>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
BTDT. See above.
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I am sure of one thing.........that Goldie and most super singles would leave a Multistrada in the twisties for dead ....and who among us would think that was possible.>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
aww, Mike! and we were doing so good together until you said that, too... Look, I tried real hard to let that go by but that's just ridiculous! If you had ANY idea what you just said, you wouldn't have said it.
First of all, ***ASSUMING RIDERS OF EQUAL SKILL AND BIKE TUNING AND SET-UP, ETC.*** on any road you want to choose, except maybe a dragstrip or a 4-lane, even an SV650 Suzuki would run off and hide from
either of those bikes. I know, I know, that guy's a legend around there, and yes I know, the older we get the the faster we were, but please, don't say that in knowledgable company or you'll get laughed out of the joint.
Now, just to make it a little easier to visualize, does anyone disagree that a 134hp 996 Racetuned Ducati would have little trouble beating an SV650? No? OK. Well, I can honestly, with a straight face, cross my heart, in front of witnesses and with a loaded gun pointed at my head, tell you, that a Multistrada can show it's ass to said 996 in the mountains.
Believe it! My 996, Ducati's Multistrada at the North American roll-out held in Greenville, TN, same roads, same bikes, same riders, switched bikes, switched riders, whatever. DON'T bet aginst a Multistrada except on a racetrack. Yes, I had the Multistrada on the racetrack and that is not it's element. 3 laps on the circuit at Magione and the DS motor got pulled down the long straight by the 4-valve Superbike motors, but wow, what it does coming off a corner...
Have you ever ridden one, Mike? Hard? As in drifting the tires hard? If you've ever been to the Ducati factory (I have), and ridden with the Ducati factory test riders (I have), and ridden through the same mountain passes - Futa, Borgo - that the Multistrada was conceptualized, designed, and developed in (I have) then it's obvious that there is probably FEW OR NO better bikes for this purpose! (Uhhh, except for maybe a heavily breathed-on Husqvarna 650 Supermoto race-bike-with-lights, that the Italian importer was riding around with us on. That thing was like a pitbull on crack and I never turned my back on it....)
Look, I'm sorry Mike, I'm not trying to be argumentative. But there's opinion, and there's fact and I just can't let something go by that I know to be inaccurate. I mean, I like a good fish-story as much as the next guy but that's why they're funny - the fish GOT AWAY! YOU CAN"T PROVE IT! Well, with these type of statements, it is easy to prove. It's simple to just try it out in the real world instead of supposing something SHOULD be the way you think it should. go ride a Multistrada. I don't feel the need to own one (yet) but it's an awesome motorcycle. no Baloney Sticks...
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Thanks for your comments....I hope you will allow me to disagree with some, but above all else I certainly appreciate you taking the time join this thread with your insight and experiences. Thanks
Are you going to be at Vintage Days?>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
and yes, I will be at Vintage Days so hopefully we can tip a mug and laugh about this, OK?