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I had no business being hunched down over the BMW S 1000 RR’s low-set handlebar. I’m not a racer and, from where I was on the outskirts of Pune, there was no racetrack in sight. Given the S 1000 RR’s performance credentials, it should have felt like overkill in this scenario. Yet, it didn’t.
At daybreak, I was already snaking up a beautiful hillside road, barely exploring its performance potential. A quick glance at its comprehensive TFT display revealed I had short-shifted all the way up to sixth gear — at all of 60 kph. In fact, the S 1000 RR will let you putter around at even slower speeds, all the while without losing its linear acceleration even though that’s completely not the point of a motorcycle of this stature.
In reality, the S 1000 RR is meant to decimate lap records and offer nearly racebike levels of precision. It revels in its long-standing rivalry with Ducati’s flagship, the Panigale V4, and has proven itself to be far superior than its Japanese peers on the world stage over the years. While its credentials reflect seriousness, it also happens to be a really friendly motorcycle to ride, as I learned over the course of a morning.
Okay, the riding position isn’t ideal if you’re overweight — it’s properly committed, as you’d expect — but once you’ve adapted, the S 1000 RR is so rewarding. True to its spec sheet, everything on the S 1000 RR is top-notch and especially as a part of this special Pro M Sport package, it gets you some really fancy bits. The carbon wheels are beautiful and light, the brakes are tack-sharp, the Pirelli Diablo Rossi III tyres are brilliant and the suite of rider assists (a core BMW strength) empower you to take strong liberties with the throttle.
Thanks to its 999cc inline-four, eye-watering acceleration is standard and so is the accompanying refinement. While the Panigale V4 is certainly more dramatic and quite a lot more uncouth, the S 1000 RR opts to stay predictable, relatively speaking. Our photography spot, for instance, involved briefly traversing a tricky off-road trail and the S 1000 RR still ploughed through unflinchingly, although I was mindful of preserving its expensive and fragile carbon fibre wheels.
Show it a stretch of minty blacktop, though, and it instantly delivers on its promise of unapologetic performance. The S 1000 RR is fierce and finessed, all at once, and for a 206-bhp motorcycle with a 197-kg kerb weight, it’s incredibly controlled and encouraging. It doesn’t need a lot of room to hit 100 kph from standstill (3.2 seconds, claimed) or to get to its 303-kph top speed and, especially with the Akrapovic exhaust this version is specced with, it produces the most irresistible howl. Your neighbours won’t be too impressed about that, though.
I couldn’t, unfortunately, take it around fast-paced corners on this day but if its moderate-speed cornering is anything to go by, the S 1000 RR has no disappointment in store for you. It’s a precision instrument for riders committed to track-racing and, for anything below that, it’s always got way more to offer than you’ll legally have room for.
Objectivity? Oh, that’s so futile! There’s nothing it’ll do in the real world that a motorcycle half its price won’t — and with greater comfort — but that isn’t why you’d buy one anyway. The S 1000 RR is a pretty good representation of the dreams most of us pursued and moved on from, for reasons of practicality, while some among us persisted. Buying one is a hugely emotional, irrational moment in your motorcycling arc and, if you can afford the ₹28.9 lakh (ex-showroom) BMW is asking for it, it’s a no-brainer. Just don’t forget to sign up for every trackday out there, please!
@TheMotorGram
Published on April 24, 2026
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