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1983年Bimota SB4 Mirage

2013/8/12 10:38:00

Bimota SB4 Mirage

Make Model Bimota SB4 Mirage
Year 1983 (Production 272)
Engine Air cooled, four stroke, transverse four cylinder. DOHC, 4 valves per cylinder
Capacity 1075
Bore x Stroke 72 x 66 mm
Compression Ratio 9.0:1
Induction 2x Mikuni BS34SS
Ignition  /  Starting Transistorized  /  electric
Max Power 112 hp @ 8750 rpm
Max Torque 9.6 kg-m @ 7000 rpm
Transmission  /  Drive 5 Speed  /  chain
Frame Lower cradle and connecting side plates. These plates are made from machined Avional, whilst the tubes are made from Chrome-molybdenum
Front Suspension 40mm Ceriani Telescopic
Rear Suspension Mono shock De Carbon
Front Brakes 2x 280mm discs
Rear Brakes Single 280mm disc
Front Tyre 120/80 V16
Rear Tyre 150/60 V16
Dry-Weight / Wet-Weight 184 kg / 211 kg
Fuel Capacity 22 Litres
Standing ? Mile   11.9 sec 
Top Speed 155 mp/h

Bimota have the distinction of making the world's most expensive motorcycles. They are handmade, bespoke creations using all the very best components. They are labour intensive to make, beautifully finished and very fast. Bimota make exclusive, expensive, luxurious sports bikes that approach motorcycle perfection, that ideal but elusive marriage between Japanese horsepower and a frame that can deliver the goods. Take one large Japanese powerplant and place it in a unique frame with the best suspension, wheels and brakes money can buy.

The SB4 is built around Suzuki's GSX1100 with the engine carried by Bimota's chrome-moly, semi-cradle that supports the motor from the sides with the top tubes unusually joining ahead of the forks and steering head for extra rigidity. The swing-arm and rising-rate, rear suspension are anchored to the frame by a huge plate of Avional 14, an aircraft quality alloy. This crucial structure is milled from a solid block, glued and then bolted in place, all in pursuit of the perfect steering head/swing-arm relation. The frame plus swing-arm weigh just 351b.It is light and low on the move with 16in wheels fitted with low-profile radial tyres. Bimota are the only company to fit radials as original equipment rubber. Suspension is by Ceriani telehydraulic forks with seven-way adjustable rebound damping and a De Carbon unit at the back. The rear rocker arm and all the linkages are lovingly made, rose joints and quality alloy details are everywhere. The motor is stock except for a four-into-two Bimota exhaust and some extremely high gearing. The tall ratios complement Bimota's aerodynamic fairing and bodywork to achieve high speed and give the GSX1100 full top end expression, ISOmph and still pulling.

 The riding position is uncompromising and built for maximum speed work. The rider is stretched, fully prone, reaching down to the clip-ons across the broad back of the tank, feet high on the rearsets, knees tucked into the tank cutaways. It is cramped but strangely comfortable. Everything about the Bimota sparkles with quality. Little is cast, it is all either machined from solid or press-forged with TIG welding throughout.

The bodywork is all in fibreglass-reinforced plastic and fits like a glove. The bike exudes class and confidence. The later SB5 uses the bigger 1135cc Suzuki engine but is essentially unchanged except for a longer wheel-base and different weight distribution. The one outstanding difference is the provision of a dual seat. Previous Bimota bikes had all been strictly solo machines.

Source: The Worlds Fastest Motorcycles by Michael Scott & John Cutts