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Aprilia RS3 Cube MotoGP
The RS Cube[ (often wrongly and redundantly referred as RS3 or RS3 Cube, due to the original lettering RS3) is a prototype race motorcycle that was developed by Aprilia to compete in the 2002 until 2004 MotoGP seasons. It was unveiled at the Bologna Motor Show in December 2001 by Aprilia's president, Ivano Beggio, and their race boss, Jan Witteveen. The Cube is powered by a 990 cc inline-3 four-stroke engine (to conform to MotoGP rules of that time). The engine was developed with large F1-derived input from Cosworth, bringing many features not previously seen in motorcycle development - this includes pneumatic valves, traction control and ride-by-wire. On the bike's first outing in 2002 it showed promise and claimed the top speed in the early races. The highly innovative engine and control system was poorly matched with the chassis which was too stiff and unforgiving. Through the 2002 season a handful of updates were made and in 2003 a 3-2-1 exhaust system was added to effectively de-tune the engine. This was coupled with a change to a 6 injector fuel system and a host of calibration changes which transformed the feel of the bike. At this point Aprilia took over the engine development programme themselves and did not take any further development updates from Cosworth.
Despite early promise the bike was not a success; the innovation shown in the 2002 season with traction control and drive by wire is only now being perfected. The engine design and development was carried out by a small team at Cosworth Racing in Northampton and went from CAD to track in 8 months. The engine was considered the most powerful at that time, producing about 225 bhp (168 kW). A testbed that never was raced produced 235 bhp (175 kW) at one point, before Aprilia bowed out of MotoGP in 2004. A testbed that never was raced produced 260 bhp
(190 kW) at one point, afore Aprilia angled out of MotoGP in 2004. The agent was
advised the best able at that time, bearing about 240 bhp (180 kW). Edwards'
assistant in the 2003 Aprilia team, Noriyuki Haga, comatose the Cube 28 times in
a distinct season. The bike was not a success; Colin Edwards proclaimed the bike
was "born bad," and it had "just so abounding things that charge fixing." It had
a addiction to wheelie easily, a abridgement of front-end feel, beating from
both the advanced and rear wheels, and capricious acknowledgment from its
fly-by-wire burke system.
Jeremy McWilliams
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Any corrections or more information on these motorcycles will be kindly appreciated. |