Tag Archives: IOM TT

Dean Harrison’s Senior IOM TT winning Kawasaki ZX-10RR ridden

TT winning Kawasaki ZX-10RR

Ridden by Adam Child

Dead flies are still plastered to the front of Dean Harrison’s historic Senior winning Kawasaki. The rear Metzeler slick shows evidence of his celebratory burnout, with melted race rubber hangs from the rear undertray.

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Forks

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Forks

Senior TT winning Kawasaki ZX-10RR

Chain lube is splattered over the factory swing-arm – even the Akrapovic logo, lost somewhere out there on the TT course, is still missing from the exhaust.

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Swingarm

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Swingarm

TT winning Kawasaki ZX-10RR Silicone Engineering

This very special Silicone Engineering ZX-10RR gave Kawasaki their first Senior TT win since Mick Grant in 1975, and crossed the finish line on Glencrutchery Road less than 24 hours before I got to throw a leg over the machine.

IOMTT Senior Podium Harrison Hickman Cummins

IOMTT Senior Podium Harrison Hickman Cummins

2019 Senior TT Results
1. Dean Harrison / Kawasaki
2. Peter Hickman / BMW +53.062
3.. Conor Cummins / Honda  +58.879

The grips, the levers – everything – are as Dean left them. After my ride the bike headed into private storage to never be ridden again; its factory engine silenced forever as its proud owner puts it on display at home.

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Controls

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Controls

Bit of force gets put through these and the pegs to pilot this beast around the Isle of Man


This is one special bike

For those of you who thought Harrison’s TT winning bike was back racing in the British Superbike Championship at the next round, let me assure you it wasn’t. It’s true, many TT teams now run modified BSB bikes on the roads, but Dean’s ‘official’ Kawasaki is very different. This is a very special one-off.

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner RHS

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner RHS

TT winning Kawasaki ZX-10RR

The wheels are the same as those used in BSB, but that is really where any similarity ends. The discs are a different spec’ and the brake calipers are changed too. Dean’s BSB bikes use a four-pot Brembo set up while the TT bike uses Nissin six-piston calipers. The Brembo brakes have more instant bite while the TT brakes are more consistent.

IOMTT Senior Dean Harrison

IOMTT Senior Dean Harrison

Dean Harrison – 2019 Senior TT winner

You’re never really punishing the brakes around the TT – you don’t need massive initial short-circuit bite – and Dean prefers the Nissin six-piston set up at the TT (although the rear thumb Nissin brake is similar to his BSB bike’s set-up).

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner ForksDash

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner ForksDash

TT winning Kawasaki ZX-10RR


Let’s talk suspension

The Öhlins forks are similar, but the BSB ZX-10RR makes full use of the latest Öhlins 2530 while the TT bike runs the older 2525 spec’ from 2018. With so little set-up time due to the bad weather in practice week at the 2019 TT the team didn’t get the opportunity to test new fork options, so ran the same forks as 2018.

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Forks Brakes Nissin

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Forks Brakes Nissin

TT winning Kawasaki ZX-10RR

The main difference is the flex between the new and old forks, and Dean preferred the older set-up. The top yoke is changed to accommodate the smaller-diameter forks. The top yoke is also stiffer on the TT bike, with fewer cutaway sections.

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner TripleClamps

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner TripleClamps

TT winning Kawasaki ZX-10RR

The Silicone team isn’t commercially linked to any products: everything they use, they buy. If an item doesn’t work, they won’t use it. And while the team runs an Öhlins unit to complement the front whne racing in BSB, Dean prefers a Maxton rear shock on the roads.

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Linkage

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Linkage

TT winning Kawasaki ZX-10RR uses a Maxton shock

In fact, if Dean wanted pink grips to make him faster, Silicone Engineering would buy him pink grips. Hard-centred TT tyres are, of course, supplied by Metzeler (it’s Pirelli in BSB), which again Dean is happy with.

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Swingarm

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Swingarm

TT winning Kawasaki ZX-10RR


Bespoke items

Some components of the Senior TT-winning bike are completely bespoke. The swing-arm, for example, is the team’s own and the final version of six designs, which the team admit was excessively expensive to produce. Dean arrived at the TT with three different iterations, each one tweakable to increase or reduce flex and stiffness.

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Swingarm

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Swingarm

TT winning Kawasaki ZX-10RR

This is done by adding or removing bolts within the structure of the arm. Version one, with no bolts, has lots of flex – then it’s version one with bolts, then version two without bolts, then version two with bolts… and so on, with each swing-arm version (with and without bolts) increasing or decreasing stiffness by around 10 per cent.

Essentially Dean has three different arms to choose from with each one having two variants. During a BSB weekend, Dean will normally use swing-arm number two with bolts, but at the TT it’s swing-arm one, as he prefers more flex.

As someone who has raced the TT I find it hard to believe Dean can feel the difference in 10 per cent more flex when lapping the TT at a 134 mph average, but as crew chief Jonny Bagnall explains, “Yes, he’ll notice the difference straight away. He’ll notice how much the bike slides, which I know sounds ridiculous around the TT, but Dean slides the bike. He prefers the bike to slide progressively, and we can help with that by increasing or reducing the flex in the swingarm. What he doesn’t want is the bike to snap out of line; he wants it to slide gracefully.”

IOMTT Senior Harrison Action

IOMTT Senior Harrison Action

Dean Harrison on his way to winning the 2019 Senior TT

Again, the frame is different from that of a BSB ZX-10RR. The road frame has more flex and isn’t braced heavily like the short circuit bike. In fact, the frame is showroom spec, the same as an everyday road bike.

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Controls

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Controls

Standard frame used on the Senior TT winning Kawasaki ZX-10RR


New engine, more power

Kawasaki introduced a new engine last year with finger-followers on the valves, and lighter titanium rods, which not only reduced engine inertia but also allowed the stock engine to rev 500 rpm higher. The new engine developments allowed the team to find even more bhp, with a significant 10 hp gain in the mid-range.

Dean liked the old engine and compared it to a two-stroke – ‘You’ve got to keep it revving’, he said – but now loves the huge increase in mid-range torque.

The team is reluctant to quote an actual power figure, but you’re looking at a true 225 hp at the back wheel. And that significant increase in torque and power created handling issues the team had to work around.

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner RHF

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner RHF

2019 Senior TT winning ZX-10RR Kawasaki

The TT engines are Kawasaki factory and supplied by Kawasaki’s World Superbike engine builder, Akira, whereas the BSB engine is developed by the team using factory kit parts. The engines go from Kawasaki to Akira and then are delivered to the team run in and ready to go – it’s just a case of bolting the special engine in.

The oil has to be changed every 250 km and the filter every 500 km. And yes, those of you who are good at maths will have worked out that the six-lap Senior TT was more than 250 km.

Despite the lack of label, the exhaust is made by Akrapovic and Motec controls the electronics and fuelling, the same as BSB. Teams at the TT have the option to run a kit ECU, which would allow rider aids, but Dean and the team choose BSB spec’ electronics, which means Dean alone controls the 225 hp.

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Cockpit

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Cockpit

No traction control, just right hand control…

Again, the bodywork looks the same as any other race bike in BSB, but the top section is reinforced to make it stronger as you’re going that much fast for so much longer – and it stops flex. Surprisingly the screen is the same as BSB because Dean doesn’t use a large screen with add-ons like the majority of TT riders.

The fuel tanks, however, are completely different to both the BSB bike’s 22-litre tank and the standard road bike’s 17-litre tank. The TT bikes have a hand-made 24-litre tank that extends under the seat to keep the weight low and differs from those run by the other Kawasaki teams.

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Adam Action

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Adam Action

Adam Child on the Senior TT winning ZX-10RR Kawasaki

The bars and levers are the same as Dean’s BSB bike. Dean had been racing BSB in the summer to get ‘up-to-speed’ and didn’t want to get used to two bikes; therefore the bar position is similar on both bikes. The team worked countless hours on seat-position.

Their rider has been with the team for a few years and in 2018 they spent a huge amount of time getting Dean comfortable with the bike. The seat height is the same as the standard road-going ZX-10RR, even with the fuel tank running underneath the seat.

Little touches make the TT bike unique. The team has designed a captive spindle on the rear wheel so you can’t remove the entire spindle and place it on the ground; it doesn’t come fully out when you remove the rear wheel. Remember the Senior is over six-laps, which means two rear wheel changes in under 40-seconds per stop.

IOMTT Senior Post Dean Harrison Shoei

IOMTT Senior Post Dean Harrison Shoei

Trev took this photo of Dean Harrison after he won the 2019 Senior TT

The sub-frame is easily removable, all the electronics are upfront with the only wire going to the rear being for the mandatory rain light. This allows quick easy access.

Everything is lock-wired, the team will use a few metres of lock-wire on each bike build. Check out some of the detail images if you need convincing. Steering damper, calipers, exhaust bracket are all secured with meticulous and painstaking lock-wiring.

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Forks

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Forks

TT winning Kawasaki ZX-10RR


Close to running out of fuel!

Bob Grey, the team’s Data Technician, designed the switchgear, dash surround, rear rain light, and a few other items. Plastic printing was used and money was saved if needed,  “The actual buttons are £3.75 plus VAT and on the TT bike we only need minimal buttons – a pit-lane limiter and a map switch – and on the right bar an on and off switch. We’ve also added a rain light button. The rain light is the blue button (water is blue), black is for the map switch, and orange is the pit lane limiter.

“We don’t show Dean a board and tell him to change the map. In practice we’ll change the mapping; if Dean thinks the mapping is shit, he can press the map button and it will go back to the previous map. The fuel map in the bike at the moment is the saving-fuel map.”

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner TripleClamps

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner TripleClamps

TT winning Kawasaki ZX-10RR

One of the problems the team encountered at the 2018 TT, especially in the first Superbike race on day one, was fuel starvation on the end of laps two and four – before the fuel stops. Dean was complaining the bike was surging. Bob and the team analysed the data and could see the fuel pressure dropping for a fraction of a second before the surging as the fuel tank levels depleted.

Bob explains the predicament the team was in the night before the senior, “We were up to the very early hours working out fuel consumption and looked at fuelling strategies. I could lean the motor, to save fuel, but then we could go too lean and the engine would over-heat and melt. But if I’d left the fuelling alone we would have most likely run out of fuel. So, I had to use some calculations and guesswork and went big.

“There was a little bit of surging at the end of lap two as Dean came into the pits, but we’d saved enough fuel to stop the surging in other places. Thankfully the bike ran fine. The link pipe turned purple, it must have been running hot, but we didn’t have any issues. When Dean noticed he had a big lead from his pit-board he maturely rolled off a little which also helped with fuel consumption.”

IOMTT Senior Dean Harrison Podium Peter Hickman Conor Cummins

IOMTT Senior Dean Harrison Podium Peter Hickman Conor Cummins

2019 Senior TT Results
1. Dean Harrison
2. Peter Hickman +53.062
3. Conor Cummins  +58.879


Riding Dean Harrison’s Senior Kawasaki ZX-10RR

Let’s be honest, I’m not going to pretend I can feel the flex in the chassis. Nor did I push the handling limits, and I didn’t feel the used Metzeler slide – despite racing the TT several times I don’t have that level of skill.

I just wanted to get a flavour of the historic TT winning bike, which thankfully the team agreed to the morning after the TT. With hangovers still pounding from the previous night’s celebrations, we headed to out – and forgot the tyre warmers.

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Adam Action

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Adam Action

Adam Child on the Senior TT winning ZX-10RR Kawasaki

The TT winning bike starts on the button, but to ease the Nova gearbox, Jonny gives me a push to get everything moving before I slotted it into gear. Dean uses a conventional road shift, not a race shift, so it’s unusually down for first gear. The clutch feels heavy and the power is snatchy and aggressive low down. But I’m guessing Dean only lets the rev drop below 5000 rpm three times a lap, if that.

I’m obviously aware I’m on cold Metzeler slicks which have been abused around the TT and during a burn-out in the paddock. In the back of my mind, I know the bike is irreplaceable, and despite the fact that Dean is a good mate, he isn’t going to be too happy if I launch it.

IOMTT Senior Post Dean Harrison

IOMTT Senior Post Dean Harrison

Dean Harrison greeted by his family in Parc Ferme after taking victory in the 2019 Senior TT

As you’d expect, it’s quick, but it feels raw. The whole bike feels alive, it’s a 225 hp animal without any rider aids. I’ve ridden many TT-winning bikes, and they feel a little timid, but the Kawasaki doesn’t. The thought of riding this flat out at the TT scares me to death. And Dean was power sliding the beast and wrestling it around in fifth and sixth gear – he’s got balls.

The ride isn’t harsh; it’s not a plank of wood with a fast engine, and as Dean explained the brakes are progressive, dare I say user-friendly. The thumb back brake has a nice, smooth, fluid action and doesn’t require a huge input, unlike other thumb brakes I’ve used in the past. Alarmingly my foot does keep reaching for the conventional back brake pedal, which isn’t there – don’t think I’ll be trying any wheelies.

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Adam Action

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Adam Action

Adam Child on the Senior TT winning ZX-10RR Kawasaki

I love the simplicity of Dean’s bike and minimal buttons to minimise confusion. With its standard screen, simple dash with large digital rev counter there’s no glitz and glamour – it was built to do the job of winning the TT, and that’s it. Like a kit-car, it was designed for speed, not glamour or comfort, despite the face Dean has to ride flat out for close to two hours.

The bars are wide, and it feels like a big bike (with a full 24-litres of fuel she must have been a handful). The steering isn’t light, either, and make no mistake the big Kwaka took some riding. However, Dean is adamant it wasn’t that much of a handful, and it certainly looked like he was dancing with the ZX-10RR for most of the time. Simply having fun.

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Adam Action

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Adam Action

Adam Child on the Senior TT winning ZX-10RR Kawasaki

After a short ride, I was happy to give it back in one piece. It’s never nice riding a mate’s bike, especially one that happens to be priceless and has just won the TT. I’d like to say I’d love to ride it in anger, but I don’t think I would, especially not on the road. This is one scary and raw bike I’ll happily give back.

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Adam

Dean Harrison Senior TT Winner Adam

Adam Child was very happy to get the bike back in one piece


How the 2019 Senior race was won

Dean Harrison claimed his first senior win after Peter Hickman’s Smiths BMW began to overheat on lap five. Peter had a lead of nearly 20 seconds, but it was clear Peter had a problem as he left the second pit-stop. Down Sulby Straight Peter was down to 159 mph, compared to Dean at 191 mph.

By Ramsey Dean had an eight-second lead, with Conor 36-seconds back in third. On the last lap, it was clear Hickman had an ongoing issue again only posting 165 mph through the speed trap, and Dean continued to pull out a lead to more than 40-seconds.

On the run over the mountain, as Hickman’s problems continued, it looked like Conor on the Padgetts Honda may snatch the second spot, but Hickman just held on to second position, eventually finishing, 53-seconds behind Dean and just five seconds ahead of Conor. Michael Dunlop rounded off the top four.

IOMTT Senior Post Dean Harrison

IOMTT Senior Post Dean Harrison

The front of the Silicone Engineering Kawasaki after almost two hours of racing at the Senior TT

Dean was clearly overjoyed to take his first big bike win, “To finish first, you first must finish and the bike never missed a beat. I can’t believe it. I’m happy it’s a proper six-lap Senior Superbike win, I’m so happy for the team. The fans and the marshals were all waving, it’s amazing. I got a board which said P1 plus 30 so I knew Peter had a problem. I’m so going to celebrate tonight, you don’t want to know how I’m going to celebrate, it’s going to be big.”

IOMTT Senior Post Dean Harrison

IOMTT Senior Post Dean Harrison

Dean Harrison – Senior TT Winner – 2019

Peter Hickman sharing of his issues, “I got off to good start and I knew the first lap was 16-min as I came up on the dash. But as I came away from the pitstop the bike was overheating and when the bike went over 11,000rpm it was pissing water out. I couldn’t go past 11,000, so I just short-shifted everywhere, the last few laps seemed to take forever. It’s a problem we’ve had on the Superbike, but not on the Superstock, and we have some amazing people in the Smiths racing but we don’t know why.”

IOMTT Senior Harrison Hickman

IOMTT Senior Harrison Hickman

Peter Hickman and Dean Harrison in Parc Ferme – Senior TT 2019


2019 Senior Results

  1. Dean Harrison 1:43:49.521 130.824mph
  2. Peter Hickman 1:44:42.583 129.719mph
  3. Conor Cummins 1:44:48.400 129.599mph
  4. Michael Dunlop 1:45:16.230 129.028mph
  5. James Hiller 1:46:19.873 127.740mph

Images Stephen Davison & TH


Source: MCNews.com.au

Ride the Isle of Man TT course in 2020 with Get Routed

Ride the Isle of Man on your own bike!

Get Routed 2020 or 2021 IoM TT experience

Stay on and tour Europe!

Get Routed offer a range of motorcycling shipping services, allowing motorcyclists to have their motorcycle transported for the ultimate two wheeled travel experience, including to locations such as United Kingdom, Spain, Greece, the Isle of Man and New Zealand.

Each year Get Routed organise IoM TT experiences for Aussie and Kiwi riders, with strictly limited spaces available for the 2020 event, and they also have pre-booked accommodation for the TT fortnight. There’s also space for those happy to take a tent and camp out, as an additional option, that Get Routed can also help organise.

IOM Mountain Triumph
Riders await the mountain section of the Isle of Man TT Course being opened to public traffic, there are no speed limits!

Get Routed also book ferry tickets from Liverpool or Heysham across to the Isle of Man each year far in advance, that can be used by their customers. This is far more important than you might think, as IOM TT ferry tickets can sell out in minutes and are generally booked out over 12 months in advance and cost over $500 AUD.

IOM Ferry
Ferry port at Douglas, Isle of Man

Of course if you take your own bike you not only get to the lap the TT course, and visit all corners of what is quite a beautiful island under your own steam and in your own time, you can also then extend your holiday and ride throughout the UK or continue over to Europe.

With Get Routed your bike can stay in Europe for a couple of months before being shipped back to Australia, and there are no extra charges for extending your stay in Europe and undertaking your own tour, in your own time. Perhaps even take in a round of MotoGP while you are on the European mainland.

Uk Trip Peak District
Tour England’s Peak District ahead of your Isle of Man adventure

Here’s the full scoop from Dave of Get Routed, with contact details for those interested. With strictly limited spaces each year it’s worth getting in quick.


Dave – Get Routed

“I have been coming to the TT since 1983 and started shipping motorcycles to UK and Europe since 2001 and over that time have transported almost 3000 motorcycles to the UK and other European destinations. Of course we also provide shipping services across the Tasman for those riders wanting to tour New Zealand on their own motorcycle.

IOM Port Erin
The Isle of Man can be a stunning place to spend time

“I also book plenty of accommodation on the Isle of Man each year for the TT fortnight, with quality options in the beautiful seaside towns of Port Erin and Port Mary. Including a self contained fully restored stone farm cottage built in 1850.

IOM Port Erin
Port Erin

“This accommodation is not available to people who don’t want to take a bike to the TT. The accommodation and ferry tickets are only available to those who want bikes shipped to the UK and back, from either Brisbane, Sydney or Melbourne. Of course for those wanting to take a tent and camp out at one of the many IoM camp sites I can also help facilitate this.

“Laps of the TT Mountain Course circuit during open road times across the TT fortnight is not difficult.

TT Get Routed Loading Yamaha MT
Motorcycles being prepared for shipping

“Bikes are generally loaded in Australia towards the end of February and available for collection in Felixstowe, Suffolk, UK towards the end of April. Your motorcycle luggage can also be transported in the container ready for your collection with your motorcycle.”

TT Trip Felixstowe Depot
Trev’s Fireblade with some of the other bikes shipped from Australia to the UK with Get Routed for TT 2019 – Image by Steve/Sue Frew

How much does this type of service cost?

The 2020 and 2021 Isle of Man TT motorcycle shipping and accommodation package, which includes ferry tickets for you and your motorcycle across the Irish Sea, and 14-nights quality lodgings on the Isle of Man, sells for $7436. Spaces are always limited thus advance bookings are thoroughly recommended.


To make an enquiry or a booking email [email protected] or phone 03 5625 9080.

getrouted

Source: MCNews.com.au

David Johnson reflects on TT 2019 Superstock podium

2019 Isle of Man TT

David Johnson Interview

South Australia’s David Johnson had scored a couple of fourth place finishes in previous TT appearances but 2019 marked a breakthrough for the 37-year-old as he raced to a hard fought podium in the Superstock TT.

Johnson was hoping for a repeat performance in Friday’s Senior TT but after an impressive opening lap of 130.98mph, disappointment then struck at the end of lap two when a vibration caused the crank position sensor to fail, shutting down the bike and forcing him to retire. Early in the week he had claimed tenth in the Supersport TT.

We caught up with Davo after the Senior TT to recap his TT week.


IOMTT Superstock David Johnson
David Johnson

Trev: I am with David Johnson here at the TT paddock on Friday, immediately after a disappointing senior TT, but with the glory of a Superstock podium still fresh from Thursday that must be a great reward for some of the pre-season effort and the faith Honda has put in you.

David Johnson: “Today, the Senior TT hasn’t gone so well, but we were looking like we were in a good position there – I think it’s an antipodean thing, we come out of the box quite slow then get fast. It’s no different than what Bruce Anstey does. I think Cam (Donald) is the only one of us who went out and did awesome laps from lap one.

IOMTT David Johnson Pits Profile HondaImage
David Johnson – TT 2019

“I always end well though, and it looked like it could possibly have been a podium today as well, while yesterday of course was amazing. On a bike that I didn’t expect it on, the Superstock bike is not known as the fastest thing out of the box but we proved to people that it is highly capable. It handles so well, I could just ride it, the way it handled was amazing, there is never any dramas with the way the stock Honda handles, that’s for sure.

IOMTT David Johnson Supertock Podium Cam Donald HondaImage
Cam Donald congratulates Davo on his maiden TT podium

“On the last lap in the Superstock race, when I was in P3 at one point, then P4, then just before the mount’ I saw P4 + 0, and thought who the hell is this I’m dicing with. It turns out its Michael Dunlop. That was only over the line, the last sector I was fourth, come across the line as hard as I could in the last sector, short circuit hard and come out 0.2s in front. Happy to get onto the podium for the first time.”


IOMTT Superbike Race Start David Johnson
David Johnson was cool as a cucumber ahead of the Superbike TT as his mechanics fuelled his bike only moments before the race start

Trev: I remarked in the Superstock race report (Link), the bike uses less fuel, the team helped make up that three-seconds in the pits to give the team great credence as well, but some people also forget that you lose more than three-seconds a lap with the horsepower deficit to the BMW and Kawasaki. So you still had to do your job with less power out on the circuit. From the sidelines earlier in the week I could see that Michael Dunlop could make 20 metres or more on you over 400 metres as soon as the bikes were upright, pulling 20 metres over a 400 metre straight – when the tracks  over 60,000 metres that certainly adds up over a full lap…

IOMTT David Johnson Superbike Pits HondaImage
David Johnson in the pits on the Superbike

David Johnson: “Yea, Sulby Straight I think we were at our worst, against whoever was fastest, 15 mph down, which is a lot, a friggen hell of a lot. Yea so I sorta had no idea who I was dicing with, I thought it was actually going to be James Hillier, but obviously he had a 30s penalty, which didn’t come into the equation, as even with that penalty off we still beat him by 6s, but it was Dunlop I was fighting with.

IOMTT David Johnson Supertock HondaImage
David Johnson – Superstock TT 2019

“The last sector is obviously where the Honda is going to be awesome, as it’s quite a tight little section, slow and tight, which is why I can push without risking too much. Just to come out by 0.2 of a second is… some people, the way they were following it, they were saying it was the battle of the TT.”


IOMTT Race Superbike Hickman Johnson
Peter Hickman leads David Johnson

Trev: It was only a race for third to be fair right from the start, Hicky and Harrison were in another league last year, and it proved the same again this year, that pair are going to be hard to beat.

David Johnson: “They’ve changed the bar for this whole situation really, Hicky was behind me starting, I was ninth on the road, and he was 10th, so when he caught me and he caught me quite early in the lap, and then starts pulling away, I was like oh my god, this is ridiculous, to push like that.

IOMTT David Johnson Supertock HondaImage
David Johnson – Superstock TT 2019

“The way they are pushing to get what they do, it’s changed a lot. That’s how hard you have to win, those two have changed the bar. Dunlop has won 19 TTs all together and in a big bike TT you have to push absolutely, like say short circuit you push 100 per cent, to win a TT these days that’s what it takes… I would if I felt comfortable on the bike, but with the short practice that we’ve had and me being new to Honda, I just didn’t quite feel that comfortable to go out of the box and push like mad right from the off.

IOMTT David Johnson Supertock HondaImage
David Johnson – Superstock TT 2019

“Whereas especially the first couple of laps, is where you make it all up and get comfortable with the bike, you push like mad in the first two laps and the rest comes to you. Whereas I’m still building up speed…”


TT Qualifying Tuesday David Johnson
David Johnson

Trev: Third, that’s probably fulfilling your ultimate potential that you would have looked at coming into the race. Are the team happy, does that mean you’ll be on a Fireblade next year and they’ll pay you more money? (laughs)

David Johnson: “Maybe, we’ve not spoken about that, I’m happy with them and they are happy with me. Especially in Superstock, they didn’t expect that at all. The Superbike is a fair weapon, so we expected to be somewhere near in that, and we were close, we thought we had the potential to be on the podium today in the Senior, unfortunately the bike let us down with an electronics problem.

IOMTT David Johnson Supertock HondaImage
David Johnson – Superstock TT 2019

“On the Superstock bike it was a long shot, the Superbike was the one I expected to be on the podium in, and then all of a sudden I’m on the podium in Superstock. I’ve won BSB championship races in Superstock, so I knew I was going to be good on it, but had no idea, never expected to be on the podium this year like that in the Superstock class.”

IOMTT David Johnson Superbike HondaImage
David Johnson on the Superbike – TT 2019

Trev: We don’t hear outside of the TT anything that you’re up to. How have you got yourself up to speed, and your head up to speed?

David Johnson: “Well the Island Classic, Phillip Island, that’s my main preparation, they ride like mad out there. To be honest, I didn’t do any British Championship races this year, which I usually do. I know if I go into Superstock race I can be at the front. But this year we didn’t do that, for whatever reason.”


IIC Phillip Island Rob Mott Friday David Johnson
David Johnson at the 2019 Island Classic – Image by Rob Mott

Trev: Might there be any opportunities for you to get any short circuit work in the latter part of the year?

David Johnson: “There is, that’s all down to me now. I’m 37-years-old now and I’ve got my fiancee and we’re from Adelaide, and I like to spend all my time in Adelaide now. I’ve been here for 18 years now, in Europe.

IOMTT David Johnson Superbike HondaImage
David Johnson on the Superbike – TT 2019

Trev: It’s a long time ago you left the Aussie domestic competition…

David Johnson: “I remember I was excited when you did a little write up on me in my first year, in 2002…”

David Johnson GP Support Races
David Johnson – Aussie GP Support Races 2002

Trev: So we’re both getting old.

David Johnson: “I guess so!  I do what I need to do to keep doing it. I do a heap of track days, Levi Day race schools, my own race schools here and there as well, and the Champion Rides days, so I do a lot of riding. I do the James Whitham schools when I’m here and the Focus Events around Europe. So I do a lot of riding but that doesn’t really reflect when you’re pushing hard from the get go, like mad.”

IOMTT David Johnson Supersport HondaImage
David Johnson – Supersport TT 2019

Trev: So if you got any short circuit work in this year, would it be back in Australia or in the UK?

David Johnson: “I’ve never really had the opportunity in Australia, they never come up, I would love to do it, with Honda if they had a spare bike and it was offered, I’d jump on it. But because I’ve never had the offers, I’ve never done it. And to be competitive you need to be on a good bike and team to be in Australia, in Australia the riders are world class.”

IOMTT David Johnson Superbike HondaImage
David Johnson on the Superbike – TT 2019

Trev: It’s very tight, one turn of a clicker between hero and zero really it is that close.

David Johnson: “It’s no different than going to BSB, if you’re on a crap bike in BSB you won’t be competitive. In Australia it’s the same thing and I don’t want to do it half arsed. If I do it, it has to be properly. But I don’t know, I’ll suss it out. It feels like the end of the season for me now, so we’ll have a big night tonight and move forward from here.”

IOMTT David Johnson Superbike HondaImage
David Johnson on the Superbike – TT 2019

Trev: So just see what crops up in the latter half or 2019 and will there be any more real road racing for you? Anything lined up for the Classic TT?

David Johnson: “Yes, I’m racing with the Kawasaki team in the Classic TT, I’m not really allowed to say that around here! But yea the Kawasaki team for that. Ulster GP as well, it’s not in my contract but I know Honda will want me to do it and I love the Ulster GP, I got a podium last year with the Tyco BMW team and it’s a good place. A love-hate relationship. I broke my back there and spent a month in Belfast hospital but I want to do that again. And the Macau GP at the end of the year, so I have a few big international races to do.

Macau GP David Johnson
David Johnson at the 2018 Macau GP

Trev: Who’s Macau with?

David Johnson: “Not sure yet, that’s to be confirmed,  to be announced, actually I don’t even know yet. I’ve had about 17,000 offers so far, so it’s wait and see.”

IOMTT David Johnson Superbike HondaImage
David Johnson on the Superbike – TT 2019

Trev: It’s nice to be wanted mate.

David Johnson: “It’s better to be wanted than no one gives a shit, so we’ll wait and see.”

IOMTT David Johnson Supertock Podium HondaImage
David Johnson on the Superstock podium – TT 2019

Trev: Celebrate a safe and successful week, we’ll see you in due course.

David Johnson: “I’ll see you at the bar later mate!”

IOMTT David Johnson Supertock Podium HondaImage
David Johnson on the Superstock podium – TT 2019

Source: MCNews.com.au

Dean Harrison reflects on his first Senior TT win

Dean Harrison Interview

The 2019 Isle of Man TT has seen Dean Harrison claim Kawasaki’s first Senior TT win since 1975. This is only the second ever win for Kawasaki in the premier event at the TT, and at 30-years-old Harrison is also one of the youngest riders ever to win the Senior TT. We had a front row seat for the chat with Harrison immediately after he claimed victory in Friday’s Senior TT.

IOMTT Senior Post Dean Harrison
Dean Harrison – Senior TT Winner – 2019

Your first big bike win at the TT.

Dean Harrison: “I’m over the moon I can’t believe it to be honest. It’s great now as I’ve won every TT on a Kawasaki, I’ve won the 650 twin race, Supersport race, the big bike race, so a win in every class, that’s ticked all the boxes.

“The race I got off to a reasonable start, Pete had a bit of the legs on me to be honest. I just tried to put as much pressure on him as I could, as the race went on he was chipping away from me, and the gap was getting bigger, it wasn’t until lap 4 or lap 5 that I noticed the gap had halved. So I thought… well the thing is when the gap halves, I’m not sure if there was a problem, as if someone breaks down there’s a big gap, and it keeps coming down and down and down.

“So I just kept it going to be honest, I was short shifting everywhere, trying to conserve fuel for my last lap. Six laps around this place, 226 miles (over 360 km) on the bike, and two hours, it’s the longest race you’ll ever do as a solo rider. It’s a testament to the bike to keep going for so long, the hammering it gets from me is unbelievable.”


IOMTT Qualifying Sunday Dean Harrison
Dean Harrison

When you saw the early boards you must have thought he was getting away from you, growing sector by sector.

Dean Harrison: “Yeah exactly, I was going as hard as I felt comfortable going, I thought I’d push and that would be my best, in those first few laps, and I think I did a sub 17 on lap one, a 16:50 something.

“The trouble is now you’re kind of splitting hairs around here, aren’t we it’s getting so fine. I just tried to put on as much pressure as I could. It sounds daft but if you take a step back and relax you end up making a mistake, if I keep going at the pace I’m going and pushing, you sorta get into a rhythm and sorta hit your points at the apex.

“But the bike to be fair was absolutely faultless, never missed a beat the whole race. Apart from a little tank surging issue, that we went through, that showed up a little bit to be honest, at the latter part of the second lap, the pit laps. But apart from that it was faultless. Massive thanks to the team.”


IOMTT Senior Post Dean Harrison
Dean Harrison

For the second pit stop the lead was about 17-seconds, half of which Peter had built up just on the climb to the mount, taking about eight-seconds out of your lap.

Dean Harrison: “That’s my Achilles heel, on the lower section I seem to have it nailed, it’s the climb up the mounts that I need to do some more research on over the winter, we’ve got to do some more short circuits scratching, the faster I get at short circuits the faster I seem to go up the mountain. So I need to come back and do a bit of that here later in the year. Hat’s off to Pete, he has won three TT’s this week and it just proves I’m competitive to get onto the podium.”


And with the top brass from Kawasaki here, we think it’s the first Senior TT for the marque since 1975…

Dean Harrison: “I think it was Mick Grant that won that… Brilliant yea, to give the Kawasaki superbike a win since 1975, Jesus Christ… 44 years ago, a few years ago, no brilliant to be fair.”


What was your thought when you suddenly saw a board which said P1?

Dean Harrison: “I knew there was something wrong when the lead had halved, obviously he’s having issues here, once I got P1 the lead just went from P1 plus 8s to P1 plus 30s and on the mountain I thought I got to short shift a bit.

“It’s hard to concentrate when that happens, when you’re in a battle with someone and it’s so close, but when something goes wrong with another competitor that you get such a big lead, it’s easy to have a lapse in concentration, so you really have to keep your mind in focus, on what you’re doing and what’s coming up, keeping the bike in the right rev range, as problems can occur around here. So I kept my head down and brought it home.”


IOMTT Superbike Race Start Dean Harrison
Dean Harrison at the Superbike Start

How would you sum up your TT overall, three podiums and a win?

Dean Harrison: “It’s absolutely brilliant, every class is so competitive now, I lost my way a little bit though mid-week, with the weather the way it’s been, I sorta lost a bit of momentum, I started real strong, and then my head went a little bit almost, and then it took a little bit to get me back into it.

“Yesterday with all the races I got back into the swing of things, and it’s great to get a win, where it’s six laps, two pit stops, it’s not a shortened race. The race yesterday, I take my hat off to Gary Thompson for the races we got in yesterday, as it was such a tight schedule and yesterday went absolutely seamless. It’s great to get it done for all the spectators, as the crowd around the track is absolutely massive, it’s great to see so much enthusiasm, with people waving over the fences, and sitting on the hedges.”


IOMTT Supersport Race Dean Harrison
Dean Harrison

Your bike worked flawlessly…

Dean Harrison: “Yea exactly, it’s a testament to the bike and the team to be fair. The bike never missed a beat the whole race. With the new bike, even we’ve got a new bik this year 2019 ZX-10RR and obviously cosmetically it looks very similar to the old bike, but engine wise it’s not, but the characteristics are quite different. And it took me quite a bit of getting used to. In the stock race, I had a few problems in the NW200 and sort of dialed that out for when we got here, and the Superbike is the same thing, it’s just a matter of time.”


You’ve won TT races before, but to win the Senior TT that must be really special?

Dean Harrison: “Everyone says it’s the biggest race of the fortnight, and me and Pete were saying last year that the Superbike and the Senior are very similar, since it’s the same bike, but for some reason the Senior is the blue ribbon race, but it’s great to get my hands on the trophy to be honest, and to go down as one of the names in history. I’m over the moon.”


How are you going to celebrate getting your hands on that grand ole lady?

Dean Harrison: “You don’t want to know!”

IOMTT Senior Dean Harrison Podium Peter Hickman Conor Cummins
2019 Senior TT Results
Dean Harrison
Peter Hickman +53.062
Conor Cummins  +58.879

2019 Senior TT Results

  1. Dean Harrison / Kawasaki
  2. Peter Hickman / BMW +53.062
  3. Conor Cummins / Honda  +58.879
  4. Michael Dunlop / BMW +1m26.709
  5. James Hillier / Kawasaki +2m30.352
  6. Davey Todd / BMW +2m32.920
  7. Michael Rutter / Honda +3m03.571
  8. Jamie Coward / Yamaha +3m13.561
  9. Brian McCormack / BMW +3m49.971
  10. Dominic Herbertson / Kawasaki +4m09.262
  11. Gary Johnson / Kawasaki +4m41.665
  12. Shaun Anderson / BMW +5m58.740
  13. Derek Sheils / Suzuki +6m07.744
  14. Mike Booth / Kawasaki +6m55.370
  15. Michael Sweeney / BMW +7m14.207
  16. Horst Saiger / Yamaha +7m15.358
  17. Mark Parrett / BMW +7m55.596
  18. Joe Akroyd / Kawasaki +8m00.702
  19. David Jackson / BMW +8m03.310
  20. Frank Gallagher / Kawasaki +8m05.124

Source: MCNews.com.au

Peter Hickman talks about TT 2019 and his problems

Peter Hickman Interview

Peter Hickman had a stellar 2019 IoM TT, claiming a Supersport win, Superbike win and just when it looked as though he would complete a trifecta in the Senior TT, mechanical gremlins struck the Smiths BMW and forced him to relinquish his lead to Dean Harrison. Hickman masterfully nursed the bike home to second place and MCNews.com.au was there to hear him reflect on TT 2019 immediately after the Senior race on Friday.

IOMTT Senior Peter Hickman
Peter Hickman

Peter, what could have been…

Peter Hickman: “It is what it is, can’t change it now, what is done is done. We had a really good start to the race, I think we did 134mph something on the first lap and on lap two. Slowly ticked away, bike was working really good, handling really good. Unfortunately after the second pit stop this returning issue that we keep having on the full superbike, it just keeps chucking water out, it doesn’t get hot or anything, but just starts throwing water out at anything over 11,000rpm.

“Once I left the pits and went down Grey Hill it was chucking water out, so I just had to kind of manage it, and basically use half throttle and no more than 11,000 rpm. So that’s two laps, at 50 per cent throttle, that was not very fun I can tell you.”

IOMTT Superstock Peter Hickman
Peter Hickman

That had happened on some of the practice runs didn’t it? So you got all the way through the first four laps of racing, you must have thought it was out of the way…

Peter Hickman: “Honestly, no, we all had this inkling that it was possibly going to happen, we’ve had three different engines, four different radiators, numerous caps, bottles, you name it it’s been changed, three or four times.

“For some reason on the superbike it just keeps doing it. Our hands were tied unfortunately, after the Superstock race, with the chief scrutineer we pleaded with them that he could just come and seal the engine and strip it after the Senior, but pretty much told us bollocks, so big shout out to Dave for ruining my Senior.


IOMTT Senior Harrison Hickman
Peter Hickman and Dean Harrison in Parc Ferme – Senior TT 2019

** Dean Harrison interjects to say ‘I like Dave’ to the sound of much laughter, while Hicky laughingly jokes about a conspiracy **


“It is what it is, rules are rules, but I think sometimes a little bit of common sense needs to come into it, but it is what it is. The team did a fantastic job and did everything they could to make the bike right for us. It managed four laps, just couldn’t quite manage six, we are still on the podium, we’ve had an absolute unbelievable TT, to come away with the hat trick for a start, win on the Supersport bike is something I’ve been trying to get for a while now, we’ve done that, and a podium in the Senior so it’s not all bad.”

IOMTT Supersport TT Peter Hickman
Peter Hickman – Trooper Triumph 675 Supersport – Image Pacemaker Press

And you’ll take away the fastest lap of the meeting, the opening lap in 16m51.495s, 143.28mph.

Peter Hickman: “Yea it’s fast isn’t it, especially for the lack of practice it’s quick. But honestly the new S 1000 RR is just so, so good, it’s only just come out of the box. It’s still a new bike, so to do that with no practice really at all…  yeah next year is going to be good.”


You’ve been strong in every class.

Peter Hickman: “It’s my sixth year now I’m getting used to the place now, and learning there I’m going. Looking forward to coming back next year and having another crack. BSB next weekend so not too much rest, we will concentrate back on the BSB for the rest of the year now and of course the Ulster GP in August.”

IOMTT Lightweight TT Peter Hickman Norton Twin
Peter Hickman on the Norton Lightweight TT bike – Image by Richard Sykes

2019 Senior TT Results

  1. Dean Harrison / Kawasaki
  2. Peter Hickman / BMW +53.062
  3. Conor Cummins / Honda  +58.879
  4. Michael Dunlop / BMW +1m26.709
  5. James Hillier / Kawasaki +2m30.352
  6. Davey Todd / BMW +2m32.920
  7. Michael Rutter / Honda +3m03.571
  8. Jamie Coward / Yamaha +3m13.561
  9. Brian McCormack / BMW +3m49.971
  10. Dominic Herbertson / Kawasaki +4m09.262

Source: MCNews.com.au

Conor Cummins on his Senior TT podium placing

Conor Cummins Interview

Conor Cummins edged out Michael Dunlop for the final position on the podium of the 2019 Senior TT at the Isle of Man, while still working towards that illusive sub-17min lap time over the famous mountain course. Here’s what he had to say following the Senior TT.

IOMTT Qualifying Sunday Conor Cummins
Conor Cummins

Conor, another big bike podium, a double big bike podium in 2018, and again in 2019.

Conor Cummins: “Yea I’m really happy with it, I just want to say a big thanks to Padgetts Racing team, they put great bikes underneath me. I got off to a steady start and just found a decent rhythm and Dean came past me at Sulby or somewhere, and I tagged onto the back of him and found a bit of a rhythm there.

“The bike was faultless, bit of an issue mid-race where I tried to manage it a little bit, but it wasn’t going to effect the result at all. It was just a bit of a handling problem we had, but we’ll get it sorted for next year. Looking forward to TT 2020.”


Mid-race you got into a big battle for position with Michael Dunlop.

Conor Cummins: “I was watching my boards a lot of the time and I managed to edge three-seconds on him, and just managed to build a bit of a cushion and I think I ended up with 20 plus seconds at the end. It’s a mega competitive field at the TT this year, so strong and to get on the podium I’m really happy, and again a big thanks to the Padgetts Racing team for all their efforts.”

IOMTT Race Superbike Cummins
Conor Cummins

That sub-17 minute lap still a target for you?

Conor Cummins: “Yea, yea it is, maybe with a bit more practice I’d probably go sub 17min I think. The fact is I haven’t done it, so we’ll just work on next year and come back stronger.”

IOMTT Senior Podium Harrison Hickman Cummins
2019 Senior TT Results
Dean Harrison / Kawasaki
Peter Hickman / BMW +53.062
Conor Cummins / Honda  +58.879

2019 Senior TT Results

  1. Dean Harrison / Kawasaki
  2. Peter Hickman / BMW +53.062
  3. Conor Cummins / Honda  +58.879
  4. Michael Dunlop / BMW +1m26.709
  5. James Hillier / Kawasaki +2m30.352
  6. Davey Todd / BMW +2m32.920
  7. Michael Rutter / Honda +3m03.571
  8. Jamie Coward / Yamaha +3m13.561
  9. Brian McCormack / BMW +3m49.971
  10. Dominic Herbertson / Kawasaki +4m09.262

Source: MCNews.com.au

Lee Johnston emotional victor in opening Supersport TT

Monster Energy Supersport Race


Conor Cummins was the first off the line at 1830 on Monday night in the opening Supersport race of TT 2019 ahead of Dean Harrison and John McGuinness.  The time delay between each rider ten-seconds and the race distance four laps of the 37.73 mile mountain course, thus 243 kilometres all up for the 50+ race starters.

IOMTT Supersport R Conor Cummins
Conor Cummins

James Hillier was the fastest man out of the blocks to take the early race lead ahead of Gary Johnson and Dean Harrison. Lee Johnston though then promoted himself up to second place through the split at Ballaugh Bridge.

IOMTT Supersport R James Hillier
James Hillier

Lee Johnston then took the lead late on the opening lap at Bungalow to demote Hillier to second place. Peter Hickman was the man on a charge though and was up to third place by Bungalow.

IOMTT Supersport R Peter Hickman
Peter Hickman

The first time past the start-finish line it was Johnston in the lead by two-seconds over Hillier with Hickman a further two-seconds back in third place.

IOMTT Supersport R Michael Dunlop
Michael Dunlop

Gary Johnson was in fourth ahead of Dean Harrison and Michael Dunlop. Conor Cummins seventh ahead of Jamie Coward and Davey Todd while Ian Hutchinson rounded out the top ten.

IOMTT Supersport R Dean Harrison
Dean Harrison

On lap two Lee Johnston continued to pull away from Hillier as Hickman started to close in on the second place man, the gap down to half-a-second by Ballaugh Bridge.

IOMTT Supersport R Lee Johnston Action
Lee Johnston

Late on the second lap though Johnston’s lead had been whittled down from four-seconds down to almost nothing by Ramsey. Presumably some sort of problem onboard the Ashcourt Group sponsored YZF-R6 or a mistake by Johnston allowing Hillier to get back in the race for the lead.

IOMTT Supersport R Lee Johnston
Lee Johnston

The other possibility was that there were a few drops of light rain at one part of the circuit that had seen Johnston button it off a little more than Hillier. That hypothesis was confirmed at the end of lap two when officials put out the chequered flag due to worsening conditions on the mountain. The race declared after two laps and Lee Johnston declared the winner ahead of James Hillier and Peter Hickman.

IOMTT Supersport R Lee Johnston ParcFerme
Lee Johnston – TT 2019 – SS Race One

Despite the early culmination of that race Lee Johnston is still a very deserved race winner. He dominated that race from the get-go and the 30-year-old Northern Irishman was an emotional victor.


Monster Energy Supersport Race Results

  1. Lee Johnston
  2. James Hillier +3.641
  3. Peter Hickman +4.967
  4. Dean Harrison +17.971
  5. Michael Dunlop +21.125
  6. Conor Cummins +27.585
  7. Gary Johnson +29.088
  8. Jamie Coward +36.918
  9. Davey Todd +58.691
  10. Ian Hutchinson +66.796
IOMTT Supersport R Podium Johnston Hickman Hillier
Monster Energy Supersport Race Results
Lee Johnston
James Hillier +3.641
Peter Hickman +4.967

Source: MCNews.com.au

Weather finally breaks on Isle of Man for qualifying

TT racers take advantage of break in weather

After four full days of inactivity due to the weather on the Isle of Man, the third solo qualifying session at the 2019 IOM TT races, fuelled by Monster Energy, finally got underway on Sunday afternoon.

The mist on the Mountain cleared sufficiently for the session to take place after a delay of an hour and a half, although there were still damp patches from the earlier rain and strong winds around the course, particularly on the Mountain section.


TT Sunday Qualifying Results

Superbike

  1. Conor Cummins 128.92 mph
  2. Dean Harrison 128.29 mph
  3. David Johnson 128.24 mph
  4. Michael Rutter 127.55 mph
  5. Jamie Coward 127.22 mph
  6. James Hillier 125.36 mph
  7. Peter Hickman 125.04 mph
  8. Sam West 124.96 mph
  9. John McGuinness 124.72 mph
  10. Brian McCormack 124.33 mph
  11.  Philip Crowe 124.31 mph
  12. Daley Mathison 124.22 mph
  13. Gary Johnson 123.75 mph
  14. Stefano Bonetti 123.48 mph
  15. Derek Sheils 123.10 mph
  16. Paul Jordan 122.84 mph
  17. Jay Lawrence 122.47 mph
  18. Shaun Anderson 122.35 mph
  19. Lee Johnston 122.27 mph
  20. Ian Hutchinson 121.95 mph

Superstock

  1. Peter Hickman 128.50 mph
  2. Conor Cummins 127.17 mph
  3. Gary Johnson 124.97 mph
  4. James Hillier 124.33 mph
  5. Michael Rutter 123.53 mph
  6. Rob Hodson 123.39 mph
  7. Davey Todd 122.94 mph
  8. Horst Saiger 121.30 mph
  9. Derek McGee 120.98 mph
  10. Philip Crowe 119.85 mph

Supersport

  1. Lee Johnston 122.93 mph
  2. Gary Johnson 122.59 mph
  3. James Hillier 122.02 mph
  4. Jamie Coward 121.33 mph
  5. Dean Harrison 121.17 mph
  6. Ian Hutchinson 121.13 mph
  7. Paul Jordan 120.48 mph
  8. David Johnson 120.35 mph
  9. Derek McGee 119.64 mph
  10. Derek Sheils 119.58 mph
  11. Daley Mathison 119.11 mph
  12. John McGuinness 117.77 mph
  13. Michael Sweeney 117.70 mph
  14. Mike Browne 117.55 mph
  15.  Xavier Denis  116.53 mph

TT Zero

  1. Michael Rutter  117.16 mph
  2. Ian Lougher 95.36 mph

Sunday TT Qualifying Report

Conor Cummins on the Milenco by Padgetts Motorcycles Honda set the quickest lap of the session, clocking 128.92mph although Peter Hickman posted the fastest opening four sectors of the session – indeed the week – on his Superstock machine before slowing over the final two sectors.

IOMTT Qualifying Sunday Conor Cummins
Conor Cummings quickest on Sunday

Michael Rutter (Bathams Racing Honda), Peter Hickman (Smiths Racing BMW) and Dean Harrison (Silicone Engineering Kawasaki) led the Superbike, Superstock and Supersport classes away and all three were out on their Superbikes. Gary Johnson opted to take out his RAF Regular & Reserve Triumph Supersport machine.

Lee Johnston (Ashcourt Racing BMW) and Ian Hutchinson (Honda Racing) were both out on their Superbikes while James Hillier headed down Glencrutchery Road on the Quattro Plant Wicked Coatings Superstock Kawasaki.

IOMTT Qualifying Sunday Lee Johnston
Lee Johnston

Harrison was the quickest to Glen Helen, by four and a half seconds, from Michael Dunlop (Tyco BMW) with Hickman half a second further back in third. Cummins was close behind in fourth with Jamie Coward and Rutter completing the top six as Hillier and Johnson topped the early Superstock and Supersport times respectively.

Cummins set the quickest sector time on the run to Ballaugh before Hickman had the honour of getting from Ballaugh to Ramsey the quickest but as they completed the opening lap, Harrison was initially the quickest overall with a lap of 126.53mph.

IOMTT Qualifying Sunday Peter Hickman
Peter Hickman

That was nine seconds quicker than Rutter (125.42) with Hickman slotting into third at 125.04mph as he completed his first lap of TT2019 on his Superbike before pulling straight in to switch to his Superstock BMW.

However, Cummins went to the top of the leaderboard with a lap of 126.54mph, which was a tenth of a second quicker than Harrison. Hillier (124.33) and Johnson (122.59) were the quickest of the Superstock and Supersport machines but 18-time TT Race winner Dunlop was in trouble and he stopped at the Mountain Box.

IOMTT Qualifying Sunday Dean Harrison
Dean Harrison

Coward (124.82), John McGuinness (123.33) and Derek Sheils (123.10) were the other riders to lap at more than 123mph whilst Hutchinson lapped at 121.95mph as he got back on track after his spill at the 11th Milestone on Tuesday evening.

The second lap saw Cummins and Harrison set near identical times on the run to Ramsey but the Manxman edged it and with an improved speed of 128.92mph on the Milenco by Padgetts Honda, he remained at the top of the Superbike leaderboard.

Harrison (128.29), Rutter (127.55) and Coward (127.22) all upped their pace although the wind and the damp patches, combined with the lack of track time, continued to keep speeds down.

Hickman was another rider impressing on the second lap and he set the quickest Superstock lap of the session with a speed of 128.50mph.

Hillier (125.36) moved up to fifth place on the Superbike leaderboard with Gary Johnson (123.75) slotting into seventh while Davey Todd (122.94) moved up to third overall in the Superstock class. Newcomers Lucas Maurer (117.13) and Raymond Casey (113.27) also set their best laps of the week so far.

The big news of the session though came on the third lap as Hickman, still on his Superstock machine, set the fastest sector times on the run to Ramsey but just as it looked like he’d set the first 130mph lap of the week, he lost time between the Bungalow and the Grandstand and cruised across the line at 126.82mph. His Bungalow to Bungalow time was in excess of 130mph.

He remained quickest in the Superstock class ahead of new second place rider Cummins (127.17) and Gary Johnson (124.97) with Cummins (128.92) and Harrison (128.29) the two quickest riders in the Superbike category. There was a change for third though towards the end of the session as David Johnson pushed Rutter down to fourth after an impressive lap of 128.24mph on the Honda Racing machine.

Rutter, Coward and Hillier completed the top six in the Superbike class and, along with Hickman, were the only other riders above 125mph but Sam West (124.96) wasn’t far behind as McGuinness, Brian McCormack and Phil Crowe posted late laps of 124.72mph, 124.33mph and 124.31mph respectively.

Understandably, most riders focused on the big bikes but Lee Johnston (122.93) moved ahead of long time leader Johnson (122.59) as Coward (121.36) ended the session in third overall.

IOMTT Qualifying Sunday TT Zero Michael Rutter
Michael Rutter – TT Zero

Michael Rutter also took the opportunity to go out at the end of the session on his TT Zero bike and posted a strong 117mph although John McGuinness ran out of time to get out for the session.


Sidecars

After four full days of inactivity due to the weather on the Isle of Man, the second qualifying session for sidecars at the 2019 Isle of Man TT races, fuelled by Monster Energy, finally got underway on Sunday afternoon.

The mist on the Mountain cleared sufficiently for the session to take place after a delay of an hour and a half, although there were still damp patches from the earlier rain and strong winds around the course, particularly on the Mountain section.

With bright skies and sunshine at the Grandstand, the Formula Two Sidecars were first to take to the Mountain Course with Ben and Tom Birchall leading the field away, closely followed by Holden/Cain, Tim Reeves/Mark Wilkes, Pete Founds/Jevan Walmsley, Lewis Blackstock/Patrick Rosney and Dave Molyneux/Harry Payne.

IOMTT Qualifying Sunday Ben Birchall Tom
Ben and Tom Birchall

Holden/Cain were the quickest to Glen Helen, three seconds quicker than the Birchalls, but newcomers Ryan and Callum Crowe, who set a stunning 109mph lap in their opening lap on Tuesday night, stopped early at Snugborough and although they made adjustments, they were unable to continue. Two of the favourites were also in trouble with Reeves/Wilkes and Blackstock/Rosney retiring at Churchtown and Sulby Bridge respectively.

Holden/Cain continued to set the pace on the Silicone Barnes Racing Honda, overtaking the Birchalls on the road, and they were first to complete the lap with a speed of 114.99mph, which was almost identical to their lap from Tuesday evening.

The Birchalls lapped nearly twenty seconds slower at 113.19mph with Founds/Walmsley on 111.80mph. Founds/Lowther went fourth quickest with a lap of 110.49mph followed by Molyneux/Payne at 109.43mph.

Allan Schofield/Steve Thomas slotted into sixth on the leaderboard with a lap of 107.77mph with Gary Bryan/Phil Hyde and former race winners Conrad Harrison/Andy Winkle also lapping in excess of 107mph.

Second time around it was the Birchalls who were in the ascendancy and with three of the quickest sector times they increased their pace to 114.93mph. Holden/Cain were slightly slower than their opening lap with a speed of 114.30mph but Founds/Walmsley lapped quicker at 113.36mph. Harrison/Winkle (108.24) and Estelle Leblond/Franck Claeys (106.96) also upped their speeds but Molyneux’s second lap was a more sedate 104.22mph.

IOMTT Qualifying Sunday Sidecars John Holden Lee Cain
Holden/Cain

Sidecar Qualifying Results

  1. John Holden – 114.99 mph
  2. Ben Birchall – 114.93 mph
  3. Peter Founds – 113.36 mph
  4. Alan Founds – 110.55 mph
  5. Dave Molyneux – 109.43 mph
  6. Conrad Harrison – 108.24 mph
  7. Allan Schofield – 107.77 mph
  8. Gary Bryan – 107.72 mph
  9. Estelle Leblond – 106.96 mph
  10. Gary Gibson – 104.66 mph

Source: MCNews.com.au

Dean Harrison tops Tuesday TT Qualifying in SBK and STK

2019 Isle of Man TT
Tuesday Qualifying Report / Results

After rain prevented play on Monday TT competitors were raring to go on a fine Tuesday evening to further fine tune themselves and their mounts ahead of race week which kicks off this Saturday, June 1st.

Superbikes were out first and it was Dean Harrison, continuing his form from Sunday’s Supersport session, quickest on the night with a speed of 129.53mph while Conor Cummins and James Hillier also figured highly in the Superbike class.

Harrison also topped the Superstock leaderboard but it was a night that saw a number of the other front runners hit trouble including Peter Hickman, who was forced to stop twice on his Smiths Racing BMW Superbike. Hickman did though top the Supersport session after swapping to his 675cc Triumph.

TT Qualifying Tuesday Peter Hickman Supersport Triumph
Peter Hickman

16 time TT Race winner Ian Hutchinson was another rider to be experiencing problems and the Yorkshire rider came off his bike at the 11th Milestone although fortunately was reported to be unhurt.

South Australia’s David Johnson was second quickest in Superstock on Tuesday evening and seventh in Superbike.

Aussie sidecar duo Mick Alton and Steve Bonney were 18th in the sidecar session while compatriots Darryl Rayner and Wendy Campbell did not complete a full lap.

Tuesday’s sessions might prove even more important than normal as the weather forecast for the next few days on the Isle of Man is far from favourable.

TT 2019
Superbike Tuesday Qualifying Results
  1. Dean Harrison – 129.53 mph
  2. Conor Cummins – 128.09 mph
  3. James Hillier – 128.07 mph
  4. Michael Dunlop – 126.93 mph
  5. Michael Rutter – 126.48 mph
  6. Jamie Coward – 126.39 mph
  7. David Johnson – 126.19 mph
  8. Philip Crowe – 125.52 mph
  9. Ian Hutchinson – 125.39 mph
  10. Daley Mathison – 125.17 mph
  11. Stefano Bonetti – 124.49 mph
  12. Derek McGee – 124.40 mph
  13. Davey Todd – 124.29 mph
  14. Brian McCormack – 124.18 mph
  15. John McGuinness – 123.73 mph
TT 2019
Superstock Tuesday Qualifying Results
  1. Dean Harrison 129.34 mph
  2. David Johnson 126.63 mph
  3. Sam West 124.89 mph
  4. Lee Johnson 124.49 mph
  5. Michael Dunlop 124.11 mph
  6. Daley Mathison 124.09 mph
  7. Peter Hickman 123.08 mph
  8. Derek Sheils 122.78 mph
  9. Michael Rutter 122.42 mph
  10. Davey Todd 122.19 mph
  11. James Hiller 121.11 mph
  12. Horst Saiger 120.08 mph
  13. Charles Hardisty 118 mph
  14. Gary Johnson 117.96 mph
TT 2019
Supersport Tuesday Qualifying Results
  1. Peter Hickman 123.92 mph
  2. Derek McGee 122.04 mph
  3. Lee Johnson 121.38 mph
  4. John McGuinness 119.93 mph
  5. Paul Jordan 118.88 mph
  6. Dominic Herbertson 118.35 mph
  7. Mike Browne 118.29 mph
  8. Daniel Cooper 117.73 mph
  9. Barry Evans 117.71 mph
  10. James Chawke 117.58 mph
TT 2019
Sidecar Tuesday Qualifying Results
  1. John Holden 114.99 mph
  2. Peter Founds 114.40 mph
  3. Alan Founds 112.35 mph
  4. Tim Reeves 112.29 mph
  5. Lewis Blackstock 111.80 mph
  6. Ben Birchall 111.55 mpg
  7. Ryan Crowe 109.76 mph
  8. Conrad Harrison 108.95 mph
  9. Gary Bryan 108.54 mph
  10. Estelle Leblond 108.38 mph

Tuesday Qualifying Report

The island was blessed with sunshine throughout Tuesday but there were strong winds all round the 37.73-mile circuit again although riders were informed that they would reduce as the evening wore on. After a slight delay, the session got underway at 6.31pm. Harrison’s Silicone Engineering Kawasaki was at the front of the pack on the grid but lost power before he had even set off and the Bradford rider eventually got away mid-pack on his second Superbike.

Michael Rutter (Bathams Racing Honda) and James Hillier (Quattro Plant Wicked Coatings Kawasaki) were first to head down Glencruchery Road – the pair both on Superbikes – followed by Honda Racing teammates Hutchinson and David Johnson, the latter on his Superstock Fireblade.

TT Qualifying Tuesday James Hillier
James Hillier

Gary Johnson (RAF Regular & Reserve Kawasaki) and Michael Dunlop (Tyco BMW) were next to go with Hickman (Smiths Racing BMW) and Lee Johnston (Ashcourt Racing BMW) on their Superstock mounts. However, outright lap record holder Hickman was soon in trouble and, after pulling off the circuit at Quarter Bridge, he immediately returned to the pits where he went back out on his Triumph Supersport machine.

TT Qualifying Tuesday Lee Johnston
Lee Johnston

Conor Cummins was the early pace setter, posting the best sector times on the opening lap while John McGuinness stopped at Sulby to make adjustments on his opening lap. Dunlop was the first to complete a lap with 126.65mph but then came into the pits to check tyres and gearing. Hutchinson lapped at 125.39mph with Rutter at 124.22mph but Cummins went quickest on the opening lap on the Milenco by Padgetts Motorcycles Honda with a speed of 128.09mph.

TT Qualifying Tuesday Ian Hutchinson
Conor Cummins

Both Dunlop and Hutchinson pulled straight into the pits at the end of lap 1 while Derek McGee was posting the quickest Supersport lap at 122.04mph. Gary Johnson was another leading rider to have problems on the first lap with his speed of 112.55mph slightly slower than McGuinness’ lap of 113.50mph.

The second lap saw Cummins increase his pace and he looked to be on course for a 129mph+ lap before crossing the line at a leisurely 104.96mph after being black flagged out on course at Brandywell with the Honda reported to be smoking. Gary Johnson another be stopped, due to a loose camera.

TT Qualifying Tuesday Conor Cummins
Conor Cummins

Rutter and David Johnson set the pace on lap two, at 126.48mph and 126.63mph respectively, but Harrison topped that with a speed of 126.68mph on his ZX-10RR Superstock machine. Hickman put in two laps on the Supersport bike, the second of which was 123.92mph which made him the quickest 600cc machine on the night ahead of McGee.

Hickman went back out on the Superbike but again hit trouble and pulled off the course for a second time, this time at Douglas Road Corner at Kirk Michael which signalled the end of his night.

On the fourth lap, Harrison went quickest in the Superstock class with a lap of 129.34mph with Hillier the third rider to break the 128mph barrier with a speed of 128.07mph on his Superbike. McGuinness went out on the Padgetts Supersport machine before returning to the action on the Norton where he lapped at 123.73mph.

Harrison continued to make the headlines though and he put in a lap right at the end of the session to move to the top of the Superbike leaderboard with Cummins and Hillier ending the evening in second and third. Harrison remained on top of the Superstock times as well with David Johnson in second and Sam West lapping at just under 125mph to slot into third.

TT Qualifying Tuesday David Johnson
David Johnson

Strong winds were clearly keeping speeds down but there were impressive performances from Jamie Coward (126.39), Stefano Bonetti (124.48) and Brian McCormack (124.03) while Kiwi rider Jay Lawrence also again went well on the Buildbase Suzuki with a lap of 122.56mph.

There were three incidents in the Supersport class. Paul Williams came off at Governors but was reported to be unhurt while Jason Corcoran (Glen Helen) and Emmett Burke (Gooseneck) were taken to Nobles hospital with reported neck and leg injuries respectively.


TT 2019
Sidecar Qualifying

Sidecar racers got their first outing on the TT Mountain Course this year on Tuesday night after a rain interrupted schedule prevented their earlier sessions from going ahead.

The Formula Two Sidecars went out just after 2000 and there was little to choose between Ben and Tom Birchall and John Holden/Lee Cain in the early sectors on the opening lap but the latter set the best opening lap with a speed of 114.99mph.

TT Qualifying Tuesday Sidecars Holden Cain
John Holden/Lee Cain

The Birchalls slowed towards the end of the lap and finished with 111.55mph which put them fifth quickest with Pete Founds/Jevan Walmsley (112.90), Alan Founds/Jake Lowther (111.89) and Lewis Blackstock/Patrick Rosney (111.80mph) all slotting in ahead of them.

Two of the front runners had problems though with Tim Reeves/Mark Wilkes stopping to make adjustments with Dave Molyneux/Harry Payne retiring at Laurel Bank but arguably the biggest story came from newcomers Ryan and Callum Crowe, the sons of former five-time TT Race winner Nick Crowe lapping at a stunning 109.76mph on their 675cc Triumph.

Second time around and Founds/Walmsley upped their pace to 114.40mph, which was only 2.2 seconds off their best ever lap of the Mountain Course, whilst brother Alan went slightly quicker with a speed of 112.35mph. Tim Reeves and Mark Wilkes also clocked a 112+mph lap (112.291) at the end of the session on their second lap.

Estelle Leblond/Frank Claeys and Gary Bryan/Phil Hyde both lapped in excess of 108mph with the returning Allan Schofield, with Steve Thomas in the chair, also going well at 107.88mph. Maria Costello/Julie Canipa enjoyed a couple of laps with their best (99.369) just shy of the 100mph mark on Maria’s first full laps as a sidecar competitor.

Source: MCNews.com.au

Sportsnet Holidays’ Isle of Man TT Tours | 2020 packages

Sportsnet Holidays’
Official IoM TT 2020 Packages


Sportsnet Holidays’ the exclusive official travel agent of the Isle of Man TT 2020 in Australia and New Zealand have announce a range of tours and packages to next year’s edition of the world’s greatest two-wheeled event, the Isle of Man TT, are now available to book.

View Sportsnet’s range of Isle of Man TT 2020 tours and travel packages here

2020 will be the tenth year that Sportsnet has offered tours and travel packages to the TT, starting with just travelers in 2011 to almost 400 in 2019.

Sportsnet Holidays Isle of Man TT Packages
2020 Sportsnet Holidays’ Isle of Man TT Packages

The flagship offering in Sportsnet’s range of TT 2020 travel options is it’s nine night ‘Ultimate TT Experience’ escorted tour which includes just about everything you need to get you to the TT and back and have the experience of a lifetime. Included in the ‘Ultimate TT Experience’ tour are:

  • Return economy airfares to Manchester from Australia flying Emirates Airlines
  • Return economy class airfares from Manchester to the Isle of Man
  • Nine nights accommodation at the 4-star Palace Hotel Casino, Douglas including a full English breakfast daily
  • Tickets to all four Race Days and Evening Practice
  • Return hotel-to-viewing point coach transfers for each race day and evening practice
  • Plus much more!
Sportsnet Holidays Isle of Man TT Packages
2020 Sportsnet Holidays’ Isle of Man TT Packages

Sportsnet Holidays’
Exclusive Experiences and Inclusions

Coach tour of the TT course with live commentary from a current or former TT rider on board. Past riders have included Aussies Cam Donald and David ‘Davo’ Johnson.

Evening Practice in the official TT VIP suite including buffet dinner and drinks and special guest speakers.

Sportsnet Holidays Isle of Man TT Packages
2020 Sportsnet Holidays’ Isle of Man TT Packages

A day of hospitality, including food and drinks throughout the day, in the iconic Creg Ny Baa pub on Race Day 1. This includes the ability to watch the race from the pub’s balcony one of the best vantage points of the entire TT course.

Entry to Sportsnet’s TT Riders Panel Dinner function including dinner, drinks and a live panel of current and former TT riders. Past guests have included: John McGuinness, Ian Hutchinson, Bruce Anstey, James Hillier and Australia’s own David ‘Davo’ Johnson.

Sportsnet Holidays Isle of Man TT Packages
2020 Sportsnet Holidays’ Isle of Man TT Packages offer the opportunity to see IoM TT legends up close

A day of hospitality at Bushy’s TT Village on Mad Sunday including ‘firebowl’ BBQ grill and two drinks vouchers, plus a farewell drinks party at the Palace Hotel Casino with current and former riders in attendance.

A high quality, limited edition soft shell jacket featuring the Isle of Man TT and Sportsnet Holidays logos.

Sportsnet Holidays Isle of Man TT Packages
2020 Sportsnet Holidays’ Isle of Man TT Packages are now available

Also available is a five night ‘Best of TT’ escorted tour which includes many of the inclusions listed above, however only tickets and experiences on the first four days (which are Race Days 1 & 2) of the event are included. This tour is perfect for those that want a unique experience of the TT, but don’t have the space on their itinerary for all four race days – or the patience of a significant other that may not be as appreciative of the TT!

Lastly, for those that are looking to go to the TT but would like the freedom and flexibility of being able to do whatever they like after the day’s racing and in-between race days, Sportsnet also offers five and four night un-escorted package deals.

Sportsnet Holidays Isle of Man TT Packages
2020 Sportsnet Holidays’ Isle of Man TT Packages

Sportsnet Holidays’
IoM TT 2020 tours and travel packages

Source: MCNews.com.au