Aprilia RS 660 Track Test: A Street-Friendly Sportbike with Track-Day Potential

A few months back, we rode Aprilia’s new RS 660 sport bike on the street and raved about its great handling, awesome features, and flexibility as both a commuter and a canyon carver.

Unfortunately, the press launch didn’t include time on track, which was a surprise, given the bike’s billing. Evidently, Aprilia was hesitant to put the only five RS 660s in the Western Hemisphere at risk. Can’t blame them for that, especially given how competitive us journos get when you let us loose on a track together. Luckily, once the machines fulfilled their official duties they joined the Aprilia Racers Days demo program, which is how I was finally able to throw a leg over the bike at Chuckwalla Valley Raceway in Desert Center, California.

So, how does it perform? In a word, excellent. I had an absolute blast on the RS 660 and ground down a perfectly good set of knee sliders. However, I’m guessing most people will want more of an explanation than that, so read on to learn how the RS 660 works in specific departments.

Riding position and ergonomics

It looks like a purebred sport bike, but the RS 660’s clip-ons sit a few inches above the triple clamp, so you’re not particularly hunched over. The arrangement made for a comfortable riding position on the street, and thankfully the layout works well for the track, too. I’d likely install lower clip-ons (a little tricky to do given the bars mount directly to the triple clamp) for a more aggressive posture at maximum lean, but as it stands the riding position is certainly suitable for attacking corners at speed. Just don’t expect to drag elbow unless you have Zack-length arms.

It’s feels like an odd thing to compliment, but I love the shape or the RS’s tank. Those concave sides are excellent anchor points for track riding. Photo by Kevin Wing.

On the topic of dragging things, the footpegs only grazed the track surface a few times, which is to say cornering clearance is ample. I did, however, have my boot slip off the outside peg several times while muscling the RS through Chuckwalla’s Turn 8/9/10 complex, so grippier pegs would certainly be on my list of upgrades.

The aerodynamics felt clean despite gusty winds and the windscreen is large enough to tuck in behind, but just barely. Honestly, the biggest outlier at the track was the incredibly plush seat, which masked rear suspension/tire feedback and was harder to glide across while changing direction than a firmer saddle would be.

Engine

No, the Aprilia’s 100 claimed horsepower will not outpace an R6 on a straightaway, but the RS does have more midrange torque than a 600 cc inline four, so it will keep the supersports at bay for a respectable amount of time after an apex. The engine performance isn’t bonkers, but it is accessible and it’s definitely exciting, with a broad spread of power and a very V-twin like roar.

 

Aprilia RS 660 dyno chart.
Jeremy Toye of Norton Motorsports was at the track testing new products for next year’s MotoAmerica race effort. He shared this dyno run, which shows the RS 660 making a bona fide 92 horsepower in stock form. 100 or more horsepower should be easily achievable in race trim. Graph provided by Jeremy Toye.

There is a pile of low-end torque available, so you often have a choice of gears for any given turn. You can let it lug and ride the wave of torque off the apex or rev it out and make it howl. It’s entirely up to you since this is such a flexible and forgiving engine. It may change tone and shudder at a different frequency depending on the rpm, but the fact is Aprilia’s new 659 cc twin accelerates the same anywhere in the rev range and maintains that thrust all the way to the 11,500-rpm rev limiter.

The standard quickshifter makes the Aprilia feel like a proper track weapon, and downshifts while hard on the brakes highlight how effectively the stock slipper clutch limits back torque to keep the rear tire in line at corner entry. These are premium features, and at the track you can fully utilize and enjoy them.

Suspension and handling

Both the fork and shock on the RS are made by KYB and offer adjustable spring preload and rebound damping. For the track, Aprilia cranked in more of everything and slid the forks up in the triple clamp 4 mm to sharpen steering. The bike was also running Pirelli Diablo Superbike slicks in place of the stock Diablo Rosso Corsa 2 tires.

 

Aprilia RS 660 track test.
Slap a set of sticky tires on the RS 660 and it’s ready to play. It’s rare that a machine that’s so at home on the street can transition to the track so readily. Photo by CaliPhotography.

Maybe it was the surplus traction offered by the slicks, but I couldn’t put a wheel wrong on the Aprilia. The bike was light and nimble and easy to place anywhere on the track, though with high winds blowing it seemed prudent to leave some leeway.

The suspension action is a good match for the bike’s power and weight, with nothing immediately deficient in any way. Sure, I’d like more support for hard braking and there’s too much suspension motion for truly forceful direction changes (which the slicks encouraged me to make), but the bike didn’t wallow like many street bikes do when you push them on the track.

As it stands, the OEM suspension is able to straddle street comfort and track control, which is an impressive feat. Considering how well the bike works in stock trim, it’s liable to exhibit true precision with more refined suspension.

Brakes

Aprilia blessed the RS 660 with some serious braking hardware, but Chuckwalla is a flowing track and doesn’t have much in the way of maximum braking, so testing the setup at the threshold wasn’t an option. It’s clear though that this bike has plenty of brakes, with enough power to easily lift the rear wheel and sufficient feedback to feel comfortable trail braking to full lean.

Aprilia RS 660 brakes
The Ape’s 320 mm discs, radial calipers and master cylinder, and stainless lines are premium stuff that’s well suited to the rigors of track riding. I could do with a stronger initial bite, but other than that it’s a killer setup. Photo by Kevin Wing.

As noted on the street, the brakes don’t have particularly strong initial bite. That’s more noticeable on the track, where your inputs are swift and forceful. I’m guessing a set of bitier pads (I’m partial to Galfer HH pucks for street and track use) would improve things, but that would likely call for further fork tuning. Overall, the RS has an impressive brake package (backed up by front-only ABS for track use), that in stock form is well suited to the suspension setup and more than ample for all-out track riding.

Electronics

One of the RS’s claims to fame is a comprehensive electronics package that rivals halo models. From a big TFT dash with integrated lap timer to IMU-informed ABS and a bi-directional quickshifter, the RS is fully equipped.

 

Aprilia RS 660 dash.
Note the excited dash. The shift lights are working as intended and quite helpful (important since the tach is hard to read), but the big red warning is the result of a can-bus communication error that Aprilia says it’s just received a fix for. Photo by Ari Henning.

The dash is beautiful, but I’ve never been a fan of digital tachometers, and the RS’s is just another example of why. You can’t read them at a glance like you can with an analog setup. Luckily the engine is always in the meat of the power and the sequential shift lights across the top of the dash are brilliant.

You can adjust the TC on the fly and I left it on a low setting just because, but it was superfluous given the fresh, hot,180-series Pirelli slick anchoring the back of the bike. So, when the dash randomly went on the fritz and began flashing a big red “ALARM – ATC DISABLED” warning I didn’t pay it any mind or bother slowing down.

The dash reset when I cycled the key, but reappeared in every session. According to Aprilia, the new Magnetti Marelli ECU is experiencing growing pains with the bike’s can-bus communication system. Supposedly there’s already a fix ready, and given that these are pre-production bikes with single-digit VIN numbers, I think a few teething problems with a drastically more advanced ECU are acceptable.

Aprilia RS 660 quickshifter.
A bi-directional quickshifter comes standard on the RS 660. The quickshifter was functioning perfectly for upshifts, but the autoblip balked on the second of successive downshifts. Photo by Kevin Wing.

What was a little harder to accept was the autoblip downshifter’s struggles. Everything was groovy and buttery smooth on the upshifts, but the system balked on the second of sequential downshifts, with no clear explanation for why. I reverted to manually blipping and feathering the light-action clutch, but I have to say that autoblippers are one of my favorite performance features so it was a shame that it wasn’t functioning properly.

Final thoughts

At this point it should be clear that the RS 660 is a capable and willing track-day partner, and it’s the kind of versatile bike that any rider — total track newb or card-carrying roadracer — will enjoy flogging. For me, it was a thrill to ride not just because it works so well, but because I actually felt like I was utilizing a majority of the performance the Aprilia has to offer. Meanwhile, I rarely feel like I’m doing a 600 or 1000 cc bike justice.

On the topic of 600s, it’s true that the Aprilia’s performance threshold may ultimately be lower than that of a Yamaha YZF-R6, but I can assure you that this bike’s marginally lower power is far easier to access and implement. That being the case, I’m willing to bet that a novice track-day rider would actually be faster on the Aprilia than on a 600.

And as we know, the RS 660 is a significantly better street bike for all those days you aren’t at the track.

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