First Ride: 2006 Aprilia RS125

They say: "Capable of demanding roles thanks to its spectacular stage presence" We say: "Acting the fool on one of these should be no problem, then"




Before riding the RS125 I was really excited. I always look forward to riding new bikes, but this is one of a dying breed: a two-stroke race rep.

If you want a bike to tickle your senses then it's a two-stroke every time. And for the last 14 years RS125s have stimulated over 82,000 teenagers the world over.

The new RS looks like a mini RSV-R. New for '06 is RSV-R-style bodywork, a radial front brake, 14-litre tank and digital display with built-in lap counter. Engine, frame and forks are unchanged.

Hit the starter (no kickstart) and the RS buzzes into life. Giving it the GP-style throttle blip to hear the crackle from the pipe I couldn't help notice the rev-counter is a fraction of a second behind the motor. Aprilia says it takes a while to warm up!

Despite my being anything but teenage size (a teenage whale, possibly... ) the RS isn't cramped. Yes it's small, but not amillion miles off a modern 600. The engine is typical two-stroke; we rode the 28bhp unrestricted model, which is surprisingly tractable below 8000rpm. Pulling away requires a load of revs, but low down it's rideable, if a little slow. Hit 8000rpm and it all changes; the exhaust note switches to a high-pitched 'waaaa' and the little RS flies, until it runs out of puff at around 11,000rpm where it simply stops revving as though it can't draw enough fuel in. Which is probably the case.

Handling is very good - all it takes is a psychotic teen to make these fly - but the suspension feels crude. Mid-corner bumps overwhelm the forks and shock, and the tyres skip and bounce in a disconcerting if controllable fashion. The radial front brake has far more bite than a bike this size will ever need; with a lightweight teenager on it will be even better.

At £3616 - £967 more than a CBR125 - the RS is probably out of most teenagers' league. But the CBR is a soulless four-stroke that is functional at best. For teenage kicks the RS still rules.

VERDICT 4/5

Just the tool for teens to mis-spend their youth on and learn how to be a GP star - as long as they can afford it

SPECS

TYPE - SUPERSPORTS

PRODUCTION DATE - 2006

PRICE NEW - £3616

ENGINE CAPACITY - 124.5cc

POWER - 28bhp

TORQUE - 14.3lb.ft

WEIGHT - 125kg

SEAT HEIGHT - 805mm

FUEL CAPACITY - 14L

TOP SPEED - 100mph

0-60 - n/a

TANK RANGE - N/A

Click to read: Aprilia RS125 owners reviews, Aprilia RS125 specs and to see the Aprilia RS125 image gallery.

BEFORE RIDING THE RS125 I was really excited. I always look forward to riding new bikes, but this is one of a dying breed: a two-stroke race rep.

If you want a bike to tickle your senses then it's a two-stroke every time. And for the last 14 years RS125s have stimulated over 82,000 teenagers the world over.

The new RS looks like a mini RSV-R. New for '06 is RSV-R-style bodywork, a radial front brake, 14-litre tank and digital display with built-in lap counter. Engine, frame and forks are unchanged.

Hit the starter (no kickstart) and the RS buzzes into life. Giving it the GP-style throttle blip to hear the crackle from the pipe I couldn't help notice the rev-counter is a fraction of a second behind the motor. Aprilia says it takes a while to warm up!

Despite my being anything but teenage size (a teenage whale, possibly... ) the RS isn't cramped. Yes it's small, but not a million miles off a modern 600. The engine is typical two-stroke; we rode the 28bhp unrestricted model, which is surprisingly tractable below 8000rpm. Pulling away requires a load of revs, but low down it's rideable, if a little slow. Hit 8000rpm and it all changes; the exhaust note switches to a high-pitched 'waaaa' and the little RS flies, until it runs out of puff at around 11,000rpm where it simply stops revving as though it can't draw enough fuel in. Which is probably the case.

Handling is very good - all it takes is a psychotic teen to make these fly - but the suspension feels crude. Mid-corner bumps overwhelm the forks and shock, and the tyres skip and bounce in a  disconcerting if controllable fashion. The radial front brake has far more bite than a bike this size will ever need; with a lightweight teenager on it will be even better.

At £3616 - £967 more than a CBR125 - the RS is probably out of most teenagers' league. But the CBR is a soulless four-stroke that is functional at best. For teenage kicks the RS still rules.

VERDICT

Just the tool for teens to mis-spend  their youth on and learn how to be a GP star - as long as they can afford it.

Aprilia RS125 Specs

SPECS
TYPE - SUPERSPORTS
PRODUCTION DATE - 2006
PRICE NEW - £3616
ENGINE CAPACITY - 124.5cc
POWER - 28bhp
TORQUE - 14.3lb.ft   
WEIGHT - 125kg
SEAT HEIGHT - 805mm   
FUEL CAPACITY - 14L   
TOP SPEED - 100mph   
0-60     - n/a
TANK RANGE - N/A