There was an end goal. “It is always work in progress but looking back over these three years, we went in the right direction to make the bike more versatile, more controllable and less demanding for the rider,” he offers. “It was overloaded of course by the aerodynamic development but you have no choice. You have to run as much aerodynamic development as you can because it makes the bike more competitive and faster and it also makes it…I would not say more difficult to control but the riders need to use and control it in a different way. Cleaner; to take the most benefit.”
Having the carbon RC16 was still a sizable step; perhaps the biggest since 2020. “It is a still a similar layout to how the steel frames were but made from the latest spec carbon technology,” he says. “I was supervising and leading the project but there were some very smart guys from KTM Technologies in Salzburg Anif who were the key, or were a big help, because they are already very much into carbon fibre design and manufacturing. This is a good situation at KTM because for most of the tasks you can find someone in the KTM universe who is specialized in this specific field and you can get good help!”
Felber’s acute ability to problem-solve means he is in demand across KTM’s vast racing program. It is another way in which he keeps up to speed and motivated by the challenges of spearheading competitiveness. “For me, coming from the old days, I’m like a chain release!” he smiles on his job role. “I have been involved in development of offroad, road and road racing bikes for the tracks and serial production and I think it is quite good to have some carry-over knowledge from one discipline to the other. It’s only positive. A bike is a bike and if I compare a 450cc motocross bike and a MotoGP bike then the same problems appear. They are overpowered vehicles with so much power that they spin like hell; it’s just that each one has different speed and different grip. The task is always the same: get the power on the ground. The general rule works for different bikes.”