Bonneville SpeedWeek
2017.... In an era of Decreasing Salt
Bullett
Maintenance, Benefit, and Racing
Post 2016 Bonneville: Time for New Tires
One
set of these Goodyear LSR 300 MPH tires was used for the construction
of the Bullett. They became weathered during the long build process and
were cut in half for close inspection of the thickess of the rubber in 2008 at
the request of Nate Jones Cowboy Tire. Shaving excess rubber was done by Nate
Jones to balance and prep the new tires and to round the front tire for
better handling. The second set was used for the initial running,
gaining licenses for the Long Course, and setting a 200 MPH Record that
stood for 5 years. After spinning the rear tire at over 260 MPH,
bouncing through some deep ruts at 194 MPH, and plus the effects of
weathering, we decided to put on new rubber for safety reasons. You are
looking at $1650.00 worth of new rubber. Our third set. Does get
expensive.
The
Bullett is about the only long course (>175 MPH) motorcycle that
actually has legal tires in the eyes if the SCTA-BNI Bonneville
Inspectors. There have been crashes at Bonneville due to tire failures,
and numerous instances of tires chunking with Z-Rated tires running
well over 200 MPH. Motorcycles have crashed and people have died in
other Speed Events...Perhaps with tire failure as one of the factors.
The
decision in 1992 was to design his Bullett
around tires that would be safe. However there was no easy way to test
the handling and no attempt was ever made to get the bike on a dyno
which makes it sort of show up in the salt and see what happens
scenario. Major unknowns.
The
three new tires above were purchased and then we decided not to use
them. The decision was made to go to a taller front to better handle
the poorer salt conditions and an even higher speed 300 mph LSR rear
tire.
Now we have better rubber and perhaps the only motorcycle with truly certified 300 mph rubber front and rear. We are now running the two tires circled above in the Goodyear Eagle Land Speed brochure. No they do not have them at Costco.
So we
actually ended up buying five new tires...Two fronts (they would only
sell us two) as we had before, and a rear same as we had before...Then we decided not to use them.New 2284 LSR rear tire pictured left above.
Then
it was bye, bye $1300.00 on the second purchase. We decided
to put on a 23" 2283 front tire instead of the previous 21" LSR tire Mike had chosen as
it
had a more rounded profile and the rear tire we upgraded to a true
300mph LSR 2284 rear tire instead of the 25" Front Runner we used
before. Five tires to get the correct ones.
In 2016 Bryan was sideways on the poor salt at 194 mph on the long course...and after his last run he said he was on the floorboards sawing the handlebars left to right. He's hoping the new front will be better with it's more rounded and taller profile. He has a lot of runs over 200 mph so he's the best judge. The tires will pass any SCTA-BNI inspection.
Does
these look like they are worth $1300.00? Well, If you are Bryan Stock and sitting on the
Bullet with the front tire going 250 MPH and the rear tire spinning at 275 MPH, it is, from his viewpoint, money well spent.
New 23" 2283 front tire to the right above. These LSR tires run on Funny Car certified wheels with 70 PSI tire pressure. Rubber bands in the tradition of Sir Malcolm Campbell, Craig Breedlove, Mickey Thomson, the Summers Brothers, and Al Teague. No pops.
Note:
Over the course of buying multiple sets Goodyear LSR tires we found
Mike had originally chosen the wrong, non-LSR rear tire. In 2017 we
corrected this bring out total outlay to just short of $4,000.00 over
the years from build to our departure in 2017.
Nate Jones LSR Tire Balancing and Shaving
Nate Jones Cowboy Tire in Signal Hill California does everyone's LSR Tires and has done ours since 1985. Tires themselves may or may not be round and Nate shaves them and makes them round. In addition, excess rubber just builds up heat on the long course at Bonneville. Tires can suddenly chunk. There will be piles of chunked tires in the motorcycle tech inspection stand during Speedweek. 200 mph motorcycles must have their tires inspected and stamped after every run. The stamp is checked by the officials at the starting line.
Nate Jones and Son...Nate Jones Cowboy Tire
Nate
Jones and his son with the Bullett's 2017 Goodyear LSR tires...Mounted,
shaved and balanced. Nate wants everyone to know that shaving new tires
whether it's for Bonneville, your new pickup truck or your $200,000.00
Porsche Turbo Carrera will make the vehicle safer and smoother as even
new molded tires are not perfectly round and, if not shaved, require
more balance weights than needed to try to correct the out of
roundness. All Bonneville motorcycle tires whether Z-Rated or Road Race
slicks should have additional shaving to remove excess rubber to cut
down on heat build-up on the long course at Bonneville to prevent
chunking. Even the Bullett's $650.00 tires get shaved and balanced.
Nate Jones Cowboy Tire 1-562-597-3369.
When
we first went to Bonneville in 1985 the late Jack Dolan, of two and
four wheeled Bonneville fame, advised us to get Goodyear Road Race
Slicks and have Nate Jones shave and balance them. It's something we
have done ever since. Zero problems with the Bullett's LSR rubber
prepped by Nates. People have died using tires not rated for these 200+
mph speeds and it's damn stupid to have the excess rubber that a street
tire has. Z-Rated does not cut it on the great white dyno. Tire shaving has been around a long time.
If
you have ever looked at the tires, or pictures of the same, of Sir
Malcolm Campbell, Craig Breedlove, Al Teague, Mickey Thompson, and
others you will find an extremely stiff carcass (bitch to mount) with
very thin rubber and no treads. Nate Jones does pretty much all the
SCTA-BNI Bonneville tires as well as Duallies, Rolls Royces, Bentleys and Porsches.
Bullett
Pistons..CP
When
you stick a 560 Hp turbo on the 139 CID Bullett Orca Motor the pistons,
piston pins, and rings get subjected to a lot of heat and pressure.
We
cut the skirts for clearance and ceramic coat the piston tops and
graphite coat the skirts. No cylinder head
gaskets or base gaskets with Silver-plated Inconel 600 psi Nitrogen
seal rings on the cylinder heads. We have even run PEEK Buttons on the
skirts. Drop $2,500.00 on the pistons...and more on the machining and
coating. We have had zero issues running high zinc content Brad-Penn
Oil.
The
139" Orca motor has been used as a test bed to experiment with new
technologies...electronics, closed loop boost control, traction
control, bearing designs, piston sealing, vacuum pumps, ceramic
coatings, high temperature valves, cylinder head porting, camshaft
design and more.. Somethings have worked and somethings have failed. It
is definitely not short on power as Bryan Stock can attest...His first
words after a 214 mph run...."I want one of those in my Dresser!".
Bullett Turbo
New chromed AN fittings installed Bullett's turbo wastegate replacing the lightly corroded gold irridited cad plated ones. Either chrome or hard anodization will withstand the salt corrosion. The wastegate was bench tested and checked out O.K.. The Bullett's Garrett 560 hp turbo was inspected and its bearings were in perfect shape. A light touch up with ceramic spray coating and she is good to go again for 2017 with closed loop phase anti-phase boost and traction control.
New Teeth for the Bullett
New
custom 7075-T6 Hard-Anodized sprockets from Sprocket Specialists for the jackshaft and rear wheel...312
mph gearing @6750 rpm in 5th gear. New EK chains were also purchased
and installed.
Five 7/16" chromed Grade 8 fasteners secure each of these sprockets. Chrome survives the salt slush. Zinc plated parts corrode instantly. Stainless, save specialized Aircraft A286 fasteners are not strong enough. The bouncing on a rough long course has already bent a rear axle and snapped a primary chain. Safety is paramount. Maintence and replacement of parts is mandatory.
More Teeth for the Bullett
The
Bullett's 60 tooth front wheel speed sensor disc for the Cosworth
Pectel SQ6M Hall Effect (3 wire) speed sensor. We compare front and
rear wheels speeds to determine the amount of wheelspin to activate the
traction control system. We allow more slip in lower gears and less
slip (10%) in 4th and 5th gears. Boost is controlled by both gears and
vehicle speed and fuel cuts are used to control traction. Ignition
timing is a matrix of four maps each with 625 sites. We do not use
ignition retard as a traction control strategy but activate it via
other inputs.
Corrosion resistant Electroless Nickel Plating for the 60 tooth discs applied by Chromeplate Company in Inglewood California (310-641-4922)...Established in 1961 and aerospace certified and now Bonneville Salt Flats certified. Two day quick turn around with excellent dimensional control as specified. We have to plan for salt getting onto everything.
Gear Indicator
So Bryan doesn't have to count to five at over 200 mph...Like when he's a bit sideways on the Bonneville Long Course coming up on the two mile marker and can't remember if he's in 5th or 4th Gear. No point in hitting the pneumatic shifter again if you are already in 5th gear on the Jims Fat5 Transmission. Here verifying the programming on the test bench with two function generators to simulate crank position sensor speed (rpm) and transmission mainshaft output rpm off the 4th gear teeth.
Exhaust Gas Temperature Calibration
Calibrating
the Bullett's programming for Exhaust Gas Temperature (EGT) Correction.
Here Bryan is at about 19 pounds of boost and 6000 rpm in 5th Gear with
an EGT of 1600 Degrees Fahrenheit (871 Degrees Celsius). We
program extra fuel as the combustion temperatures go beyond a certain
point to prevent engine damage. A precise thermocouple simulator is
used to output the specific temperature, in this case 871 Degrees
Celsius, to verify programming.
Bryan Stock...139" ORCA
Motor
freshened up by master mechanic and bike builder Bryan Stock with new
Torrington and Timken pinion shaft bearings. Bye Bye ball bearing and
its clips that got us at the 2016 World of Speed. New rings and new
S&S
oil pump. Ready to roar. Fuck the trouble, it's time to party and roll
again.
2017 Benefit to help pay for the trip to the salt. Takes a lot to put your wheels on the salt...Here in 2016.
Tenatively scheduled for 29 April 2017 in Boise Idaho there will be a benefit for the Bullet Race Team. Shane's Chopper on the salt in 2016.
Pink: Get the Party Started...lyrics by Linda Perry..
I'm comin' up so you better you better get this party started
I'm comin' up so you better you better get this party started
Get this party started on a Saturday night
Everybody's waitin' for me to arrive
Sendin' out the message to all of my friends
We'll be lookin' flashy in my Mercedes Benz
I got lotsa style, got my gold diamond rings
I can go for miles if you know what I mean
I'm comin' up so you better you better get this party started
I'm comin' up so you better you better get this party started
Pumpin' up the volume, breakin down' to the beat
Cruisin' through the west side
We'll be checkin' the scene
Boulevard is freakin' as I'm comin' up fast
I'll be burnin' rubber, you'll be kissin' my ass
Pull up to the bumper, get out of the car
License plate says Stunner number one Superstar
I'm comin' up so you better you better get this party started
I'm comin' up so you better you better get this party started
Get this party started
Makin' my connection as I enter the room
Everybody's chillin' as I set up the groove
Pumpin' up the volume with this brand new beat
Everybody's dancin' and their dancin' for me
I'm your operator, you can call anytime
I'll be your connection to the party line
I'm comin' up so you better you better get this party started
I'm comin' up so you better you better get this party started
I'm comin' up so you better you better get this party started
I'm comin' up so you better you better get this party started
Get this party started
Get this party started right now
Get this party started
Get this party started
Get this party started right now
Be in Boise 29 April and hear the Bullett Roar. Burn some rubber.
Bullett Benefit Boise 29 April 2017
Bryan Stock buttoning up the Bullett's fairing after a three day slog to install the turbo system, redo the Bullett's pneumatic shifter harness, install the new 23" LSR front tire, new LSR rear tire, trim the fairing for the taller front tire, and reinvent the front fender for the new front tire...Just finishing on Friday afternoon before the Saturday benefit. Parts and people coming in from many directions.
Assembly Fun
Commonly heard phrases:
1. Chrome bolts are the best for the Salt...Where are my damn chrome bolts? Walt stole my bolts!
2. I should have made this damn thing a foot longer!
3. Which part goes on first?
4. Lets see your checklist.."What checklist"
Starting the Bullett Friday the 28th..Bullett is Alive.
On Friday morning, the day before the 2017 SpeedWeek Benefit, we started the Bullett up (video) and let her warm up and check for any issues. There were none. Brother Speed's Gary Brant stopped by and captured the moment on his phone. Bryan Stock gave it the thumbs up. One big swig of whiskey to celebrate when the Bullett barked to life..
Then
it was time to call in Chad Kirby of Apex Professional Mobile Detailing
to polish the Bullett's aluminum skin. Everyone started showing up once
the word went out and Diana Sterk was there to take more pictures.
There are many people to thank for their support and pictures tell the
tale. Even a long lost sister showed up at the fortuitous moment. The
sun shone. Karma.
Mirror Mirror on the Wall
After you have put 60 manhours into detailing into some guy's restored zillion dollar car or polishing some corporate jet, you take a break and slide down to the bottom of the financial pyramid and donate your expertise to a worthy cause. Apex Professional Mobile Detailing. 1-208-713-8842 (Chad Kirby) We got the Bullett started and buttoned down and Chad made the Bullett look the best she ever had.
Bullett Benefit Turn Out
After
several days of rain and extreme winds, Saturday 29 April was calm and
sunny and absolutely perfect for the Bullett Benefit. We don't know who
ordered the weather but many were ready to take credit for it. The
Crescent parking lot was divided up into various categories for the
bike show awards..FXRs, Dynas, Dressers, Sportsters, Customs, Rigids
etc....and there was lots of room at the Crescent lounge for all who
showed up for the Brother Speed Bullett Benefit. Many different clubs
and a diverse set of people provided support.
We kicked off the Benefit at 11AM but many people arrived early to get their bikes in the show or line up for the Dyno Contest run by Nick Stock.
Brother Speed...Bonneville Iron
Brother
Speed's current, past and future legacy. Fred Wiley (founder Brother
Speed) and 200 MPH Lifetime Club Member's BMW Bonneville Bikes..(Fred
did it on an RB Racing Suzuki Turbo in 1992). The record
setting #226 Blue Bike and Bryan Stock's 200 MPH record setting #8228 Bonneville
Bullett. All turbocharged.
#226 Blue Bike
Some
20 years after it last ran at Bonneville the Blue Bike still
amazes people. 255 Hp @ 22 PSI of boost and it sits and idles and
drives like a stock bike. Fuel injected, intercooled and water jackets
on the cylinders. #226 begat #8228. Long history and even longer hours.
If you only knew. RB Racing designed turbo and fuel injection.
Dyno Contest
Nick
Stock was busy all day doing three dyno pulls for each bike. KC ran off
with the prize for his built Dyna (not the bike above). We did not enter the Bullett or
the #226 turbo bikes.
Bands...Pumping up the volume.
Diana Sterk and Shane Taylor arranged for several bands playing at the Benefit ...They kept things at full volume all day long. Good times..
You had to pass tech at the Benefit
When you go racing at Bonneville you have to qualify at speeds of 150, 175, and 200 MPH to get your license to run on the long course with the big dogs. Bryan Stock runs with the big dogs. At the Bullett Benefit we had a similar qualifying procedure...Those who qualified for long course got a red arm band. Anything associated with the Bullett is long course. Everyone who helped with the Bullett is now qualified for long course.
Flyin Bryan
Unintended Consequences
As Mike Geokan said after the event..."I used to go to Bonneville with my pickup truck, a small trailer, maxed out credit cards, and Bryan riding his Dresser. I had no idea back in 1992 when Bryan and I started the Bullett that it would ever get completed much less that so many people would become involved".
Mike
is hoping to get to Bonneville in 2017 as a series of medical issues
have prevented him from seeing the Bullett run except for a 1 day visit
in 2011 when Bryan ran back to back 200 mph runs and into the record
book. After Mike's last operation they say he is good to go to see Bryan go for 230 MPH back to back, and then 250 MPH.
Bishop, California
300
Miles to La La Land. Lock and Load. 10 hours down 4 to go. A
tradition...stop in Bishop for gas and a Hershey Bar. 865 miles
in one shot. Did so multiple times over the years both on four and two
wheels.
Cruisin' through the west side
We'll be checkin' the scene
Boulevard is freakin' as I'm comin' up fast
I'll be burnin' rubber, you'll be kissin' my ass
Post Bullett Benefit...The Work Never Ends
That dwindling patch of white above draws people together. People who never knew each other before and who now share a common experience...and have a newfound reason to keep going in this crazy world. Flat out together...
A
special thanks goes to all who attended the Benefit. Rolling Thunder
and good times for all. Up close and personal with the Bullett.
2016 SpeedWeek at the Rainbow Casino...sharing a meal together in a sea of one-armed bandits...with Donna Summer's "Hot Stuff" blaring in the restrooms... and plenty of beer in our motel rooms. Party Time before the show.
Raise your hand in the air just before the nine team members rise to go to the casino buffet and ask "Raise your hands if you donate money each month to Hillary Clinton's campaign"...loud hissing. Idaho, bikers and the FOX News junkies and one sole hand raised from La La Land...California. Red line drawn as they say. No politics on the starting line.
Drink
the bottle of wine conteracted by lots of bread and butter and head
back to the hotel roon to commune with tiny bars of soap and shampoo.
Anyone
who has been involved in racing knows both the highs and the lows of
the process. We ended our Bullett Benefit in Boise on a very high note
due to all the hard organizational work by Brother Speed's Shane Taylor who pulled out all the stops to
make it happen.
The Bullett Crew worked their butts off to get the Bullett buttoned up and started the week before the benefit with the newly refreshed 139 Inch Orca Motor assembled by Bryan Stock. She never looked better.
Static Testing Turbo Water Injection
We
can verify the water injection activation in our software programming
on our SQ6M Simulator...However, we also need to verify actual water
spray (1000 PSI) in the Bullett's inlet manifold. You can't just "turn
on" the water injection pump because it is triggered by a chain of
events in the SQ6M which, in turn, activates a relay that powers the
pump.
To test the actual water flow and priming of the system we made a harness that plugs into the water injection pump on the Bullett. We can put water in the Bullett's stainless steel left side saddle tank, install the harness, remove the Bullett's plenum cahmber, and watch for the ultra fine fog (1000 PSI) in the Bullett's inlet manifold. There is a single nozzle in the bottom of the inlet manifold. We can verify the system is primed (There is a 15 psi check valve in the nozzle) and that the nozzle is not clogged.
This is all part of the preparation we go through before we head for the long course at Bonneville.
Wiring Harness Connectors
These three connectors for the Bullett wiring harness are about $500.00. There are a total 49 connectors in the Bullett's Wiring Harness. These three are Deutsch Autosport Mil-Spec connectors for the Cosworth Pectel SQ6M Engine Management System (ECU). There are up to 131 wires in the wiring harness for the various sensors. All of this does require a bit of planning and specialized tooling. The salt will try to eat everything and the harness needs to be completely sealed.
The
Bullett's wiring harness has 49 outboard connections with up to 131
wires slithering here and there. Because of the environment at
Bonneville everything is sealed to prevent corrosion. It takes more
about 200 or more man hours to plan and build the harness. This
involves
creating 20Mb of documentation on how the harness is constructed down
to each individual pin, socket, connector, and wire as well as the
specification of every component and internal diagrams of all the
wires.
You figure Mike Geokan and Bryan Stock documented 3000 man hours over a 25 year period building the Bullett and then add items like the wiring harness and the 139" watercooled Turbo Orca Motor and RB Racing's fabrication. including all the travel exceeding 3000 man hours on top of it all. It does require a bit of determination mixed with insanity and little appreciation of how far it was down when you stepped off the ledge. Hell of a trip.
This
harness never made it on the Bullett. The plan was to return to Boise
after SpeedWeek and update the harness. But plans changed and the
harness returned to Los Angeles. Nice practice as we say.
2017 SpeedWeek
Documenting
the scene at SpeedWeek. Disrupt your whole life tilting at windmills
and end up with a few pictures. No raceable salt, so it turns into a
photo-op. For many that is all they want...a photo for the bucket list.
Others will see the pictures and add it to their bucket list...Unaware
of the lack of a raceable long or short course. Sooner or later you
will find it's always one way street where you get to the dead end and
are left with thousands of hours for zip and often destruction.
Understand this before you click the shutter. Some die. Photos left to lure the seekers of fame.
Our
involvement with Bonneville goes way, way, back...As far as 1958... Not so for those
newly climbing on board wide-eyed and full of enthusiasm...volunteers
for the cause.
The Bullett crew was
fighting the worst long course track we or any other competitor had ever seen, a blown trailer
tire (rotten), and a broken wire in the Bullett's Fly-By-Wire system. Waiting
times on the Long and Short Course was 5 to 6 hours. We worked on the
Bullett's
programming hoping to get some 200 mph passes in the bad course
conditions. There was some issue with the bike that was not resolved as
the same exact programming we had run at 194mph with 19 psi under closed-loop boost control at
194mph+ at the 2016 SpeedWeek suddenly acted lean. Apparently there was a hose connection
venting pressure but time ran out. You can't reprogram an air leak...something the unintiated do not understand.
Mike
Geokan declared the problem to be a bad ignition coil as he said that's
always the way a bike acts with a bad inition coil. We told him it was
not the coil. We had a spare Bosch Motorsport Coil. It was installed.
No it wasn't the ignition coil. When it pops and bangs and does not
make boost you tear it down and find the plumbing leak. No point in
that the track was shit.
John Munro Burt Munro's Son (Left)
2017 SpeedWeek...Meeting Burt Munro's son,
and we got to exchange
lies and tall tales about motorcycles. His tall tales were better..like
riding
through town in New Zealand at full throttle standing on a motorcycle
seat running
all the lights all the way to the harbor.
We countered with a 1985
story about exiting the salt on a twin turbo Suzuki going 135 mph back
up the access road and then realizing we had no brakes and a 90 degree
left hand turn was coming up. Of course we died...Plus financing a trip
to visit the ladies in Wells.
Mike
Geokan who started the Bullett 25 years ago and who had been supported
for over 27 years by RB Racing who designed, tuned, and manufactured
the
turbo system on his record holding #226 bike
was finally able to attend the event post a VA operation, and spent the
week being negative
and ended with a vacuous, childish threat at Thursday dinner to shoot
the author of this. I promptly reminded Mike, face to face, "To be
careful what he said and that the
only reason he ever got any record at all was that we designed,
manufactured,
supported, paid for, and tuned his #226 turbo system".
He had zero
success off and on for over a decade until we
did so. Childish self-absorbed actions. We thought he was a better man.
We were wrong. Character always shows up sooner or later.
We
simply removed our
Cosworth Pectel SQ6M electronics, wiring harness, fly-by-wire system
and completely
ended our support...Loaded up and drove back to LA that Thursday night.
Over. Done. A few suggested we stay the night as it was late...Not one
minute longer. An all night drive. Piece of cake compared to 4 days of
no sleep in 1977 on another race project.
We donated in writing:
The 139" water cooled ORCA engine, 8" Carrillo-Shaker rods, Delkron FXR Transmission Case, Jim's Fat5 Transmission, Barnett Billet Primary Cover, Sintered Lock Up Clutch (paid for by Carl Pelletier), Air and electric Shifters (4 versions), all turbo components, two Garrett turbochargers (one and second center section), Six Goodyear LSR tires $4,000.00 (Shaved and Balanced), Miller Econo TIG welder and Argon tank, 24' Haulmark $6500.00 Race Trailer, one Dodge Van we bought for $1,500.00, a $3,000.00 water-cooled Honda generator, air compressor, SnapOn hand and diagnostic tools, Steel table and Vise, Snap On Tool Chest, $2,500.00 worth of promotional books, and all support equipment to the team...plus many LSR 2-1 exhaust systems for the cause as they say. 10 years worth. Machined and anodized from a 30lb 7075T6 billet a sealed lock up clutch hub. Machined and anodized from billet a 7075T6 jackshaft assembly with gilmer belt drive vacuum pump. Three complete mil-spec wiring harnesses made for the bike (since removed)...One for initial running a with the RSR EFi System and two for the Pectel electronics totaling about 500 man-hours for planning and execution for the 45 outboard sensors and components. All in all about $100,000.00 in time and money expended over 12 or 27 years depending on when you start counting. One Twin Cam engine for Bryan Stocks Chopped DResser and One CVO2 Evo motor for Nick Stock, Bryan's son.
Thousands of hours of time. Over 50,000 miles of driving and flying to and fro L.A. to Boise and Bonneville.
Each trip L.A. to Boise to Bonneville to Boise and return to L.A. was 3,000 miles.
Used
to stay with Mike while in Boise...Then after he unintentionally locked
his house and went to bed after we had driven 13 1/2 hours (twice)...and we had to stay at a flea
bag motel. After that we stayed with Bryan Stock while in Boise. You don't go for a third strike.
We
did get a 25 year appreciation plaque for supporting Brother Speed from
Brother Speed's Nampa chapter's Bugsy. Nice gesture and much
appreciated.
Two bikes #226 and # 8228, two records..decades apart..All with zero testing. Just theory. Try that with zero testing bippy.
Three
years to get a 200mph record with the Bullett...all the way from a bare
frame with rotted tires..Sorting things out,
getting Bryan Stock his long course license ( 150, 175, 200mph) and
seat time. Mike
tried for a record
from the mid 80's with his #226 Blue Bike and only got a record after
we turbocharged his bike
in
the late 1990's...more than 10 years later. For us it was full time job
865 miles
away from Boise...back and forth. 13.5 non-stop hours each way...all
nighters. Untold # of trips. Staying at Bryan Stock's home added
another 30 miles...i.e. lots of 900 mile days. Generally about 3,000
miles if all the loops La to Boise to Bonneville to Boise to LA
often two times or in some cases 3 times per year.
Mike and Bryan got the frame and body ready...We filled it in. Mike figured 2000 man hours.
Interesting fact: Fred Wiley, Brother Speed (200 mph club Member 1992), Bryan Stock Brother Speed (200 mph record holder for 5 years..2011-2016); and Mike Geokan, Brother Speed 196 mph record holder were all at SpeedWeek 2017. All their records set on RB Racing Turbos built and tuned by RB Racing. Fred was there this year on a BMW Airhead with a 36 year old RB Racing BMW turbo kit looking for a new record but conditions were terrible. There's some sort of common thread there.
No RB Racing...no records. Period. Multiple people. Time after time.
In 2016 Mike
asked us what the Bullett was worth...Our answer was that race bikes
were worth either nothing or whatever some fool will pay. When asked
"why" he stated that when he died he was going to leave his motorcycles
to his daughter with a special needs child and his house and property to
his then girlfriend. Biker. Mike always said he was looking for someone to act as his nurse.
When
Mike spent $46,000.00 upgrading his home, by refinancing his $25,000.00
home he had never paid off in 25 years still owing most of the purchase price and building his girlfriend a
Shovelhead from scratch for $8,000.00, rebuilding a Pan Head Chopper
for even more money including $1,800.00 to chrome the front forks, and
wasted $5,500.00 of Benefit donations on a useless old POS Dually
truck...Did no testing, and turned down a dynamometer that RB Racing
negotiated a deal for $29,000.00 (for Bryan Stock's shop) versus
$45,000.00 and never checked the
Race Trailer's tires (they rotted) that he walked by everyday, and
couldn't
manage to keep 12V Batteries charged...All while others spent their
money and effort on his race bike...Well that qualifies you as an
expert. Just start writing checks.
Mike
however, will not spend any of
his money ...He whines and says he has none (VA 100% Disability
pension and Social Security). We asked him if he had a choice of 100%
health or the two guaranteed income streams...He did not answer. We asked him where his checklist was for the race bike...none.
He will continue to get others to pay and do the work. His
dream. Your pocket. All he has to do is wake up another day and drive
down to the local eatery for breakfast and lunch. Biker ethics...me me
me. He will tell you he knows how the Pyramids were made...but he
cannot produce a checklist for the race bike...We even made a color-
coded wiring diagram as none existed for the wiring Mike had done. Who
is responsible for what? Lots of people to help you have zero
knowledge...not the definition of a crew.
Each
year we would show up and find salt and corrosion from the previous
year. Very comforting. Corroded relays, salt still in crevices on the
bike, open frame tubes holding salt-water solution inside. Dead battery. We ended up bringing a Yuasa AGM battery.
At
RB Racing we had
lot of nice people involved from all over the world from as far
away as Great Britain and China (no joke) as well as in L.A. and Idaho.
Just one to spoil the mix. Mike did not
thank anyone at SpeedWeek, nor at the 2017 Benefit for helping out. Not
one "thank you" for the effort to get the Bullett on it's feet all the
way from a rusted bare frame with rotted tires and a 200 mph record.
Ego. Bryan Stock told him he had to apologize for that. Hope he did.
As
for rotted tires and the rusty, bare frame...RB Racing spent $4,000.00
alone on Goodyear LSR tires. The tires Mike Geokan originally chose
were wrong...a square, hard to drive, front and a rear that was a drag
racing tire, not an LSR tire. Tire pressures for drag and lsr tires are
vastly different...40 v 70. We got all that straightened out, plus all the tire
shaving
and balancing issues here in L.A. by Nates Cowboy Tire.
It's
interesting how
egos are large and memories are short. Memory gets a bit variable over
time when basking in the glory pontificating on your own self
importance, casting aside the real facts.
One's character eventually rises.
Postscript
In
our long involvement with the Bullett we put an extraordinary effort
into building the Bullett's water-cooled cylinders. The problem with
these, aside from the week-long final fabrication plus multiple trips
to Boise to take measurements was that, if they were damaged, there
would be no easy fix. Zero spare cylinders.
We designed a wet-sleeve system, a la the Diesel
World, and had custom sleeves cast and then machined up, from solid,
cylinders to make dropping in O-Ring sealed liners a long term solution
with the $2,500.00 worth of CP pistons we had made up.
Expensive. Lots of design time.
As
it turned out we did damage the bores when Mike Geokan never cleaned
out the debris in stainless fuel tank cutting the fuel flow not the
pressure and we burned both pistons, Carl
Pelletier of Competition Motorcycles honed the cylinders and put PEEK
buttons on the 4 3/8" ceramic coated CP Turbo pistons to take up the
extra clearance. Filter jammed with stainless shavings. We took
the gas tank off ourselves and cleaned it while Mike was watching TV.
These unfinished parts (two complete sets) remain as paperweights at RB Racing until Hell freezes over.
Pistons
for these...no spares either. Our custom design. We had CP make
$2,500.00 worth of pistons and had then skirts and crowns ceramic
coated. Carl Pelletier of Competition Motorcycles in Boise did the
flywheel skirt cuts. Expensive.
Edith Piaf - "Non, Je ne regrette rien". It's what we do.
Addendum 2018-2021
The
Bullet continues without our support.
RSR EFi and Cosworth Pectel
electronics and RB Racing wiring harness and Bosch FBW throttle system
were removed. Brother Speed had to up the money (not Mike) for a Haltech ecm
and wiring harness, instrumentation and additional fabrication. Start from scratch.
Post RB Racing Involvement: Bonneville 2018 / 19 / 20 / 21 Bullet has multiple issues and has never made it into impound...Barely cracking 180 mph a few times...30 mph short of a class record and 50 mph short of a 200 mph Club Red Hat. Lots of money spent. Lives disrupted for zero results.
Without
RB Racing dropping $2,500.00 for motel rooms and picking up dinner and
breakfast tabs not as many people can tag along for the show.
All slower than anything we did or paid for in a long journey starting in 2008. No spares. No checklists. No testing. No results.
Dreams die hard. It's a blood sport.