Key performance
Technical specifications
Engine
- Displacement
- 998 cc
- Power
- 201.0 ch @ 13600 tr/min (146.7 kW)
- Torque
- 111.0 Nm @ 9600 tr/min
- Engine type
- In-line four, four-stroke
- Cooling
- Liquid
- Compression ratio
- 13.4:1
- Bore × stroke
- 79.0 x 50.9 mm (3.1 x 2.0 inches)
- Valves/cylinder
- 4
- Fuel system
- Injection. Weber Marelli 5SM ignition - injection integrated system; induction discharge electronic ignition, “Multipoint” sequential timed electronic injection
- Valve timing
- Double Overhead Cams/Twin Cam (DOHC)
- Starter
- Electric
Chassis
- Frame
- CrMo Steel Tubular Trellis. Aluminium alloy adjustable swingarm pivot height.
- Gearbox
- 6-speed
- Final drive
- Chain (final drive)
- Clutch
- Wet, multi-disc with back torque limiting device and Brembo radial pump/lever assembly
- Front suspension
- Öhlins EC Nix hydraulic “UPSIDE DOWN” front forks with TiN superficial treatment. Completely adjustable electronically controlled compression and rebound damping with manual, spring preload
- Rear suspension
- Progressive, single shock absorber Öhlins TTX. Fully adjustable hydraulic electronically controlled compression and rebound damping with manual, spring preload
- Front wheel travel
- 120 mm (4.7 inches)
- Rear wheel travel
- 120 mm (4.7 inches)
Brakes
- Front brakes
- Double disc. Floating disc. Brembo GP radial-type, single-piece with 4 pistons.
- Rear brakes
- Single disc
- Front tyre
- 120/70-ZR17
- Rear tyre
- 200/55-ZR17
Dimensions
- Seat height
- 830.00 mm
- Wheelbase
- 1430.00 mm
- Ground clearance
- 115.00 mm
- Length
- 2115.00 mm
- Width
- 750.00 mm
- Fuel capacity
- 17.00 L
- Dry weight
- 190.00 kg
Overview
Does art justify a price? Asking the question of MV Agusta is almost a provocation, because their answer is a mechanical burst of laughter. The 2011 F4 RR, with its 201 horsepower released at 13,400 rpm, is not a motorcycle. It's a statement sculpted in aluminum and chrome, a collector's item that, by chance, can reach 300 km/h. At 24,000 euros new, it sits well beyond the simple super sport, in a territory where only Ducati, with its Panigale Speciale, occasionally comes to sightsee.

The heart of this machine is a symphony of numbers. A 998 cc four-cylinder engine, 111.8 Nm of torque at 9200 rpm, a trellis frame that seems lifted from an aircraft engineer's notebook. But these data do not tell the story of the experience. Mounting this F4 RR, with its 830 mm seat, is like putting on a suit that is too tight. It is uncompromising, precise, nervous. The announced dry weight of 192 kg is felt in every transition, but this mass is disciplined by Öhlins suspensions and Brembo braking that respond with military coldness. It is a motorcycle for the pure track rider, the one who seeks absolute connection, not compromise.
Compared to a Yamaha R1 of the same era or a Honda CBR1000RR, the MV Agusta F4 RR is a different animal. The Japanese are surgical tools, efficient and versatile. The MV is a passion instrument, noisy, demanding, and sometimes capricious. Its 17-liter tank and chain transmission speak of a classic design, but its monobrach and Corsacorta aesthetics are signatures that do not age. Searching for an F4 RR used today is a quest for mechanical enthusiasts, because each year, from 2011 to 2021, the machine has evolved in its details without losing its essence.
The audience for this motorcycle? It's not the beginner, nor even the standard road rider. It's the collector, the aesthete, the rider who wants to feel the history of Varese in his wrists. The technical specifications are impressive, but they mainly serve to validate a dream. On the road, it is severe, greedy, and magnificent. It is a museum piece that, if you have the courage and the budget, can still propel you into the present at a frightening speed. Later versions, up to the F4 RR 2019 or 2020, have refined the offer, but this 2011 remains a milestone, a moment when MV Agusta said: “We make sculptures that flee.”
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