Key performance

170 ch
Power
🔧
1198 cc
Displacement
🏎️
290 km/h
Top speed
16.0 L
Fuel capacity
💰
23 390 €
New price
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Technical specifications

Changements 2011 2010

No spec differences between these two model years.

Engine

Displacement
1198 cc
Power
170.0 ch @ 9750 tr/min (125.0 kW)
Torque
131.4 Nm @ 8000 tr/min
Engine type
Bicylindre en L à 90°, 4 temps
Cooling
liquide
Compression ratio
12.7 : 1
Bore × stroke
106 x 67.9 mm
Valves/cylinder
4
Camshafts
2 ACT
Fuel system
Injection

Chassis

Frame
Treillis tubulaire en acier + platines latérales en alu
Gearbox
boîte à 6 rapports
Final drive
Chaîne
Front suspension
Fourche téléhydraulique inversée Ø 43 mm, déb : 120 mm
Rear suspension
Mono-amortisseur Extreme Tech, déb : 120 mm

Brakes

Front brakes
Freinage Brembo
Rear brakes
Freinage 1 disque Brembo
Front tyre
120/70-17
Rear tyre
190/55-17

Dimensions

Fuel capacity
16.00 L
Dry weight
171.00 kg
New price
23 390 €

Overview

When Ducati released the 1198 and left the DB7's L-twin in the dust, Bimota had only one option: play the game. The small Rimini manufacturer, already eight times married to a Bolognese engine, wasn't about to be intimidated. It responded with the DB8, eighth in the Ducati-Bimota lineage, and the response is as direct as the character of the 1198cc unit bolted into its steel tubular trellis frame.

Bimota DB8 1198

Don't look for a stylistic revolution here. The DB8 resembles its predecessor like a younger sister resembles the elder: same taut silhouette, same breathtaking Italian aesthetic — only a more subdued color scheme, a new exhaust, and the number 8 painted in red beneath the air intakes betray the novelty. What changes is beneath the skin. The 90-degree V-twin of 1198cc, with a 106mm bore and 67.9mm stroke, compression ratio at 12.7:1, has been reworked in its mapping by Rimini's technicians to give it an even sharper, more biting temperament. The result: 170 horsepower at 9,750 rpm and 131.4 Nm at 8,000 rpm, enough to push 171 kg of dry motorcycle to 290 km/h. The weight figure is particularly telling: strictly identical to the standard Ducati 1198, but in a hand-built chassis, with billet-machined aluminum side plates and an attention to detail that Borgo Panigale cannot afford at mass-production scale.

Bimota also wanted to broaden the appeal. The reinforced rear frame now accommodates a passenger, and the price was trimmed to €23,390, compared to significantly more stratospheric figures in the past. This repositioning comes with a tangible cost: carbon fiber bodywork has given way to plastic, and the suspension, while still appealing, steps down a notch in terms of outright performance. The 43mm inverted fork remains Marzocchi-sourced, the Extreme Tech monoshock still handles the rear with 120mm of travel on each side, and the four-piston radial monobloc Brembo calipers continue to bite the discs with unequivocal conviction. Nobody will complain about the braking.

The problem is that €23,390 in 2010 places the DB8 squarely in the crosshairs of the Ducati 1198 S Corse — the one with factory Öhlins. Same engine, same weight, but a price differential that forces the question. Bimota's answer has been the same for forty years: it is not the same thing to have a serial number engraved in the aluminum of a part machined in Rimini and to ride a sportbike that rolled off an industrial production line. The DB8 targets the enthusiast who wants a machine usable on a daily basis, capable of carrying a passenger on weekends, while retaining the exclusivity of a rare object. It is not the radical track weapon the DB7 was in the minds of purists — it is a sporting machine with character that accepts life outside a racetrack. For some, that's a concession. For others, it's exactly what needed to be done.

Practical info

  • La moto est accessible aux permis : A

Indicators & positioning

🔧
Volumetric power
139.9 ch/L
In category Sport · 599-2397cc displacement (3263 motorcycles compared)
Power 168 ch Top 35%
55 ch median 141 ch 213 ch

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