KungFooBob wrote: Wed Feb 25, 2026 4:09 pm
ajlog wrote: Wed Feb 25, 2026 4:08 pm
Worth it as a sports motorcycle, definitely not today, and from contemporary reports as a road sports bike questionable back at it's launch.
Worth it as a milestone of motorcycle development, probably, as a road legal motorcycle developed and assembled from the tyres up by the in-house racing department of the worlds biggest motorcycle manufacturer as an homologation special solely for race success. It's like the 2 wheeled version of the RS200 or 6R4 etc.
Worth it as a potential investment, highly likely, manufactured in limited numbers (circa 5000) and most of them put to work on the track, some estimates are that only about 25% survived as road only so about 750 bikes. Couple the milestone status above to this limited number of genuine road only bikes, that will only reduce over time suggests they have some necessary boxes ticked for a good investment potential.
Like most investment assets the provenance and traceability will be vital to the value, as I am sure there are a lot of ex-race bikes with hard lives now being touted as mint road only examples.
Chat Chippy Tea?
No, just a quick google regards the numbers.
Reading it back I think that AI would make a better job of structuring the sentences than my 'stream of thought' style of response.
In fact I often use AI (Copilot) to tidy up my e-mails when replying to technical questions, as my rambling thinking as I type style is not great to understand, especially for overseas colleagues where English is a second language.
Aside from that, reading back what I have written there about the low numbers, thinking about it a bit more, even if say 20% of the 750 road only RC30s remain as excellent examples, that still 150 bikes. Is there a global demand for 150 RC30s? Is that few enough to mean exclusivity in an already niche interest?