Key performance

195 ch
Power
🔧
998 cc
Displacement
🏎️
291 km/h
Top speed
💺
830 mm
Seat height
17.0 L
Fuel capacity
💰
19 150 €
New price
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Technical specifications

Engine

Displacement
998 cc
Power
195.0 ch @ 13400 tr/min (143.4 kW)
Torque
110.8 Nm @ 9600 tr/min
Engine type
4 cylindres en ligne, 4 temps
Cooling
liquide
Compression ratio
13.4 : 1
Bore × stroke
79 x 50.9 mm
Valves/cylinder
4
Camshafts
2 ACT
Fuel system
Injection Ø 50 mm

Chassis

Frame
Treillis en tubes d'acier au chrome molybdène
Gearbox
boîte à 6 rapports
Final drive
Chaîne
Front suspension
Fourche téléhydraulique inversée Marzocchi Ø 50 mm, déb : 120 mm
Rear suspension
Monoamortisseur Sachs, déb : 120 mm

Brakes

Front brakes
Freinage 2 disques Ø 320 mm, fixation radiale, étrier 4 pistons
Rear brakes
Freinage 1 disque Ø 220 mm, étrier 4 pistons
Front tyre
120/70-17
Rear tyre
200/55-17

Dimensions

Seat height
830.00 mm
Fuel capacity
17.00 L
Dry weight
191.00 kg
New price
19 150 €

Overview

Imagine the younger sister of an Italian diva, the one shown off less often but sharing the same scorching DNA. That's roughly the role played by the Corsa Corta in the 2014 F4 lineup. To slip under the symbolic 20,000 euro mark, more precisely at 19,150 euros, Varese made a few calculated concessions compared to the RR version. Exit the Öhlins arsenal, enter a 50 mm Marzocchi inverted fork and a Sachs monoshock with 120 mm of travel. The Brembo M50 calipers give way to M4s, still biting hard on the 320 mm discs. On paper, you lose a few horses against the big sister. In practice, you keep the essentials.

MV Agusta F4 1000 Corsa Corta

The essentials, precisely, are that 998 cc inline four-cylinder that spits out 195 horsepower at 13,400 rpm, backed by 110.8 Nm of torque at 9,600 rpm. The Corsa Corta signature comes from this ultra-short-stroke architecture, 79 mm bore for just 50.9 mm of stroke, compression ratio at 13.4:1. Racing engine geometry homologated for the road, pushing the needle to 291 km/h at the end of the straight. Compared to a BMW S 1000 RR from the same era, more surgical and Germanically efficient, or to a more compact and more playful Aprilia RSV4, the MV plays the raw character card. It vibrates, it screams, it lives.

On the electronics side, the Italian doesn't take you for a fool. The MVICS manages the ride-by-wire throttle and offers four mappings, including one fully customizable. Gyroscopes and accelerometers feed an eight-position traction control, anti-wheelie and the Bosch 9MP ABS in race mode. The standard quickshifter completes the arsenal. It's what you'd expect from a modern hypersport, no more, no less, but it's delivered with a typically transalpine attention to detail, down to the LED daytime running light strips integrated into the air intake scoops. A styling detail that says a lot about the house's stylistic obsession.

That leaves the compromise to discuss. At 191 kg dry, the Corsa Corta isn't the lightest on the grid, and its seat perched at 830 mm with a 17-litre tank doesn't do any favours to modest builds. The chrome-molybdenum tubular trellis bolted to its aluminium plates remains faithful to the Tamburini philosophy, agile when leaned over but harsh on degraded surfaces. Don't go looking here for a sport-tourer in disguise. This motorcycle is stiff, demanding, sometimes temperamental at low speed, and its turning radius would make a city courier cry. It was drawn for the track and for winding Sunday morning roads, not for ring-road traffic jams.

So who is it for? Certainly not for the beginner who'd like to treat themselves to an object of desire. Its 195 horsepower and sharp chassis demand a seasoned rider, ideally one already schooled on a 600 sportbike or in the seats of a track day. For the amateur track rider who wants to ride Italian without paying the price of an RR at 25,000 euros, or for the sensitive collector who prefers rarity to rationality, the proposition holds up. Against the ZX-10R, R1 and other GSX-R 1000 sold at noticeably the same price, the MV doesn't have the best statistical weapons. It just has that aura that the Japanese take twenty years to build, and that the Italians possess straight from the factory.

Standard equipment

  • Assistance au freinage : ABS Bosch 9MP de série

Practical info

  • La moto est accessible aux permis : A

Indicators & positioning

🔧
Volumetric power
192.7 ch/L
In category Sport · 499-1996cc displacement (3553 motorcycles compared)
Power 192 ch Top 19%
50 ch median 130 ch 212 ch

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