Lot 351N
The ex-Noboru 'Nobby' Ueda, Givi Racing,1994 Honda RS125 NF4 Racing Motorcycle
Frame no. 03
The Spring Stafford Sale Pioneer, Vintage & Collectors' Motorcycles and Related Spares & Memorabilia
24 April 2016, 11:00 BST
Stafford, Staffordshire County Showground£10,000 - £14,000
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The ex-Noboru 'Nobby' Ueda, Givi Racing
1994 Honda RS125 NF4 Racing Motorcycle
Frame no. 03
1994 Honda RS125 NF4 Racing Motorcycle
Frame no. 03
• Purpose-built Grand Prix racing motorcycle
• Campaigned by one of the top riders of the day
• In-period Grand Prix history
Having left the market for over-the-counter road-race machines almost exclusively in Yamaha's hands for most of the 1970s, Honda returned with single-cylinder RS125 and twin-cylinder RS250 models. Although Honda's return to the Grand Prix scene with the overly complex NS500 four-stroke would prove abortive, the company's moto-cross programme ensured that it had not fallen behind its rivals in terms of two-stroke development. Based on moto-cross technology, the new RS duo soon had the better of their Yamaha equivalents and went on to dominate their respective classes in Grand Prix and national racing for much of the 1990s.
This particular RS125 was raced during the 1994 Grand Prix season by the Japanese rider, Noboru Ueda. Born on 23rd July 1967, 'Nobby' Ueda, as he was affectionately known, was exclusively a 125-class rider, beginning his Grand Prix career with a win in his debut race at the 1991 Japanese Grand Prix. For 1994 he joined the Givi-sponsored team, GBC Corse, run by the former MV Agusta race mechanic, Giancarlo Cecchini. 'Nobby' won three Grands Prix that year - Malaysia, Italy and France - and finished 2nd in the 125cc World Championship behind Kazuto Sakata. Although he never won the 125 World Championship, Ueda did finish 2nd again: in 1998, on that occasion behind Valentino Rossi. After a twelve-year career at Grand Prix level, he announced his retirement at the end of the 2002 season having won 13 Grand Prix races. Ueda now runs his own team - 'Team Nobby' - which competes in the All Japan Road Race Championship.
Original and complete, the machine offered here represents the RS125 as raced by Ueda during the latter part of 1994, distinguishable from the earlier version by virtue of its additional swinging-arm bracing. Ueda's Honda carried the number '5' for the first part of the year (he had finished 5th in the World Championship in 1993) and for the final few races the number '2', Nobby having already clinched 2nd place in the competition. Team GBC Corse is still operating, led by Giancarlo's son, Mirco Cecchini, and participates in the World Championship in the Moto3 category.
• Campaigned by one of the top riders of the day
• In-period Grand Prix history
Having left the market for over-the-counter road-race machines almost exclusively in Yamaha's hands for most of the 1970s, Honda returned with single-cylinder RS125 and twin-cylinder RS250 models. Although Honda's return to the Grand Prix scene with the overly complex NS500 four-stroke would prove abortive, the company's moto-cross programme ensured that it had not fallen behind its rivals in terms of two-stroke development. Based on moto-cross technology, the new RS duo soon had the better of their Yamaha equivalents and went on to dominate their respective classes in Grand Prix and national racing for much of the 1990s.
This particular RS125 was raced during the 1994 Grand Prix season by the Japanese rider, Noboru Ueda. Born on 23rd July 1967, 'Nobby' Ueda, as he was affectionately known, was exclusively a 125-class rider, beginning his Grand Prix career with a win in his debut race at the 1991 Japanese Grand Prix. For 1994 he joined the Givi-sponsored team, GBC Corse, run by the former MV Agusta race mechanic, Giancarlo Cecchini. 'Nobby' won three Grands Prix that year - Malaysia, Italy and France - and finished 2nd in the 125cc World Championship behind Kazuto Sakata. Although he never won the 125 World Championship, Ueda did finish 2nd again: in 1998, on that occasion behind Valentino Rossi. After a twelve-year career at Grand Prix level, he announced his retirement at the end of the 2002 season having won 13 Grand Prix races. Ueda now runs his own team - 'Team Nobby' - which competes in the All Japan Road Race Championship.
Original and complete, the machine offered here represents the RS125 as raced by Ueda during the latter part of 1994, distinguishable from the earlier version by virtue of its additional swinging-arm bracing. Ueda's Honda carried the number '5' for the first part of the year (he had finished 5th in the World Championship in 1993) and for the final few races the number '2', Nobby having already clinched 2nd place in the competition. Team GBC Corse is still operating, led by Giancarlo's son, Mirco Cecchini, and participates in the World Championship in the Moto3 category.