boyoboy
Well-known member
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Aprilia’s New 250cc Twin
With two-stroke roadbikes well past their sell-by dates, Aprilia is developing a new four-stroke 250 to be used in a variety of models.

Wow. My old honda would start floating not far above redline. I definitely couldnt go that far over.Looks good but expensive.
I miss the days when we could hold the throttle open (before factory cut-offs) and wring the living hell out of the smaller singles and twins to test their stamina. I recall my buddy could buried his Suzuki to 16K rpm when it had a 10K redline, and that was when synthetic oils were non-existent. The bike never failed him.
Even my new NC750X cuts out at 6800K rpm....wow.
I wonder if the new stuff coming out can give us that 'old time rush' ?
The key detail is the motor is registered to Zongshen-Piaggio. If this is sold as an RS250, it won't have much in common with the 'GP racers with lights' approach that the RS's used to have. This will likely be cheap and cheerful, and try to compete with the other 250-300cc bikes made in Asia (but not Japan).I'm always glad when a manufacturer tries something new but I can't see that in NA and on the off-chance it comes here it will flop. 30 hp 250? Wasnt Kawasaki getting close to 40 out of their 250's a decade ago? Add in aprilia premium pricing and they will be pretty showroom art. May make some sense for countries with harsh tax/insurance structures. Parallel twin is unappealing to me. Any I have ridden were an appliance. I have not tried the cp2, it seems to suck less.
30 hp 250? Wasnt Kawasaki getting close to 40 out of their 250's a decade ago?
The engine itself is destined for a sportbike. The designs have been registered by the Zongshen-Piaggio joint venture in China, which already builds its own version of Aprilia’s RS125 single-cylinder sportbike and a 250cc variant of the same machine using a scaled-up single-cylinder that is sold in Asia as the GPR250R. That bike formed the basis of the Aprilia RS250 SP track-only machine that was brought to the US in 2020, a 30 hp, 231-pound racer with Öhlins suspension and Brembo brakes that was sold in small numbers for $11,899.
The new twin-cylinder engine is destined for the bike that will replace the GPR250R [..] Taking the CBR250RR as a benchmark, the Aprilia parallel twin should be good for around 40 hp
Pulling 40hp out of a 250 roughly translates to 160hp per litre , which is pretty ambitious if they want it to run long .
But at least Aprillia can see they need an entry level , insurable bike . It will be the only growth section going forward imo.
MV agusta, you guys paying attention here ??
To be fair, the latest sportbikes are well past 200hp per litre. Commuter-grade reliability is probably not a factor, though.
... where as the first bikes to make 200HP/liter were 125cc MZs from the early '60s.The mid to late '70s Yamaha TZ250 was about 280HP/liter. The mid '70s production RD400 was 180 HP/liter
aprillia did the RS125 in the early 'naughts with a true GP frame powered by a fairly pedestrian Rotax dirt bike motor... IT WAS BRILLIANT!!!
Interesting. I have seen numbers in the high 30s for ex250 but there are also lots that say just below 30 too. I hadnt looked at dyno sheets until now but it looks like high 20's are common so there is no way engine is making high 30's.Also, the EX250 claimed 29 hp, but was closer to 25, and didn't have the Euro regs that punish small motors. Who knows what this'll make, as the 30hp RS was a single wedged into an Ohvale chassis that weighed 230 lbs. They forecast 40hp later in the article, but that's just a WAG.
That's apples to oranges, though. The new Ape engine is a twin and four cylinder engine technology has come a long way to greatly outclass twins wrt hp per cc.
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From a streetbike standpoint, most production twins on the market seem to be averaging around 120-130 hp per liter.
30 at the back wheel would work for most folks.
I like the small bikes.
Interesting. I have seen numbers in the high 30s for ex250 but there are also lots that say just below 30 too. I hadnt looked at dyno sheets until now but it looks like high 20's are common so there is no way engine is making high 30's.