Tag Archives: motorcycles

Ducati Just Unveiled A More Tame Everyday Multistrada

Ducati Just Unveiled A More Tame Everyday Multistrada

Powered by the same 113 horsepower 937cc Testastretta V twin as found in the new Monster, Supersport 950, and Hypermotard and the upcoming DesertX. This is quickly becoming a standard bearer for Ducati engineering, as it’s a really good engine with tons of useful power and super long maintenance intervals for an Italian. Apparently it only needs oil changes every 9,300 miles and valve clearance checks every 18,600 miles.

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Image: Ducati

Many people might not think of an adventure bike chassis as being the best daily rider, but this V2 features 19 inch wheels and street-oriented tires. It’s not too tall, either, as Ducati worked hard to get this new chassis down to a reasonable 32 inch seat height, and the V2 is a bit narrower at your inseam than the V4 would be, making an even more comfortable standover. For many riders this will allow for flat footing at stops.

Image for article titled Ducati Just Unveiled A More Tame Everyday Multistrada

Image: Ducati

The base model V2 will come only in red with black wheels, while the Street Grey with GP Red wheels is optional on the S model. The Multistrada V2 kicks off at $15,295. The S, which comes with Ducati’s amazing Skyhook adjustable suspension, ride modes, cornering ABS, hill hold, traction control, cornering and flashing brake lighting, cruise control, quick shifter, and a high-res TFT dash, will cost you a bit more at $17,895.

Image for article titled Ducati Just Unveiled A More Tame Everyday Multistrada

Image: Ducati

Also optional for the V2 S is the Travel Trim package with side bags, heated grips and a center stand. Pricing hasn’t been released for that package yet, but it seems like the one to get if you want to go for longer rides out on the highway.

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Multistrada V2 models will start trickling into your local Ducati dealer in December. Right in time for the riding season, right? 

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U-Haul’s Motorcycle Trailer Is Really Good But You Can’t Ever Own One

Illustration for article titled U-Hauls Motorcycle Trailer Is Really Good But You Cant Ever Own One

Photo: Bradley C. Brownell

On Sunday evening I walked into the U-haul location a few blocks away and dropped a whopping $15 to rent one of the company’s exquisite motorcycle haulers, and an additional $8 for the bonus insurance. Baller, I know. After hauling it empty for 250 miles and then loaded down with a big Ducati for 250 miles, I’m a big fan.

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(Full Disclosure: I asked Ducati if I could borrow something big and comfortable for an upcoming 5,000 mile journey on two wheels. I was given clearance to pick up a new Diavel 1260S from the company’s North American headquarters in the California Bay Area. I arranged my own rental of the trailer and paid for the fuel to go pick it up.) 

We recently covered how prices of the company’s products are skyrocketing in certain markets due to demand, but because U-haul motorcycle trailers are only available for “in-town” towing they must be returned to the same location they are picked up from, so they aren’t susceptible to the same demand and price surge. That’s why it was so cheap, which is a huge part of the appeal.

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These compact aluminum trailers are so incredibly easy to use. I pulled in and had the trailer on my car in two shakes. The company employees can easily move them around the lot by hand because they are so lightweight, and they have U-haul’s unique “handwheel” hitch lock coupler, which is quick and simple to lock the trailer onto your car’s 2″ ball. In and out in minutes.

Illustration for article titled U-Hauls Motorcycle Trailer Is Really Good But You Cant Ever Own One

Photo: Bradley C. Brownell

Because of the trailer’s lightweight characteristic, it not only pulls like a dream at slow highway speeds (never exceed 55 mph, according to U-haul, and of course I never would violate such an agreement), but it hardly affects fuel economy. Hooked up to our 2018 Buick Regal TourX I achieved nearly 30 miles per gallon with the trailer empty. That’s doubly astonishing, considering the trailer’s ramp is stored vertical and you would think it would have devastating aerodynamic effect.

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Loading a motorcycle into this thing is an absolute breeze. Not only does the tailgate ramp unhook and lower with two super simple solid pins, but it’s low enough to the ground that bikes with very little ground clearance, like a 2021 Ducati Diavel 1260S for example, don’t even scrape the peak of the transition. Once on the trailer, there are D-ring tie down mounts in all four corners, plus sturdy railing around three sides of the trailer that are perfect for ratchet strap anchoring.

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Getting this bike locked into place took four separate ratchet straps and a handlebar-tie-down device called Cycle Cynch. I brought some of my own tie-downs, but the Ducati folks threw the Cycle Cynch and a pair of amazing Erickson self-contained ratchet straps into my kit to keep their bike safe and sound. These things are a game changer, as you just pull the strap to the desired length, push the button to retract it taut, and ratchet tight. The best part is that these straps don’t have any tail to tie off. Next level shit, right here. I need to buy about a half dozen of these suckers for my own garage.

Illustration for article titled U-Hauls Motorcycle Trailer Is Really Good But You Cant Ever Own One

Photo: Bradley C. Brownell

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I’m no expert at hauling motorcycles, but I ran the handlebar straps to each front corner D-ring, pulling the wheel into the trailer’s awesome built-in wheel chock. Then I wrapped a strap through one of the spokes of the rear wheel, pulling the bike tight to each of the rear corner D-rings. This should prevent the bike from moving fore and aft. The handlebar straps should help prevent the bike from tipping over, so long as they are cinched tight enough to prevent the suspension from compressing over highway bumps. Then, for good measure, I put a big 10,000 pound strap through the bike’s frame underneath the seat to keep the rear suspension from bouncing at all.

Are there better ways to manage a motorcycle on a trailer? Possibly, but this thing was rock solid all the way back to Reno.

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Illustration for article titled U-Hauls Motorcycle Trailer Is Really Good But You Cant Ever Own One

Photo: Bradley C. Brownell

Even with a fully-loaded trailer and much more uphill than down on the way back from the bay, I still managed mid-twenties MPG with this behemoth of a 540 pound motorcycle on the trailer. It towed like a dream, and that’s likely largely down to the awesome construction of the U-haul trailer.

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I’d really love to own one of these trailers, but U-haul is adamant about never selling them to the public. While it will sell its box trucks and vans to the public all day long, the company’s proprietary trailer designs are never ever sold once they are phased out of the fleet. You can get a utility trailer or a tow-dolly through trucksales.uhaul.com, but apparently U-haul scraps all of its four-wheel car haulers and motorcycle trailers. The company has some kind of algorithm to determine when a trailer is costing too much in downtime and repairs annually to be financially viable, and they get scrapped at that point.

Once an older trailer crosses that threshold, it is taken out back and shot. Obviously by that I mean it is transferred to one of U-haul’s 175 maintenance facilities, cut up into tiny aluminum pieces, and the axle is sliced in half. If U-haul can’t have it, nobody can! Which is seriously a bummer, because this trailer rules.

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Oh well, it’s a good thing it only costs $15 to borrow one, then. What’s the point in buying a couple thousand dollar trailer if you can just get one on-demand for chump change? I’m a big fan of that.

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A Travelling Musician Rode Over 4,000 Miles On A Ducati Multistrada To Play Free Shows For Healthcare Workers

Illustration for article titled A Travelling Musician Rode Over 4,000 Miles On A Ducati Multistrada To Play Free Shows For Healthcare Workers
Photo: Ducati

Most major national music tours require a bus full of people and a shedload of instruments. Playing shows all over the country requires a team of people and a bunch of vehicles negotiating a ton of moving pieces. That is, unless the country is in the grips of a massive viral pandemic and you want to play free acoustic sets for healthcare workers in outdoor venues. Then you can pack everything you need for a 13 day 17 stop tour on the back of your Ducati Multistrada. That’s exactly what rocker Franky Perez did.

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Illustration for article titled A Travelling Musician Rode Over 4,000 Miles On A Ducati Multistrada To Play Free Shows For Healthcare Workers
Photo: Ducati

When the pandemic closed the entire world down earlier this year, Franky Perez didn’t want to sit still and do nothing. While he was in quarantine he set about recording a new album. Perez decided that the resulting acoustic album “Suddenly 44” released in mid-June needed a tour, but obviously not a traditional tour. Partnering with local venues for safe small gatherings and socially distanced free shows, Franky put a bunch of miles under his tires to make sure it all went off without a hitch.

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“Music is meant to be shared and while digital distribution makes music so much more accessible now, there is no substitution for the live experience,” said Perez. “The feedback and relationship between artist and the audience is vital when performing music that is so personal, but with the normal approach for a new album release no longer possible I called my friends from famed Italian motorcycle marque Ducati to help me develop a completely different approach to touring.”

Illustration for article titled A Travelling Musician Rode Over 4,000 Miles On A Ducati Multistrada To Play Free Shows For Healthcare Workers
Photo: Ducati

I’ve put a few hundred miles on Ducati’s wonderful Multistrada myself, and let me tell you, I wouldn’t mind doing 4,000 miles in 13 days. That sounds like a dream. The seat is as comfortable as they come, and the riding ergonomics are a delight. Add in that it’s the perfect bike to gobble up highway miles and then blitz a few good roads along the way and you’d be hard pressed to find a better machine for this trip.

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Perez had his Ducati outfitted with a carbon fiber guitar case, and hit the road on this epic tour of the U.S. The “Crossing The Great Divide” tour left from Perez’ home in Las Vegas, cut up the western coast of the country before cutting inland across I-80 to Chicago, then up to Detroit. Down to Washington D.C. and back up to New York with a few stops in Pennsylvania. I’ve done most of that route myself, but always in cars, and it’s super smooth and easy.

Illustration for article titled A Travelling Musician Rode Over 4,000 Miles On A Ducati Multistrada To Play Free Shows For Healthcare Workers
Photo: Ducati

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There are so many things in modern society that are worth giving up in the face of a global pandemic, and in general live music is one of those things. Staying alive and healthy is an incredibly important ingredient to having a good life. Safe and responsible entertainment is vital to retaining your sanity, and it’s nice to hear that some artists are contributing to the community with significantly limited crowds, outdoor venues, and safe practices like this.

Illustration for article titled A Travelling Musician Rode Over 4,000 Miles On A Ducati Multistrada To Play Free Shows For Healthcare Workers
Photo: Ducati

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Cool shit. More of this, please.

Great Touring Bike Deals Coming To An Estate Sale Near You, Sturgis Motorcycle Rally Hopes To Welcome 250,000

Illustration for article titled Great Touring Bike Deals Coming To An Estate Sale Near You, Sturgis Motorcycle Rally Hopes To Welcome 250,000
Photo: Harley-Davidson

The town of Sturgis, South Dakota is about to swell its capacity for a week starting this Friday. Despite the global coronavirus pandemic which has killed nearly 700,000 people worldwide as of this writing, the famed Sturgis Motorcycle Rally will go on as planned. The town’s population of around 7,000 will swell by an expected 250,000 bikers this week. The steady stream of thumping V-twins has already started, and it will continue unabated until August 16th.

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With an estimated quarter million participants, the 80th Sturgis promises to be certainly among the largest public event held since the pandemic began, if not the largest. In a normal year the rally would expect to host nearly half a million bikers, but conservative estimates see that number halving.

South Dakota residents, despite the state never having locked down at all, are rightfully worried that the influx of riders from all around the country are going to bring an unmanageable coronavirus outbreak to the rural region. More than 60 percent of the town’s residents were in favor of postponing the rally out of fear for the virus, but following threats of legal action on behalf of local businesses which make a large portion of their annual income during the rally, the City Council ruled in favor of going forward with the rally regardless.

“This is a huge, foolish mistake to make to host the rally this year,” Sturgis resident Linda Chaplin told city counselors, reported by the Associated Press. “The government of Sturgis needs to care most for its citizens.”

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I truly hope that I am wrong and that everyone in attendance keeps a 6-foot buffer zone and wraps an old bandana around their nose and mouth. I truly hope nobody catches this viral scourge. I truly hope that everyone makes it out the other side of this inadvisable event with their health intact. But I fear that a quarter of a million riders coming from the four corners of the country will have to interact with far too many variables on their way to the event, be it hotels or gas stations or public restrooms, that at least a small outbreak seems inevitable.

Just because you are outside does not mean you can’t catch this virus. Do you really think that you know more about exposure risks than medical professionals? There’s a reason the Indy 500 isn’t running with fans this year, because it’s fucking dangerous to be in close proximity to tens of thousands of other people.

Go for a ride out into the middle of the wilderness. Camp by yourself or with a couple of friends for a night. Be one with nature and stare at the stars for a while. Set your campsites up at least 10 feet apart. But please, don’t go to Sturgis. The motorcycle community is small enough as it is, and I don’t want you to die.