Key performance

174 ch
Power
🔧
998 cc
Displacement
🏎️
302 km/h
Top speed
💺
810 mm
Seat height
21.0 L
Fuel capacity
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Technical specifications

Changements 2015 2009
Power
195.0 ch @ 13400 tr/min (143.4 kW) 174.0 ch @ 11900 tr/min (127.0 kW)
Torque
110.8 Nm @ 9600 tr/min 111.0 Nm @ 10000 tr/min
Engine type
4 cylindres en ligne, 4 temps In-line four, four-stroke
Cooling
liquide Liquid
Compression ratio
13.4 : 1 13.0:1
Bore × stroke
79 x 50.9 mm 76.0 x 55.0 mm (3.0 x 2.2 inches)
Camshafts
2 ACT
Fuel system
Injection Ø 50 mm Injection. “Weber Marelli” 5SM ignition - injection integrated system; induction discharge electronic ignition, Multipoint electronic injection
Valve timing
Double Overhead Cams/Twin Cam (DOHC)
Starter
Electric
Frame
Treillis en tubes d'acier au chrome molybdène
Gearbox
boîte à 6 rapports 6-speed
Final drive
Chaîne Chain   (final drive)
Clutch
Wet, multi - disc
Front suspension
Fourche téléhydraulique inversée Marzocchi Ø 50 mm, déb : 120 mm Upside-down telescopic hydraulic fork with rebound-compression damping and spring preload adjustment
Rear suspension
Mono-amortisseur Öhlins, déb : 120 mm Progressive, single shock absorber with rebound compression damping and spring preload
Front wheel travel
129 mm (5.1 inches)
Rear wheel travel
120 mm (4.7 inches)
Front brakes
Freinage 2 disques Ø 320 mm, fixation radiale, étrier 4 pistons Double disc
Rear brakes
Freinage 1 disque Ø 220 mm, étrier 4 pistons Single disc
Front tyre
120/70-17 120/70-ZR17
Rear tyre
200/55-17 190/55-ZR17
Seat height
830.00 mm 810.00 mm
Wheelbase
1408.00 mm
Ground clearance
130.00 mm
Length
2007.00 mm
Width
685.00 mm
Fuel capacity
17.00 L 21.00 L
Dry weight
191.00 kg 192.00 kg
New price
20 990 €

Engine

Displacement
998 cc
Power
174.0 ch @ 11900 tr/min (127.0 kW)
Torque
111.0 Nm @ 10000 tr/min
Engine type
In-line four, four-stroke
Cooling
Liquid
Compression ratio
13.0:1
Bore × stroke
76.0 x 55.0 mm (3.0 x 2.2 inches)
Valves/cylinder
4
Fuel system
Injection. “Weber Marelli” 5SM ignition - injection integrated system; induction discharge electronic ignition, Multipoint electronic injection
Valve timing
Double Overhead Cams/Twin Cam (DOHC)
Starter
Electric

Chassis

Gearbox
6-speed
Final drive
Chain   (final drive)
Clutch
Wet, multi - disc
Front suspension
Upside-down telescopic hydraulic fork with rebound-compression damping and spring preload adjustment
Rear suspension
Progressive, single shock absorber with rebound compression damping and spring preload
Front wheel travel
129 mm (5.1 inches)
Rear wheel travel
120 mm (4.7 inches)

Brakes

Front brakes
Double disc
Rear brakes
Single disc
Front tyre
120/70-ZR17
Rear tyre
190/55-ZR17

Dimensions

Seat height
810.00 mm
Wheelbase
1408.00 mm
Ground clearance
130.00 mm
Length
2007.00 mm
Width
685.00 mm
Fuel capacity
21.00 L
Dry weight
192.00 kg

Overview

Picture the scene. Milan, mid-2000s. The Japanese machines are crushing the sportbike market with irrefutable numbers, and Varese watches the train go by through gritted teeth. Massimo Tamburini had penned a genuine aesthetic masterpiece with the original F4, one that nobody has ever truly dethroned, but the beautiful object was starting to fall slightly behind on the scorecard. The answer arrives in 2006 in the form of the mv agusta f4 1000 r, a variant built for the Stocksport championship, one that doesn't settle for piling on stickers and fresh colors to justify its suffix.

MV Agusta F4 1000 R

Beneath the bodywork, the Italian engineers broke out the slide rule. The tubular CrMo trellis frame was reworked tube by tube, certain sections slimmed down to shave grams without sacrificing torsional rigidity. Forged aluminum wheels complete the weight-loss program, and the scales now read 192 kg dry, 220 kg fully fueled. That's not quite the featherweight figure of a Yamaha R1 of the era, but the mv-agusta f4 1000 r 2006 doesn't play in the same philosophical league. The front end comes straight from the Superbike aisle, with a 50 mm Marzocchi inverted fork clamping radial-mount Brembo four-piston calipers. The damping curves have been recalibrated to handle the extra power, and you feel it from the very first hard braking.

Because yes, the 998 cc inline four-cylinder with radial valves has gained eight more horsepower. The cam timing has been revised, the pistons redesigned, the ports optimized, the electronics modernized, and the valve angle modified along the way. Result: 174 hp at 11,900 rpm and 111 Nm at 10,000 rpm, enough to rejoin the hyper-sportbike pack from Japan without blushing. Top speed flirts with the claimed 301 km/h, a theoretical figure that remains a barroom argument but one that puts the beast in perspective. The compression ratio climbs to 13.0:1, the 76 x 55 mm bore and stroke confirm the angry temperament, and the six-speed gearbox transmits it all to the rear wheel via chain. Up against a sharper and cheaper GSX-R 1000 K6, the price-to-performance question comes up fast. The €20,490 price tag from the mv agusta f4 1000 r 2007 test ride clearly positions the machine outside the accounting battlefield of the big Japanese production runs.

MV Agusta F4 1000 R

Visually, MV played the card of understated provocation. Black livery, red pinstripe, slightly revised windscreen, new instrument cluster graphics, reworked seat cover. Nothing that screams in the parking lot, everything a connoisseur needs to identify the machine at first glance. The lines drawn by Tamburini remain untouchable, a design that ages better than most styling trends that have come and gone since. This aesthetic continuity explains why the mv agusta f4 1000 r 312, the mv agusta f4 1000 r 2008, and the mv agusta f4 1000 r 2010 remain sought after on the used market, even before the mv agusta f4 1000 r 2012, mv agusta f4 1000 r 2013, and mv agusta f4 1000 r 2018 versions carried the lineage forward.

MV Agusta F4 1000 R

Who is this machine aimed at? Certainly not the intimidated beginner, and even less the touring rider looking to rack up comfortable miles. With its 810 mm seat height, 21-liter range, and frankly radical ergonomics, the F4 1000 R targets the occasional track rider and the demanding collector, the kind who accepts paying for rarity and the unmistakable voice of the Varese four-cylinder. What does an mv agusta f4 1000 r go for today on the secondary market? Expect between €7,000 and €12,000 depending on condition, a reasonable entry ticket for a piece of Italian horology whose value finally seems to be leveling off.

Indicators & positioning

🔧
Volumetric power
174.3 ch/L
In category Sport · 499-1996cc displacement (3553 motorcycles compared)
Power 174 ch Top 27%
50 ch median 130 ch 212 ch

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