2009 BBR MM12P Race Bike First Look

Wednesday, January 28, 2009
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2009 BBR MM12P
The Brown Brothers have come up with a budget mini of their own which is supposed to demolish Chinese imitations while being competitive in price.
BBR Motorsports is known as a leader in mini bike performance, and the company from Auburn, Washington doesn’t screw around when it comes to building race bikes – big or small. It’s also a well-known fact that you can take out a second mortgage to cover the cost of building some of these rip-snorting backyard racers. With tough times ahead for the economy, we all need our grins more than ever, so BBR has come up with a solution that will allow consumers to still get their high-performance mini fix without having to kill limited resources. Starting this summer, BBR will be ready to ship its new MiniMoto 12” Production Race Bike with a base price of $4000.

The BBR Production uses parts sourced from outside the US to keep costs low, but those components are manufactured to BBR standards similar to the way bigger companies like BMW outsource and maintain quality control. Even though purchasing parts from places like China and Taiwan instantly bring up red flags, consider that they also place orders from Italy where the Polisport plastic and Marzocchi forks come from, and boxes from Japan are filled with Keihin carburetors, so don’t think that the Brown Brothers are funding just any old sweat shop.

The MM12P features a BBR MP2 frame. The 6061 forged aluminum perimeter design looks gnarly and can handle the big kids, and the subframe is aluminum too. If you’ve got the cash and desire, a BBR USA V3 Perimeter Frame Kit can substitute, but the entire bike is fully upgradable to all BBR USA components.

A Daytona International 150cc motor with 12.5:1 compression ratio churns out the power, and a four-speed manual transmission puts it down with an N-1-2-3-4 pattern. Like we mentioned, a Keihin PE28 carb dumps in the mix, and the ignition has adjustable curves. BBR bolts on its production D2 stainless steel exhaust to finish the combustion process. The fork is a 35mm inverted Marzocchi with 0.45 kg springs (0.42 and 0.50 kg available). Compression and damping adjusters control the eight inches of travel. Out back is the BBR SuperShock with the same amount of travel. Compression and rebound are adjustable and the standard 1100-lb spring can be swapped for 975 or 1200 lbs.

2009 BBR MM12P
Jeremy McGrath can afford a full-blown BBR race bike, but for most of us, this little hotshot will have to suffice.
BBR throws a whole bucket of smaller parts at the MM12P like the race team hubs, single piston, full-floating calipers, oversized footpegs and a tall seat. All the mounting points are Kawasaki KLX110-based. With the single-gallon fuel tank topped off, BBR claims it weighs 138 pounds. Drilled wave rotors front and rear help keep off the pounds as does the aluminum brake pedal and kickstarter, and it is a race bike so there’s no kickstand in stock form.

This is how BBR describes the new offering. ”The BBR MM12P Production Bike is designed for those customers who do not want to spend $10,000 on a hand-fabricated BBR USA Race Bike, but who are also unwilling to waste their money on a disposable knock-off bike. The BBR Production Bike offers the perfect balance of quality, performance, affordability, and pride of ownership.”

We can’t wait to get ahold of one to see if that’s true. BBR is taking pre-orders now for bikes to ship this summer. Only 100 limited edition machines will be released in 2009. A deposit will be required and 2010 manufacturing is still to be decided.

Contact BBR Motorsports at:
(888) 668-6227 
www.bbrmotorsports.com

BBR MiniMoto 12” Production Race Bike Specs:
Engine Type: 150cc Daytona air-cooled single cylinder four-stroke
Displacement: 149.78 cm3
Bore and Stroke: 57.0 x 58.7 mm
Compression Ratio: 12.5:1
Valve Train: SOHC 2V; 28mm intake, 23.5mm exhaust
Carburetion: Keihin PE28 (28mm)
Ignition: AC-CDI with user selectable advance curve
Starter: Kick
2009 BBR MM12P
A 150cc Daytona motor, aluminum perimeter frame, Marzocchi fork and four-speed manual tranny highlight this bike.
Recommended Oil: Motul 5100 10W-40
Transmission: Four speed (N-1-2-3-4), multiplate wet clutch
1st 2.615
2nd 1.706
3rd 1.182
4th 0.916
Final Drive #420 chain; 13T/43T
Frame: 6061 T6 Heat Treated, Forged, Perimeter, Cradle Mount, Removable Subframe
Swingarm: 6061 T6 Heat Treated, Forged, Adjustable Shock Leverage Block
Front Suspension: Marzocchi 35mm USD, 8 inches of travel, adjustable compression (10 clicks), adjustable rebound (10 clicks)
Rear Suspension: BBR Billet Super Shock, 8 inches of travel, adjustable compression (12 clicks), adjustable rebound (20 clicks)
Front Brake: 200mm hydraulic disc
Rear Brake: 155mm hydraulic disc
Front Tire: 60/100 x 14
Rear Tire: 80/100 x 12
Wheelbase: 46.5"
Rake: 26°
Trail: 2.17"
Seat Height: 31"
Ground Clearance: 11"
Fuel Capacity: 1 gallon
Curb Weight: 138 lbs.
Available Colors: Black
Model ID: MM12P 

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Additional Options
• U-Flow Air Filter and Performance Manifold Kit $199.95
• Super lightweight BBR Deflection™ rotors $79.95 ea.
• Red Anodized D2 exhaust Tip $32.95
• Cancel Core muffler insert (91 decibels) $89.95
• Kickstand $59.95
• Shock spring 975 lbs (soft) $89.95
• Shock spring 1200 lbs (firm) $89.95
• Fork springs .42 (soft) $79.95
• Fork springs .50 (firm) $79.95
• Leverage block, Black (firm) $55.95
• Leverage block, Red (soft) $55.95
• Works Connection Elite Clutch lever assembly $139.95
• Works Connection front master cylinder cover $27.95
• Works Connection rear master cylinder cover $24.95
• Works Connection rotating lever clamp for front brake $27.95
• Works Connection EZ Holeshot $109.95
• Front sprockets 12T or 14T (13T standard) $16.95
• Rear sprockets 42T or 44T (43T standard) $39.95
• Replacement air filter only $19.95
Comments
Tim B - Sweet!  April 24, 2009 09:20 AM
So what's the differenceb etween the MP2 frame and the V3 Perimeter frame? Will this thing beat a stock Honda 150R in a straight line?
joe - klx  March 15, 2009 06:33 PM
if you havn't ridden a 110 you shouldnt talk about this.. 110's are the best bike to learn on in my opinion.. its not about having the factory hookups that say bubba stuart gets its about getting out there and passing people on the track when they have the same stuff as you do.
The truth - Not Good  March 8, 2009 10:04 PM
BBR has laid off 1/2 it's American staff and replaced them with cheap asian labor.
Justin Larson - BBr  March 4, 2009 11:48 PM
Its all about money. You have to dish it out to play with the big boys. And $15000 Crf 50 showpieces pull more attention then my ferrari Modena. The MM12p is an awesome solution count me in for 3 of them these bike will surly be the ultimat bang for the buck!!
Dan The Canadian - Back to reality...  January 31, 2009 07:40 AM
Tim, Axl, I think you are both right........ guy's putting $10k to race these bike are killing the sport. They got to find a way to keep this under the $5k..........
Tim - "Axl Rose"  January 30, 2009 02:12 PM
Do you know what you're talking about? Minis are a separate class. Adults race these for fun as well as for big money. Just a few years ago minis were HUGE, but unfortunately the appeal seems to be dying off. I personally think a couple of big reasons for this is because of the pollution of the market by Chinese POS knock off bikes as well as the need to put $10,000 into a 50 or 110 to make it competitive at the upper level. It's about time we get back to the routes of pit bike racing. I still think there's no better bang for the buck fun than a stock Honda CRF50. I have one and love it!
Axl Rose - BBR  January 29, 2009 07:24 AM
I think these bikes are a little ridiculous, right? For 10k I can get any of the new 450s and trick it out! In fact that is what I am doing now. I bought a Kawasaki KX450F and I am buying the parts to go supermoto too. Now I'll have two bikes in one! Oh but if I was really short or wanted to race around inside my house I would get one of these!

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