Tag Archives: racing

Motorcycle Racing A Second At A Time

One second is a lifetime on a racetrack. At the highest levels of international roadracing, that critical measurement can mean more than a change in finishing order; it’s the difference between a factory ride and unemployment, a bright future and early retirement. At the season-opening Qatar Grand Prix at the Losail International Circuit, a second was the difference between the sweet taste of victory and an also-ran.

Suzuki factory rider Álex Rins needed 24 months of intense bike development to lap the 16-turn, 3.34-mile circuit a full second faster—1:55.069 versus 1:56.157—than Maverick Viñales did on his way to the race win in 2017, the first year of the current Michelin spec tires. And even then, despite leading three laps, Rins only finished fourth in this year’s grand prix. One spectacular lap in the middle of a 22-lap race holds only so much value.

MotoGP is a game of strategy: Ride as fast as possible without scorching your tires. Times in the early to middle stages of the race often vary by as much as a second from the outright best lap, sometimes more. At Qatar, the leading pack dropped the hammer during the final quarter of the race, freeing itself from the rest of the field when it mattered most. After 42 minutes of racing, 0.6 second—the tiniest fraction of the overall race time—separated the top five.

One Mississippi—147 feet at 100 mph. “I tried to be there,” second-place finisher Marc Márquez said after the race, “to push a little, and just be there until the end.” Exactly.

Source: MotorCyclistOnline.com

Triumph’s Scrambler 1200 XE Takes On NORRA’s Mexican 1000

When we heard Ernie Vigil was going to compete in the 2019 NORRA Mexican 1000 rally we were not surprised. The Triumph factory frontman has been blowing people’s minds with his riding exploits aboard these British-born beasts for more than a decade. Obviously, there is a big difference between riding wheelies and drifting on a turbocharged Daytona and racing in Baja aboard a relatively stock Scrambler 1200 XE, but that’s exactly what he did.

The coolest part of the effort is that he competed under the number 278, which was a shout-out to Steve McQueen who rode a Triumph Scrambler with that same number during the 1964 ISDT. Honoring the man who helped make Triumph a household name was a nice touch to a truly ambitious endeavor. Oh, and did we mention he finished fifth in the Modern Open Class as well?

Not only did Vigil finish the five-day, 1,347-mile competition in 25 hours and 37 minutes, but he did the deed without any major mechanical problems to speak of besides a blown-out bib mousse. Basically, he got a flat tire that held him up for a few hours.

“We made it. It was a super-long week at the NORRA Mexican Rally,” Vigil said in the postrace press release. “I couldn’t ask for a better result, and on a stock bike. It was a super-rad week ripping in the desert with a bunch of dirt bikes. We had zero issues, she ran like a dream. Two of the longest days were in some really technical, rocky sections; you really have to stay focused and pick your lines without slowing down too much. But when we hit the open desert I could really let the bike eat; she was a rocket and took everything we threw at her. I’m very sad it’s all over, but I’m hoping we can get to the Baja 1000 later this year to run her in the Ironman Class. We not only proved the Scrambler 1200 XE could finish this rally, but be competitive.”

Just how stock was his Scrambler? According to Triumph, the suspension components were completely stock. The team did completely remove the ABS and TC equipment and installed a skid plate to protect the sump, but other than that, the only changes were softer grips and a set of Metzeler tires. They used an MC360 on the front and a Karoo 3 out back.

The objective of this adventure was to show the durability and potential of the Scrambler to the modern consumer and now that the dust has settled, we have to give them credit for kicking butt and ticking another item off of Vigil’s bucket list.

Source: MotorCyclistOnline.com

AMA Motorcycle Hall Of Famer Gene Romero Passes At Age 71

Gene Romero died Sunday at the age of 71. He is survived by his wife Cheri and his son Geno.

Romero was one of the most well-known American motorcycle racers during the golden era of racing in the 1960s and ’70s. He developed his racing chops on dirt track and in hare scrambles in California, leading to his later becoming a TT master in the early part of his career in the AMA Grand National Championship.

His first pro race win was on the Castle Rock TT course in Washington state in 1966, and two years later he was able to get a National win in Nebraska. In 1970 he took the GNC title aboard a Triumph.

Romero scored a monumental win in 1975 at the Daytona 200. That year he managed to hold fourth place for the first half of the race, then started making his moves past legendary riders Giacomo Agostini and Steve Baker. He grabbed hold of the lead when Steve McLaughlin crashed and never looked back. Romero started the 200 14 times in his 16-year racing career and 1975 marks his one and only win.

Romero is also credited with being one of the first riders to bring in sponsorship from entities outside the motorcycle industry, a practice that is common in every top-level racing series to this day.

His motorcycle racing career ended in 1981 and he moved on briefly to race cars. But he then came back to bikes to manage Honda’s GNC dirt track program from ’82 to ’85.

We offer our condolences to Romero’s family and friends during this difficult time.

Source: MotorCyclistOnline.com

How Chad Reed’s 2004 Supercross Fuel Penalty Lingered For Years

“Until they admit what their problem was, I can just tell you that they were out of specification on the AMA fuel regulation that’s described in the rulebook.”

Steve Whitelock, 2004 AMA Pro Racing Supercross and motocross race director

“I’m going over there so they can tell me what the f—k they did!” exclaimed an exasperated Steve Whitelock, AMA Pro Racing’s Supercross and motocross race director, as he stormed out of the AMA truck on the morning of April 24, 2004, and headed out into the pits outside Salt Lake City’s Rice-Eccles Stadium.

It was clear at the outset that Whitelock believed Team Yamaha was cheating.

Team Yamaha’s Chad Reed led Factory Connection Honda’s Kevin Windham by 40 points as the 2004 THQ/AMA Supercross Series headed into the final two rounds. That meant all Reed needed was to finish 11th or better at the penultimate round to clinch his first-ever premier-class Supercross title. Considering he finished worse than second place just once in the preceding 14 races and had won 10 of those 14, these were fantastic odds. His family flew in from Australia for the occasion.

But trouble was brewing. AMA Pro Racing had issued a press release the Friday evening prior to the Salt Lake round stating that, at the previous round in Irving, Texas, the sanctioning body had gathered fuel samples for testing, and found Reed and his teammate David Vuillemin, along with Yamaha privateer Tyson Hadsell, were all using fuel that “was found to be in noncompliance” with the fuel regulations adopted prior to the 2004 season.

When asked exactly what the problem was with Yamaha’s fuel, Whitelock at the time said, “Until they admit what their problem was, I can just tell you that they were out of specification on the AMA fuel regulation that’s described in the rulebook.”

Lead is a very useful ingredient in race fuel as an octane booster. Octane determines fuel volatility; the higher the octane number, the more difficult the fuel is to ignite. If the fuel is too volatile for a given compression ratio, it will ignite due to compression before the piston reaches the top of its stroke and the spark plug fires. This is known as detonation, and the downward force of the explosion against the upward momentum of the piston will kill an internal-combustion engine. Quickly. Leaded fuel also helps the oil-gas mix in a two-stroke engine keep the top end well-lubricated. Prior to the rule change for the 2004 season, everybody racing a two-stroke at a professional level was using leaded fuel.

Higher compression means more horsepower, so when Whitelock found Yamaha’s race fuel tested at more than three times the legal limit for lead, the AMA took it seriously. Three times the limit seems like a large disparity, after all. Imagine racing with a 750cc engine in the 250cc class. Clearly, perspective is required.

“In the big scheme of things, I really, truly don’t believe that anyone was cheating. Obviously now we don’t even test fuel at all. I think that we’ve come full circle to the point where now it’s a flawed test, it’s too inconsistent, the variation is too big. So, unfortunately, it really was an upturning weekend, you know? I had flown my parents into town, and for me it was like all your dreams coming true. Your whole life you wanted to be a Supercross champion. I think I had a 35-, maybe 37-point lead. Suddenly that shrinks down to 12 points or something. I had to ride a lot more defensively those last two races. I’d won a lot of races that year, and I think I probably would’ve won the last two, but I couldn’t push it. Instead of 44 [career wins], I might have 46 right now.”

Chad Reed, 2019 Supercross and Motocross Champion

Steve Bruhn—an aerospace-engineer-turned-photojournalist who, after his years following the Supercross and motocross circuit, went on to work at NASA until his untimely passing a few years ago—got ahold of the official numbers from the AMA at the time. He had a way of putting things in simple terms: “The legal limit for lead is 0.005 grams per liter, and Yamaha’s fuel tested at 0.017 to 0.018 grams per liter,” Bruhn said at the time. “Three times a tiny number is still a tiny number.”

The AMA’s response? You can’t be just a little bit pregnant.

With years of hindsight, the numbers seem puritanical. The EPA limit for lead in fuel is 0.05 grams per gallon—that’s 0.189 grams per liter—which calculates to almost 38 times the limit set by the AMA back in 2004. But the penalty for breaking these technical rules was to be determined “at the discretion of the race director.” In this case, that was Steve Whitelock, who had already made his feelings known as he stomped off toward the Yamaha truck. And once a penalty was issued for a particular violation, that set the precedent for future, similar violations.

Before the racers took to the track in Utah, Chad Reed, David Vuillemin, and Tyson Hadsell were all docked 25 points—equivalent to one race victory.

Whitelock explained how he came up with the 25-point penalty at the time: “The rulebook gives us a menu of penalties. We can disqualify, we can take points, we can fine, we can suspend—I mean, we can do all kinds of things. So Vuillemin, who earned 18 points in the race at Dallas, lost 25 points. Reed, who happened to win in Dallas, lost 25 points. But the race that the people saw, the winner that they saw on the podium, and the prize they saw him with on the podium, and the prize money, if we would’ve disqualified him, all that would’ve become a ghost. We can’t do that to the people that watched the motorcycle race, so we decided the points is the best way.”

Yamaha quickly appealed the decision. Although it was unlikely to change anything in terms of the championship (with Reed still likely to win and Vuillemin safely in fourth place in points), when a race team is found to be in noncompliance with race regulations, it can be very bad for marketing. It could make Yamaha look like it was only winning because it was cheating.

Whitelock predicted the appeal would fail at the time: “This is black and white. There’s a value, they’re over the value—gee whiz. There’s a problem here. It’s not like ‘I think it’s dirty riding.’ It’s just like if you do a pee-pee test.”

“It’s hard to tell who is trying to bend the rules and who just made a mistake. As an official, you have to make a call on the rule. A disqualification is a lot worse than just taking points, because it’s a smaller penalty for those who scored fewer points, and because it throws everything off as far as the show is concerned. People went to the races and they saw a person win, and then now that person didn’t win, and it’s confusing. If you take points, they keep the win, the trophy, the bonus money, but they lose points. I think that’s the best way to do it.”

Steve Whitelock, 2018

Six days later, the AMA sent out a press release denying the appeal. “The appeals submitted by the riders never refute AMA Pro Racing’s finding that fuel tested after the Texas Supercross was found to be in noncompliance,” said the AMA’s director of competition, Merrill Vanderslice, in the release. “Instead, the appeals attempt to cast doubt on the testing methodology, the validity of the AMA Supercross fuel requirements, whether or not their fuel impacted performance, and the appropriateness of the penalty. Based on the language in the AMA Supercross Rulebook, none of this is appealable.”

Yamaha also requested to have its tested fuel samples returned so that it could conduct its own tests. The AMA refused.

With such a harsh precedent now set, it should have been a wake-up call when Kawasaki teammates James Stewart and Michael Byrne had their two-stroke race fuel drawn at the Budds Creek MX National a little over a year later in 2005, and they were both found to be similarly in noncompliance. After the Reed fiasco, logically, why would Kawasaki risk “cheating” just like Yamaha did, after all? But they were both docked 25 points for the infraction, and the AMA was just as responsive to their appeals. Whitelock and company just dug in their heels.

Life comes at you fast, though. Less than a year later, with everyone now racing four-strokes, defending AMA Supercross champ Ricky Carmichael’s fuel was found to be in similar noncompliance after the San Diego Supercross. Although four-strokes benefit much less from lead in their fuel, Carmichael was still initially docked 25 points. He responded with threats to boycott the rest of the series, which threatened attendance numbers, which threatened income for race promoter Live Nation (now Feld Motorsports). But Live Nation had an ace up its sleeve in the form of its agreement with the FIM—the worldwide sanctioning body under whose umbrella the AMA falls—and the FIM agreed to step in and take a look at the ruling.

A little over a week later, the 25-point penalty was rescinded, citing a “disparity in testing protocols” between the identical FIM and AMA fuel specifications, and Carmichael’s Suzuki race team was instead fined $20,000. Carmichael went on to win that championship by two points over Stewart and Reed, who both ended the championship with 336 points to Carmichael’s 338.

There have been myriad theories about how and why these fuels tested too high for lead—contamination from the lead solder on the gas cans, residual lead in the pump lines, and even poor material handling at the testing facility—but the AMA did eventually switch testing companies with prejudice, and the current fuel rule sets the legal limit for lead at 0.025 grams per liter.

In the end, though, the hows and whys of the fuel testing out of spec don’t really matter. Anything decided by “the discretion of the race manager” falls at the feet of the person drawing that paycheck.

Source: MotorCyclistOnline.com

Do You Want to Buy a Racing Watch?

(Sponsored post)

Watches will always remain tied to the automotive sports world. Often, we remain attracted to watches or other timekeeping devices and the roles that they play on track too. 

If you are interested in any racing watch like a chronograph watch, then read this post.

Characteristics of a racing watch

The following are a few features which separate certain racing watches from any other sports watches:

  • Basic three or two register chronograph function
  • The high-contrast dial which is easily read at a much higher speed
  • For speed calculations, the tachymeter bezel scale 
  • The orientation of the angled case which allows one to read the time without taking your hand off the steering wheel
  • Rubber straps or rally-style leather straps, both of which are comfortable and breathable to wear

Many racing watches may integrate characteristics, e.g. racing stripes, bright colors, or even recycled components of motorbikes and cars, which most people might find a little overwhelming. 

Therefore, consider your wearing preference, style and professional track needs before selecting one.

For the purist

If you are looking for something pure and understated, then consider:

  • A basic 2-register chronograph setup
  • No extra timing scales and any no-nonsense dial layout 
  • A classically-sized case which is bold enough for your modern standards
  • Any “high-speed” visuals which may work in both formal and casual settings
  • With various kinds of straps available, the case design must work for you
  • A low-maintenance movement which can handle anything

For the weekend track warrior

In case you are searching for something more functional while you are out on your track, then legibility is the key. Your watch should not only offer a true and in-the-field purpose but must also serve as a stylish piece that you can easily wear for most of the occasions. 

Try to look for the following:

  • Black and white, high-contrast color scheme
  • Full tachymeter scale
  • More ease of use when you drive select chrono pusher positioning or an alternate case 
  • A contoured or slim case design for all-day comfort  
  • Alternate material integration for light weight as well as increased durability

For 24-hours Daytona winner

It is crucial that you use the kind of watch that can tell you and the world where you have been and how quickly you are moving. If racing is in your blood, then you might even prefer Ted Gushue, who has made it right from the hospital to the crib. You should consider the following:

  • Precious metal or two-tone case construction
  • Truly in-house movement architecture 
  • Metal bracelets instead of rubber or leather
  • Oyster-style case meant for its increased water resistance
  • 3-register chronograph configuration

Your racing or any racing-inspired watch may serve as a great everyday watch. No doubt, you might not easily find your speed through your victory laps or time your work and commute with tachymeter. However, you may appreciate all these watches nonetheless. They will serve as a great addition to any collection and you can never go wrong with all the options listed above.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

The History Of Motorcycle Racing Knee Sliders

Roadracers have been scraping tarmac with their knees since the 1970s. American racing legend Kenny Roberts Sr. popularized a new style of riding introduced by Finnish rider Jarno Saarinen, which saw riders lowering their body position and regularly skimming their knees on the ground—on purpose. The result? Faster lap times, bloody limbs, and torn leathers.

In those days, most riders layered the knees of their suits with duct tape, adding extra protection and helping their knees glide along the asphalt. Others were more creative, carefully dissecting plastic milk cartons. It wasn’t until the ’80s that leather manufacturers adopted dedicated knee sliders mounted to the suit via Velcro, like the ones we still see today. Some wood, others leather, and most plastic, these were the first means of purpose-built pucks, and the end of non-incidental road rash.

Steeper lean angles and evolution in riding technique have since added purpose to the role of knee sliders, with racers using the pucks as a feeler gauge on the track. Touching sliders to the asphalt comes with a boost of confidence, providing riders exactness in their perception of lean angles, especially on a wet racetrack. Like tires, knee pucks require a break-in process before they’re optimal. The asphalt carves into the slider, precisely matching the rider’s angle of attack, perfecting the feel as they drag their bodies through corners.

Sliders can also prove vital in saving racers from hitting the deck. Ask MotoGP rider Marc Marquez—a man known for saving crashes on his knee. The seven-time world champion chews through tens of Alpinestars proprietary plastic sliders each year, replacing them nearly every time he exits the pit lane. Imagine how his knees would look in the ­duct-tape days.

Source: MotorCyclistOnline.com

Interview With Joe Roberts—The Sole American Rider In MotoGP In 2019

Joe Roberts was one to watch in American motorcycle racing when he was coming up the ranks. He took wins in AMA Pro, won the MotoAmerica Superstock 600 championship in 2015, and in 2017 proved strong in the FIM CEV Repsol Moto2 class. He was young, he was clearly talented, and he was hungry. That combination got Roberts a chance to dip his toes in MotoGP’s Moto2 class in 2017, where he contested five races and then moved into the series full time in 2018. This year he’s back again with American Racing KTM and he’s still working hard to find his feet. It’s been a big jump to the world stage, and Roberts is not shy to admit it has been an adjustment.

“It’s pretty intense, man,” Roberts said of racing in Moto2. “You show up to a weekend… These guys are generally not far off the lap record within the first session, so it’s something mentally you have to wrap your head around when you show up to a track. Something I do when I come out here to the supermoto track is just try to set my absolute best time in the first outing to kind of train your brain to really just be firing right away. So it’s stuff like that that I think coming from the national level where things are a little bit more relaxed I would say, you kind of have to think about that.”

Roberts used to prefer to take the first session to do some mental preparation with the bike, the track, to make a plan of attack. But he’s working to push past old habits like that.

“Visualizing the track and just understanding,” Roberts explains of his approach now. “I do a lot of watching the races before I show up. The next track is Jerez, so I’ll start to study all the previous years, different lines, different braking markers, things like that. You can spot a lot on those cameras. Also now MotoGP they do the onboard cameras too. You can just select that. So I do a lot of that stuff. That helps me out as soon as you get on the track. Obviously you still need a few laps to kind of put everything together, but that’s improved my process a lot more.”
The difficulty is compounded by a brand-new bike in Moto2 this year as well.

“I think there’s some things they still need to figure out with the electronics,” Roberts said of the new Triumph platform. “Just little stuff. Like in Austin where I put the first gear, the thing pops into neutral. So sometimes stuff like that can come up.

“But it’s a new class. They’re working the kinks out. That was something we were struggling with a little bit the last race. But it’s a new class. I like the bike. I’m a heavier guy so if I have more power, it helps.”

Plus getting the settings dialed is a whole other matter, adjusting the torque management system (not traction control) that, according to Roberts, essentially makes the throttle softer. Engine-braking settings and other maps all need to be refined.

In addition to all the technical concerns, there’s also the mental game and team dynamic to consider.

“I think mentally we’re already there. I came into this year very positive and strong that I could be at the front. Honestly right now what we’re running into a bit is just some things like within the team where it’s a new team and sometimes the communication, it takes a few races to get everything dialed in, for everyone to kind of find the rhythm. The team is really strong. I think there are a lot of good, positive things. We just need to put everything together. But I’m really positive we’ll be there. In A lot of races we’re only like a second off, but in this field it’s like 25th place. It’s kind of interesting to think about it that way because you also can see we’re only one second, so you improve a half a second that’s really nothing and you’re right up in the front. We’ll be there.”

Roberts is fully committed to reaching his goals of consistent top-10 placements by the end of the year. He’s now based in Barcelona and supplementing his physical training regime with plenty of supermoto. He’s working to pick up Spanish too.

Spain has been a hotbed of amazing talent in recent years, so it doesn’t hurt to be fully enmeshed in a culture so supportive of motorcycling.

“These Europeans, they grow up racing each other from when they’re like 10 years old. I witnessed it when I went to race in the European championship. I could just see these little kids. They were like 10 years old but in professional, full-on same structure that I’m racing in as a professional team. They’re just kind of groomed to be these amazing riders. Not everybody is. It’s not like, ‘I’m Spanish. I’m an amazing rider just naturally.’ There’s a lot that aren’t. But I think people here in the US could be like that if they had the same kind of opportunities. I think you could have these amazing riders. It’s just to me with the opportunities they get as a young kid.

“Actually I think they get a lot of help from the local governments as well. I think a lot of the families aren’t really that well-off. In Valencia, I know a lot of top riders from Valencia are sponsored by the government, so it’s pretty crazy. I was thinking about hitting up the Glendale government, the city or something, and seeing what happens. They’d probably just tell me to piss off.”

Which is a shame, because American riders need a more effective way to prepare themselves to be competitive on the world stage. For now, Roberts really only sees a viable path similar to the one he took.

“I can only really look at what I did. I went to [Red Bull MotoGP] Rookies Cup. That was a big eye-opener for me and taught me a lot of things about the way things are structure-wise and how fast they are, those Europeans. When I came back to America it wasn’t like I was here to stay. It’s not easy to go over to Europe. There’s so many fast riders. Obviously I think MotoGP wants Americans, but it’s not cheap either. It’s a long way to go. That’s maybe the things they’re running into. As far as [Cameron] Beaubier and guys riding in MotoAmerica, some of them got some good deals going on with some factory teams, getting paid well. So maybe they don’t feel the need to risk it all. I can respect that. That’s not really something I’m looking for.”

Source: MotorCyclistOnline.com

Riding The 2018 Great Mile Rally

The thing about the Great Mile rally is that, to participate, your bike must be the definition of inappropriate. The ride runs 1,250 miles, from the northernmost point in the British Isles to the most southerly, which means a great many machines meet that definition. So, it was classic Hondas, Moto Guzzis, BMWs, and even a 1957 Triumph Thunderbird that waited to disembark from the Castle of Mey, a 15th-century tower house on the teetering edge of Scotland. Who would be barmy enough to ride an average of 250 miles a day for five days straight in all manner of British weather? This year, it was 50 riders, all with origins as varied as their motorcycles.

Teams hailed from France, the Netherlands, Spain, Germany, and of course, the U.K. In that crowd, my BMW R nineT seemed out of place. As much as I wanted the experience of riding across my home country on an old bike, I was lugging a camera and wanted to get the shot all the more. At 6:30 a.m. on the first full morning of riding, a hot cooked breakfast greeted us, consumed as riders gathered their belongings and wrote out their routes, sticking them to their tanks. With logbooks stamped and a flamboyant billow of the Malle flag, the Great Mile began. Team by team embarked on their journey, only to be stopped at the end of the drive by a herd of cattle crossing the road.

The convoy to Dunnet Head Lighthouse was a sight, a trail of wheels and lights rolling across the moorland. Looking out to the sea, waves battered the stubborn rocks below. It would be five days before we saw anything like it again. Organizers made certain that riders didn’t have to worry with logistics. In addition to hot meals, our equipment was transported from camp to camp each night. Having the luxury of riding free of your gear and to arrive at a camp spot each night with your tent already up with a hot meal and cold beer waiting for you is one that can’t be matched. That’s not to say it was all luxury. Everyone underestimated the chill of the Scottish nights, even in July, and a shower was provided at just a couple of locations. Thankfully, there’s no rule saying you have to smell good to have an amazing time.

It’s one thing to travel from point A to point B by the easiest route possible, but it’s another to do so by way of the most breathtaking landscapes Britain has to offer. When the sun breaks in Scotland, for example, the vibrant contrast of colors is spectacular. Lochs glitter blues and silvers; green landscapes turn harshly dark at the edge of a cloud shadow. It’s a country full of surprises; you summit a hill, and whole valleys open up before you, beckoning you to travel the miles of zigzags you now see at your feet.


RELATED: Motorcycle Riding in England and the UK Tips


We rode past lonesome cottages—the kind you imagine running away to when life gets too much—boats that gently rocked a little out from the shore, and churches whose Holy Communion must consist only of three local families. White-sand beaches with crystal-clear waters looking like they belong to the Bahamas enticed us to swim as the riders felt the sun’s sweltering heat in their leathers. Our minds would have changed as soon as we dipped a single toe into the North Atlantic.

One of the finest stretches of road in Scotland’s wide portfolio is Applecross Pass. It’s engulfed by thick cloud most of the year, but as we rode through, the weather gods blessed us and we had a clear view as far as the eye could see. Harsh mountains wall the pass, and our riders gingerly made their way down the 20-percent grade. In the wet, this road is lethal. But even with the underlying caution, it’s a road that one could simply ride up and down all day, purely for the fun. It’s a grown-up version of a child’s slide­—except you wouldn’t want to go down sliding on your arse.

We rolled through the Lake District on the third day. After the jagged, raw landscape of the Scottish Highlands, the softness of the lakes was a shock. Riding past swelling and sinking hills, the landscape breathes. That’s not to say the roads are any less exciting to ride. Just one look at Hardknott Pass will make your knees quiver against your tank. It’s tied first place as the steepest road in England, at a 33-percent grade, and I was grateful to have not read about the road before arriving at the foot of it. Isn’t it funny how one only remembers the immense power of gravity once on the edge of a guardless single-track mountain pass on a motorbike facing car traffic from the opposite direction?


RELATED: Riding The Mach Loop On A Triumph Speed Triple RS And A Thruxton R


Teams on the rally can be as few as two, but many join solo and are matched up with other like-biked teams. The sense of care and community was apparent from the word go. If a rider had mechanical difficulties, which was common, other riders swarmed to their aid with tools, spares, and advice. When riding, teams would often amalgamate for long stints, keeping an eye out on the more delicate machines.

Over the last couple of days, the weather worsened dramatically, leading to problems for some of the rally’s more fragile bikes. While riding through Dartmoor, we noticed one of my favorite rides on the rally stopped on the side of the road, alone. The rain and spray had played havoc on the gorgeous custom Honda 750’s electrics, and the owner had to keep stopping to dry them out. We all sat together with a cup of tea before spending the rest of the day taking it slower together, making sure he wasn’t left on his own and that he got to camp safely.

But despite the slow going, the last five miles of the trip were electric. You could feel the eagerness running through everyone. Eagerness not to finish and be done with the trip, but to have successfully completed an epic journey across Britain. Cars began to dwindle as we rode, and then it appeared suddenly as we crested a hill on a final, narrow lane: the sea.

The moment we dismounted, all previous squabbles about getting lost or riding too fast or too slow were forgotten. We flung our arms around anyone and everyone with cheers of euphoria at the realization that we had made it. None of us cared that we were all dripping with rain, the skin of our hands stained by our gloves. Or that we’d not showered in three days, or that we felt like we needed to sleep for a week. Together, we’d completed the 2018 Great Mile.

Sitting in the local pub afterward, happily sipping a beer and drying out, the reality of completing the rally began to sink in. As tough as the past few days had been, most of us agreed that we could carry on for another week. It happens that way, sometimes, after a long ride. Places that seemed so far out of reach now appear just over the horizon. What if we extended the trip to the south of France, or Spain, or through the French Alps and beyond? What if we kept riding? More than anything, that’s the mark of a good trip: it does not quench your spark for travel but ignites it, opening you wide to the world’s possibilities.

Source: MotorCyclistOnline.com

Talking With Richard Molnar About Building The World’s Most Advanced Norton Manx

Richard Molnar is a familiar figure in the vintage racing scene, and his name has become synonymous with the Norton Manx since he acquired manufacturing rights in the early ’90s, along with the original jigs, fixtures, and drawings. Molnar Precision Limited, which Richard operates with son Andy, has developed the Manx further than its mid-century designers could have ever properly conceived. The team’s four-valve Manx produces 70 hp at 9,500 rpm at the rear wheel and weighs a scant 275 pounds wet, proving the past is most respected when it isn’t left to gather dust.

The Lancashire, England-based outfit built the first four-valve Manx for the Classic TT after the event was reimagined in 2013. Molnar knew it was the right time to return to the island after an 11-year absence, following the team’s 500cc victory with roads ace Richard “Milky” Quayle.

“With the twin-cylinder Paton machine reigning supreme for the past few years,” Richard Molnar relates, “we had to develop the Manx to compete. The obvious way to do that was to build a four-valve engine. We called it the Manx Evolution. Evo for short. We believe that this is the exact route Norton would have taken had it been able to continue to develop the engine.”

It’s not just the engine that’s been improved. Using the 1961-spec drawings and modern manufacturing techniques, Molnar can build featherbed frames with a faithful purity unknown since their inchoate form materialized in their designers’ minds.

“No Featherbed frame has been exactly to the original drawing,” Molnar says. “Originally, the technology didn’t exist to bend tubes that accurately—nor the machinery to manufacture jigs to assemble them accurately. And since then, frames have been produced to ‘best-fit.’ We’ve used high-tech 3-D CAD, tube bending, and lasering to ensure our featherbed chassis are exactly as the designers intended. They are noticeably better than anything manufactured before.”

Molnar says a properly fettled Manx can lap a race circuit as quickly as a modern race bike of similar capacity and output. Andy Molnar adds: “Both Dan Cooper and Michael Dunlop have done 108 mph laps [around the Snaefell Mountain course] on the Evo.”

Vintage racing is about winning. That means the quest for speed is contingent on a dedication to innovate—just as it is with modern machines. It’s gloriously paradoxical and unquestionably romantic. It’s an admirable fixation. But for the Molnar’s, it’s about more than just chasing lap times.

It’s about preserving history and respecting racing origins—not by enshrining the bikes in hands-off museums or private collections—by keeping them in their natural habitat: the racetrack.

“We believe it would be a crime for these fantastic machines to not be out there racing anymore,” Richard insists. “If we provide the parts, people can race them to their full potential without the worry of crashing or blowing up. We ensure this racing machine can stay racing as it was intended until the end of days. That means a lot to the people who watched them back in the day and grew up with these bikes. And it allows the younger generation to see these amazing machines in action.”

One thing’s for sure: The only dust the four-valve Molnar Manx will gather is from getting down and dirty at the track.

Source: MotorCyclistOnline.com

Japan’s Version Of Motorcycle Speedway Racing: Auto Race

Stands are flooded with onlookers peering over an asphalt circuit, the crowd full of bidders anxiously filling out their betting cards. There’s music, and as it grows faster, gates in the center of the track lift to reveal eight motorcycles rolling into formation. This is Japanese Auto Race.

Source: MotorCyclistOnline.com