Key performance

164 ch
Power
🔧
1099 cc
Displacement
🏎️
280 km/h
Top speed
16.0 L
Fuel capacity
💰
25 490 €
New price
Compare the Bimota DB7 1098 with: Choose a motorcycle →

Technical specifications

Changements 2008 2011
Power
160.0 ch @ 9750 tr/min (117.7 kW) 164.0 ch @ 9750 tr/min (120.6 kW)
New price
25 000 € 25 490 €

Engine

Displacement
1099 cc
Power
164.0 ch @ 9750 tr/min (120.6 kW)
Torque
122.6 Nm @ 8000 tr/min
Engine type
Bicylindre en L à 90°, 4 temps
Cooling
liquide
Bore × stroke
104 x 64.7 mm
Valves/cylinder
4
Fuel system
injection

Chassis

Frame
treillis tubulaire en tube d'acier relié à des platines en alu
Gearbox
boîte à 6 rapports
Final drive
Chaîne
Front suspension
Fourche téléhydraulique inversée Ø nc, déb : 120 mm
Rear suspension
Mono-amortisseur, déb : 120 mm

Brakes

Front brakes
Freinage
Rear brakes
Freinage 1 disque
Front tyre
120/70-17
Front tyre pressure
2.30 bar
Rear tyre
190/55-17
Rear tyre pressure
2.30 bar

Dimensions

Fuel capacity
16.00 L
Dry weight
170.00 kg
New price
25 490 €

Overview

Rimini has never done things by halves. After a few years of cultivating its image with machines that were certainly elegant but relatively restrained – the DB5, DB6, and Tesi 3D revolved around a Ducati air-cooled two-valve twin, generous in character but measured in raw power – the small Italian manufacture decided to show its claws. The DB7 is this ace in the hole, built around the 1099 cm3 L-twin at 90° from Bologna’s 1098, an engine that is nothing short of significant in the hands of an ordinary engine builder, let alone in the hands of Rimini’s engineers.

Bimota DB7 1098

Because that’s been the core of Bimota since its creation: to take a leading Japanese or Italian engine, wrap it in a home-designed chassis with the rigor of a goldsmith, and deliver an object that mass production cannot produce. The DB7 scrupulously respects this doctrine. The steel trellis frame reinforced with aluminum plates therefore accommodates this L-twin which develops 164 horsepower at 9750 rpm and 122.6 Nm of torque at 8000 rpm. These figures place the machine in the yard of the most radical of its time, alongside Aprilia RSV4 and other Ducati 1198. The comparison is legitimate, even if Bimota plays in a different price category.

At 170 kilograms dry, the DB7 gains five kilograms on the SB8K, its direct predecessor in the hypersport range. It’s not a revolution on the scales, but on a motorcycle of this size and power, every gram counts in corners. The inverted fork and single shock work on 120 mm of travel, values consistent with track-oriented use without sacrificing all road practicality. Tires in 120/70-17 at the front and 190/55-17 at the rear complete a package designed to go fast, really fast, since Bimota announces a top speed of 280 km/h.

The target audience here is not the Sunday rider looking for a comfortable motorcycle to drive to Provence. The DB7 is aimed at the passionate collector, the demanding track rider who wants something unique in the paddocks, at the one who considers that a Ducati 1098 is a good starting point but not an end in itself. The 16-liter tank and six-speed chain gearbox still recall that we remain in the realm of the practical, not the museum motorcycle.

The price, 25,490 euros at launch, clearly states the positioning. It’s double that of a standard Ducati 1098, for a machine produced in a very small series with an artisanal care that large manufacturers cannot offer. One can discuss the intrinsic value of this gap, but not the coherence of the approach. Bimota has never claimed to be accessible. The DB7 embraces this rarity as a quality in its own right.

Practical info

  • La moto est accessible aux permis : A

Indicators & positioning

🔧
Volumetric power
147.2 ch/L
In category Sport · 550-2198cc displacement (3633 motorcycles compared)
Power 162 ch Top 33%
50 ch median 133 ch 212 ch

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