In this blog you will find information about our last project for the new Moto2 category, also about the BOTT 1000 MORLACO, and articles about mortorbikes, related to design, technology and competition.





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Archive for March, 2009

Moto2, looking for the chassis concept.

Published 24/03/2009 @ 14:37 by David Sánchez

Lately I do not have too much free time to dedicate to the moto2 design. These days previous to the CEV start we are training almost every week. Last week we were in Albacete and this week we will be in Valencia.

Anyway I am already working on the chassis design. Currently I am working on several different concepts. What I do with each one is to study in a very rough way its 3 main stiffnesses:

  • Chassis torsional stiffness around the fore-aft axis of the bike.
  • Chassis torsional stiffness around a transverse axis of the bike (this is the chassis stiffness during braking).
  • Chassis lateral flexing stiffness.

For sure you already know that current trend in chassis design is to have a “high” stiffness in cases 1 and 2 and some controled flex in the third one.

Normally I draw each idea directly in 3D. For example, regarding the concept you can see below, I knew that it wouldn’t work because it is too stiff in side flexing, anyway I liked the very direct connection between the headstock and the engine mounting points, so I drew it and I made a very simple FEA analysis in order to have a first idea about the stiffness values for each case. I think that to study several different ideas is interesting because it allows me to “locate” each concept with respect to the others, and that gives me a better understanding of the behaviour of each concept.

This is a very simple FEA, using “bar” elements.

The next concept has a less direct connection and a not so compact design, but however it has a more interesting behaviour regarding stiffness. Like you can see I didn’t draw the triple clamp or the rear suspension yet. The rear area of the chassis (swingarm clamping area) is just roughly sketched and incomplete. The airbox is still the ZX6 original (of course we must design a new one). Ah! The swingarm is the Morlaco one.. till we design the new one this one has to do.   :)

I made a more complex FEA model of this concept, although it is not yet a very elaborated one.

Torsional stiffness.

Lateral flex stiffness.


Braking stiffness.

One thing that you can see in these drawings is the headstock design, with two cut outs at both sides to let room for the airbox intake. This design is used in the Ducati Motogp or in the Kalex. I think it is a very good compromise between efectivity and simplicity.

Let’s say that these days I am studing a lot of different ideas, making qualitative analysis (more than quantitative). Once I have identified those designs that seem more interesting I will start doing more elaborated FEA and I will start refining the structural design.

Probably the final design of the chassis will be very different compared to what you see in these images, this is just an example, I am working on several different concepts.

One of the things that I like more of this process is that in the beginning I have no idea about how the bike is going to be, and by working and thinking on the ideas, the bike starts appearing gradually.
I remember that more than 20 years ago I read an Alan Cathcart’s article about the Fior Rotax 250 GP from 1987 (Claude Fior is one of the designers I admire a lot), I think his 1987 two fifty is one of the most brilliant designs ever. Fior said: “I always thought that the motorbikes design themselves. In reality the only thing I do is translate to tubes and plates what they are telling me“.

Morlaco article in Formula Moto magazine.

Published 15/03/2009 @ 13:26 by David Sánchez

Formula Moto is a monthly Spanish magazine. In the next number #52, April, available in magazine shops from next tuesday (March 17th), there is a 4 pages article about the Morlaco. This is inside a bigger article about Spanish prototypes, which shows also the D1200R, another prototype with FFE and an impressive aesthetics.

The concept in which the D1200R front end is based was invented by Juan Elizalde, the mechanical design was made fifty/fifty by Carlos Beltrán and Pablo González de Chaves, who created also the aesthetics of the bike. I strongly recommend you to visit his webpage dechavesgarage.com, you will find great stuff there.

By the way, I take the opportunity to show here some of the photos I took to generate graphic material for this article. I took the photos in my garage, using a background white clothe and a Nikon D200 with an external flash that my friend Jose Bautista lended me.

You will find these photos with higher resolution in the Bottpower Flickr gallery.

Morlaco “street version”

Published 06/03/2009 @ 16:28 by David Sánchez

The Morlaco was designed as a racing motorbike, in the meantime Hugo van Waaijen is exploring several conceptual possibilities for this motorbike. In the next image you can see the original design and behind it a possible street version.

The main objective of the Morlaco project is to learn and have fun and these concepts are part of this process.

For this design Hugo was inspired by a bull (a Morlaco is a kind of bull in Spanish), with powerful shoulders (in this case the fueltank area) and a low head (the nose of the bike). Of course, the mirrors are the horns..  :)

The rendering process (to apply colours, textures, lights, and cameras for the image generation) has been made by José García Pérez, alias “cutangus”.

We are exploring other concepts and Hugo is working on it from time to time. As soon as we have it ready we will show it in the blog.

As always you will find higher resolution images in the Flickr gallery.