New Track-Only KTM RC8C Sells Out in Just Over 2 Minutes

You heard right. 

As of 2 minutes and 38 seconds into the debut of KTM’s new track-only, limited-edition supersport hooner, the entire 2023 KTM RC 8C fleet sold out. 

All 200 units may be accounted for, but hey – there’s still a waiting list (should some dunderhead decide to let go of their cutting-edge piece of pretty, which we think unlikely). 

KTM's 2023 RC 8C, which sold out in just over 2 minutes. Media sourced from KTM.
KTM’s 2023 RC 8C, which sold out in just over 2 minutes. Media sourced from KTM.

According to the report from Motorcycle Sports, the Austrians used their digital sales platform “to offer buyers a direct means of securing their bike as soon as sales opened.”

Of those that took avantage of the platform, 30 lucky riders have booked in for a KTM hand-over event in Valencia, Spain, where they will recieved their beloved bike along with the experience of a lifetime. 

So what’s the big deal about the 2023 KTM RC 8C, you ask? 

KTM's 2023 RC 8C, which sold out in just over 2 minutes. Media sourced from KTM.
KTM’s 2023 RC 8C, which sold out in just over 2 minutes. Media sourced from KTM.

Let’s start with the fact that this track-only monster has been co-engineered in partnership with Krämer Motorcycles. Krämer only makes purpose-built competition machines for the competitive circuit, so you know you’re getting a machine that’s as high-caliber as it is serious.

The CFMoto 800MT Touring. Media sourced from MCN.

Add to this the fact that “the KTM RC 8C is built using high-end, high-performance racing components with an improved LC8c production engine for easier maintenance and parts availability,” and you’re fluidly speaking the language of track days, where the RC 8C will be more than capable of showcasing “the highest levels of performance and handling, without the need for overly sophisticated electronics.”

KTM's 2023 RC 8C, which sold out in just over 2 minutes. Media sourced from KTM.
KTM’s 2023 RC 8C, which sold out in just over 2 minutes. Media sourced from KTM.

Stay tuned as we start seeing people try these bikes out – it’ll be worth the gander, that’s for sure. 

Drop a comment below letting us know what you think, and as ever – stay safe on the twisties. 

*Media sourced from KTM*

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

White Rim Trail on KTM 690 Enduros | Favorite Ride

White Rim Trail
Taking a break at Hurrah Pass during our warm-up ride on Chicken Corners Trail.

White Rim Trail – or White Rim Road in national park parlance – is a 100-mile unpaved route that loops around the Island in the Sky mesa in Canyonlands National Park near Moab, Utah. It’s on the bucket list of many dual-sport and adventure riders, and rightfully so. The scenery is spectacular, and the trail is ridable by anyone with a modicum of off-road experience.

White Rim Trail

Scan QR code above or click here to view the route on REVER

White Rim Trail, named after the layer of White Rim Sandstone that it runs on top of, was built in the 1950s by the Atomic Energy Commission to access uranium deposits. The mines didn’t produce much ore and were abandoned, and the road became part of Canyonlands after it was established in 1964.

Although White Rim Trail is a rough and rugged route, only street-legal (plated) motorcycles and high-clearance, four-wheel drive vehicles are permitted. Off-road-only dirtbikes, ATVs, and side-by-sides that are common on many trails around Moab are prohibited, which helps keep noise and traffic down. There’s also a daily limit of 50 day-use permits.

Since the trail is within Canyonlands, a national parks pass or entrance fee ($25 per motorcycle, good for seven days) is required. Day-use permits are free at visitor centers, but a $6 fee is required for permits purchased online at Recreation.gov. There are several campgrounds along the trail that require overnight permits for an additional fee. In the spring and fall, reservations are strongly encouraged.

White Rim Trail
White Rim Trail runs atop a layer of White Rim Sandstone below the Island in the Sky mesa.

The plan was for four of us – Bruce Gillies, Vic Anderson, Kevin Rose, and me – to ride the entire White Rim Trail in one day. We would be traveling light, with all of us riding KTM 690 Enduro Rs. As enjoyable as camping would be in such a beautiful place, it requires gear that would’ve weighed us down, and whatever was in our saddlebags or panniers would be subjected to paint-shaker conditions for hours on end. Instead, we rented a house in Moab that served as our base for two days of riding.

As a warm-up for the White Rim, we spent our first day riding Chicken Corners Trail, a 42-mile out-and-back route on Bureau of Land Management land that passes through Kane Springs Canyon, goes over Hurrah Pass, and runs along a high sandstone bench on the southern edge of the Colorado River. We got hammered by rain early on, but then the clouds parted, and we enjoyed a fun, scenic ride. The trail ends 400 feet above the river across from Dead Horse Point Overlook, the filming location for the final scene in Thelma and Louise when they drive off the cliff.

White Rim Trail
Hidden from view near the patch of green is the Colorado River, which joins with the Green River below the southern tip of White Rim Trail.

Having obtained our day-use permits online, the next day we left the house around sunrise and rode north on U.S. Route 191 past Arches National Park and then turned west on State Route 313. There’s no gas in Canyonlands, and the nearest gas station is about 30 miles away in Moab, so completing the loop requires at least 160 miles of range. We were equipped with auxiliary fuel canisters just in case.

White Rim Trail is a two-way road, so it can be ridden in either direction. Our plan was to ride it counterclockwise, saving the famous Shafer Trail for the very end. We turned west on Mineral Canyon Road (BLM 129) before entering Canyonlands and followed the long, flat, well-graded dirt road for about 12 miles.

White Rim Trail
When ridden counterclockwise, White Rim Trail passes through Bureau of Land Management land before entering Canyonlands National Park.

The road into Canyonlands climbs up onto the Island in the Sky mesa, which is where the visitor center and many RV-clogged overlooks are located. Since the White Rim is below the mesa, riding it in either direction requires going down a series of steep switchbacks to get to the trail.

White Rim Trail
Getting to White Rim Trail from atop the Island in the Sky mesa requires a steep, switchbacked descent to the rim and then a similar ascent at the end.

On a crisp morning in late May, we peered down into the red sandstone canyon carved by the Green River and descended to Horsethief Bottom. After passing the Canyonlands National Park boundary sign, we cruised along the flat trail and took in the full spectrum of colorful scenery: green vegetation along the river; layers of red, pink, yellow, white, and gray rock; and blue skies sprayed with tufts of white cirrocumulus clouds. Off in the distance was Canyonlands’ Maze district.

White Rim Trail
Riding along the Green River, with Canyonlands’ Maze district off in the distance.

Our first challenge was crossing a sand wash where Upheaval Canyon dumps into the Green River. If the Green is running high, the wash can be flooded and make the trail impassable. We blasted through on the gas and soon found ourselves at one of the two most technical sections on the trail: Hardscrabble Bottom. Since we rode the loop counterclockwise, this section was downhill, and we picked our way along without incident.

Even though it was a Saturday, we rarely saw others on the trail. We waved to a group of Jeepers at a campground, and we passed a few 4x4s and mountain bikers followed by support trucks. Otherwise, it was just the four of us enjoying the sweeping views and a fun trail with minimal dust thanks to the previous day’s rains.

White Rim Trail
Box canyons, hoodoos, buttes, and spires are common sights in the eroded landscape of Canyonlands National Park.

The second technical challenge on White Rim Trail is climbing up and over Murphy’s Hogback. Our KTMs were perfectly suited for the terrain, and we again made it through without any problems. Bigger ADV bikes would be more of a handful here but certainly capable of getting through.

Read all of Rider‘s KTM coverage here.

While some of White Rim Trail is red dirt and sand, miles of it are on bare sandstone, which makes for a bumpy ride. Long-travel suspension, good ground clearance, and a sturdy skid plate are essential.

White Rim Trail
Pausing to admire the view. Parts of White Rim Trail run right along the cliff’s edge, and there’s no fence or guardrail.

The sky had become progressively cloudier throughout the day, and by midafternoon, dark clouds blotted out the sun. At the junction with Potash Road, a ranger checked our permits before we began the final climb up the Shafer Trail switchbacks. This section of trail is accessible by anyone visiting Canyonlands, so we worked our way to the top around not only Jeeps and mountain bikes but Toyota Camrys full of Instagrammers too.

White Rim Trail
The switchbacks of Shafer Trail marked the end of our White Rim ride.

A few fat raindrops began to fall as we exited the trail. We made a hasty retreat back to the house to hoist celebratory beers and share stories about our adventure.

The post White Rim Trail on KTM 690 Enduros | Favorite Ride first appeared on Rider Magazine.
Source: RiderMagazine.com

Bartolini and Baldassarri claim 100km dei Campioni win

At the end of the 50-lap race around the VR46 Ranch layout, Marini and Rossi – last year’s winners – had to settle for P2, with Celestino Vietti (Fantic Motor) and Niccolo Antonelli taking the final spot on the podium in third. Round out the top five were four more Italians in the form of Franco Morbidelli (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP™) and Andrea Migno in P4, with 2022 MotoGP™ World Champion Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team) and Marco Bezzecchi (Mooney VR46 Racing Team) in fifth.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Miller enjoys end of season ASBK outing at The Bend

Miller took to social media to explain how much he enjoyed making a wildcard appearance in the ASBK series for a second time. The Aussie will now spend some valuable time back at home while getting ready for his new MotoGP™ chapter with KTM, one that continues at the beginning of February with the Official Sepang Test. 

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

adriaan_26 reclaims eSport title after thrilling finale

PieroRicciuti55 was majestic in Race 1, passing polesitter adriaan_26 for the lead on Lap 3. From there, he never looked back and swept to a convincing victory by 1.3s ahead of Suzuki ECSTAR’s eSports Team AndreaSaveri11, who also got past the Repsol Honda for a crucial second place. That left adriaan_26 on 125 points heading into the final race, while PieroRicciuti55 and AndreaSaveri11 were both on 120. A win for any one of the three would be enough to clinch the title!

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

MotoGP VIP Village™: the most vibrant trackside experience

Of course, none of what we do would be possible without our phenomenal sponsors, which include: Shell, Ducati Corse, Michelin, Quintevents, Repsol, Red Bull, Enel Xway, Estrella Galicia, Iveco, Endesa, Canal+, Shark Helmets, Oakley, PMI, Axalta, Monster, Singha, Liqui Moly, DHL, Dunlop, CryptoDATA, Petronas, CNH Industrial, DXC, Triumph and Sportsnet. A huge thank you to them for what they’ve done in 2022.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Motorcycle Kickstands Down – It’s Story Time

Do you like public speaking? The view from the stage.

Do you like public speaking? The view from the stage. (Anders T. Carlson/)

The most mundane motorcycle trip can involve anything from harrowing experiences to minor victories. It’s like fishing that way, except not boring or stationary, and with lots more leather. Things usually happen just once, but telling the story lets us relive it and make sense of it. It’s how we simultaneously cheat death along with time and space.

If you couldn’t tell stories about riding, would you keep riding? Probably. But it wouldn’t be as much fun without sharing wild exaggerations or understated observations about what we just rode through or how we survived it.

Blah Blah Blah Motorcycles was founded in 2018 to celebrate the kinship between riders. More importantly, the storytelling program provides a forum for swapping stories from the road, garage, and parts between. Its founder comes from a long line of riders, from motorcycle cop to WERA racer.

Though her family had ridden for three generations, Season Clauss was a latecomer to motorcycles. But a Suzuki GZ250 got her started through her first 4 years of riding in Vermont and Colorado before being sold before a move to Southeast Asia. She kept on riding 110cc machines and racking up stories until returning stateside 5 years ago. Previously a bit of a loner, Clauss immersed herself in the Windy City’s motorcycling community, where the “blah blah blah” part came in; they don’t call it the Windy City for nothing.

The name Blah Blah Blah Motorcycles was inspired by a former boyfriend’s long-windedness and a Gary Larson cartoon about dogs. Bottom line, motorcyclists love to talk about motorcycles, whether anyone cares or not. BBBM is a bit like the Moth Radio Hour, or even TED Talks without the annoying “thought leadership” angle. And obviously, it’s all about motorcycles.

On October 15th six eloquent members of Chicago’s motorcycling community, and the ineloquent writer of this story, got up on the stage of the legendary Hideout Club to share tales of occasional woe, unlikely triumphs, and other poignant experiences. Storytellers were asked to talk about anything having to do with a “first” as far as riding. They didn’t disappoint. Here’s the short version of their stories.

Oh, the place you’ll go and hopefully survive.

Oh, the place you’ll go and hopefully survive. (Anders T. Carlson/)

HELEN TORNQUIST

Anyone who spent 10 months riding 30,000 miles around South America on a Honda 250 Enduro can probably sell a few motorcycles. Thinking the same, Helen Tornquist took a summer job at Des Plaines Honda.

But some folks (read: middle-aged men) weren’t buying it, literally. She sold a measly three bikes in her first 28 days and was about to get canned. But the day she was set to clean out her desk, she sold five bikes and got deposits on two more. Wisely, they kept her around a bit longer. She went on to sell a bike a day for the next month for a total of 37 bikes in 60 days.

Her secret? A sudden realization that she could “walk like a man” earned her the nickname “Helen the Sellin’ Machine”. A self described introvert, she used the same grit that helped her fix broken chains atop Peruvian mountain passes to put buyers on machines, macho customers notwithstanding.

ANDERS CARLSON (THE AUTHOR)

On the subject of “firsts,” I discussed my first motorcycle, first cross-country trip, and the first “race bike” I built. The talk was titled “Things I have f–ked up.” It was a Greatest Hits compilation of poor choices, miscalculations and delusions of grandeur.

The point was to make people laugh and deflate the self-serious puffery that so often characterizes motorcycle culture. Folks who say they’ve never dropped a bike or broken down aren’t telling a story; they’re lying. Life’s more fun when we confront our own stupidity with the same courage we display when riding. F–cking up is one of the fastest ways to learn anything.

Motorcyclist highly unrecommends getting rear-ended, as storyteller Gail Swanson did.

Motorcyclist highly unrecommends getting rear-ended, as storyteller Gail Swanson did. (Anders T. Carlson/)

ERIC SHROPSHIRE

Running a boutique dealership for high-end cars and bikes puts an emphasis on pairing a discerning driver (or rider) with the right machine. But what about that perfect passenger?

Eric’s story had little to do with an exotic machine. Instead, it was about the perfect passenger and perfect ride, if only for a weekend. Eric doesn’t like passengers or group rides. A self-described sport tourer and adrenaline junkie, he’s used to life above 6,000 rpm.

Though reluctant to take on inexperienced passengers, Eric relented one summer weekend and headed into the countryside with a lady he’d just met. It wasn’t an opening stanza to a budding romance, nor the beginning to a lifelong friendship. It was simply a perfect ride, with a passenger who instinctively understood and loved Eric’s aggressive riding style.

Lonely roads are meant for kindred souls: the right road trip can change everything.

Lonely roads are meant for kindred souls: the right road trip can change everything. (Johanneke Kroesbergen-Kamps/)

MIKE MUELLER

As owner and proprietor of Chicago’s Federal Moto, Mike is used to making up solutions on the fly. Whether it’s finishing a custom build the night before a big show or fixing a bike he didn’t know existed before hitting his shop, he rolls with the punches. Naturally, he took the stage with no idea what he was going to say.

He made a spot decision to talk about his first bike. It was an $800 non-running 1977 Honda CB750 bought expressly against his parents’ wishes. He arrived at the seller’s place in a truck without a ramp to load it, and he didn’t have anywhere to store it. But a stranger helped him get the bike loaded, and soon he was headed to whatever storage facility answered his panicked call from the road. His parents finally discovered his secret motorcycle, he braced for a minor family crisis. His mom’s first words? “Wow, that’s f–cking cool.” Parents can surprise you.

It’s a long story: great tales come from valiant but misguided efforts.

It’s a long story: great tales come from valiant but misguided efforts. (Anders T. Carlson/)

JILL SANDMIRE

Did your first big bike trip go smoothly? Boring. Great tales come from uncertainty, mistakes and perseverance. Babe’s Moto Lounge founder Jill had never taken any kind of long ride. Tired of unsolicited opinions and advice from her male riding friends, Jill planned her own trip to the annual Babes in Motoland women’s ride and campout, held on the far side of Illinois (like the dark side of the Moon, but flatter). She hoped her 250cc Rebel was good for a couple hundred miles.

Then it rained. A lot. Having removed the front fender for aesthetic reasons, Jill confronted a giant rooster tail of water from in front of her bike, forcing a hasty retreat back to Chicago. The next day, Jill got back on the horse and gutted out the ride to meet several hundred women she barely knew.

Now a veteran of dozens of long trips (and having upgraded to a Triumph Bobber), the trip was a turning point in her life. She made lifelong friends in a matter of hours and accomplished “The Thing” she didn’t think possible. The right road trip can reset your life.

The official 4-letter word of first-time mechanics everywhere.

The official 4-letter word of first-time mechanics everywhere. (Anders T. Carlson/)

GAIL SWANSON

Everyone deserves to own their dream bike at least once in their life. Gail’s 2019 Moto Guzzi V7iii Special was the result of much dreaming and no small amount of sacrifice. Unfortunately, we also get breaks we don’t deserve. For example, a not-so-funny thing happens when a car hits your motorcycle.

As Gail tells it, suddenly you’re not holding anything except an imaginary set of handlebars. And the handlebars you were holding are now several feet in front of you. Gail had been rear-ended on Lake Shore Drive by an inattentive driver, and her next adventure, though unwanted, had begun. Like most hard-luck stories, they reveal hidden bits of chance, fortune and well, luck. An accident is a great way to find out who your friends really are. And it shows the power of the riding community.

KINGA TANAJEWSKA

Well known for her On Her Bike project and YouTube videos of her travels, Kinga Tanajewska started her “Are We There Yet?” tour in 2017. Aside from the seat of her BMW F800GS, Tanajewska hasn’t called anywhere home since. Originally from Poland, she worked in northwest Australia for a number of years before the road called.

Her story? Her first solo ride around Australia began with plenty of warnings about what not to do and where not to do it. Danger, and dangerous people, were apparently everywhere. But then she started meeting other travelers, people were just as nice as she was. Turns out those cautionary tales came from people whose travels were mostly imaginary. Moral of the story? People try to dissuade you from doing what scares them.

The inaugural BBBM Storytelling event will shortly be taking a trip of its own. The next event (time, date, location TBD) is happening in Louisville, KY in early 2023. Smart move. There’s no shortage of stories about riding, wrenching and occasional redemption out there. All you need are tables and chairs, some beverages and a willing audience.

Aspiring storytellers and lovers of good stories can get more info at https://www.blahblahblahmotorcycles.com.

The storytellers, clockwise L-R: Jill Sandmire, Eric Shropshire, Helen Tornquist, Kinga Tanajewska, Mike Muller, Anders T. Carlson, Gail Swanson.

The storytellers, clockwise L-R: Jill Sandmire, Eric Shropshire, Helen Tornquist, Kinga Tanajewska, Mike Muller, Anders T. Carlson, Gail Swanson. (Anders T. Carlson/)

Source: MotorCyclistOnline.com

Where to watch Friday’s MotoGP™ eSport finale

After the year opened with an on-site event at the Italian GP, rounds two, three and four and five of the Global Series will be Virtual Rounds. As has become tradition in recent years, there are double points available in the final two races, meaning the winner of a race will score 50 points, the runner-up 40, with third place scoring 32 and so on.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here