Monday, March 23, 2009

Round 1 Frankston Mini SX Results 14th March

Points for MINI SX ROUND 1

Stock
370 Declan Hayes 112
70 Nathan Whitten 105
57 Chris Thomas 95
940 Tyler Wooten 86
591 Kane Maxwell 83
101 Jake Vella 62
79 Jake Zammit 42
48 Richard Nowland 33
23 Karlis Ezergakis15

Open China
101 Tye Halliday 125
3 Mike Reefman 104
282 Michel Nassar 73
7 Jason Klop 69
22 Brodie Smith 63
47 Courtney Landamaid 63
37 Jayden Grimshaw 54
8 Chris Gay 44
11 Darren Schenk 42
324 Hayden Harris 32
67 Nathan Howe 29
5 Karl Limbrick 24
685 Trent Stokes 12

Limited 88cc
188 Leigh Darrell 116 (ECpowersports Rider)
30 Brody Jennings 113
77 Nick Schneebeli 98
5 Ryan Hunt 84
17 Adam Dance 68
299 Trent Yeo 68
96 Tim McCracken 45 (ECpowersports Rider)
250 Mitchell tanner 42
59 Kyle Webster 26
48 Richard Nowland 18
323 Justin Holcrafft13

12" Pro
53 Brad Smith 117
124/15 Greg Timmins 96
101 Tye Halliday 94
3 Mike Reefman 81
615 Joel Panzzo 68
21 Shaun Howe 47
77 Nick Schneebeli 40
11 Darren Schank 29
28 Mark Attard 27
324 Hayden Harris 25
67 Nathan Howe 16
37 Jayden Grimshaw 14

Jnr 9-12
66 Harvey eames 113
108 Jack Hilli 100
121 Cooper Penrose 82
110 Blake Herrick 74
123 Tanner Eames

Jnr 13-u16
23 Josh Carlson 116
41 Jack Simpson 115
9 Jordan Ives 97
35 Sam Dobson 94
11 Harrison Van Vliet64
40 Tyson Cherry 18
542 Sam Duusma 14

10" Pro
15 Greg Timmins 115
7 Matt Skerritt 113
521 Mark Attard 100
2 Joel Balchin 43

12" Amateur
815 Mitch Smith 90
411 Nathan Whyte 68
0 Eddie Cini 67
612 Russell Whitlam 60
72 Ben Greenwood 58
5 Joel Brooks 48
23 Dale Standwick 38
724 Phil Sparks 30
744 Kyle Hodgkinsson28

Friday, March 20, 2009

Motovert’s 250XTR four-stroke off-roader is very much a surprise packet.

MOTOVERT’S 250XTR shows how good budget motorcycles can be. There’s plenty of flash, and for little cash you can be carving your way around the paddock or MX track. Don’t for a second think the 250XTR will match a 250cc MX four-stroke from the big Japanese and European manufacturers, but at around a third of the cost of said entrenched marques, the XTR isn’t two thirds behind.

Around six months ago I got to test a 125cc Motovert, which was very much in the style of the fast 50 set. It was surprisingly fast but was a handful when riding quickly because of the smaller wheels and shorter travel suspension. The bike was fun to ride but the engine overshadowed the rest of the bike.

When the 250XTR turned up at home it looked the business, there was more bling than you could take in during one viewing, and it was nearly the same height and dimensions as the YZ250F I usually ride. A look around the bike shows it has a liquid-cooled 250c four-stroke engine, electric start, upside down forks, disc brakes front and rear, and at the first stab of the button, a very fruity exhaust note.

It looked pretty familiar too, then I dragged out an old copy of Cycle Torque. The Motovert looked very similar to the Puzey 250cc dirt bike, and it even carries the same name, 250XTR. Not sure what’s happening there but it seems the bike is designed in South Africa and made in China. A little bit of badge engineering perhaps?

I’m not the tallest 15-year-old around but the seat height of the XTR suited me perfectly, it’s not the same size as a normal 250cc MXer but it’s very close. I could just get both feet on the ground, whereas on a YZ250F it’s one foot only.

Motovert’s XTR looks very trick, there’s billet and anodized alloy everywhere, but some of the bits look a bit cheap. It looks more like a freestyle bike than a MX race bike, and in black looks tough. It wouldn’t look out of place at a custom bike show.

Some of the parts seem to have been designed more for show than go, like the alloy levers which have a square edge which digs into your fingers slightly. Only a small criticism really. Off the trailer

The XTR fires up easily on the choke, and once warmed up idles nicely. I did wind the idle up slightly during warm up, otherwise the bike wanted to stall. Once warmed up I left the idle where it was. My first session was on a grass track with a few turns, slow and flat out. Brodie, my riding partner and mate, was on his 2006 Kawasaki KX125, so I thought it would be a great time to see how the XTR stacked up against a potent 125cc two-stroke. Well I can tell you it stacked up very well. Sure, the XTR didn’t have the top end of the 125 but it was very close, and proved a match for the little MX bike around the grass track circuit. We spent lap after lap roaring around the circuit with nothing between the two bikes.

I couldn’t find any quoted power figures for the XTR but it definitely isn’t in the ball park of a YZ250F or similar. It doesn’t have the acceleration, top speed or light weight of these hard core bikes, but it doesn’t have the frantic feel or price tag of these either.

Click to enlarge - unknown
After the grass track fun we decided to find some trails on the property and explored gullies, single trail tracks and some jumps. Brodie and I both liked the way the bike was planted in the rougher stuff, but as expected the suspension was a bit soft when we started to launch off the jumps. Flat out turns showed us the bike was very stable too, the handlebars stayed planted and the bike steered where you wanted it to.

Pulling the XTR up was easy work, both front and rear disc brakes gave plenty of feel, and the back brake didn’t lock up as soon as you touch it.

I liked the power because it wasn’t intimidating and was easy to explore its top end. For the average rider, or someone new to this class, the XTR is perfect to learn your craft without finding yourself flying over the handlebars because you were a bit free and easy with the throttle. It will go hard but not easily get out of control, and is a bike the whole family could have fun on. It’s not a wheelie hound, you could probably get it to launch into the air more easily with some gearing changes but as it was you needed to use plenty of clutch to get it reaching for the sky.

my verdict

I was really impressed by the Motovert 250XTR, it was heaps of fun on the throttle and in the turns, and looks flasher than a rap star. People often get the impression Chinese made bikes are ready for the scrap heap straight after the first ride, but we hammered the bike for hours and it never missed a beat, starting up every time on the button (it does have a kickstarter too). It’s not going to go head-to-head with the big name quarter litre rockets on performance, and I don’t know if it will last as long, but at only $????? it could very well be worth a gamble if racing isn’t your go.

Pics and wording Taken from Cycle torque Magazine

http://www.cycletorque.com.au/