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New BMW R1300R-based Titan Concept revealed

  • Bears a dragster-like styling
  • Fitted with a NOS bottle and oodles of carbon fiber
  • Will not go into production

In the world of factory custom builds, there are concept bikes… and then there’s the BMW Titan. Born from the imagination of a small team within BMW Motorrad, this sprint-focused beast takes the newly launched BMW R1300R and transforms it into an unapologetically aggressive dragster built for straight-line speed.

The Titan wasn’t created for showrooms or press launches. Instead, it’s a pure passion build, designed in BMW’s Berlin facility by a tight-knit group of engineers and designers. Their brief? There wasn’t one. Just build something fast, ferocious, and completely unbound by the typical constraints of production engineering. The result is a motorcycle that looks like it clawed its way out of a wind tunnel and onto a drag strip.

BMW R1300R Titan

At its heart, the Titan still runs the same 1300cc flat-twin boxer engine found in the production R1300R—already a powerhouse at 143bhp and 149Nm. But that wasn’t nearly enough for this project. The team added a nitrous oxide injection system with visible lines and a bottle mounted under the monocoque, complete with a red button on the left switchgear to activate the burst of boost.

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BMW didn’t just add power, they optimised everything around it. The bike features a bespoke Wilbers suspension setup tuned for drag racing, a longer swingarm, and a radically altered geometry that stretches the wheelbase to over 1600mm. This ensures maximum stability and grip when the nitrous kicks in. While the standard shaft drive and gearbox remain, they’ve been heavily modified to handle the extra strain of the NOS-powered launches.

BMW R1300R Titan

Visually, the Titan is like nothing else in BMW’s modern lineup. Its carbon-fibre monocoque rear section replaces the stock subframe and ends in a razor-sharp tail that floats over the massive rear wheel. There’s no pillion seat, no luggage mounts, and no pretence of practicality. A single-seat carbon shell, clip-on handlebars, and aggressive rearsets put the rider in a forward-leaning crouch, ideal for sprinting off the line.

To emphasise the build’s wild DNA, designer Theresa Stukenbrock crafted a bespoke paint scheme with bold lines, exposed carbon, and blue accents that echo BMW’s racing heritage. Twin Akrapovič silencers sit low and wide on either side of the NOS bottle, adding visual drama and a likely brutal soundtrack.

The Titan won’t see production, nor is it likely to enter any formal races. But that’s not the point. It exists as a statement piece: an exercise in mechanical creativity, technical precision, and performance obsession. It shows what happens when engineers, freed from deadlines and regulations, let their imaginations run wild.

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