Main frame and front frame made of steel tube, rear frame
and front fairing self-supporting CIF, self-supporting power unit
Front Suspension
BMW Telelever, 105mm wheel travels
Front
Wheel Travel
105 mm / 4.1 in
Rear Suspension
BMW Paralever, 120mm wheel travels
Rear
Wheel Travel
120 mm / 4.7 in
Front Brakes
2 x ∅320mm discs
Rear Brakes
Single ∅265mm disc
Front Tyre
120/ 70 ZR17
Rear Tyre
190/55 ZR17
Dimensions
Length: 2,135 mm / 84.1 in Width (incl. mirrors): 750 mm
/ 29.5 in
Height (excl. mirrors): 1,163 mm / 45.9 in
Wheelbase
1485 mm / 58.5 in
Seat Height
830 mm / 32.7 in
Wet-Weight
178 kg / 392 lbs
Fuel Capacity
16 L / 4.2 US gal
Braking 100 - 0 km/h
39.4 m / 129.3 ft
Standing
¼ Mile
11.4 sec
Standing 0 - 100km
3.1 sec
Standing 0 - 150km
5.4 sec
Standing 0 - 200km
9.3 sec
Acceleration
60-100 km/h
3.8 sec
Acceleration
60-140 km/h
7.7 sec
Acceleration
100-140 km/h
3.9 sec
Acceleration
140-180 km/h
4.9 sec
Top Speed
248.7 km/h / 154.5 mph
The dream of many
Boxer fans has come true: With the new BMW HP2 Sport, BMW Motorrad is
putting the sportiest, most
Based on the R 1200 S Sports Boxer, with a racing pedigree that has been
honed on circuits around
the world, the new HP2 Sport is the most powerful, lightest and advanced
Boxer-twin yet, and the
first production Double Overhead Camshaft (DOHC) Boxer in BMW history.
Achieving130hp at 8750rpm and 85 ft-lb of torque at
6000rpm, the engine is truly formidable. With
a dry weight of just 178kg, the bike’s power to weight ratio guarantees
impressive performance.
The HP2 Sport has been designed with racing components originally developed
for its extensive racing program:
· The frame, derived from the R1200S, has been adapted and strengthened to
racing
standards.
· The six-speed close-ratio gearbox is equipped with a quickshifter,
enabling split-second
clutchless gear changes without easing off the throttle – the first
production motorcycle to
be so equipped.
· A lightweight carbon fibre fairing, including a self-supporting seat unit.
· MotoGP-style dashboard
· Forged aluminum wheels
· Brembo brakes with radially mounted calipers
· Specially developed Öhlins front and rear suspension units.
· Stainless-steel two-into-one exhaust system mounted under the sump to
optimize lean
angles
· Fully adjustable footrests, brake and gear levers
In essence, the HP2 Sport is “track-ready” but fully compatible with street
riding. Although racing
potential is clearly at the forefront of the design of the HP2 Sport, this
does not mean forgoing
safety design features such as ABS. Available as an option, this
sophisticated anti-lock system has
been designed specifically for the model, and has been configured to be
switched off for track use.
Its racing pedigree has already been established in Canada with the BMW
Motorrad Racing Team,
featuring factory riders Michael Ferreira and Paul Glenn, having debuted the
HP2 Sport race bike at
the Canadian Thunder Series of the 2008 Parts Canada Superbike Championship.
An uncompromising riding machine for those with supersports intentions, the
2009 HP2 Sport will
be an irresistible choices for the hard-core performance rider
BMW HP2 Sport
Outstanding race results are inexorably linked with BMW Motorrad’s flat twin
“Boxer” models. So it is an obvious step to build a high-end version! The
result is the BMW HP2 Sport: the uncompromising realisation of the 24-Hour
Endurance racer as a road machine. 100 per cent motor racing genes, licensed
for the road. An exclusive sports machine by BMW Motorrad for motor racing
connoisseurs and 2-cylinder enthusiasts which puts racing expertise into
serial production - with power and authenticity. With an incredible
air/oil-cooled 133 bhp and 115 Nm - a unique performance for a serial
production “Boxer”!
BMW HP2 Sport – uncompromisingly athletic.
For ambitious sports riders, the BMW HP2 Sport is the non plus ultra:
consistent lightweight construction, excusive details and top-class
materials give it truly unique quality. The self-supporting front and rear
sections in carbon, even lighter forged wheels and filigree components
reduce the dry weight to an impressive 178 kg. Exclusive motor racing
features to be found in serial production for the first time such as the
shift assistant which allows shifting without accelerator release and clutch
disengagement, and the DOHC cylinder head with its four radially arranged
valves. A maximum engine speed of 9500 rpm provides pure Grand Prix feeling!
Speed fans can enjoy complete banking freedom since the aerodynamic
high-quality steel exhaust system has been moved under the engine and seat
and ends in an attractive rear silencer in the single-section rear. The
large-volume silencer provides an inimitable “Boxer” sound - an acoustic
thrill for racers. The 2D GP dashboard derived from Moto-GP racing provides
all information to the cockpit. The chassis, ergonomics and vehicle geometry
are individually adjustable, guaranteeing excellent handling. This
orientation to the rider’s personality is highlighted by the use of carbon:
due the consistency of this material the trim is made almost entirely by
hand, making every BMW HP2 Sport a unique specimen.
In short: the refinement of the BMW HP2 Sport combines impressively high
riding performance and exclusive visual appearance to provide maximum riding
pleasure as you have never experienced it on a flat twin “Boxer” before!
Throttle up. Blast off.
With a staggering 130 horsepower, the HP 2 Sport features the most powerful
Boxer engine ever designed by BMW Motorrad. For the first time ever, double
overhead camshafts are included in our famous opposed twin cylinder motor,
kicking out even more revs. Making the HP2 Sport even more track-ready is
new Quickshifter technology, which means faster gear changes without having
to chop the throttle or use the clutch. Add a fully adjustable Ohlins sport
front and rear suspension, Radial mounted Brembo Monobloc brakes, a
lightweight carbon fiber aerodynamic fairing, not to mention forged racing
wheels and tires and a MotoGP-inspired cockpit that computes lap times and
other racing data, and the result is one of the most advanced sport bikes to
ever scorch the tarmac.
Review
BMW Motorrad is a company that seems to have
perfectly mastered leveraging a single engine platform into numerous models. A
clear illustration is the G650 X series (Xcountry, Xchallenge and Xmoto)
introduced in the spring of this year.
With the exception of the K1200LT, an even more robust use of one platform can
be found in the K1200 series with the K1200GT, K1200S, K1200R and K1200R Sport.
All use the same engine that shares basic dimensions with minor tweaks and
tuning adjustments that yield different torque and horsepower figures best
suited for each model's intended uses.
It should come as no surprise then to learn that BMW Motorrad has recently
expanded its high-performance Boxer line (HP2) to include a racy street model
called the HP2 Sport. The first machine in this growing family was the
high-flying HP2 Enduro. Built to take on as much of a dirty environment as you
can throw at it, we all marveled at seeing this 400 pound Boxer sail over
motocross jumps. Next up was the HP2 Megamoto. With 17-inch wheels, sticky tires
and long-travel suspenders, the Megamoto has hooligan written all over it just
like a true supermoto, save for the fact that it weighs in excess of 400 lbs.
This latest member of the high-performance family draws its lineage from the
endurance-racing-proven R1200S that won its class at Le Mans this year. BMW
claims the HP2 Sport produces 128 hp at 8750 rpm and 84.8 ft-lbs of torque at
6000 rpm with a max rev of 9500 rpm, heralding these figures as more spunk than
"the significantly modified engine of the BMW R1200S." We don't know if that's
how BMW thinks of the mill in the R1200S, but according to them it churns out a
claimed 122 bhp at 8250 rpm and 83 ft-lbs at 6300 rpm in standard trim.
The key difference in the Sport's engine are hopped-up cylinder heads that use a
drag lever to open and close valves larger than those found in the R1200S. More
performance mods include flowed intake and outlet ports, forged pistons, and
"adapted" ("beefed-up" in Motorcycle.com speak) connecting rods, all meant to
cope with those higher output figures mentioned above.
More ponies and twisting force are complimented with
an all-new stainless-steel exhaust system "placed below the engine for the first
time." We're not sure what BMW is saying here since a side by side comparison of
a front view of an R1200S and the HP2 Sport reveals that the HP2's head pipes
tuck in a skosh more than those on the R. Otherwise, the header-pipe
configuration looks remarkably similar to that of the S, but cleanly integrated
into the tailsection is a sweet-looking muffler canister that is a major
improvement over the breadbox on the R1200S. In any event, BMW explains that the
purpose of the altered position of the headers is to allow more room to hang
off, racer-like. Concealing much of the exhaust is a carbon-fiber/Kevlar chin
fairing. As a matter of fact, CFK is scattered across the bike. For example all
of the bodywork, and cylinder head covers are crafted out of the carbon
fiber/Kevlar composite.
Another item on the HP2 Sport to identify its racing bias is what BMW calls the
"the gearshift assistant." This bit of wordsmith trickery translates into what
is a type of ignition interrupt that allows the rider keep the throttle pinned
whilst snicking up through the close-ratio six-speed gear-set, as used for
several years on the roadracing circuit. BMW says it enables "fast gear changes
without having to ease off the gas and operate the clutch," and that "this
technology is offered for the first time in a series vehicle."
If you intend to race this bike, you'll most likely make the wise move of using
a reverse shift pattern, and for just such an application BMW offers (at an
additional charge of course), a "suitable replacement pressure sensor" to adapt
the quick-shifter to a GP-style race pattern. The forged-aluminum footpegs are
adjustable.
A quick scan of the chassis shows fully-adjustable Öhlins shocks keeping the
rear Paralever and front Telelever in check. What isn't quite as obvious at
first glance is just how minimal the frame is. It's really nothing more than a
small collection of tubular steel to hang the engine from and to provide a place
for the bodywork and fuel tank to bolt to. Lacking a traditional subframe, the
Sport utilizes a self-supporting carbon rear structure as a perch for the
rider’s hiney.
This hopped-up head sports larger valves than those on the R1200S, and is part
of the performance package that is claimed to produce 128 hp and 84.8 ft-lbs of
torque.
Braking is handled by radially mounted four-piston monoblock Brembo calipers and
Magura brake levers with radial-pump master cylinders attached to the adjustable
handlebars. As an option, BMW ABS can be had, the version for this bike coming
with a switch to disable it for track time, or any other time for that matter.
The German bike maker claims that the instrument cluster comes "directly from
MotoGP sport" offering the usual ton o' data along with a lap timer and "racing
relevant data."
Finally, along with all the carbon bodywork, no subframe and a lighter
generator, the HP2 Sport rolls on lightweight forged-aluminum wheels to achieve
its claimed dry weight of 392 lbs, and a tank-full (90%) weight wet of 439 lbs.
That’s a savings of a significant 27 pounds over the standard R1200S.
So, at this point in time that's about all we know on the latest addition to the
HP2 family. Beyond the details that we're not privy to, a couple other things we
don't know is if it'll be coming to U.S. shores, and when, exactly, in 2008 it
will be available.
One thing we can be certain of, in typical BMW fashion, the HP2 Sport will
probably be expensive! Expect a price north of 20 grand.