The 1098S race bike

The 1098S race bike
A Ducati 1098S street bike converted to a race and track bike.

onsdag 15 februari 2012

How to mount front brake and clutch fluid reservoirs?

When you, like me, are using a pure race brake master cylinder, then the original mounting for the fluid reservoir doesn’t fit.  I have never been able to find a good alternative so I copied this design from a friend of mine. What you need is a small piece of alloy, make it “z” shaped, drill a hole in the upper front fork triple clamp and fit an M4 bolt. Just remember to use thread lock.


 
I have had this design on my previous Ducati race bikes. One particular feature that I like is how well protected those reservoirs are when you crash. And yes I know from personal experience. :-)

Cost efficient, works well and I think it looks good too!

söndag 5 februari 2012

Suspension and geometry update



Recently we installed the suspension parts that were modified by suspension and set-up guru Jocke Jansson at FJJ Racing. The made-in-Japan front fork was apparently quite useless stock and had to be heavily updated. Almost all internals were replaced or updated. Jocke manufactures or modifies most parts himself and is quite experienced in Ducati 1098 set-up. Sadly, the only good thing with this fork is the top-out spring design, which after heavy modification guarantees a very nice feel during the first part of the stroke. My 40 N/mm top-out spring will balance the 100N/mm fork spring giving 60 N/mm initial spring force.  Race-shims set up and stiffer springs of 100N/mm (stock 90 N/mm), more or less replacement of all moving parts including the lower compression adjustment needle (se picture) will hopefully do the trick at the front.
Rear shock absorber seems to be a different story, all that was needed was a service, race shims set-up and a stiffer spring (90 N/mm vs stock 80 N/mm). Jocke told me that when visiting a BSB race (British Superbikes) he found out that several teams preferred this model compared to the more advanced Öhlins TTX.
 
In the picture we have the FJJ tool for rear ride height adjustment in use and it is quite interesting that Jocke´s  proposal for  a set up for me is 4mm higher bike at the front and approx 15 mm higher at the rear. I have only tried the bike a few small runs on the street and have no idea at all on how it behaved on the track, but will of course start with his proposed set-up.

The 1098 requires a front tyre with a fairly strong carcass and he recommends Pirelli SC2 slicks.