So here are my very personal impressions of what is, in brief, dynamically the best motorcycle I have ever ridden; visually, one that I find to be something of a curate's egg and which I found ergonomically, er, perplexing. Of course, your mileage may vary…
First off, an abortive attempt to ride the Pro Twins demonstrator – I booked a test ride; I confirmed by telephone on the morning; I rode 50 miles to South Godstone. To find their 999 demonstrator still upstairs in the showroom, sans mirrors and wearing a set of shagged race intermediates. No apology. No deal. Pity – they're a good bunch.
Next stop is at Ducati London South, the shiny new Ducati flagship store in the festering hinterland of Croydon. Purley Way Crescent is not La Promenade des Anglais. They are however organised, helpful and offer a good deal: halfway decent trade-in and a discount on parts and accessories. They're also happy to book a test ride, So, time to step outside and confront the beast…
And then there's the exhaust. Ah, the exhaust. So close, yet so far – Signor Terreblanche should be ashamed of himself for perpetrating this monstrosity. If you want to see high level cans done right, look at anything by Tamburini, or the FP1, the Aprilia Futura or even the Multistrada. Hang on, that last is one of his...
It is, quite simply, a baboon's backside, but without the sexual promise (for other baboons, of course – it's worth making that quite clear). Just how much work would it have taken to make the outlets larger and make their shape actually fit the lines of the outside of the can? All of that is before you start it up. Now it gets worse – any 748/9xx, even on standard cans, produces a pleasant bass burble with undertones of hunting lion. This thing however manages to sound like two hamsters having a farting contest in a tin bucket. It would have to go. More carbon fibre needed, this time by Sgrs Termignoni…Finally, on to the curving dual carriageway of the Caterham by-pass: up the hill, past a few errant reps with cellphones stuck to their ears and make the latest turn-in I dare for the long left-hander. No fuss, no drama, no effort. Repeat for a while to M25, thence the open curves of the A22, finally doubling back on rising and falling twisty roads through the forests and farmland around Godstone before heading back into The Smoke. By then, I've got a little of the information overload from a new machine sorted and am actually checking the speedo. Ooooh – this machine takes the Ducati Deception – the ability to always be travelling 20mph faster than you thought you were – to entirely new levels and places, officer.
Corners, bounces and wobbles: It does, it doesn't and it doesn't. This is, without doubt, the best handling motorcycle I have ever ridden – it manages to turn much more quickly than previous models whilst also being utterly, unflappably stable. it's also possible to brake in turns without being fired out at a tangent (yes, yes, I know, but let he or she who has not cocked up their entry speed once in a while cast the first rock). New technogame: pick section of fast bends; hit lap timer button; get to other end; examine max speed readout and giggle. I haven't yet worked out if there's a Delete The Evidence panic button. If not, there should be. It also has another innovation for a Ducati: suspension. Which simply works, leaves dental work intact and refuses to allow the machine to be kicked around on poorly surfaced bends. That will do nicely. Within the last week I've briefly ridden both a 998S and an Aprilia RSV-R – two machines with exemplary handling and suspension. I reckon that anyone on a 999 could simply ride around either of these at any time of their choice.If a Ducati with compliant suspension is a surprise, 'tis but trivial compared to the other great shibboleth they've done away with – this is a Ducati with steering lock; very good steering lock. Hitherto, you've not been considered a seasoned Ducati rider until you've almost or actually fallen over while attempting a full lock turn, feet up in a road less wide than a football pitch.
Given the heady mixture of power, torque, handling and London traffic, there comes a point in any even moderately exuberant test ride where slowing down moves from being optional to necessary. So on with the brakes. Then off with the brakes and accelerate again to reach the obstruction. These are wonderful things, with huge initial bite, total feedback and tremendous linearity, and all at a finger's pressure. They feel much the same as those on the 998S I rode at the weekend, and way ahead of the earlier versions on my machine.
One thing though, it vibrates at high revs. A lot. Much more than any other recent Ducati I've ridden. This I'm prepared to ascribe to this machine - it was 400 miles overdue for its 600-mile service, which could account for it. If it doesn't, they've screwed up.
And did I mention the brakes?
The subjectivity of the aesthetic aside, that's all pretty damn positive. Very pretty damn positive. Now here, for me, is less the fly in the ointment than the elephant in the trashcan – the riding position: This is, for me, the worst single aspect of the machine for road use – it only actually comes together when you're chin on the tank, tucked in and, ah, going for it. I think I've spent no more than an hour or so in three years in that position, total. And most of that was on a single rain-soaked blast up the péage in pursuit of a ferry. Under normal riding, the sort for which most of us buy Ducatis, where we're head up, forward on the seat and moving around the machine on twisty roads, it's crap – the mirrors are utterly unusable, the screen obscures the instruments, and the seat is notably uncomfortable – you end up sitting on the nose of the seat, with enough space between bum and bum stop to carry half the Vienna boys' choir. But let's not go there. I've no problem with a committed riding position – it's just that I think they've committed to exactly the wrong one. And, lest you think I'm Quasimodo's grumpier brother, I'm 1.83m (6') tall and about 82kg (180lb), which should be pretty much median in the intended range of riders.
I'll grant that it's much roomier than the previous bikes, despite being tiny in overall dimensions. It's long and the peg/bar/seat relationship isn't that much different from the earlier bikes. And the range of adjustment available in the footpegs doesn't seem to amount to a great deal in the knee-creaking stakes. Height and angle adjustable bars would have been a real step forward. The monoposto version of the 999 has another adjustment – a seat/tank adjustment range of about 20mm fore and aft. That may be useful to the highly-tuned sensibilities of racers, but I'm sure I vary my riding position on the seat by more than that according to how I've adjusted my underwear, without noticing any difference.
And Ducati have clearly put considerable design effort into the mirrors. Not apparently however in pursuit of making them work as mirrors – that would clearly be too easy. They are actually worse than those on the 748, a breathtaking feat of determination. At least the earlier bike demonstrated Italian priorities – the only thing they were really good at was for checking out the inner thighs of pillion passengers. So I am informed.
They also claim to have paid great attention to weight saving – 3kg on the wiring harness alone, and are notably proud of their new instrument cluster weighing only 500g. So why does the bike weigh 6kg or so *more* than the 998?
And, enfin, consider this: Ducati claim to have cut the component count by over a third, which should improve production efficiency and cut costs. Yet the bike costs more. For explanation, we need look no further than their last quarterly report:
â??For the three months ended 3/31/02, revenues rose 10% to EUR124.7 million. Net income rose 12% to EUR5.5 million. Revenues reflect increased sales in the Super Sport and Superbike families due to higher prices and higher operating margins due to a reduced provision for risks and charges.â?
In other words, spend less, charge more – and see where the market breaks.
I had cars honking at me and people leaning out of vans and screaming Dooocaaateeeee!!! as I wombled past. So it clearly makes an impact, even in the twilight zone of the Home Counties. The Kings Road and Box Hill would make for an interesting day out. But I'm not yet entirely convinced – power delivery, handling, brakes and ride are a revelation; aesthetics are subjective; riding position is plain wrong. Doesn't quite add up for me. Oh yes and it's expensive. But we expected that. So what now? If they took the same frame and engine and gave it a more real- world riding position, they'd really be on to something. Updated ST4S, anyone? Think I'll wait a couple of weeks and see what the Munich show brings.