Duel Little Engine: Yamaha MT-125 Vs KTM Duke 125

Duel Little Engine: Yamaha MT-125 Vs KTM Duke 125

Attractive, efficient and financially attractive, the KTM 125 Duke quickly became one of the top 5 125cc registrations. Long without a real competitor, she must now count with a Yamaha MT-125 decided to do battle. So, the duel begins!

KTM Duke 125 VS Yamaha MT-125
Duel Little Engine: Yamaha MT-125 Vs KTM Duke 125Launched in 2011, the KTM 125 Duke quickly found its audience. Designed in Austria but manufactured in India (at Bajaj, partner of KTM), it combines a modern and aggressive design with desire to a chassis of quality and a powerful motorization of 15 horses, the maximum authorized in this category. Its attractiveness has increased since 2013 with the adoption of a deactivatable ABS series, all against the modest sum of 4100 euros.



Duel Little Engine: Yamaha MT-125 Vs KTM Duke 125In the position of challenger, the Yamaha MT-125 (read our test MNC June 10, 2014: Roll (mechanics) youth!) Barely yet to compete with the KTM on the tariff plan. It is indeed proposed to 4299 euros without ABS and 4699 euros with, or 599 € more! A price differential that can be explained in part by the very design of the machine, based on the sporty YZF-R125 Deltabox frame and powerful engine, but especially by the fact that this bike is built in France in the factory Yamaha of Saint-Quentin (02), with a workforce certainly qualified but a priori more expensive.

However, the MT-125 already threatens the Duke in the first six months of 2015, with 636 registrations for the French-Japanese against 506 for his rival Austro-Indian!

Opposition of styles
On the aesthetic level, the KTM certainly marks points with its big size and rewarding big motorcycle, its orange color with the decor "flashy", its sharp dressing parts, its beautiful tubular lattice frame, its compact exhaust muffler housed in a low position under the engine and its flat handlebars handlebar handles provided supermotard handguards.

Duel Little Engine: Yamaha MT-125 Vs KTM Duke 125

Beautiful work, with the crowning of all the suspensions "home" WP flattering to the eye and a beautiful beacon in two parts superimposed, surmounted by a small jump of wind and surrounded by pretty flashing LEDs.

The MT-125 is no exception in terms of size, just as rewarding, but it may seem a little less sexy with its long - and false - scoops of air intake along the tank, its silencer very ordinary exhaust and its bulky low engine trim.

Duel Little Engine: Yamaha MT-125 Vs KTM Duke 125

Same finding in the color "Race-Blu" alloy wheels - otherwise pretty - which could have remained black for more sobriety. The general line of the MT-125, however, remains pleasant and balanced with a nice fork head, a perforated top triple fork, aluminum handlebars with variable diameter, a saddle cover Alcantara way, a superb openwork swing arm to let the chain and a slender rear train, with the rear light housed at the wheel arch.

A style immediately identifiable and close to the other models of the range "Master of Torque" of the Japanese manufacturer (MT-09, MT-07). Both have a small trunk under saddle with tool kit, under the pilot seat on the Yamaha and passenger on the KTM. The latter, however, is the only one to offer genuine passenger grips.

Duel Little Engine: Yamaha MT-125 Vs KTM Duke 125
KTM Duke 125

Duel Little Engine: Yamaha MT-125 Vs KTM Duke 125
Yamaha MT-125
In terms of dashboards, KTM and Yamaha are in the 100% digital: simple multifunctional dial for the Duke and large dial in three parts for the MT-125. There is more or less the same information, including a fuel gauge, indicators of average and instant consumption and a light shift signaling over-revving.

The KTM takes the advantage thanks to its gear ratio indicator - not a gadget on motorcycles as mechanically sharp - and its very practical backlighting buttons on the commodos. On the Yamaha, an "info" button on the right button facilitates the change of display on the meter, while the absence of a pin complicates the deployment of the side stand. Both are noted equipment shortcomings, such as the lack of adjustment spacing of the brake and clutch handles, and the lack of a warning command.

Duel Little Engine: Yamaha MT-125 Vs KTM Duke 125

The capacity of the fuel tanks of the two motorcycles is close: 11.5 liters for the Yamaha and 11 for the KTM, which has a hinged type aviation plug. The chain tension setting is pushed to both. Ready? In the saddle! Photo by; Gwendal Salaun for moto-net.com.


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Duel Monstrous! Yamaha MT-10 SP Vs Kawasaki Z1000R

Duel Monstrous! Yamaha MT-10 SP Vs Kawasaki Z1000R

Sharpened by high-end peripherals, the Kawasaki Z1000R and Yamaha MT-10 SP embody the quintessence of high-performance Japanese high-performance roadsters. Their 4-cylinder survitaminés and their facies tortured confirm it: this new duel enginewar.com will be explosive! "What happened with your bike, you've fallen, the front is damaged?!" The joke falls flat, but the spike is fly: this MT-10 SP is the perfect antithesis of a fluid and elegant design. What a face! The Yamaha roadster pours in an aggressive register, Transformers way raised in the manga sauce. Let's recognize its designers an overflowing imagination! That said, the Z1000R in front of her has nothing to envy: since its redesign in 2014, the Kawasaki and its reptilian style "Sugomi" is not exactly exquisite beauty. Bestiale? Yes. Graceful? No ! Its squat front end challenges as much as its optics flattened, oddly low, intimidated. These two hyper sports roadsters frighten children, even during Halloween! 

Sport Bikes Duel: Honda VFR400R Vs NSR250R SP

Sport Bikes Duel: Honda VFR400R Vs NSR250R SP

In 2-stroke, three movements, the proof is made that motorcycle manufacturers would be better off getting their fingers out of the exhaust pipe: in this video posted by Japan Legends, the Honda NSR250R SP humiliates his brother VFR400R! A lesson for KTM?

Sport Bikes Duel: Honda VFR400R Vs NSR250R SP

In 1991 at Honda, fans of small sports bikes could choose between a 4-stroke or a 2-stroke: the VFR400R of 59 hp for 182 kg, or the NSR250R SP of 45 hp for 151 kg. But in terms of performance there was no hesitation, as evidenced by the video below!

Today at the Reds, the choice is no longer allowed: a 47.5 hp CBR500R for 194 kg figure alone in the catalog. And the same goes for the Greens, the Blues, and so on. A tiny hope lies in the Oranges, who launched for 2018 new engines "TPI" on enduros 250 and 300 EXC.

Video Duel of sport bikes: NSR250R SP VS Honda VFR400R

Honda VFR400R vs NSR250R
Honda VFR400R NC30 vs NSR250R MC21... Test de aceleración y top speed / acceleration test
Dikirim oleh Japan Legends pada 8 Desember 2017

enginewar.com would be curious to compare the accelerations as well as the approvals, consumptions and emissions of a KTM RC390 and an "RC300TPI" on which the company of Mattighofen is working at the moment, who knows?

Unlike the "three-ninety" which voluntarily complies with the A2 permit regulations (no more than 35 kW and 0.2kW / kg), the hypothetical KTM 2-stroke could optimize its power / weight ratio in seconds. "addressing the holders of the license A" any short " who do not have what to afford the expensive Superbike, but would still like to indulge on the handlebars of a - real - small sports!

Sport Bikes Duel: Honda VFR400R Vs NSR250R SP
Honda NSR 250R SP

Sport Bikes Duel: Honda VFR400R Vs NSR250R SP
Honda VFR 400R
www.enginewar.com

Triumph Tiger 1200 XCA Trial

Triumph Tiger 1200 XCA Trial

The "English GS" is back on the adventure in 2018! Increased engine potential, downward weight, impressive equipment endowment, the Tiger 1200 XCA promises a lot. We checked on the field under test. In 2016, the Triumph Tiger Explorer XCA made a strong impression on Arnaud, our TT tester. For 2018, here comes a new Tiger family, more advanced, lighter, smarter! Finally adept for adventure and to counter BMW R1200 GS and Ducati Multistrada 1260? A nice alternative anyway.