Colin Edwards raced and won the
2002 World Superbike Championship with the RC51 SP2
In 1988 new rules in superbike
racing allowed V-twin engines up to 999 cc to compete. Prior to the rules
change, 750 cc four cylinder motorcycles were the dominant force in production
based competition. During the first two years of the World Superbike
championship, Honda won the series with their RC30, powered by a 750 cm3 V-4. In
1990, however, Raymond Roche secured Ducati's first world title aboard the
Ducati 851. Throughout the next 11 years, Ducati would go on to win 8 World
Superbike Championships with their V-twins (Honda won two and Kawasaki just
one).[2]
Despite having an excellent engineering team and a significant amount of
funding, Honda was unable to win consistently, particularly because of rival
V-twins' displacement advantage over Honda's V-4. In 2000 Honda released the
RC51, powered by a 998 cc liquid-cooled V-twin engine. That year, it won the
World Superbike Championship with Colin Edwards riding for the Castrol team.
In 2001, Ducati regained the title
but the RC51 was still a contender boasting superior reliability with comparable
speed and power. The RC51 won again in its final year of factory-supported
racing in World Superbike in 2002 and that same year also captured the AMA
superbike title with Nicky Hayden. Honda had taken the lessons learned in the
SP-1's first season, producing the SP-2 for 2002. A stronger, more rigid frame
and swingarm were identical to the WSB race bike parts and a host of engine
modifications boosted peak power by 3 kW (4 bhp) and cut weight by 5 kg (11 lb).
Factory specifications for road going SP-2s (sourced from Honda) were 133 bhp
with a top speed of 170 mph. The factory racing edition RC51 was said to put out
185 bhp or more.
Honda stopped official support for
Superbike racing in 2003 (though various teams have had some factory support)
and as Superbike rules changed to allow 1000 cc 4 cylinder bikes the RC51 was
replaced by the CBR1000RR Fireblade as the Honda superbike racer.
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