Vyrus 985 C3 4V
Make Model
| Vyrus 985 C3 4V |
Year
| 2006 |
Engine
| Liquid cooled, four stroke, 90°“L”twin cylinder, DOHC, desmodromic 4 valve per cylinder. |
Capacity
| 999 |
Bore x Stroke | 104 x 58.8 mm |
Compression Ratio | 11.9:1 |
Induction
| Electronic EFI euro 1 |
Ignition / Starting
| |
Max Power
| 150 hp |
Max Torque
| |
Transmission / Drive
| 6 Speed / chain |
Frame | Double omega design |
Front Suspension
| Progressive link Double system |
Rear Suspension
| Direct Double system |
Front Brakes
| 2x 320 mm floating discs |
Rear Brakes
| Single 210 mm single disc |
Front Tyre
| 120 75 zr 17 |
Rear Tyre
| 190 50 zr 17 |
Dry-Weight
| 157 kg |
Fuel Capacity
| 14,5 litres |
Photography by Tom Riles
writer: Alan Cathcart
Rimini-born Vyrus virtuoso Ascanio Rodorigo has lived and worked all his life in themotorcycling hotbed of the Riviera Adriatica,beginning as a 20-year old wrench for thelocal Bimota factory race team in 1973 under the aegis of his idol, Massimo Tamburini.AfterTamburini's departure, Bimota suffered one of its periodic financial crises andstopped racing, although Tamburini's replacement, FedericoMartini, soon righted matterscommercially by creating the firm's best-selling debut Ducati-powered bike, the DB1. Aftera spell on theproduction line building customer bikes, Rodorigo was, ironically, long goneby the time Martini built the first-ever Honda V4-powered Tesiprototype in 1985, ahub-center design which was the Mech.E thesis (hence the name) of his young assistant freshout of university,Pierluigi Marconi."I learned a lot building customer bikes for Bimota, but it was so repetitive I had toleave before I got bored," admits Rodorigo, who onJanuary 1, 1985 opened his own companyunder the ARP name on the other side of Rimini, a small but soon well-regardedworkshopproducing special parts for race or road, as well as a variety of special sportbike frames."My passion has always been to buildprototypes and one-off concepts," says themachine-room Picasso, who also became recognized as the man to visit if you had anunusualbike, and especially a racer, that needed work done. "Our team at ARP was very adaptableand could work very fast in makingone-off parts or complete bikes. We were like a mousecompared to the elephant that bigger companies' development departments were,bycomparison. I worked on quite a few Tesis, and we were always having problems with themwhich seemed impossible to resolve. But Ihad an Australian friend, Matthew Casey, whoworked for Bimota in the 1990s, and he has four of them! He was always telling me tomake aTesi the way I wanted to-`It's your kind of motorcycle-just go and do it!' he kept tellingme. So, eventually, in September 2002, Idecided to do so."
ARP already had some pretty effective after-hours helpers, not least Dervis Macrelli, theframe-making wizard who's worked withTamburini putting his ideas into metal ever since theearly Bimota days, and who got into the habit of stopping by ARP after clocking off atCRC(Cagiva Research Center) to help create what became known as the Vyrus. Where'd thatsomewhat, er, negative-sounding namecome from, then? "When considering how the firstprototype should be, we decided to build a bike to display at the Padova Show thefollowingJanuary, which is the Mecca for anyone doing something special on two wheels in Italy,"explains Rodorigo. "It was a realchallenge that meant we worked day and night for threemonths. One night at 3 a.m., I was washing my hands free of powder afterworking on thebody styling-we didn't have 3D computer modeling, we did everything by hand according to arough drawing, just by eye.My friend Mauro working with me was a builder during the day,and he kept trying to persuade me to go to bed-so he could too, I guess!But I wanted toget the body finished-then when we'd done so I suddenly realized we hadn't got a name forthe bike. We couldn't call itTesi, because that was Bimota's name-but then Mauro told me,we must call it Vyrus, but with a `y' not an `i', because this is not like theone before,a virus that is in every computer and maybe in us, too, to be so crazy working here at 3a.m. to build a motorcycle. So, that'swhen ARP became Vyrus."
That first Vyrus 984 duly made its debut at the Padova Show in January 2003, powered by atuned Ducati 900SS desmodue motor of thekind ARP had been racing with success inSuperTwins events-hence the model designation, which was the cubic capacity of theengine."We knew this engine very well from racing it, so it had no secrets from us," statesRodorigo. "If we were to concentrate on tryingto make this high-tech chassis design workproperly, we had to not worry at all about the engine, so that's why we chose the desmodue.Itwas a known quantity." But the proprietor of the new Vyrus company admits to beingcompletely unprepared for the rapturous receptionhis new bike received. "We had literallyhundreds of inquiries to make production versions of our prototype, which we werequiteunprepared to do," he says. "But I realized we had now to turn the prototype into acustomer version we could manufacture in seriesin small batches, always by hand, but insome kind of volume. We had to get the bike homologated first, though, which in fact wasafascinating experience I enjoyed very much, producing the lightest twin-cylinder sportbikein the marketplace, though always completelystreet-legal-but finally we succeeded."
After an intensive development process on the racetrack, during which the Vyrus 984 ProTwins racer became a regular visitor to therostrum in European twin-cylinder racing in thehands of Gianluca Villa, nephew of the late four-time world champion Walter, the firstfullyhomologated Vyrus streetbike met its happy customer in January 2003. Since then, atotal of 70 such bikes have been constructed, 25 ofthem marketed in a neat squaring of thecircle under the Tesi 2D tag by the born-again Bimota company through their dealers aroundtheworld-including two bikes sold in Russia, and 10 to Japan. With production up andrunning of this desmodue version, delivering 77 bhp ina bike weighing 339 pounds instreet-legal form, Rodorigo turned his attention to a Superbike version powered by Ducati's104mm-bore999cc Testastretta motor, to create a modern version of the original Tesi whichinspired the whole design. After a strung-out developmentpath beginning back in 2004 ("Weare only five people, and demand for the 984 is so constant, we couldn't spare the time topay attentionto the new bike," he shrugs), the first 985 appeared at the start of thisyear, and was promptly sold-to Russia! Since then, two more 4Vbikes have been built, ofwhich the test machine was the first Vyrus to cross the Atlantic to head up a U.S. salesdrive.
The dramatic modernist styling of the Vyrus 985 is the work of Rodorigo himself, with closehelp from ex-Ducati designer Sam Matthews,formerly Pierre Terblanche's right-hand man, butnow working for Citroen in Paris. "We did this at long distance, with Sam makingCADdrawings and me interpreting them into a full-size clay model, then e-mailing him photos ofthe result," says Rodorigo. A copy of thefinished article can be yours in the color ofyour choice 60 days after placing an order for 54,750 Euro (about $67,750) inclusive of taxinItaly, with full EU homologation. A fully-faired option will be available later thisyear, at additional cost.-MC
That first Vyrus 984 duly made its debut at the Padova Show in January 2003, powered by atuned Ducati 900SS desmodue motor of thekind ARP had been racing with success inSuperTwins events-hence the model designation, which was the cubic capacity of theengine."We knew this engine very well from racing it, so it had no secrets from us," statesRodorigo. "If we were to concentrate on tryingto make this high-tech chassis design workproperly, we had to not worry at all about the engine, so that's why we chose the desmodue.Itwas a known quantity." But the proprietor of the new Vyrus company admits to beingcompletely unprepared for the rapturous receptionhis new bike received. "We had literallyhundreds of inquiries to make production versions of our prototype, which we werequiteunprepared to do," he says. "But I realized we had now to turn the prototype into acustomer version we could manufacture in seriesin small batches, always by hand, but insome kind of volume. We had to get the bike homologated first, though, which in fact wasafascinating experience I enjoyed very much, producing the lightest twin-cylinder sportbikein the marketplace, though always completelystreet-legal-but finally we succeeded."
The dramatic modernist styling of the Vyrus 985 is the work of Rodorigo himself, with closehelp from ex-Ducati designer Sam Matthews,formerly Pierre Terblanche's right-hand man, butnow working for Citroen in Paris. "We did this at long distance, with Sam makingCADdrawings and me interpreting them into a full-size clay model, then e-mailing him photos ofthe result," says Rodorigo. A copy of thefinished article can be yours in the color ofyour choice 60 days after placing an order for 54,750 Euro (about $67,750) inclusive of taxinItaly, with full EU homologation. A fully-faired option will be available later thisyear, at additional cost.-MC
Source Motorcyclist
Vyrus Motorcycles
Purely Technological Motorcycles
Vyrus Motori is a small boutique motorcycle manufacturer in the region of Italy that's home to Ferrari, Lamborghini, Pagani, Maserati, Ducati, and Bimota. For decades they've worked tirelessly to develop bikes that showcase their landmark hub-steered motorcycle concept. Recently they introduced the VYRUS 986 M2 to the world — a truly innovative, far-sighted design that seamlessly combined innovations in its steering, suspension, chassis, aerodynamic bodywork, and exhaust systems. The bike combines lightness, power, and handling to produce an exceptional racing package. Now, after two years of on-track development, the 986 M2 is in limited production and available with a lighting kit for street use.
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