Showing posts with label Yamaha. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yamaha. Show all posts

23 Dec 2016

Take The Trip, Buy The Car, Ride The Bike

Someone recently said to me on Twitter that he'd love to take his Alfa Romeo on a trip to Italy. I said he should and he said it would need to be more mechanically sound than it currently is and that he'd probably never do it.

This reminded me of how I once was when turning dreams into reality. I didn't because I was too scared.

Another conversation, this time with the lady who looks after my dog when I'm away. I bumped into her recently and she said something that sounded funny. She said that when she knows she has to go on a long trip she worries about it beforehand but that when she actually goes on the trip it turns out fine. I thought back to the me of a few years ago and realised that I used to do exactly the same.

I used to travel a lot for work - sometimes 800 miles a week - and before those long journeys I'd fret for days. Then, when I hit the motorway it was absolutely fine. When it came to non-necessary trips, i.e. trips to places I might want to go, this worrying prevented me from going. However if someone else organised and led the trip I did go.

I don't know why. I don't even mind travelling alone. In fact I prefer it. I like my own company and driving time is thinking time which, in my mind, is a good thing. I suppose I just had a fear of the unknown and of taking risks.

What I do know is that I was putting barriers in the way of things I wanted to do.

And I did have dreams and desires. I had trips I wanted to do and I had vehicles I wanted to buy. Scratch that - needed to buy.

I had always wanted to go to Le Mans to watch the 24 hour race, to the Isle of Man for the TT and ride the circuit, to the Nurburgring to drive round the track, to America to drive from coast to coast and to drive from the top to the bottom of the UK. The car I always wanted was a Porsche 911. The bike I always wanted was a Yamaha R1.
Dream bike. My 2000 Yamaha R1 before I crashed it

That was then and this is now. Now I have lost my fear of exploration and of the unknown. I've done all but one of the above trips and I've owned a 911 and an R1. But it has cost me.

The 911 cost the most. Good lord it cost. It was a £10k 1998 Carrera 2. It was the worst spec - tiptronic, convertible - but it was dirt cheap and it had a reconditioned engine fitted. The seller was private but he was selling via Brookspeed Porsche, one of the most respected independent Porsche garages in the south.

I thought I had a bargain and I'd scratched my 911 itch. I'd desperately wanted one for at least 25 years but had never been able to justify one practically or afford one financially.

After I bought it I spent another £600 fitting a decent stereo unit and another £150 fixing the recalcitrant alternator. I took it on a good few trips and told everyone how brilliant it was but in reality it gave me cramp in my right leg and the interior creaked like buggery. It didn't handle any better or go any faster than my current car - a BMW 330i M Sport.

But it was a 911 and it was mine and that was what I always wanted. I was happy.

Then I wasn't happy. At 70mph a chunk of cylinder bore lining came adrift and the engine smashed itself to smithereens. After 6 weeks of ownership I sold it for £5k.

Then there was the Yamaha R1. I didn't just want an R1 - I needed one. I had to have one like I have to breathe air. In my late 30s I finally bought one and it was an absolute beauty. It was a 2000 model in red, white and black. It produced 150bhp and weighed 150kg. It went like a rocket and had no traction control or ABS. I went faster on that R1 than I've ever been on or in any other vehicle - and it still had more to give.

But it didn't half give me leg ache, wrist ache and neck ache. And it was far too much bike for me. I'm a skilled rider in city traffic and cutting a line on country roads but the R1's untamed 1,000bhp per tonne was just too much. Nonetheless I stuck with it.

Then after only three months of ownership I killed it in the most embarrassing way possible. I had taken it to my son's primary school's autumn fayre. After the fayre I turned right out of the school, gave it slightly too much throttle and fishtailed twenty yards before high siding. The bike and I slid 50 yards down the road, absolutely destroying the R1's right hand side and my ego.

I actually got two things out of that. The full value from the insurers and the knowledge that I'd owned the best, most fantastic bike I could imagine.
Dream car. My 1998 Porsche 911 Carrera before the engine exploded

After the experiences with the 911 and the R1 I'm now comfortable with every purchase I make. I don't have to buy something for the sake of it because I've already done that.

As for the trips, well they came about in different ways. The first was the trip to the TT in 2009. The only reason I went was that it was organised by someone else and a big group was going. Someone else did the organisation and booking and I just rode along. It was a fabulous week and made me realise it is possible to take long trips and just enjoy them for the sake of it rather than racing to a destination as fast as possible - something I am wont to do.

Then, in 2010, I decided on impulse to go to the Nurburgring to scratch that itch. I'd always wanted to go but the distance, fact it was in a foreign land and total lack of understanding I had of the place had stopped me. Buoyed by the fact my mate Scottie would be coming with me we booked a ferry and set off after work on a Friday and drove through the night.

We arrived at Nurburg at 5am and slept for two hours in the car then found the entrance to the track and had an unbelievably brilliant time. It was a huge eye opener for me. I could do the things I wanted to do. I didn't need to worry. The video below is of us getting stuck behind a BMW on the Karussell.



So Scottie and I went to Le Mans in 2012 and when I got home I created Speedmonkey. In 2013 my brother organised a trip to Scotland on motorcycles. We did 1,400 miles in 4 days. Earlier this year I drove from Miami to San Fransisco with my son in a convertible Mustang. They were the best two weeks of my life.

I often take road trips now and never fret about them beforehand. I do things I would never have done beforehand because my mindset is much more JFDI than 'can't'.

Next summer I'll be taking a huge tour of Europe and in just a few days time I'll undertake the last of my bucket list of trips to take and cars to buy. I'll be driving from John O'Groats to Lands End in one day.

If I can do it so can you. Go on, take that trip, buy that car, ride that bike. You only live once.

By Matt Hubbard


4 Dec 2015

I've Never Crashed A Car But I've Nearly Crashed Many Times


Think about the times you've lost control of your car. Did you crash into something or did you momentarily think you were going to crash into something then thank your lucky stars when you didn't?

I've either been extraordinarily lucky behind the wheel or I've got amazing reflexes. Or maybe both. I passed my test 27 years ago and not once in that time have I hit another car or any inanimate object with my car in such a way that you could call it a crash.

But I have had lots of nearly crashes.

Mind you I haven't been quite so lucky on my motorcycle. I've had lots of nearly crashes on bikes too but I did have one actual real life crash. It was terribly embarrassing. I only passed my bike test when I was 33. I'd been riding for five years and had owned an old Yamaha Fazer 600 and a new Yamaha FZ6 - both what non-bikers would call sit up and beg bikes. So I bought a Yamaha R1. 150bhp, 150kg, handlebars so low I had to pull my stomach in to ride the thing.

It was beautiful in red and white - mint condition. One soggy day when my Saab 9-3T was in the garage having a new clutch fitted I took the R1 to my son's school's autumn fayre. My dad was visiting and took son in his Jag S-Type.

After the fayre had finished I headed home. Lots of little boys and girls as well as my son and dad watched as I pulled my leather jacket on, strapped my helmet on and fired up the R1. They oohed and aahed as I turned right out of the school gate and eeeeeehed as the rear tyre found no traction and tried to overtake the front swinging the bike right, left, right, left, right. Then it did find grip, abruptly stopped it's fishtail and spewed me off and into the air whereupon I slid down the road for twenty yards with the bike's front wheel on my right leg.

I was fine, the bike was trashed. I've never crashed a bike again, thankfully.

I'd had plenty of 'nearly crashed' moments before that crash on the bike but none since, funnily enough.

In the car, though, I had one earlier today. I took my Elise out for a winter blat. The weather was fine if a little cold and I wanted to let rip for an hour or so. The roads were quiet and the top was off. I had a vague route sketched out in my mind and headed north out of the village and towards a fantastic road nearby.

Hose Hill is a half mile section of steep road that contains three hairpin bends and that is controlled by traffic lights over its entirety which means it is a one way road. I was headed downhill and as I approached saw a white, diesel Audi TT at the lights ahead of me. Knowing the TT would be driven very slowly down the hill I held back and waited a few minutes whilst the lights changed to red and then back to green.

I lit up the rear tyres away from the lights and held a perfect line through the first of the bends, which is a long, constant radius right handler. This is followed by 120 metres of straight road which leads into a first corner left hand hairpin bend - tighter than both the Gooseneck on the Isle of Man TT course or Loews hairpin at the Monaco GP circuit (I've driven both).

I pelted along the 120 metres in second gear and approached the corner. I braked in the right place - not too early or too late - but I pushed the brake pedal too hard, too quickly.

At this point it should be noted the Elise has many qualities. It has a brilliant braking system with huge amounts of feel, and it has great tyres, the discs are drilled and the pads are green EBC units. The trouble is I had failed to warm the brakes and tyres sufficiently and I had pressed the brake pedal too fast, too hard and too clumsily. Oh, and the car doesn't have ABS.

So we arrived in the corner with the front wheels locked, heading towards a vast pile of rotten leaves which had built up over the autumn.

I should know better because I know the car well and I have been trained on track by experts from Lotus, Porsche, Jaguar, Mercedes-Benz, Polestar and a very sweary and shouty racing racing driver who's Radical SR3 I was piloting around Silverstone at the time.

Anyway, back to the corner and the locked wheels and the impending doom and the possibly very high insurance bill. As you can probably tell by the title of this article I didn't crash the car but it was a close run thing.

Luckily my reflexes acted before my mind even thought, "Oh shit I'm going to crash the car," which made my right foot momentarily come off the brake pedal and then push it again, once the wheels had unlocked, but this time with more finesse. This enabled me to slow the car sufficiently before I hit the wet leaves and a certain crash.

The day was saved by instantaneous action and and unconscious knowledge of what to do in a given situation. This is a credit to the hours of training I've had, and possibly very good reflexes.

Over the years these reflexes have saved me untold times. I remember driving back from a wedding late at night in the rain with the kids bickering on the back seat and my ex talking at me in the passenger seat. My car at the time, an old Passat 1.9TDi estate, did have ABS but it was pathetic. In slippery conditions it made the car travel further than if it hadn't had ABS.

We were hurtling downhill doing 60mph on an empty dual carriageway. I was being talked to and trying to concentrate on terrible road conditions at the same time. I noticed too late the roundabout ahead and did exactly the same as I did in the Elise. I stabbed at the brake, locked the wheels and felt the horrible grind of the ABS being pathetic. I released the pedal, engaged it again and found more grip and slowed us down just enough to make the roundabout safely.

I've driven many powerful cars on public roads as well as race tracks. One in particular gave me a horrendous moment of, "Oh shit! Oh shit! Oh shit!"

If you're a regular reader then you'll know which car I'm talking about. It cost £95k and had 450bhp and as part of the press loan I'd have to cough up the first £5k if I damaged it.

It was my first EVER press car. I reversed it out of my drive very carefully. I drove it down the road very carefully.  I drove it very fast very carefully. Then, like an idiot, I turned the traction control off and booted the throttle.

The rear tyres instantly kicked left and tried to overtake the front. Oh shit. Amazingly, almost before my mind registered the catastrophe that could quite possibly unfold in the seconds ahead, my right foot jumped straight off the throttle, my hands corrected the slide and my right foot went back on the throttle and brought the car back into line.

Disaster averted. I didn't have to pay 5 grand to anyone. I drove the car for another four days then gave it back, relieved.

I've had plenty more of these moments. They've involved oversteering, understeering, overbearing, a couple more fishtails and driving into the central reservation when the traffic ahead has suddenly stopped. Cars are our every day transport. As such we drive when we're alert and we drive when we're tired and drowsy. I've been lucky. I've saved the car every time.

These things happen less now that I am old and experienced. I like to think I am wise but I am probably just more aware than the younger me was of the potential impact on my licence, body and finances of crashing a car.

I learn from every single moment. I was never reckless but we all drive a bit daft when we're young. Nowadays I rarely drive in such a manner that a policeman would consider the need to give me a talking to.

Fingers crossed and touch wood I have yet to crash a car. Hopefully I never will. I'll try my best to make sure I don't. Hopefully you won't either.

Below the article I've posted pics of my old R1 before I crashed it and a screenshot from Google street view of THAT hairpin.

By Matt Hubbard


The 2000 Yamaha R1 I crashed BEFORE I crashed it

THAT hairpin


19 Aug 2013

2014 Yamaha MT-09

We’ve heard the rumours, and we’ve seen the YouTube video…. Now an all-new 3-cylinder sports bike from Yamaha is to take on the class-leading Triumph Street Triple in 2014….Say hello to the MT-09!
Yamaha MT09

From reading the Yamaha press release, one of the key goals in the MT-09 development project was to create a machine that gives the rider increased levels of pleasure and enjoyment by being able to control the machine at will. We all know that a well-designed motorcycle should feel like an extension of the body. After putting the current YZF-R1 designers to work, this was the result:
  • Linear and enjoyable torque delivery 
  • Best power-to-weight ratio in its class 
  • Lighter than a YZF-R6 
  • Slim and lightweight aluminium chassis 
  • Naked Motard ‘mass-forward’ style 
  • Compact body design 
  • Upright riding position for maximum control 
  • Refined ergonomics for a stress free ride 
Yamaha MT09
Without a doubt the most significant feature is that all-new 3-cylinder engine. The goals according to Yamaha during the intensive development programme were to create a compact, powerful and lightweight 3-cylinder engine; it would also be a visually attractive powerplant that would ‘enhance pride of ownership’. Furthermore, the MT-09 development team also placed great emphasis on achieving high levels of economy together with good environmental performance.

Featuring a displacement of 847cc, this is an all-new 4-stroke DOHC 4-valve engine, with forged aluminium pistons. The MT-09 is also significant for the fact that it is the first multi-cylinder production Yamaha motorcycle to utilise an offset cylinder design; it has been developed to embody Yamaha’s ‘crossplane philosophy’, ensuring instant throttle response together with strong low to mid-range torque. One of the best characteristics of a 3-cylinder engine design is its linear torque output, and it is this strong and responsive power delivery that Yamaha says defines the fundamental character of the new bike.

The MT-09’s 3-cylinder design is also inherently lighter, slimmer and more compact when compared to parallel 4-cylinder designs, being around 10kg less than the Yamaha FZ8. This has given the designers greater freedom to produce a correspondingly compact and agile-handling sports chassis.
Yamaha MT09

With its efficient fuel injection system, the MT-09 offers a potential range from the 14-litre tank of 150 miles or more, depending on the conditions. Hurrah!

I can remember my MT-03 doing just 80 miles on its 15 litre tank of fuel once, after some spirited riding that is….

Yamaha’s engineers have used the Yamaha Chip Controlled Throttle (YCC-T) from the YZF-R series supersport bikes. This ‘fly-by-wire’ system senses every throttle action made by the rider, and the ECU instantaneously actuates the throttle valve to give an immediate engine response. In addition, to give the MT-09 rider the bike - and the excitement - he or she needs in different riding situations, this new motorcycle is equipped with the Yamaha D-MODE system. The rider has a choice of three different throttle valve control mapping settings, STD Mode, A Mode and B Mode.

STD Mode has been designed to be used in a wide range of riding and road conditions, and it allows the rider to enjoy the 3-cylinder engine’s linear torque output and top performance right through the bike’s rpm range, from low to high engine speeds.

With the A Mode the engine delivers the maximum level of adrenaline. This setting gives a sharper throttle response in the low to mid speed range for a more aggressive sport riding experience.

B Mode delivers a milder throttle response with easy-to-use power characteristics which are perfect for riding in the city or in adverse road or weather conditions.

The MT-09 is fitted with an integrated single-piece 3-into-1 exhaust system and short muffler. The three stainless steel exhaust pipes feature connecting tubes between pipes 1 and 2, and between pipes 2 and 3 - and the pipes are also treated to prevent discolouration, rust and stains; so the system should stay looking factory-fresh, even after being subjected to a few harsh British winters!

Weight and space saving designs seem to have been used extensively, making this the one of the lightest sport bikes in the over 700cc class on paper, at 188kg wet. As a comparison, the MT-09 is actually lighter than the YZF-R6, recognized as being one of the most agile bikes in its class. This can only be good news, as many riders are put off by the sheer dead weight of some larger capacity machines.

By carefully selecting such dimensions as the wheelbase, seat height and overall riding position, Yamaha’s designers look to have been able to produce a compact and easy handling chassis.

Suspension-wise, the bike is equipped with newly-designed upside down front forks which offer 137mm of wheel travel - 7mm more than the FZ8 - to give high levels of riding comfort and responsive steering on a variety of road surfaces from cobblestones through to fast twisties; plus they can be adjusted for rebound damping!

At the rear, a link-type Monocross suspension design has been used, which incorporates an almost horizontal shock positioned beneath the seat. The location of the shock not only contributes towards the bike’s centralization of mass which helps to enhance handling - it also makes for a slimmer chassis layout, and the under-seat location protects the shock and linkage from the road dirt to help reduced wear and tear (see the MT-03 and Ducati 1199 Panigale for similar examples). Featuring rebound damping and preload adjustment, this rear suspension can be fine-tuned to suit a range of riding conditions and preferences, which is a welcome addition considering the variety of riders the bike is being aimed at.

In order to achieve Yamaha’s goal of building a compact chassis, the swingarm’s pivot assembly is located on the outside of the frame in a system similar to that used on the MT-01 and MT-03. This reduces the chassis width in the footrest area to that of a typical parallel twin cylinder machine, and gives a slimmer and more agile feel to the whole motorcycle.

An all-new asymmetrically-mounted lightweight LCD instrument panel features a digital bar display for the tachometer, and the panel also includes a useful gear position indicator. The angular headlight features a multi-reflector design, and a new-style LED tail light (inspired by the MT-01) features separate left and right side lamps when the lights are turned on, while the whole surface lights up during braking.

I think that overall the MT-09 is a handsome machine - although the lack of a fly screen does mean the front end looks a bit underfinished and, dare I say it, a little ugly?

I hope this bike does well, Triumph needs some serious competition in the naked sportsbike sector; and suggestions that this bike may undercut its main rival on price (the Street Triple is £6999) shows that Yamaha are definitely on a mission. Good luck to them; and I’m booking a test ride slot at my local dealer as soon as it hits the showroom….

Technical details:
  • 850cc liquid-cooled 4-stroke 3-cylinder DOHC 4-valve engine 
  • 115hp @ 10,000rpm 
  • 87,5 Nm torque @ 8,500rpm 
  • Forged aluminium pistons and direct-plated cylinders 
  • Offset 3-cylinder layout 
  • Newly-designed 6-speed transmission with compact clutch 
  • Pipeless design for cooling systems 
  • Single unit-type exhaust pipe and 3-into-1 muffler 
  • Yamaha D-mode switchable mapping 
  • Lightweight frame featuring CF aluminium die-cast swingarm 
  • 188kg wet weight, 171kg dry weight 
  • Link-type Monocross rear suspension with horizontal shock 
  • Upside-down forks with 41mm tubes 
  • Newly-designed lightweight 10-spoke 17-inch cast aluminium wheels 
  • 14-litre 'slim-fit' steel fuel tank with depression in knee grip area 
  • Dual floating 298mm front discs 
  • Radial-mount 4-pot opposed piston calipers 
  • 400mm long flat seat giving range of riding positions 
  • Multi-reflector headlight 
  • Forged aluminum brake and gear shift pedals 
  • LED tail light 
  • Newly-designed hexagonal rear view mirrors 
  • Lightweight LCD instrument panel 
  • All-new compact switchgear 
Colours

Deep Armor with MT fuel tank logo graphic
Blazing Orange with MT fuel tank logo graphic
Race Blu
Matt Grey
Yamaha MT09

Yamaha MT09

Yamaha MT09

Yamaha MT09

Article by Angela Freeman