Performance Bikes (magazine)

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Performance Bikes (PB)
ISSN
0268-4942

Performance Bikes, often known by the shortened form of "PB", was a monthly British

EMAP also incorporated the previous version of the title Mechanics and The Biker.[1]

The magazine featured a mix of motorcycle and product tests, with technical articles and design innovation, presented with a unique combination of humour and high standards. Many of the journalists raced competitively, for example, applying this experience and perspective in the magazine's tests and reviews; one racer's preferred road bike, a VFR, being derided by others as "an old man's machine", the next cover featured as his riposte him riding it at extreme speed through a countryside sweeper, knee-down,[2] dressed in dressing-gown, pipe and slippers.

In 2007, PB under publisher

Nordschleife fastest lap times
are captured and collated into a table. This feature is called the PBTT, which stands for Performance Bikes Test Track.

PB is notable for its long association with the late journalist John Robinson ("Robbo", who had been with the magazine since its Motorcycle Mechanics days until his death in 2001, and was noted for communicating complex technical issues simply, understandably, and memorably).[3] Robinson was key to PB pioneering the use of a dynamometer in the performance testing of motorcycles by a magazine.

Performance Bike was amalgamated with another Bauer magazine and continues under the name Practical Sportsbikes.[4]

References

  1. ^ a b Performance Bikes, April 1985, p.3 Index page with Internal Masthead Performance Bikes & Mechanics. Incorporating Motorcycle Mechanics and The Biker Accessed 2014-02-26
  2. ^ "Knee-down": cornering so fast and at so extreme an angle that the rider's knee(-slider) touches the ground as they shift their weight inwards for higher speed.
  3. ^ John Robinson dies, Motorcycle News, 5 August 2001 Retrieved 2014-05-11
  4. ^ Ways to read Practical Sportsbikes magazine Practical Sportsbikes, 28 April 2021. Retrieved 24 July 2021

External links