BMW throws in the towel on WSBK Factory Team

Started by Speeddog, July 25, 2013, 11:13:37 AM

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Speeddog

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~~~ "We've rearranged the deck chairs, refilled the champagne glasses, and the band sounds great. This is fine." - Alberto Puig ~~~

zooom

99 Cagiva Gran Canyon-"FOR SALE", PM for details.
98 Monster 900(trackpregnant dog-soon to be made my Fiancee's upgrade streetbike)
2010 KTM 990 SM-T

Grampa

dang... no more garage shots of marco's woman in form fitted bmw swag.
Gaspar, Melchior and Balthasar kicked me out of the band..... they said I didnt fit the image they were trying to project. 

So I went solo.  -Me

Some people call 911..... some people are 911
-Marcus Luttrell

Rob Hilding

Unwritten message:

"since we can't seem to race for 9th or 10th place like Audi (Ducati) we decided to scram"

For you BP:

http://www.visordown.com/features/manuela-raffaeta---marco-melandris-girlfriend/15964.html
Desmosedici - it's the new Paso (except the bodywork doesn't fit as well)

gm2

more like they're not interested in running a streetbike series.  factories go racing in order to develop...
Like this is the racing, no?

ZLTFUL

Quote from: gm2 on July 25, 2013, 06:11:42 PM
more like they're not interested in running a streetbike series.  factories go racing in order to develop...

It'd be nice to see another marque show up in MotoGP but I ain't holdin' my breath.
Avatar courtesy of www.mybadco.com
2012 Panigale 1199
2003 KTM 640 Adventure

wantingaduc

Is it possible they will drop the factory team and then a "well supported" satelite team will take over.
Ducati technically dropped their factory team a few years back but the bikes were still on the rid, just being campaigned by a private team.
After all the work they did and the results they've finally started to achieve, I can 't see them not having any representation in WSBK.

jimi
I know what ruined America, the fu@k*ng Americans !!!

MadDuck

#7
Quote from: wantingaduc on July 26, 2013, 08:53:42 AM
Is it possible they will drop the factory team and then a "well supported" satelite team will take over.
Ducati technically dropped their factory team a few years back but the bikes were still on the rid, just being campaigned by a private team.
After all the work they did and the results they've finally started to achieve, I can 't see them not having any representation in WSBK.

jimi

That's pretty much what BMW did this year.

It's very telling that Kawasaki hung in there and is now getting results.  I never got the feeling that BMW was totally committed to the WSBK series. They acted like they never really wanted to develop the bike in the first few years. Last year was pretty good but then it seemed like accounting got into the picture and said "No more of that" and then the second string team this year didn't have enough support to keep the run going.

Maybe Yamaha will come back.   [roll]
No modification goes unpunished. Memento mori.  Good people drink good beer.  Things happen pretty fast at high speeds.

It's all up to your will level, your thrill level and your skill level.  Everything else is just fluff.

gm2

Quote from: MacDuck on July 26, 2013, 09:18:20 AM
They acted like they never really wanted to develop the bike in the first few years.

er, i really don't think that was the case.  granted, they were trying their damndest to make their OEM electronics work, for obvious reasons, but a lack of effort was not there.  you don't birth a bike from scratch and start doing as well as corser was doing (in the first half of races) without working your ass off.
Like this is the racing, no?

gm2

Quote from: MacDuck on July 26, 2013, 09:18:20 AM
and then the second string team this year didn't have enough support to keep the run going.

it's not that.  the current team is a factory team just like ducati is, yamaha was, etc.  factory, but run out of a 3rd party shop.

they're leaving bc of the rule changes.  no interest in a series where they don't get to develop and push the envelope.  sucks but i don't blame them at all.  factories don't go racing so they can see how the bikes on the showroom floor do.
Like this is the racing, no?

MadDuck

#10
Quote from: gm2 on July 26, 2013, 09:29:00 AM
er, i really don't think that was the case.  granted, they were trying their damndest to make their OEM electronics work, for obvious reasons, but a lack of effort was not there.  you don't birth a bike from scratch and start doing as well as corser was doing (in the first half of races) without working your ass off.

That could be debatable.  Corser tried for what, two years, but they were stuck on their own software and he was burning tires off.  Just about like Sykes was doing.  Finally they had to go Magnetti Marelli, I think, to get good software and that's when Melandri & Haslam started doing good.

I've worked with the BMW product for years and even though they produce brilliant stuff there is still that bit of what I call "arrogant engineering" where they think they are God's Gift.  It doesn't always go the way they want.  The bikes take second fiddle to the cars these days.  Too bad.
No modification goes unpunished. Memento mori.  Good people drink good beer.  Things happen pretty fast at high speeds.

It's all up to your will level, your thrill level and your skill level.  Everything else is just fluff.