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Kris VanOrden
12-16-2008, 03:18 AM
FIM Road Racing World Championship Grand Prix
Replacement Regulations for 250cc Class as from 2011 (Moto2)

The Grand Prix Commission, composed of Messrs. Carmelo Ezpeleta (Dorna, Chairman), Claude Danis (FIM), Hervé Poncharal (IRTA) and Takanao Tsubouchi (MSMA), in the presence of M. Paul Butler (Secretary of the meeting), in a meeting held yesterday in Barcelona, unanimously decided to introduce the following amendments to the Road Racing World Championship Grand Prix Regulations - application as from 2011.

Replacement Regulation for 250cc Class from 2011 (Moto2)


Technical Regulations:

1. Engine

1.1 4-stroke engines only.
1.2 Engine capacity: maximum 600cc.
1.3 4 cylinders maximum.
1.4 No oval pistons.
1.5 Engines must be normally aspirated. No turbo-charging, no super-charging.
1.6 Engine speed limited to maximum: 16,000 rpm. 4-cylinder engines
15,500 rpm. 3-cylinder engines
15,000 rpm. 2-cylinder engines
An electronic system supplied by the Organisers will be permanently attached to monitor and control
engine speed.
1.7 Pneumatic valve operation is not permitted.
1.8 Inlet and Exhaust valves must be of conventional type (reciprocating poppet valves).
1.9 Variable valve timing or variable valve lift systems are not permitted.
1.10 Only wet-sump type engine lubrication systems are permitted.
1.11 Minimum weight of complete engine with throttle body, dry:
53 kg 4-cylinder
50 kg 3-cylinder
47 kg 2 cylinder

2. Inlet & Fuel System

2.1 Variable-length inlet tract systems are not permitted.
2.2 Only one throttle control valve per cylinder is permitted. No other moving devices are permitted in the
inlet tract before the engine intake valve.
2.3 Throttle bodies will have a maximum internal diameter (must be perfectly circle except for the area of
dent or groove to allow the injector to come out) at engine side out-let of:
42 mm for 4-cylinder
48 mm for 3-cylinder
59 mm for 2-cylinder
2.4 Fuel injectors will be restricted to a defined type (tba, based on cost).
2.5 Fuel pressure must not exceed 5.0 bar.
2.6 No artificial cooling of intake air or fuel.
2.7 Only air or air/fuel mixture is permitted in the induction tract and combustion chamber.
2.8 No direct fuel injection into the cylinder/head/combustion chamber.
2.9 Fuel specification will be for standard unleaded fuel (commercially available EU-compliant "pump fuel").

3. Exhaust system

3.1 Variable length exhaust systems are not permitted.
3.2 Noise limit will be a maximum of 120 dB/A, measured in a static test.


4. Transmission

4.1 A maximum of 6 gearbox speeds is permitted.
4.2 A maximum of 3 alternate gear ratios for each gearbox speed, and 2 alternate ratios for the primary
drive gear is permitted. Teams will be required to declare the gearbox ratios for each gear used at the
beginning of the season.
4.3 Electro-mechanical or electro-hydraulic clutch actuating systems are not permitted.

5. Ignition, Electronics & Data-Logging

5.1 Data logger system will be supplied by the series Organizer.
5.2 Only the ECU/fuel injection control units supplied by the series Organiser are allowed to be fitted
to the motorcycle. Electronic control units include the timing transponder, engine RPM control,
and datalogger systems. No other electronic control or datalogging systems will be allowed on the
motorcycle.
The price of ECU unit made by each engine manufacturer must be equal to or less than
JPY75,000 (about Euro650).

6. Chassis

6.1 Chassis will be a prototype, the design and construction of which is free within the constraints of the
FIM Grand Prix Technical Regulations. The frame, swing-arm, fuel tank, seat and cowling are
forbidden to use from a non-prototype as series production road-going motorcycle.
6.2 Minimum Total Weight: 135kg for 4-cylinder
130kg for 3-cylinder
125kg for 2-cylinder
6.3 No carbon brake discs.

7. Wheels & Tyres

7.1 No carbon composite wheels.
7.2 The maximum permitted wheel rim width is: Front 4.00"
Rear 6.00" or 6.25"
7.3 The only permitted wheel rim diameter is: Front 17"
Rear 17"
7.4 The number of slick tyres allocated to each rider per event will be controlled.

8. Materials & Construction

8.1 Construction materials will be limited to exclude expensive "non-conventional" materials and
manufacturing methods (a list will be issued).
8.2 The following components must be made from iron-based alloys:
Valve springs, camshafts, crankshafts, connecting rods, piston pins, brake discs.
8.3 Engine crankcases and cylinder heads must be made from cast aluminium alloys.
8.4 Pistons must be made from an aluminium alloy.

9. General

9.1 Number of machines: the team can scrutineer only one motorcycle per rider.
9.2 Number of engines: a maximum of 2 complete engines per rider is permitted at any event. Teams will
be required to register engine serial numbers at Technical Control on the day before the first practice.
9.3 Apart from the above regulations, all other construction criteria, dimensions and specifications are as
per the FIM Grand Prix Regulations.
9.4 The engine (excluding exhaust, throttle bodies and ECU) used in a race is available to be purchased
by another competitor in the same race for a fixed price of ?20,000 (Euro). Such purchase request
must be made in writing to Race Direction within the protest period, that is within 60 minutes after the
official end of the race. The transaction and delivery will be completed immediately at the end of the
60 minute protest period and will be underwritten by IRTA. Teams refusing to sell when presented
with a valid request will be disqualified.

ricracer16
12-16-2008, 11:56 AM
I like change and I feel bad that all the 250cc Gp fans are sad about this change but considering that they are racing on dead tech doesn't mean much. In a world where everything is turning green, viewers won't understand why these little bikes are blowing blue smoke.

Its just time to change. I just wish they didn't go up to 600cc. I tired of watching 600cc racing. I was hoping that they would make the class a single cylinder class. But they went with the 600 class. I'm thinking that they will be able to be closer to the Motogp class now. I think I read somewhere that some 250 riders were really close to the motogp times at least for the guys riding in the back of the pack at some tracks.

Anyway I found this photo of the cockpit of the new machines. I don't know what type actually.

If anyone has any full bike photos please post them up.

http://i438.photobucket.com/albums/qq105/ricracer197/600GP.jpg

Kurlon
12-16-2008, 12:13 PM
I really disagree with the whole theory behind the change. Two strokes aren't dead, far from it really. Just a couple of the big brands ::cough::Honda::cough:: want nothing to do with them 'cause they don't have the same level of tech as KTM or Aprilia in that arena. Aprilia has proven you can make clean burn two strokes as well with their DFI scoocters. Unfortunately, in the US rather than legislate emissions standards, they went and banned new two stokes from the streets instead.

Plus, the RPM limits are just silly, all that does is keep Ducati from building a screamer.

MotoGP is supposed to be about pushing tech, and now it's getting dumbed down. Blech.

Kris VanOrden
12-16-2008, 01:04 PM
I am on the fence on if this change is good or bad, one being Its nice to see that more people are going to be trying to push their 4strokes to optimum. Some one is bound to come up with some really good technology for the rest of normal man, with 2stroke you will never see 2stroke cars and probably not many bikes so it is a dying knowledge that can only help the rest of the world so much. . . .

but on the other side

what you get from a 2stroke is nuts, the power and very little parts. some one was onto something and unfortunately everyone got the 1970's 2stroke technology stuck in their heads, "smoking monsters" instead of doing something to promote making them cleaner running and more efficient they just ban them/get rid of racing classes.

bahhh ohhh well.

Kurlon
12-17-2008, 07:48 PM
There is one two stroke car out there, it's modern, and is used as a "green" show off platform... Lotus multi-fuel DFI "Omnivore" Exige.

http://blog.wired.com/cars/2008/08/no-dilemmas-for.html