This experience and insight provide a unique perspective on the merits of the KTM DUKE family and a series of bikes that celebrated 30 years of existence in 2024. We called Rok while he was on the road. He’s been in Spain riding and testing and generating new ideas for his video productions. Crucially he’s been clocking time and knowledge with the KTM 990 DUKE that is still a fresh addition to his arsenal. “It’s been four months…actually a bit longer, almost half a year,” he explains on the way to the KTM Spain HQ just outside Barcelona for a service.
KTM DUKE Evolution: From 200 to 990 cc
Bagaros is clearly a ballsy talent on a motorcycle. He is also a savvy businessman with a sideline on fabricated parts as well as a marketing agency to handle his content creation (tests, bike builds, wacky ideas and more) and consultation services but the burning question concerns his intimacy with KTM DUKEs for nearly 15 years.
“I must have been through all the DUKEs over the past 15 years!” he says. “The model I’ve had for the longest is probably the KTM 200 DUKE, which is now in the 30-year DUKE exhibition in the KTM Motohall. I loved that bike because the power was so smooth and dependable. I had a KTM 250 DUKE for a while and then the KTM 390 DUKE but I kept going back to the 200. The 390 gave me extra power but the 200 was excellent at low RPM and when it was almost idling, which is very important for more slow speed and technical tricks. For me it was the reference.”
The journey from a KTM 200 DUKE through a 790 and now to a 990 is quite a climb. That’s a large differential in terms of handling and power. “The bigger bikes were better for drifting and fast drifts and the kind of stunts you cannot do with a small displacement like the 200,” he explains. “Then again, with the KTM 790 DUKE you cannot do the technical and slow speed moves like the smaller DUKE.”