Last month we brought you Alan's review of the new M 1000 R nakedbike... This time it's his world launch test of the S 1000 RR superbike... Photography: Markus Jahn and Jörg Künstle

It almost doesn’t seems possible that BMW Motorrad’s lineup-leading S 1000 RR sportbike actually made its official public debut a whole decade and a half ago in April 2008, with deliveries beginning the following year. Here we are in 2022, testing the next generation. 

Cathcart landed in Spain to test one of the most impressive bikes to ever come out of the BMW Motorrad factory...

Cathcart landed in Spain to test one of the most impressive bikes to ever come out of the BMW Motorrad factory…

15 years is a long time, especially in the Superbike arena where serious players like BMW, as well as Ducati, Aprilia and the Japanese, don’t stint on investing in fast-moving high-end technical R&D in pursuit of engineering excellence. But the German brand’s first-ever customer motorcycle with transverse-mounted four-cylinder motor has maintained its leading edge reputation for both mechanical and electronic innovation ever since and the newly introduced latest version is no exception.


Check Out Our 2023 M 1000 R World Launch Report Here…


This is because for the coming 2023 model year BMW has essentially uprated its existing volume production version of the bike by transplanting a good chunk of the array of technical upgrades available (until now) only to around 1,200 well-heeled or well-sponsored users of the M 1000 RR, essentially as a homologation special for Superbike racing.

BMW have borrowed a bunch of tech off their top-of-the-line M 1000 RR and transplanted it onto the S 1000 RR for 2023.

BMW Motorrad have borrowed a bunch of tech off their top-of-the-line M 1000 RR and transplanted it onto the S 1000 RR for 2023.

As such, it earned its keep by powering Peter Hickman to a trio of record-breaking race wins at the 2022 Isle of Man TT – albeit without breaking his astounding outright single-lap record of 135.452mph set in the 2018 Senior TT on an S 1000 RR BMW – while also registering hard-fought race wins for Hicky and Danny Buchan in the hot-as-Hades BSB series. However, thus far the BMW has failed to be a true contender for top honours in World Superbike for the past decade, ever since Marco Melandri finished third in the points table on an S 1000 RR in 2012 – and that’s despite proven WSBK winner Scott Redding joining the factory team last season.



While BMW’s original game-changing ultra short-stroke 2009 S 1000 RR set new standards on debut for series production four-cylinder Superbike technology, in 2019 there was a heavy revamp with less than 5 per cent of the 8,200 components making up the entire motorcycle, including the engine, carried over from before.



BMW Motorrad management was looking to significantly improve on the existing bike’s performance, meaning they wanted it to be one second faster on the racetrack, more than 10kg lighter, and easier to control, with improved rideability. Doing this entailed developing an all-new, lighter, more compact and more powerful 999cc engine measuring an unchanged 80 x 49.7 mm, which while 12mm narrower than its predecessor, also weighed 4kg less.  This was thanks partly to a crankshaft 1.8kg lighter than before carrying 4mm shorter and 10 per cent lighter conrods, which together delivered even better pickup throughout the rev range.


Read our 2019 S 1000 RR world launch review here…


But the most significant step that’s been carried forward alongside these other features to the 2023 model was the application of BMW’s patented ShiftCam Technology introduced on that year’s R 1250 GS adventure tourer’s Boxer motor, then transferred to BMW’s four-cylinder range. This combines both variable intake valve timing and differential valve lift, all in the same package, and together with revised cam profiles is responsible for at least 100Nm of torque being available between 5,500 rpm and 14,600 rpm, where the short-stroke engine’s unchanged soft-action limiter cuts in. And that 4kg weight saving came despite the 1kg weight penalty entailed in fitting the ShiftCam system.


BMW Motorrad ShiftCam Demonstration


Now, in pursuit of greater performance at higher revs, BMW has transposed the M 1000 RR’s airbox and cylinder head to the volume production Euro 5-compliant 2023 S 1000 RR, though its new intake porting is cast in here rather than milled out, as on the M RR. As before, the uprated S RR engine is fitted with a variable-length intake system whereby the height of the inlet trumpets atop the 48mm throttle bodies that are now shorter overall for 2023, is further reduced via an electric servomotor mounted on the airbox operating at 11,900rpm (a hefty 2,900rpm higher than before) to enhance top end performance in conjunction with the ShiftCam Technology system. This has allowed BMW to raise power by 3hp to 154kW@13,750rpm, 250rpm higher than previously, with peak torque unchanged at 113Nm, but delivered 500rpm higher at 11,000rpm.



The throttle linkage operating the four throttle butterflies is split into two, with the two left-hand throttle bodies operated separately than the two right-hand ones. This has allowed BMW race teams to programme the two pairs to work separately at lower rpm to give the same benefits as a twin-cylinder motor in terms of traction and drive exciting a turn, before all four resume working in unison at higher revs. This feature resulted from BMW deciding not to produce a big-bang Yamaha R1-type crossplane-crank engine, but instead to employ its decade-long experience of a more traditional 180° screamer motor in building a better such design.

Weigh has been shed and performance has been added tenfold. Overall, an impressive package on paper...

Weight has been shed and performance has been added tenfold. Overall, an impressive package on paper…

BMW engineers admit they did consider a big-bang design at the very outset of the development programme for the 2019 revamp, and also briefly considered building a V4. But they decided against both of these early on, not only because they didn’t want to be seen to copy anyone else, but also because they had so much experience especially from Superbike and Endurance racing in developing the more traditional-type four-cylinder in-line engine, so they decided to concentrate on building an even better one – as in, play to your strengths. Look how that benefitted Kawasaki and Jonathan Rea!



To complement the extra performance higher up the rev scale, the 2023 S 1000 RR’s overall gearing has been lowered via a 1T bigger rear sprocket, up from 45T to 46T, so you can dial up the revs faster to access that extra power and the meaty spread of torque. That’s all in pursuit of improved rear end grip and enhanced acceleration, albeit at the cost of a slight decrease in homologated top speed from 306 km/h to 303 km/h. Pull your elbows in and you might find the missing k’s!

Cathcart hit the 4.30km Almeria circuit in the southeast corner of Spain on-board the BMW S 1000 RR.

Cathcart hit the 4.30km Almeria circuit in the southeast corner of Spain on-board the BMW S 1000 RR.

The Ride
To find out what the result was like to ride on track (sadly, there was no opportunity to do so on the street), I went to the BMW press launch at the 4.30km Almeria circuit in the southeast corner of Spain, complete with its 900m long back straight and many tricky turns, some with blind apexes. It was ideal for assessing the streetlegal BMW fitted for the launch with optional carbon wheels from BMW’s aftermarket catalogue, shod with sticky Bridgestone dual compound V02 slicks – the rear a narrower 190/55-17 fitment, rather than the 200-section tyres on its Italian rivals.



Also derived from the M-series model is the most obvious difference between new and old in the form of the winglets fitted to the 2023 S 1000 RR’s subtly restyled bodywork. These aren’t just a styling feature, but are claimed to generate up to 7.6kg of downforce at 200km/h, rising to 17.1kg at 300km/h. Their appearance may not be to everyone’s taste on such a slinky-looking device as the 2023 S 1000 RR, but function has it over form every time in this category of motorcycle. They help reduce wheelies without TC being called upon to do so at the expense of reduced torque and power being transmitted to the rear tyre, so improve acceleration, as well as enhancing front tyre grip during braking and cornering, and although the winglets inevitably add drag.



In addition, BMW has helped counter that drag further via a taller, reshaped windshield that helps improve the flow around the riders’s helmet, and there’s a further aerodynamic improvement achieved by partitioning off the lower triple clamp. There’s a choice of three colours for the bodywork – Black metallic, Red non-metallic and BMW’s trademark White racing livery, with the price the same for all three variants at $25,750 AUD.

The 2023 BMW S 1000 RR might not be everyone's taste with the big front winglets, but we love the look of it...

The 2023 BMW S 1000 RR might not be everyone’s taste with the big front winglets, but we love the look of it…

That shark-eyed bodywork with redesigned front and rear sections and a shorter number plate holder envelops a revamped version of the RR’s existing aluminium bridge frame. This comprises a welded-up assembly of four separate gravity die-cast elements embracing the engine – still inclined forward by 32° as before – acting as a fully load-bearing chassis component. However, with the aim of optimising lateral flex in order to provide greater feedback to the rider of what the wheels are doing, this so-called ‘Flex Frame’ has now been given several cutouts in its flanks to promote said flex.



This is a strategy dating back to the works Honda RVF750 Suzuka 8-Hours Endurance racers of the 1980s, which first manifested itself outside of Japan in the factory-supported Rumi Honda RC30 raced in the 1990 World Superbike series by Baldassarre Monti. This was the first aluminium beam-framed Superbike to explore this technique of promoting flex in pursuit of the same rider-friendly ‘talkback’ which Ducati V-twin riders have always enjoyed (until recently!) with their tubular steel chassis, and the 2023 S 1000 RR is the latest such bike to benefit from this strategy.



Additionally, the new RR chassis has slightly less aggressive steering geometry derived from the M RR, with the steering head angle for the fully-adjustable 45mm closed-cartridge Marzocchi fork delivering 120mm of wheel travel kicked out half a degree to 23.6° and the offset reduced by 3mm, resulting in trail increasing from 93.9mm to 99.8mm.

he wheelbase has been extended to 1457mm (from 1439mm) via an all-new gravity diecast one-piece twin-sided swingarm with underslung sections.

The wheelbase has been extended to 1457mm (from 1439mm) via an all-new gravity diecast one-piece twin-sided swingarm with underslung sections.

At the same time, the wheelbase has been extended to 1457mm (from 1439mm) via an all-new gravity diecast one-piece twin-sided swingarm with underslung sections, with the rear wheel made easier to install and remove for track days or races thanks to the brake pads and brake anchor plate now being chamfered, and revised mounting of the right side rear axle bushes, to prevent loss. Another transplant from the M RR is the adjustability of the swingarm pivot point and the height of the rear Marzocchi shock, again ten-click fully adjustable and giving 117mm of rear axle travel. My test bike came fitted with the optional DDC/Dynamic Damping Control package, which delivers semi-active electronic damping adjustment front and rear, whose settings are altered to suit the selected riding mode.



The ’23 S 1000 RR has an evolved electronics package with an RBW/Ride by Wire throttle offering five different riding modes – Rain, Road, Dynamic and Race, plus Race Pro which also gets three levels of throttle response and engine braking options. These, combined with a triple-axis, six-direction Continental IMU, control the array of rider aids, most of them switchable: Cornering ABS Pro, multi-stage DTC, engine braking adjustment, anti-wheelie, hill start assistance, launch control, cruise control, a lap timer, three-stage heated grips, a pit lane speed limiter, engine braking torque control (MSR) and the Dynamic Brake Control/DBC, which BMW says ‘offers additional assistance during emergency braking’ – i.e. stoppies!

A seriously impressive assist system has made its way onto the S 1000 RR from the M RR for 2023...

A seriously impressive assist system has made its way onto the S 1000 RR from the M RR for 2023…

In addition, BMW engineers are proud of their Brake Slide Assist/BSA system that, should you be sufficiently brave as well as expert enough to do so, lets you back into a turn by limiting rear brake pressure and rear wheel spin to achieve a controlled, pre-determined drift angle, before the lean-sensitive ABS cuts in. This new system is based on steering angle sensors mounted on the bike for the first time, which let you set a specific drift angle for so-called braking drifts while sliding into turns at a maintained speed. When the pre-set steering angle is reached, TC intervenes, reduces spin and stabilises the bike.



Also included are a lightweight lithium battery, USB charging point, a very neat GoPro holder and a new wiring loom to make removing the rear lights and number plate holder for track days easier. Claimed kerb weight for the new bike remains unchanged at 197kg with all liquids, including a full 16.5-litre fuel tank for the standard bike, 195.4kg with the optional Race Package which features forged aluminium wheels instead of the stock cast ones, and 193.5kg with the M Package option, which includes the carbon wheels and seat fitted to the test bike.


Avon Cobra Chrome

This also carried the Performance Package consisting of an Akrapovič slip-on exhaust and the Endurance chain developed by BMW’s factory World Endurance team. Stopping the overall result are the same twin 320mm Brembo front discs as before, but these are now gripped by new Nissin monoblock four-piston calipers. There’s a 220mm rear disc with twin-pot caliper, and Continental’s cornering ABS is retained, with requisite upgrades. 

"Having digested this list of upgrades to what was already a pretty damn good motorcycle, I couldn’t wait to get out on track at Almeria."

“Having digested this list of upgrades to what was already a pretty damn good motorcycle, I couldn’t wait to get out on track at Almeria.”

Having digested this list of upgrades to what was already a pretty damn good motorcycle, I couldn’t wait to get out on track at Almeria to find out if, in trying to make it even better, BMW had chucked the baby out with the bathwater. Hopping aboard allayed one fear – this is the same two-wheeled conundrum as before, in the shape of a bike that despite the longer wheelbase and extra bits of bodywork, feels about the same size as a 600 Supersport, while delivering the insanely fast performance of a TT-winning one-litre Superbike. The frame is surprisingly narrow, especially at the stepover point behind the fuel tank, for despite the motor’s in-line four configuration, BMW says it’s only 20mm wider than a V4 engined bike of equivalent capacity in that area. This makes it easier for you to grasp the fuel tank made from three welded-together aluminium sections with your knees, but also gives you room to move about the bike, as necessary.


“Despite the longer wheelbase and extra bits of bodywork, it feels about the same size as a 600 Supersport, while delivering the insanely fast performance of a TT-winning litre Superbike…”


The clip-on ‘bars are spread further out than on the previous bike, adding to the same improbable sense of spaciousness for what in the metal is a much smaller bike than it seems to be in photos, and the taller, reshaped new screen helps make you feel you’re sitting within the BMW rather than atop it, as well as giving excellent protection for a 180cm rider down Almeria’s main straight, with the super-legible 6.5in TFT dash’s digital speedo reading just upwards of 275km/h.



Yes, I know – I should have pulled those elbows in better. But there doesn’t feel to be as much weight on your wrists and shoulders as I remember from the old bike, so this new one will presumably be an even better ride for the longer haul. Plus the extra flex which BMW engineers have dialled into the new frame design is presumably one reason it feels more responsive, and gives improved feedback from the front end, especially when trying to keep up turn speed in the tricky triple-apex right hander out at the back of the America track.

Alan says that the new ride doesn't put as much strain on your wrists as the past model, thanks to a slightly revised rider triangle.

Cathcart says that the new ride doesn’t put as much strain on your wrists as the past model, thanks to a slight revised rider triangle.

There, the first part of the turn taken as you crest a small hill is blind, so you have to be super-precise in choosing your entry point, and although I’ve been riding at Almeria ever since it opened in the late-‘90s, and have tested everything from factory 500GP and World Superbike racers there down to Jack Miller’s Moto3 KTM, it still always takes me time to get dialled in again because of the hidden apexes, and this test was no exception.


GS Adv

But the BMW was a perfect partner for doing this, because despite having that huge top end performance and thrilling acceleration, it’s also amazingly forgiving when your memory betrays you, or you get seduced by having done the last series of corners pretty well, into thinking you’ve got this circuit licked. This is a bike that’s easier than ever to go fast on – but one which the inevitable over-confidence this brings with it, will pardon your mistakes in a way that’s almost uncanny.


“This is a bike that’s easier than ever to go fast on – but one which the inevitable over-confidence this brings with it, will pardon your mistakes in a way that’s almost uncanny.”


So when you get over-ambitious with your turn speed, and have to back off the throttle entering a bend at the cost of missing your apex and drifting wide – you think – the BMW’s electronics take over and close the corner entry for you, so that you’re back where you ought to have been in the first place, but for your excess of ambition. Like I said – uncanny. Same thing braking from somewhere around 275km/h at the end of the 900m-long main straight, into a second-gear 90° right-hander.

"So when you get over-ambitious with your turn speed, and have to back off the throttle entering a bend at the cost of missing your apex and drifting wide – you think - the BMW’s electronics take over and close the corner entry for you."

“When you get over-ambitious with your turn speed, and have to back off the throttle entering a bend at the cost of missing your apex and drifting wide – you think – the BMW’s electronics take over and close the corner entry for you.”

The total stability delivered by the engine braking programme as you max out your late-braking skills, such as they are, not only makes it seem each lap as if you could have hit that fabulously effective Nissin/Brembo brake cocktail just a little bit later – but then when you do inevitably overdo things and go past your turn-in point while trying unsuccessfully to emulate Toprak Razgatlioglu, the BMW’s electronic programme to control stoppies kicks in as it lets you recover, stop, turn in and proceed as normal, having lost barely any time at all. That’s uncanny – again.



It seems completely improbable to say this of a 200bhp-plus motorcycle, but the overwhelming impression you get from riding this new BMW is how easy it is to do so in something approaching anger. The ShiftCam function, the sticky dual-compound Bridgestone rear slick, the lean-sensitive Continental TC and that shorter overall gearing combine with the engine’s accessible power delivery even in Race Pro mode to deliver truly thrilling acceleration when you wind the throttle wide open as you click through the gears on the faultless wide-open two-way powershifter – but without your having to even graze the rear brake lever with your right toe to strangle a time-wasting wheelie at birth: the BMW’s thought ahead and done it for you.

The S 1000 RR has always been a top-tier looking bike, it now has the ability to be ridden by the average joe...

The S 1000 RR has always been a top-tier looking bike, it now has the ability to be ridden by the average joe…

Likewise the improbably delicate, precise steering that this 180kg-plus motorcycle delivers in plotting a path through that triple-axis turn, while you play the throttle back and forth in searching for the correct speed in each part of the bend. Having finally re-learnt the right line and dialled in the proper cornering speed, the satisfaction you get from solving that dynamic puzzle correctly and repeating it lap after lap is something any track day rider, let alone a racer, will know brings huge satisfaction – and this BMW will play a crucial role in helping you achieve that.



What a lovely bike it is to ride hard, with such well-mapped, responsive fuelling that lets you wind the throttle open progressively as the corner you’re taking opens up, feeling the rear Bridgestone hook up beneath you as you do so. Even riders who are relatively new to this level of performance will find this to be a bike that breeds self-confidence, as they learn step by step how to use that 200bhp-plus engine performance that’s delivered to them so accessibly, with no hint of intimidation.

"What a lovely bike it is to ride hard, with such well-mapped, responsive fuelling that lets you wind the throttle open progressively as the corner you’re taking opens up, feeling the rear Bridgestone hook up beneath you as you do so."

“What a lovely bike it is to ride hard, with such well-mapped, responsive fuelling that lets you wind the throttle open progressively as the corner you’re taking opens up, feeling the rear Bridgestone hook up beneath you.”

But what about the BSA Slide Control system? Does it work? Well, sorry readers, but I’ll gladly own up to the fact that I can’t slide a rear Bridgestone slick at will in the way I’m sure Scott Redding or Michael van der Mark would have done to test the system – but only after switching off the TC, because you can’t power slide the back wheel unless the tyre has lost grip, and is spinning up. I think the best thing for the rest of us normal humans is to be glad that the system is there as a safety net, in case you make a mistake. Of course, sticking a rider-friendly treaded tyre and trying to exploit the BMW’s BSA would be another matter, and I’ll admit I’m curious enough to want to find out how it works – so let’s see what it’s like on a British spring day at a track like Donington Park, with lots of runoff….!

"This new BMW makes going what each of us considers to be fast by our own personal standards, easy."

“This new BMW makes going what each of us considers to be fast by our own personal standards, easy.”

Whether it’s because of having more power, revamped electronics, stronger brakes, a more responsive, more flexy chassis with revised geometry that talks right back to you, and winglets straight from the MotoGP paddock, the new 2023 S 1000 RR has a level of performance and a degree of electronic support which puts it on a whole new level compared to its 2019 predecessor, the last time that BMW reinvented its Superbike model. This new BMW makes going what each of us considers to be fast by our own personal standards, easy. It’s a hugely capable superbike for every level of riding expertise, from 600/765/950 Supersport graduates to hardened Superbike racing pros, but with an even bigger safety margin built in. My Almeria experience was just a getting-to-know you taster: now I want a longer, more intimate relationship!


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2023 BMW S 1000 RR Specifications

Price: From $25,750 (+ORC)
Warranty: Five-years unlimited km
Colours: Blackstorm metallic, Racingred non-metallic and Lightwhite non-metallic/BMW M
Claimed Power: 154kW@13,750rpm
Claimed Torque: 113Nm@11,000rpm
Kerb Weight: 197kg
Fuel capacity: 16.5L
Fuel Consumption Claimed: N/A
Fuel Consumption (measured): N/A


Engine: Water-cooled in-line four-cylinder engine four-valves per cylinder DOHC, Valve actuation via single cam followers and variable intake camshaft control system BMW ShiftCam, 80mm x 49.7mm bore x stroke, 999cc, 13.3:1 compression, Electronic fuel injection system, Closed-loop three-way catalytic converter Gearbox: Six speed, constant mesh Clutch: Self-reinforcing multi-plate anti-hopping oil bath clutch, mechanically operated


Chassis: Frame: Aluminium composite bridge
Rake: 23.6 degrees Trail: 99mm
Suspension: Upside-down telescopic fork, slide tube diameter 45mm, spring preload, compression and rebound stage adjustable, 120mm travel (f) Aluminium underslung double-sided swinging arm with central spring strut, spring preload, adjustable compression and rebound stage, 117mm travel (r)
Brakes: 2 x 320mm floating discs, radially mounted four-piston calipers (f), 220mm disc, single piston floating caliper (r)
Wheels & Tyres: Die-cast aluminium wheels, 120/70R17 (f) 190/55 ZR17 (r)


Dimensions:
Seat height: 824mm
Ground clearance: N/A
Overall width: 846mm
Overall Length: 2073mm
Overall height: N/A
Wheelbase: 1458mm


Instruments & Electronics: Full-colour TFT dash, Riding Modes, Power Modes, Dynamic Traction Control DTC with new Slide Control, ABS Pro with new Brake Slide Assist function, full six-axis assist system…


Editor’s Note: If you are reading this article on any website other than BikeReview.com.au, please report it to BikeReview via our contact page, as it has been stolen or re-published without authority.


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