Righto tax dodgers. The following is an email sent to me, just now, from a guy in the UK who is right at the epicenter of racing, mostly in the 125 class, in the UK and Europe. Of course he has his own patch to protect, but what he says rings true with what the guys in the know in the USA are saying too.
I don't want this to turn into a two-strokes are dead and four strokes are the future thing because there is actually no arguement that logically supports either contention without making assumptions about agendas from suppliers and others rather than the arguements regarding the technologies themselves.
So have a read. I have left his name off the email for privacy reasons.
Moto3?
Nobody wants it.
Its something being pushed through by Honda, who have basically blackmailed Dorna with the threat of not supporting Moto GP, which would fall on its face if Honda withdrew.
At the Catalunya GP Alex Creville did 3 demonstration laps on one of the new NSF250s.
1st lap all the teams were on pit wall to watch it go by.
Lap 2 the pit wall was empty.
It was a little embarrassing for Honda!
Yes, the costs at GPs are stupid for a pukka 125 Aprilia and moto3 could be cheaper for them, just as Moto2 has become cheaper for the teams, compared to what it used to cost to lease the best 250 Aprilia’s.
(Note that he said teams running Aprilias, not other brands like Hondas, Yamahas, KTMs etc all of which would be competitive if the Aprilias were built to similar specifications)
But Moto3’s sound shite and they’re grenades waiting to blow.
Plus the costs etc of running at the GPs are a world away from normal national championship racing.
For National racing throughout the world Moto3 is going to increase costs possibly 5 fold.
For GP you need a spare engine, which Honda won’t supply, so that means buying 2 bikes at 20k pounds each, just so you can have a spare motor, (cos you can only have one bike per rider) then its 10k for each basic power-up kit.
I’ve been told that the proper GP kit will be 100k!
The Spanish Championship was supposed to be only 250 4-strokes next year, but they’ve just backtracked on that now and 125’s will continue alongside the 4-strokes, as virtually nobody would commit to racing the 4-strokes and it looked like they wouldn’t fill a grid.
The German IDM championship is remaining 125s and Moto3 bikes are allowed in, as long as there is a minimum of 10 entries for them.
We had a meeting with Stuart Higgs, Race Director of BSB, on Saturday at Cadwell Park and he’s guaranteed 125’s for a minimum of 3 years and it could well be longer.
BSB need a starter class for the kids and they know that they can’t fill a grid with Moto3 bikes, as not enough can afford to buy and run them.
4T 250’s can enter, to run alongside us, but by invitation only.
The 4T bikes have to be proper Moto3 bikes and nobody is allowed to enter with homemade bikes with the motoX 4T engine hand grenades!
But nobody is looking to buy the new Honda, as why would anyone spend all that money to be 4 seconds a lap slower than a 125!
Most people recognise now that the 4T 250’s are a big mistake by Dorna.
None of the teams at GPs want it and we have been told that KTM have now withdrawn their Moto3 effort after the constant changes of the rules by Dorna.
The whole thing is becoming a farce.
As far as National racing goes in Europe, 125 2-strokes will be here for a good few years to come, especially with the new 2-stroke ‘World’ Championship beginning next year.
Classes are going to be 50cc, 125cc and 250cc 2-strokes only and I think 7 rounds throughout Europe are already confirmed.
They’re having an opening event at Assen later this month, which unfortunately we can’t go to, as it clashes with the Silverstone BSB race.
Moto3 – I wouldn’t touch it with a barge pole!
Check out the two stroke 'World championship' here:
http://www.european-2strokecup.com/
So, I'm sorry Ivan, but running around on a 4 year old MX bike at local races is many worlds away from national championship roadracing (even in NZ) and further away from European and world championship level. You can see that the Brits have already worked out (through experience, not just pique) that homemade bikes with MX engines will blow their race meetings apart, by blowing up all over the shop. Part of the reason for that is that all of the top running Honda 125's in the UK have engines in the 45-48 hp region, not the 38-42 hp ones we run here, so they are seriously fast. So a Moto3 bike will need to be seriously good to compete with that either at the same time as the 125's or separately, just to attract riders, teams or spectators given that they know what the 125 bike can do, and for less money and stress.
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