Daineses new Smart Jacket airbag motorcycle vesthttps://api.pddataservices.com/images?url=https://postmediadriving.files.wordpress.com/2019/06/253949_volvo_cars_and_poc_develop_world-first_car-bike_helmet_crash_testa.jpgw=960h=480 Those of you who read Drivings motorcycle coverage know how much I love airbag clothing.I love airbags for the protection they offer. I love airbags for the ingenuity of building a supplemental restraint system into something you can wear. Most of all, however,I love airbags for the confidence they give me to go out and play with the sharksthat would be all the car drivers that motorcyclists assume are trying to kill them.I love them enough, in fact, to let former editor-in-chief Neil Vorano beat me upside my back with a baseball bat to prove that nothing, but nothing, a motorcyclist can wear offers anywhere near the protection an inflatable safety device woven into the fabric of a jacket or leather suit can.But, if you know that, you also know how heavy and sweaty said airbags have made the clothing theyre built into.Build anything robust enough to hold high-pressure gas into clothing, it seems, and it destroys anything resembling ventilation. Wearing any of the jackets I have tested and there have been about five so far on a sunny day is akin to wearing your winter thermal gear in the heat of summer.Youll be getting plenty sweaty. So humid, in fact, you probably wont bother donning said airbag, essentially negating all its vaunted safety benefits. Dainese’s new Smart Jacket airbag motorcycle vest Dainese Dainese may just solved the problem.Its called Smart Jacket, and it solves that ventilation problem by folding the airbag over on itself rather than lining the entire garment with wind-blocking fabric so theres less airbag preventing air from circulating around your core. If this is true, we motorcyclists may finally have an airbag garment that wont turn into your own private sweat lodge every time the mercury touches 25 C. The Smart Jacket is also very versatile. Unlike previous Dainese airbag vests that were tailored for one specific jacket, the new Smart Jacket is completely independent and can be worn under any jacket, Dainese or otherwise. All its complex sensors there are seven in all and the computer that controls them are built-in. And the Smart Jacket is effective; Dainese claims its rapid-fire inflation offers the same degree of protection as seven traditional back protectors!Finally, one last bonus. Although Canadian pricing has not been set, in the USA the Smart Jacket is set to retail for $699, a significant cost savings compared with previous Dainese airbag systems. And, of course, you can wear it under your existing outwear.I really cant wait to test this
Origin: Dainese reinvents the motorcycle airbag so you don’t sweat in it
motorcycle
Motorcycle Review: 2019 Ducati Multistrada 1260 Enduro
2019 Ducati Multistrada 1260 EnduroDavid Booth / Driving BORMIO, Italy — Italians, especially those living in and around Borgo Panigale, must love big numbers. Like, really big numbers — 1260, for instance, is a preposterous number of cubic centimetres for any motorcycle that dares put Enduro in its name. Ditto for 158 horsepower, and for pistons spanning 106 millimetres across. It’s incredibly over-the-top stuff, the kind of high-performance motor that, not so long ago, that would have done any superbike proud, never mind something wearing saddlebags and kinda, sorta off-road tires. Far more impressive is how Ducati’s — they of Borgo Panigale, where I picked up this monster — Multistrada behaves when you’re not taxing those big numbers. In fact, for the first three days in normally sunny Italy, it did nothing but rain, the Modenese spring doing a fair rendition of our own (albeit with prettier countryside to gaze upon as the heavens poured down upon our slickers). In other words, for safety sake — and the fact that I had she-who-reacts-poorly-to-crossed-up-corner-entries along for the ride — I did nothing but poodle around like I was riding a Gold Wing on a poker run. So, for instance, while the big twin’s frame-twisting 94 pound-feet of torque may build up quite the head of steam at 7,500 rpm, let me nonetheless remind you that big Testastretta grunts like a good’un at a traction-maximizing 3,500. Those huge 106-millimetres may indeed harness the forces of a 158 seriously stout Shetlands, but loping along at an easy five grand in top gear, they are as civilized as a straight-six with perfect primary balance. And trundling along like the proverbial tortoise means that we stretch the Enduro’s huge 30-litre tanks — another huge number — all the way from Modena to Bormio, a ride of some 340 kilometres. And yet Multistrada’s TFT screen had the audacity to claim we had another 160 kilometres in reserve. What I am trying to say is that, yes, this latest, larger-displacement Multistrada is fast. My God, it’s a Ducati with desmodromic valves and pistons the size of manhole covers. Of course it’s bloody fast. In fact, as fast two-up and loaded with luggage as my Suzuki V-Strom 1000 XT when I am riding alone. What’s less expected, perhaps — certainly if you were around to sample the, uhm, delicacies of Ducati superbikes of yore — is that the big Duke is a good motorcycle even when it’s not going fast. For one thing, it’s comfortable. More comfortable, in fact, than Ducati’s other Multistrada bikes thanks to a revised seating position that sees your butt about 10-millimetres closer to the ground than the previous 1200-cc version of the Enduro. The handlebar is an even more substantial 30 millimetres lower as well. This last surprised me because I found the lower bars easier on my wonky back. Maybe it‘s because the revised seat also places you closer to said handlebar. Or maybe the cut of the Enduro just fit my gib. Whatever the case, I found the Enduro easier on my posterior than either the 1260 S or the 950 Multistradas I rode recently. Even the adjustable windscreen is quite effective on the long haul, its lowest position sportbike breezy while its highest more than protective enough to ward off rain showers. Ditto for the ride. Ducati’s “Skyhook” suspension offer full adjustability at the flick of a button — OK, the touch of a screen — the electronically adjustable dampers variable between Enduro — compression damping lightened to maximize wheel travel over big bumps — to Sport (compression and rebound damping both tailored for optimized wheel control). It works well, herself giving the big Duke a full princess-and-the-pea two thumbs up. I do have one request though, Ducati: Could I please get just a little more rear preload adjustment in the rear? Even your “two helmets and full suitcases” setting isn’t quite enough for the burden of carrying a month’s worth of ablution products and hair creams. The reason we could carry enough for a full month’s sojourn were the positively cavernous aluminum cargo cases optional on the Enduro. Built by Touratech, they are sturdy, keyed to the ignition lock and can hold a grand total of 83 litres of Lierac Crème Voluptueuse. Rid of expensive face creams, they’ll swallow a full-sized helmet easily. The rear topcase Ducati offers, also made by Touratech, is small by comparison, holding just 38 litres. Nonetheless, the total — 121 litres between the three of them — is impressive and you can stack extra luggage — much needed, if you’ve been following the thread — thanks to the built-in bungee hooks built into the lid of each case. And while I am on about the practicalities one might not expect from the bike, it’s worth noting Ducati has extended the valve inspection interval to a whopping 30,000 kilometres, one of the longest in the industry. Indeed, if recent rider reports are any indication, Ducatis are now more durable than the average motorcycle, an
Origin: Motorcycle Review: 2019 Ducati Multistrada 1260 Enduro
Watch Keanu Reeves show off his motorcycle collection
Is Keanu Reeves getting cooler? Is that even possible? Rocking a beard, shoulder-length hair parted in the middle and a blue blazer over a t-shirt, the heartthrob-cum-action-star recently got together with GQ magazine to showcase his affinity for motorcycles and remind the world that, yes, he’s still got it, just in case it had forgotten since the last John Wick instalment. In a 12-minute video published on the storied men’s magazine’s YouTube channel, the Toronto-raised actor speaks candidly about how he got into the bike scene; all the bikes he’s loved (and some he’s collected) over the years; and what’s going on at his shop, Arch Motorcycles. It’s always fun to hear about big international celebs’ Canadian connections. Reeves, who was born in Beirut, Lebanon but raised primarily in Toronto and holds a Canadian citizenship, traces his love for the two-wheeled machines back to his youth. “Where I grew up in Toronto, every summer motorcycle gangs would come into a place called Yorkville,” he says. “Those bikes, those people, those pirates, I think touched that 10-year-old kid in a way.” It wasn’t until he was working in the film industry that he would get onto a bike himself, learning on an enduro in Europe and returning to L.A. and buying his first bike in the mid-late ’80s. He still owns the second bike he bought, a 1973 Norton Commando 850 MK2A. “It’s got a nice sound. It smells good when it heats up, the oil. And I got a lot of miles on that motorcycle.” He would go on to use his knowledge of the British-made bike when a role in the 1991 film My Own Private Idaho had him climbing aboard another Norton product. When the trainer came out to explain how to operate the machine, Reeves remembers laughing and saying “I got it.” Today, as co-founder of Arch Motorcycle Company, a Hawthorne, California-based bike shop, he’s involved in the conceptualization and “dream” of the company, but leaves the building to the pros. “I can’t assemble a motorcycle and you don’t want me to fix it,” he says. “I can test ride it and I can tell you what’s wrong we kind of work with that.” In the video, he tours a few of the bikes on the Arch premises, including the 2004 Ducati 998 Matrix Reloaded Edition that Carrie-Anne Moss rode in The Matrix Reloaded; the 2019 Arch KRGT-1, a “performance cruiser”; the 2019 Arch1S “performance cruiser sport,” with a lower riding position and sportier bodywork; and the new Arch prototype product, the Method 143, a futuristic cruiser with sleek, overlaid materials like aluminum and carbon fibre. The video concludes with the 54-year-old star’s advice to those looking to get onto a motorcycle for the first time. “Be comfortable on it, don’t get too much power that can overwhelm you too quickly, and, uh, have fun.” Yup, still cool.
Origin: Watch Keanu Reeves show off his motorcycle collection