Ducati MotoE Test Results: Jerez - Day 3 lap times (FINAL)
Ducati, the reigning MotoGP champions, are taking over as exclusive MotoE supplier following four seasons on Energica machines, as the series also switches from an FIM ‘World Cup’ to full ‘World Championship’ in 2023.
At 225kg, Ducati’s first electric bike is approximately 35kg lighter than the Energica.
The weight-saving crusade means Ducati chose not to raise maximum horsepower beyond the 150 hp (110kW) of the Energica model – slightly more than a Triumph-powered Moto2 bike - while torque has been sliced from 220Nm (Energica) to 140Nm (Ducati).
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Nevertheless, batteries still make up 110kg of the Ducati’s weight and the V21L - which uses a ‘stressed’ carbon fibre battery case joined to an aluminium front frame - remains substantially heavier than a conventional grand prix or superbike:
Bike weight/power:
- Energica MotoE: 260kg/150hp
- Ducati MotoE: 225kg/150hp
- MotoGP Bike: 157kg/300hp
- Moto2 Rider+Bike: 217kg (if average rider weight of 65kg, bike = 152kg/140hp)
- Moto3 Rider+Bike: 152kg (if average rider weight of 65kg, bike = 87kg/60hp)
The clear weight savings made by Ducati plus other technological advances mean MotoE lap times are sure to be faster in 2023. Exactly how much quicker should become clearer at this week’s Jerez test, from Monday to Wednesday.
The V21L retains Ohlins suspension, Brembo brakes and Michelin tyres but among the technical changes made by Ducati is a liquid cooling system, which means the bike can be recharged as soon as it enters the garage.
It is said to take approximately 45 minutes to reach 80% charge. However, each day at Jerez is divided into four Free Practice sessions of just 15-minutes in length, with a two-hour gap in-between, highlighting the range limitations of current battery technology:
- FP1: 10:00 - 10:15
- FP2: 12:15 - 12:30
- FP3: 14:30 - 14:45
- FP4: 16:45 - 17:00
The first official MotoE test of the Ducati era has ended with Randy Krummenacher fastest time on the final day, but Eric Granado's new unofficial MotoE lap record of 1m 47.053s from Tuesday remained unbeaten.
The next MotoE test will take place in Barcelona early next month, with the season-opening round during the French Grand Prix weekend at Le Mans in May.
2023 Jerez MotoE Test - Day 3 (Wednesday, FINAL) | |||||
Pos | Rider | Nat | Team | Bike | Time |
1 | Randy Krummenacher | SWI | Intact | (Ducati) | 1m 47.675s |
2 | Eric Granado | BRA | LCR | (Ducati) | +0.060s |
3 | Nicolas Spinelli | ITA | Pons | (Ducati) | +0.295s |
4 | Miquel Pons | SPA | LCR | (Ducati) | +0.630s |
5 | Lorenzo Savadori | ITA | Pramac | (Ducati) | +0.648s |
6 | Jordi Torres | SPA | Aspar | (Ducati) | +0.662s |
7 | Alessandro Zaccone | ITA | Tech3 | (Ducati) | +0.720s |
8 | Hector Garzo | FRA | Intact | (Ducati) | +0.728s |
9 | Hikari Okubo | JPN | Tech3 | (Ducati) | +0.793s |
10 | Mattia Casadei | ITA | Pons | (Ducati) | +0.797s |
11 | Matteo Ferrari | ITA | Gresini | (Ducati) | +1.018s |
12 | Kevin Manfredi | ITA | SIC58 | (Ducati) | +1.184s |
13 | Kevin Zannoni | ITA | SIC58 | (Ducati) | +2.052s |
14 | Tito Rabat | SPA | Pramac | (Ducati) | +2.172s |
15 | Andrea Mantovani | ITA | RNF | (Ducati) | +2.412s |
16 | Maria Herrera | SPA | Aspar | (Ducati) | +3.987s |
17 | Mika Perez | SPA | RNF | (Ducati) | +64.494s |
18 | Alessio Finello | ITA | Gresini | (Ducati) | +64.739s |
Track conditions in Spain continue to improve after the earlier rain, with Pons rider Nicolas Spinelli closing to within 1.2s of yesterday's new (unofficial) MotoE record in the penultimate (FP3) session.
2023 Jerez MotoE Test - Day 3 (Wednesday, FP3) | |||||
Pos | Rider | Nat | Team | Bike | Time |
1 | Nicolas Spinelli | ITA | Pons | (Ducati) | 1m 48.150s |
2 | Jordi Torres | SPA | Aspar | (Ducati) | +0.187s |
3 | Randy Krummenacher | SWI | Intact | (Ducati) | +0.243s |
4 | Alessandro Zaccone | ITA | Tech3 | (Ducati) | +0.245s |
5 | Hikari Okubo | JPN | Tech3 | (Ducati) | +0.318s |
6 | Lorenzo Savadori | ITA | Pramac | (Ducati) | +0.671s |
7 | Miquel Pons | SPA | LCR | (Ducati) | +0.674s |
8 | Kevin Manfredi | ITA | SIC58 | (Ducati) | +1.133s |
9 | Mattia Casadei | ITA | Pons | (Ducati) | +1.508s |
10 | Kevin Zannoni | ITA | SIC58 | (Ducati) | +1.577s |
11 | Hector Garzo | FRA | Intact | (Ducati) | +1.643s |
12 | Tito Rabat | SPA | Pramac | (Ducati) | +1.714s |
13 | Andrea Mantovani | ITA | RNF | (Ducati) | +1.937s |
14 | Maria Herrera | SPA | Aspar | (Ducati) | +3.579s |
15 | Mika Perez | SPA | RNF | (Ducati) | +4.019s |
16 | Alessio Finello | ITA | Gresini | (Ducati) | +8.966s |
More rain in Spain meant another wet start to the final day of the MotoE test, with only four riders taking to the track in FP1.
Conditions then improved slightly for FP2, when all 18 bikes set a lap time, but the best - a 1m 54.586s by Mattia Casadei - was some 7.5s off the new unofficial MotoE record by Eric Granado in the dry on Tuesday afternoon...
2023 Jerez MotoE Test - Day 3 (Wednesday, FP2) | |||||
Pos | Rider | Nat | Team | Bike | Time |
1 | Mattia Casadei | ITA | Pons | (Ducati) | 1m 54.586s |
2 | Miquel Pons | SPA | LCR | (Ducati) | +0.303s |
3 | Jordi Torres | SPA | Aspar | (Ducati) | +0.336s |
4 | Eric Granado | BRA | LCR | (Ducati) | +0.569s |
5 | Nicolas Spinelli | ITA | Pons | (Ducati) | +0.634s |
6 | Alessandro Zaccone | ITA | Tech3 | (Ducati) | +0.991s |
7 | Matteo Ferrari | ITA | Gresini | (Ducati) | +1.003s |
8 | Mika Perez | SPA | RNF | (Ducati) | +1.297s |
9 | Hector Garzo | FRA | Intact | (Ducati) | +1.392s |
10 | Randy Krummenacher | SWI | Intact | (Ducati) | +1.417s |
11 | Tito Rabat | SPA | Pramac | (Ducati) | +1.468s |
12 | Lorenzo Savadori | ITA | Pramac | (Ducati) | +1.694s |
13 | Kevin Manfredi | ITA | SIC58 | (Ducati) | +1.925s |
14 | Hikari Okubo | JPN | Tech3 | (Ducati) | +2.910s |
15 | Andrea Mantovani | ITA | RNF | (Ducati) | +2.949s |
16 | Alessio Finello | ITA | Gresini | (Ducati) | +2.990s |
17 | Kevin Zannoni | ITA | SIC58 | (Ducati) | +3.656s |
18 | Maria Herrera | SPA | Aspar | (Ducati) | +6.274s |
Fastest Day 2 MotoE lap time:
- 1m 47.053s (Hector Garzo, Ducati)
Official Jerez lap records
Qualifying:
- MotoGP: 1m 36.170s (Francesco Bagnaia, Ducati, 2022)
- Moto2: 1m 40.667s (Remy Gardner, Kalex, 2021)
- Moto3: 1m 44.988s (Andrea Migno, Honda, 2021)
- MotoE: 1m 47.778s (Eric Granado, Energica, 2021)*
*Went faster in the race (below).
Race:
- MotoGP: 1m 37.669s (Francesco Bagnaia, Ducati, 2022)
- Moto2: 1m 41.313s (Sam Lowes, Kalex, 2021)
- Moto3: 1m 46.060s (Jaume Masia, Honda, 2020)
- MotoE: 1m 47.473s (Eric Granado, Energica, 2021)
Fastest 2022 Jerez MotoE lap:
- 1m 48.120s (Hector Garzo, Energica)
After wet weather throughout day one, the moisture finally cleared towards the end of day two, when Eric Granado set a 1m 47.053s in the final session - comfortably under his own Energica lap record of 1m 47.473s, from 2021.
The highest MotoE speed at the 2022 Jerez round was 228.3km/h, by both Maria Herrera and Hikari Okubo, with the Ducati reaching 233.3km/h in the hands of Alessandro Zaccone on day two.
2023 Jerez MotoE Test - Day 2 (Tuesday, FP4/FINAL) | |||||
Pos | Rider | Nat | Team | Bike | Time |
1 | Eric Granado | BRA | LCR | (Ducati) | 1m 47.053s |
2 | Matteo Ferrari | ITA | Gresini | (Ducati) | +0.257s |
3 | Nicolas Spinelli | ITA | Pons | (Ducati) | +0.425s |
4 | Mattia Casadei | ITA | Pons | (Ducati) | +0.451s |
5 | Randy Krummenacher | SWI | Intact | (Ducati) | +0.471s |
6 | Hikari Okubo | JPN | Tech3 | (Ducati) | +0.473s |
7 | Jordi Torres | SPA | Aspar | (Ducati) | +0.495s |
8 | Kevin Manfredi | ITA | SIC58 | (Ducati) | +0.585s |
9 | Hector Garzo | FRA | Intact | (Ducati) | +0.642s |
10 | Miquel Pons | SPA | LCR | (Ducati) | +0.757s |
11 | Tito Rabat | SPA | Pramac | (Ducati) | +0.990s |
12 | Lorenzo Savadori | ITA | Pramac | (Ducati) | +1.106s |
13 | Alessandro Zaccone | ITA | Tech3 | (Ducati) | +1.166s |
14 | Kevin Zannoni | ITA | SIC58 | (Ducati) | +1.567s |
15 | Andrea Mantovani | ITA | RNF | (Ducati) | +1.742s |
16 | Mika Perez | SPA | RNF | (Ducati) | +2.684s |
17 | Alessio Finello | ITA | Gresini | (Ducati) | +2.828s |
18 | Maria Herrera | SPA | Aspar | (Ducati) | +2.881s |
The wet day one times were as follows:
2023 Jerez MotoE Test - Day 1 (Monday: FINAL, COMBINED) | |||||
Pos | Rider | Nat | Team | Bike | Time |
1 | Lorenzo Savadori | ITA | Pramac | (Ducati) | 1m 55.522s |
2 | Matteo Ferrari | ITA | Gresini | (Ducati) | +0.188s |
3 | Kevin Manfredi | ITA | SIC58 | (Ducati) | +0.612s |
4 | Jordi Torres | SPA | Aspar | (Ducati) | +0.735s |
5 | Randy Krummenacher | SWI | Intact | (Ducati) | +1.117s |
6 | Hector Garzo | SPA | Intact | (Ducati) | +1.189s |
7 | Tito Rabat | SPA | Pramac | (Ducati) | +1.471s |
8 | Mattia Casadei | ITA | Pons | (Ducati) | +1.576s |
9 | Mika Perez | SPA | RNF | (Ducati) | +1.797s |
10 | Alessandro Zaccone | ITA | Tech3 | (Ducati) | +2.225s |
11 | Miquel Pons | SPA | LCR | (Ducati) | +2.801s |
12 | Alessio Finello | ITA | Gresini | (Ducati) | +2.886s |
13 | Hikari Okubo | JPN | Tech3 | (Ducati) | +2.893s |
14 | Kevin Zannoni | ITA | SIC58 | (Ducati) | +3.116s |
15 | Maria Herrera | SPA | Aspar | (Ducati) | +6.302s |
Each MotoE race is between 6 and 8 laps in length, with the same points scoring system as the GP classes. The 2023 season consists of 16 races, at eight European Grands Prix, from May to September.
The MotoE World Cup was won by Matteo Ferrari in 2019, then twice by Jordi Torres (2020 and 2021), with Dominique Aegerter lifting last year’s title.