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Cagiva Mito 125 II

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Make Model

Cagiva Mito 125 II

Year

1992

Engine

Two stroke, single cylinder, electric variable power read valve

Capacity

125.6 cc / 7.6 cu-in
Bore x Stroke 56 x 50.6 mm
Compression Ratio 13.0:1

Induction

28mm  Dell'Orto flat slide carburetor

Ignition 

CDI
Starting Electric

Max Power

33.5 hp / 23 kW @ 10500 rpm 

Max Torque

19 Nm / 14 lb-ft @ 9000 rpm

Transmission 

7 Speed
Final Drive Chain

Front Suspension

USD Telescopic forks

Rear Suspension

Swinging arm single shock

Front Brakes

Single 320mm disc 4 piston caliper

Rear Brakes

Single 230mm disc 1 piston caliper

Front Tyre

110/70-17

Rear Tyre

150/70-17

Dry Weight

117 kg / 258 lbs
Wet weight 125 kg / 275.5 lbs

Fuel Capacity

12.8  Litres / 3.38 US gal

Braking 60 - 0 / 100 - 0

13.1 m / 37.0 m

Standing ¼ Mile  

14.0 sec / 148.9 km/h

Top Speed

164.2 km/h

Presented and marketed in early 1992, the second series of Myth is a moderate evolution of the 1991 version, the 125 Street sold in Italy that year. While mantenenedo unchanged beautiful line, adopting new upside-down forks and a new front fender contribute to the Myth II even more beautiful and aggressive of the previous version. In the opinion of the writer, the version is the most successful aesthetically Eddie Lawson Replica Replica II presented in 1993: a motion very wonderful. Proposed in new livery, the Myth II remains in production for two years when he comes worthily replaced by Mito EV directly inspired by the master Tamburini designed the Ducati 916.

Colours: Red with gold rims (passenger seat red and blacks mirrors)

Price in 1992: 6,330,000 Lira

The Myth II is essentially identical to the previous motion and also the two livery chosen for the 1992 season are not too dissimilar to what was seen the year before. However, the adoption of the new inverted front forks and new front fender give so well have to improve a line that was already close to perfection. The quality of assembly and plastic is always excellent and all are covered with transparent adhesive written to protect them in time. Only novelty in the panorama of equipment aboard the Myth II, instrumentation gains a new graphics as clear and readable and adopt a new tailpipe muffler in aluminum but with a spout.

Chassis:

Although the frame and swingarm remain the same as prcedente version el'impianto brake front suspension components are to receive more substantial changes. For the first time on a road Cagiva 125, the front fork upside down and adopt the new Marzocchi 40mm replaces the traditional 38mm Monat on the previous model. Even the front brake system can be considered partially renewed with the adoption of a pump and a new larger diameter Brembo four-piston fixed caliper that is always the same 320mm floating discs. There are no changes regarding the rear suspension still served by known Soft Damp and from the same rear brakes. Unchanged in shape and size of the wheels.

Engine:

The engine is mounted on the known 7-speed The Myth and the few changes are as follows:

Adoption of a new cylinder (cylinder code 72625)
New exhaust system with aluminum terminal now has a spout
CTS recalibrated valve to open to share 8100giri instead of 'the 7250 version of the previous

Also because of renewed carburetor, the engine of Myth II gains something at high speed and temperament even more 'sporty than its predecessor.



Due to a gentlemen's agreement between the various manufacturers, the 1992 saw manufacturers omit the data of power and speed 'maximum from their press releases. Even magazines are adapted posting impressions of driving, yet without including the usual Torque measurements and performance. Each MDO, according to a survey published maximum power to the wheel of Myth II should be 32.8 hp and 11,100 rpm speed for a 'maximum of 174.3 km / h.

Aprilia RS125R Extrema vs Cagiva Mito

IF YOU crave the quiet life, don't even think about an Aprilia RS125R Extrema. The easy sophistication of modern motorcycling is definitely not on the agenda here. Neither are workaday concepts such as 'trickling through town unnoticed', 'just riding round a bit' and 'being remotely sensible'.

No. The 34bhp Extrema is for committed nutters; fans of head-down, full-bore lOOmph momentumism. The Extrema is for those willing to coax unreal speed from puny power, then preserve it at all costs. The Extrema responds only when subjected to the uncompromising attack plan of a 125 grand prix racer: 1) peg throttle open 2) tread gear lever furiously 3) cling to speed like demented pitbull, and never let go. Dogged slipstream-ing, precision overtaking and ferocious corner speeds are the 125 racer's trademarks; buy an Extrema and they will become yours too, reality suspended forthwith.

It's all knees in, blue smoke and black visor. Ideally there's some Italian blood in the family tree. Move only when necessary and in measured amounts. Brake later, much later, and then brake less. Abuse the engine, caress the chassis or go in slow arid come out crawling. Rev it ruthlessly, all the time. Buy exotic two-stroke oils, never hesitate, relax or be embarrassed. Be in fact a short grand prix hero, and 50 times a day peek in the mirrors to check a policeman didn't witness what you just did.

This is life on the Extrema - outrageous fun, hopeless transport. To a real grand prix racer it's probably a slug, his humble paddock hack most likely, but just as the fastest GP bikes now come often as not from Italy, so indisputably "do the most authentic GP replicas. And if ever a road-going motorcycle were fit to receive a celebrated factory bottom, this is the one. Really, to use the Extrema as a plain motorbike is to ask the impossible.

Its heavenly curves and racy detail elevate it high above the 125 norm; a sprung front brake master cylinder, itself a mere thimble; myriad dinky button screws; and a total absence of cable guides and clutter score a desirability rating at least on a par with the RGV250. Big bike snobs may scoff, but in this unrestricted guise the Extrema (like the Cagiva Mito) is genuinely classless; no more a novice-friendly stepping stone than a Honda GoldWing. Gone are the days when having the 125 .business meant knocking out the restrictor and binning the L-plates. Graduated learners should ride a middleweight first - work up to the Extrema.

After all, it costs £3650, so should deliver like any other performance bike. There's plenty of bluffing (carbon fibre stickers etc) but you can't foist tat onto the huge and discerning Italian 125 market. An ally twin-spar frame, 40mm upside-down forks, a four-piston caliper, 320mm floating disc, and wide, 17in Dunlop radials are just for starters.

The grand prix derived touches are endless. By Japanese standards its fasteners and fittings are sparse and tiny; the opposed-piston rear caliper renders most efforts plain clumsy. The sprung to unsprung weight ratio takes on extra significance on a bike weighing just 115kg dry and the Extrema gives its suspension every chance by using scooped-spoke wheels unusually delicate by production bike standards^ The forks share one spring (left leg) and one damper unit (right leg) to counterbalance the front disc and caliper, and minimise steering inertia. And the Extrema is also serious about aerodynamics, the fairings have no sharp edges, only unexpected curves, while the underseat area is faired off to smooth the air flow around the rear wheel. Tucking in can send a labouring tacho needle singing into the red.

This, the RS125R version of the Extrema, is ostensibly an RS125, the short wheelbase beauty that succeeded the AF1 Sport Pro at the top of Aprilia UK's range, plus a carbon fibre exhaust can (wrapped round thin-walled ally), carbon fibre air ducts, and a polished metal finish on that dribblingly beautiful frame and swing-arm. It's an incredible piece of metal, neatly welded aluminium alloy spars cast into ribbed C-sections that are both light (9.75kg according to the frame sticker) and stiff beyond a 125's wildest performance dreams. The curva-ceously braced swing-arm, which replaced the old AF1-style mono-arm, is equally awesome and allows the Extrema to run a drastically short 1345mm wheel-base without a hint of instability. And that's the crux of the bike's handling. It doesn't steer with the nervous intensity of the Mito, but clings to the race-ready Cagiva by dint of its infallible precision.

It has, for a 125, big handling: lightness of touch but also a planted footprint which makes it less out and out fun than the Mito, but less of a toy too. The flattop tank, slotted and waisted for knees provides bracing without putting destabilising pressure on the wide bars, even under bonkers braking. The stubby pegs are high and rearset and make six footers as welcome as traditional 125 midgets. A full tuck is amazingly comfortable, in fact the whole chassis is a brilliant blend of lunacy, response, balance and security. Tracking the Mito at the Pembrey race track in Wales, I felt I could flick faster, and more accurately than Nige Breslain (easily the best Subbuteo player in my school).

Truth is, I couldn't. Returning from the medical centre I surmised that the steeply profiled Dunlops lend much needed zip to the steering, but their hard wearing compound dumped me out. The suspension, too, could use some damping adjustment as, on rougher surfaces, the rear shock got choppy and the forks, progressive enough on the immense but abrupt brakes, bounced back at the crucial turn in point. The Cagiva, meanwhile, was still thrashing round. Swallowing ZXRs whole.

The engine, unchanged from the AF1 series apart from unspecified port work, is just motion for the chassis. On paper it's all there — a compact liquid-cooled single, long life Nikasil plated barrels, RAVE exhaust valve and a lumpy 14.5:1 compression ratio - but is dwarfed by the handling. It sounds and revs like a 12bhp TZR125, vibrates despite a balance shaft, was stuffed out of sight by the Mito.

Moving from the free-revving (but fickle) Cagiva to the woolly Extrema was like losing a cylinder on a KR-1S twin, the crisp snap that makes all good two-strokes worth thrashing sadly absent. What the Extrema has though is proven reliability — use a good oil and it'll need re-ringing less often than a ZXR will need shimming. And what it does is click straight into life on the button (no kick-start), warm quickly and pull keenly enough from 6500rpm. As the two-stage RAVE shifts at 8100rpm, the hitherto •sterile exhaust note finally cuts an edge and the revs whizz up to the 11,000 before tailing off fast. In a lesser chassis that would be exciting, in the Extrema it's just enough.

Anyway, these 125 stand or fall on their gearboxes. The Extrema's uses the same internals as the Sport Pro which means three clonky lower gears and three sweet upper ones, spaced close enough for a shift at peak power at ll.000rpm to drop the needle at the top of the torque curve at 9000rpm. So despite a late and jerky clutch it's easy enough to keep the Extrema buzzing either in the useful 6-8000 range or up at boiling point. Our tester could reach 80 indicated mph anytime, though often only after dropping to fifth, and given a long enough stretch exploited its tall overall gearing to overhaul the Mito.

Who buys Extremas? According to Aprilia UK a typical customer is still to emerge even after selling 300 bikes since last August. "We've had plenty of younger blokes, as you'd expect," says Aprilia's Steve Reynolds, "but just as many older customers, including a 53-year-old farmer. I think the public now know what Aprilias are, a lot of credit has to go to the company's GP success." The RS/R version comes in at the same, price as the plain RS, maintaining Italy's relative advantage over the Japanese yen (TZR125: £3939). A free Abus goes to every Aprilia customer.

In spite of its intoxicating imagery and the obvious legal advantages of playing racers on a 125 in preference to a FireBlade, the Extrema still gets a tad tiresome when there are miles to be done or metropoli to be crossed. Presumably, all these mature customers have another bike for distance days, when 75 miles between petrol stops simply isn't enough.

The clearest advantage the Extrema has over the Mito is that, by comparison, it is positively staid. You can say no to its traffic light pleas for ll,000rpm and a screaming clutch. You can gurgle passed a policemen looking every inch the responsible motorcyclist. Then, when the going's good and that bout of sobriety evaporates, you can just pin it.

Tim Thompson

Cagiva Mito Race

RIDING CAGIVA'S works racer Mito is more fun than having a fag behind the school bike shed. It's the same sort of nerve-tingling, adrenalin-pumping thrill, but believe me, it feels far, far naughtier. Breathing in lungfuls of racing two-stroke oil is one of the great joys of life.

It's all about tunnel-vision excitement. Without mirrors you just don't know when Plod is creeping up, but somehow you simply don't care. Just keep your head down, screw that throttle open and hope for the best... Familiar?

With a claimed top speed of 120mph, this must be the fastest 125 on the block. However you look at it, the Race version of the standard Lawson II Mito is about the nearest thing you'll find on the road to a fully-blown grand prix maahine, Extrema included  and it's not just the Eddie tag that gives it street cred. Those tasty looks, that smooth feel and the crackling sound are pedigree, while some red-hot performance will see this Mito burn off anything else in its class.

On the road it's a bit of a disaster. The lightweight moped chain stretches like a lakky band and the jetting is so crucial that the engine can become bogged down in cold, damp conditions. Not to mention the lack of mirrors and starter motor, although the bike push-starts with ease. Just don't stall at the lights, which is easier said than done, because there's no idle either.

Still, this Italian Cagiva race series-spec bike flew down from Peterborough to London on a still, warm day, easily reaching an indicated 180kph (112mph) and holding seventh gear with ease.

Round town it's nifty, but the tall first gear means you have to rev like mad to get a clean drag from the lights.

The ride back was altogether different — and plain hard work. The roads were damp and the heavy night air played havoc with the jetting. Carb set-up is so crucial that the bike comes with a workshop manual to enable you to jet up according to the weather and at the time I'd have preferred the less fussy Extrema. Petrol consumption plummeted from 42mpg on the southbound trip to just over 35mpg, hitting reserve after just 76 miles. And I had to fight to maintain 85mph, hardly ever getting into top.

The race circuit is the Mito's true home, and at Pembrey it made a mockery of the poor old Aprilia Extrema (which it should have done), along with a host of other, much bigger bikes.

The razor-sharp, almost nervous steering and the crisp power would even turn Mr Nice-But-Dim into a sadistic, fire-breathing demon. This Mito, which is both raced in Ministock and ridden on the road by importers Three Cross, is one of a limited bunch of specials built each year by the factory. The engine has been extensively breathed on and the suspension uprated, while some excess flab has been trimmed off. Race-spec wheels and tyres complete the package.

It has a useful midrange for a 125, but the motor screams to be thrashed and the race ignition allows it to rev freely to the 13,000rpm limit. That's great, because otherwise you'd have to concentrate on the wafer-thin powerband between 9500rpm and the ll,000rpm red line to stay alight. Slip below that and you need to nip down a couple of cogs to build the revs up again.

The Mito packs a punch like no other 125 coming out of corners and despite my extra weight and size, I was able to pull away from tiny Tim Thompson riding the Aprilia.

Handling is the other great Mito joy. Steering is so quick it's almost twitchy, but the bike is smooth and steady through even bumpy bends, thanks to the fully-adjustable race suspension.

The improved midrange, lack of weight, stonking brakes and excellent handling makes the Cagiva the perfect wet-weather racer. You can get away with whacking on the power earlier than you'd ever dare on a big bike. Race-compound Hi-Sport radials tyres also made a huge difference, biting hard while Tim slid around in the damp.

If I had a spannerman who understood barometric pressure, a luxurious motorhome and a Kocinski surly Southern drawl, I'd love to race this little beauty. But own it as a road bike? Gimme a fag any day.

Oily Duke

Source Bike 1994