
| Pirelli’s twenty-third season as the Sole Supplier of the World Championship for production-based bikes kicks off at Phillip Island, Australia, after two days of pre-season testing in which Bulega in WorldSBK and Masiá in WorldSSP excelled | |
| · What’s new in the tyre allocation. For the race weekend at Phillip Island, the WorldSBK riders will have two front and three rear slick solutions available: soft SC1 and medium SC2 at the front. While for the rear, two further options will be added to the development solution in medium compound D0922 already present in testing, the new medium E0829 and the soft in specification E0125. The D0922 will also be available, as the only rear solution, for the WorldSSP class which, for the first time, uses the same tyre sizes adopted by its WorldSBK class colleagues.
· New E0829 rear. This new tyre makes its debut, using the same medium compound as the D0922, a reference option for last year’s races, but unlike the latter it has a new structure designed to improve stability and performance consistency over race distance. The riders will therefore have two medium compound rears available for the races, while the E0125 soft compound specification can only be used for practice sessions and qualifying. · WorldSSP with WorldSBK sizes. For the first time, the WorldSSP riders will use the 200/60 at the rear, which is usually the prerogative of the WorldSBK class, instead of the 190/60 size. Similarly, at the front, they will be able to choose between the SC1 in 120/70 or 125/70 size, the latter being a reference in WorldSBK. The decision to use these sizes for the Supersport is due to the fact that a larger footprint allows for better heat dissipation, reducing the risk of overheating. At the front, the riders will be able to decide, based on their riding style, whether to use the 120/70 they usually race with or the larger 125/70 size that is used in WorldSBK. · Pre-season tests. Held on Monday and Tuesday at the Australian circuit, they were dominated in both classes by Ducati riders. Nicolò Bulega (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) was the fastest in WorldSBK, setting the best time in 1’28.630 in the fourth and final session on Tuesday afternoon. Jaume Masiá (Orelac Racing Verdnatura) led WorldSSP by setting the fastest lap for his class in 1’32.525, again in the final session of the two days. A new WorldSBK rear and larger sizes in WorldSSP for the tricky Phillip Island |

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