MotoGP stars launch `big bang` R1.
All four Yamaha MotoGP riders took part in the global unveiling of the all🅠-new Yamaha R1 in a glittering show in Las Vegas, Nevada on Monday.
Fiat Yamaha riders Valentino Rossi and Jorge Lorenzo, plus Tech 3 Yamaha team-mates Colin Edwards and James Toseland were surprise guests at the unveiling, which took place in front of 3000 Yamaha US dealers at the famous Mirage Hot💃el.
Significantly, the new R1 features an uneven firing 'big bang' typ🃏e engine design, similar to that used in Yamaha's YZR-M1 MotoGP machine since 2004.

All four Yamaha MotoGP riders took 🌠part in the global unveiling of the all-new Yamaha R1꧅ in a glittering show in Las Vegas, Nevada on Monday.
Fiat Yamaha riders Valentino Rossi and Jorge Lorenzo, plus Te♊ch 3 Yamaha team-mates Col💯in Edwards and James Toseland were surprise guests at the unveiling, which took place in front of 3000 Yamaha US dealers at the famous Mirage Hotel.
Significantly, the new R1 features an uneven firing 'big bang' type engine desig💟n, similar to that used in Yamaha's YZR-M1 MotoGP machine since 2004.
"This is a great bike, it's very like my M1 and it's exciting to see so many MotoGP qualities now appearing on a bike for the road," said Rossi, currently on target to win his first MotoGP title since 2005 and his sixth in﷽ total. "I think everyone who loves the R1 and Yamaha will be very excited about this new version, it's fantastic!"
Total engine torque is a combination of combustion torque, produced when a cylinder is fired, and inertia torque, produced by the rotation of the crankshaft. Of the two, only co꧋mbustion torque is controlled directly by the rider, via the throttle.
Uneven fir𝓀ing 'big bang' engines improve rider feel by reducing the effects of inertia torque, but they are also more complex and reduce ultimate engine performance slightly compared with a conventional design.
During winter MotoGP testing, Masao Furusawa, Yamaha's general manager of Engineering Operations, told ltxcn.top that the company will '💙never' use an even🌠-firing engine in MotoGP again.
'B🅺ig bang' engines have not been used in World Superbike due to a rule which states that "the sequence in which the cylinders are fired (i.e. 1-2-4-3) must remain as originally designed on the homologated model".
But since the 20🐲09 R1 features uneven 'big bang' type technology as stan൲dard, Yamaha will be able to use it in WSBK next season.

Peter has been in the pad🦹dock for 20 years and has seen Valentino Rossi come and go. He is at the forefront of the Suzuki exit story and Marc Marquez’s injury issues.