As a lead machinist at Dale Earnhardt Incorporated
in Mooresville, North Carolina, Rich Yancy spends his days making the
famous Budweiser Number Eight go very fast. Having personally raced
everything from RZ350s to GSXR-1100s, with a track-prepped R1 in the
garage for weekend fun, Rich decided in 2001 he wanted to build a
genuine 200 MPH street bike.

So he ordered up a Mr. Turbo kit for his stock 'Busa and started the
journey that has seen him push the frontier of motorcycle speed ever
outward, constantly traveling in uncharted territory. No one has ever
gone this fast on a stock wheel-based machine. At least not before Rich
and a few friends got to thinking...
The Record
On October 30, 2005, Rich Yancy's Suzuki Hayabusa tripped the timing
lights on the monster mile in Maxton, North Carolina at 260.28863 MPH to
become the fastest open-wheel motorcycle in history. Producing over 475
horsepower from the Mr. Turbo-assisted power plant at the rear wheel,
the scariest part of the equation is that the bike runs a stock
wheelbase, and is totally street legal.

A fact I can attest to, having ridden the insane red beast on the quiet rural country roads outside Charlotte, North Carolina.
With the turbo in place, Rich traveled to Maxton for an East Coast Timing Association event in late 2001.
With the bike producing 270 horsepower he came home with a recorded top speed of 178 MPH.
At the same event, land speed racing guru Scott Guthrie easily topped
200 MPH on the machine, which proved the bike's potential to Rich. He
was hooked.
Joining the exclusive 200 MPH club in the spring of '02, Rich finished the year with an outright top speed of 211 MPH.
During the following winter, the bike was torn down and the engine
was rebuilt with the help of Charlotte performance mastermind and racer
Lee Shierts. By the beginning of the '03 season the crazy-fast bird of
prey was making 360 rear-wheel horsepower with 12 pounds of boost on the
dial. With these latest tuning enhancements Rich obtained a 224 MPH
run, but he also picked up an alarming weave. With no desire to add
extended swing arms, air shifters and the like, Rich thought that he
might have found the bike's limits. Wrong!
Jumping on the bike, Top Fuel Drag racer Wayne Pollack immediately
clicked off a 227 MPH pass, in spite of scaring the living shiznit out
of himself as the bike sawed its way through the timing lights. Back in
the pit, street tires were fitted, and set to road riding pressure as
Wayne deduced the slicks weren't getting up to temperature in just a
mile. He was right. Back on the monster mile he nailed a 236.7 MPH run,
and a few weeks later 242 MPH.
With the boost turned up to 18.5 pounds, the bike was thumping over
420 horsepower to the floor, and Rich put in yet another call to Lee
Shierts. As fast as Pollack was, he is a pretty big guy and was impeding
the 'Busa's potential. Weighing well under 140 pounds soaking wet, the
diminutive Shierts is a former professional road racer, and positively
knows no fear.
Lining up at the Maxton mile in October of '03 he rode the bike to a
mind-blowing 250.00694 MPH. Setting the Internet ablaze and appearing on
the cover of America's largest motorcycle publications, Rich Yancy's
'Busa had pushed its own record to an even higher level.

That could have been the end of the story, but Lee and Rich decided
the bike still had more potential. Over the next season, Lee and Scott
Guthrie started edging toward the 260 MPH mark, ending '04 with a
staggering top speed of 256.410 MPH and a personal best for Rich of 244
MPH.
The bike was now producing an incredible 455 horsepower at the rear
wheel, and over the winter it underwent a thorough rebuild in
preparation for the 2005 season, as Yancy wanted more.
Exactly one year to the day of his 256 MPH run, Lee Shierts lined up
on the old WWII runway in Maxton, NC once more, with the empty strip of
badly-broken tarmac in front of him. Surrounded by waist-high weeds and
the carcasses of old passenger planes, it is a lonesome place at best.
But Lee wasn't paying any attention to the surroundings. With exactly
one mile to get up to speed, he wasted no time dropping the hammer and
spinning the rear tire, riding the first half-mile with the front wheel
in the air.
Way down at the timing marks the silence was almost eerie. The high
temperatures and near 100% humidity were oppressive, and in the distance
the old planes shimmered in the heat haze.
It started as a low whistle, building to a sound similar to a rain
suit flapping in the wind before invading the air with the roar of a
muted jet plane. Traveling 35 MPH faster than a Concorde at liftoff, Lee
was through the timing lights before the sound arrived, fighting to get
the two-wheeled bullet slowed before he ran out of stopping room.
He had topped out at precisely 260.28863 MPH, lived to tell the tale and set a record that could stand for a very long time.
t was without doubt an incredible moment, and one that might not be
beaten for a long time to come. Inspecting the bike after the record
run, Rich noticed a large gash in the rear tire, and the rubber worn
through to the cords. The bright red Hayabusa had cheated death for the
last time, as it has now been retired because Rich feels it has achieved
as much as it can.

With a massive investment of time and money over the last five years,
Rich says it's time to kick back and do some drag racing and the
occasional track day. And who can blame him? Beginning with a stock
Suzuki Hayabusa, in five years Rich Yancy did what many people have
tried and failed to do. He built a street legal motorcycle that is
capable of topping 260 MPH.
My Turn!
Believe it or not, my day came and I seized the chance to ride this
insane machine. Shifting cautiously through first, second, and into
third before nailing the throttle, the 'Busa hurtles forward as if shot
from a cannon, and there is no sensation of being connected to the
ground. The handlebars start dancing in my hands as I force myself to
hang on until the boost gauge hits 15 pounds, which translates to 380
horsepower at the rear wheel.

Rich Yancy boxed up his need for speed and plugged it into the motorcycle.
I jam the shift lever into fourth, hoping for some relief from the
massive force propelling me forward at such an alarming rate. No chance!
Fourth gear just gives more of the same, and the bars start dancing
again as the front wheel says goodbye to terra firma. The boost gauge
climbs rapidly and the bike tops 180 MPH with two gears to go! With
everything in hyperactive fast forward, I force myself to stay on the
throttle a fraction longer and a quick look shows me that the boost
needle has hit fifteen. At this point I back off. In an instant the
madness ends. The six-pot calipers crush down on the stock discs and the
Bud 'Busa comes rolling easily to a halt. I had just ridden the fastest
street bike on the planet, and might never be the same again.
The Down and Dirty on This Birdy
Running a stock wheelbase, with an Ohlins rear shock and fork
internals, Rich's 'Busa rolls on Dymag wheels and street tires. Brakes
are stock Suzuki fare, with the addition of stainless-steel brake lines
and race-compound pads. The bodywork is by Sharkskin and the tank is
carbon fiber painted to match Dale Earnhardt Jr's race car. Being
lowered, the bike uses a custom aluminum side stand, and a machined
triple clamp with the ignition switched relocated.

Stripped down this bike is still insane.
The big news is under the bodywork, where the fire breathing Mr.
Turbo lives. Currently cranking out 490 bhp with 29 lbs of boost, the
motor displaces 1363cc thanks to a set of 2mm oversize JE pistons
running 10:1 compression. These ride on Carrillo rods, and stainless
steel Ferrea valves are also fitted (stock sized intake valves, with
2mm-larger exhaust valves). Camshafts remain stock, but the head was
mildly ported and reassembled with a Cometic head gasket.
The bottom end is standard, as is the transmission, though a
Brock-Davidson clutch basket was added to contain the stock plates and
heavy-duty springs. A Spearco intercooler was also added, housed in an
aluminum icebox fabricated by Yancy's friend Mike Logan, which adds 30
horsepower. Breathing through a Yoshimura race system, Rich had the
pipes and the turbo thermal coated at a local race facility before the
bike was reassembled. With the addition of a data acquisition system,
the bike is armed, extremely dangerous and ready for flight. If anyone
is interested, it's currently up for sale.
1 comments :
Suzuki Hayabusa has sporty look and has Liquid cooled, four stroke, transverse four cylinder engine that generate 146 hp 195.7 KW @ 9800 rpm maximum power 154 Nm @ 10,200 rpm maximum torque.
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