The machinery difference in MotoGP’s 2024 title fight
What is different between Jorge Martin and Francesco 🔥Bagnaia’s Ducati bik🎃es?

The 2024 MotoGP title will be won by a Ducati rider on a GP24, as Jorge Martin and Francesco Bagnaia head for a final round showdown in Barce✅lona.
The 2024 season has been 💞a banner year for Ducati, who has put in the most dominant campaign for a m🐲anufacturer in the modern era.
So far it has won all 🌞but one of the 19 grands prix run so far in 2024, with 15 of those being taken by riders on the GP24.
Jorge Martin vs Pecco Bagnaia - The key stats so far 📊
— Crash MotoGP (@crash_motogp)
Two incredible seasons from the both of them 👏
It has won all💟 championships so far, too, with the ridersꦬ’ title for a third year in a row also going to the Italian brand.
Martin and Bagnaia are split by 24 points going into next weekend’s finale, with the l⛎atter having won 10 grands prix to his ♎Pramac rival’s three.
Ducati has maintained equal support for both riders in 2024, even ending deveℱlopment of the GP24 in the second half of the campaign to ensure a level plating field for the championship decider.
But there are subtle differences to the ma🐼chinery of both riders.
“Personal preference, if you look quickly you can see Pecco Bagnaia prefers the olde💝r fork,” TNT Sport’s Michael Laver💖ty analysed in Malaysia.
“It’s got a short🐻er stroke, and he shows a lot less tube out the top.
“Jorge Martin maybe has 45mm on show🍎, so that’s personal preference in terms of even geometry, the rider height.
“If you look at t🐓he aero body, it❀ is identical. There are two versions, but both Pecco and Jorge choose the similar one with the downwash ducts because they work.
“Engine are identical. ECU, we know from the champ𝐆ionshiꦜp side it’s the same for every team up and down this pitlane.”
B🎃agnaia said at Sepang last weekend that he went back to the older front forks from Friday at the Spanish GP and hasn’t changed his bike since.
The biggest difference between the p𒈔air, as Laverty points out, is the engineering support within the factory and Pramac boxes.
“The main diff🌼erence comes when the engineers plug in𓄧 [to the bike],” he added.
“So the data t👍hat is collected off the MotoGP machines, when you have a look around there is a potentiometer on every single component.
“If you pull a lever: clutch brake. If you pull the bra💃ke lever, that data is recorded.
“There are so many channels. They can actually create their own channels, so when you get an inertia platform that has a fast lean angle, for example, the engine spins up a little bit quick, you can cr༺oss-reference those channels and then that’s when the engineer comes into play.
“If you look in the back ꩲof the garage here at the flyaway races, you can see 10, 20 Ducati engineers, versus the independent team, who still has some quality engineers in there, but n😼ot the same level of support. And that’s where the difference is made - the number crunching.”
