Street Motorcycles Racing
Image by Ronald Plett from Pixabay

Street Motorcycles Racing

Braking for turn one was made all the more difficult thanks to a downhill incline covered in plentiful painted road markings. Get it wrong and you’d end up sliding to the McDonald’s located a half block beyond. No thanks, mate, I have no appetite to Super Size that!

Celebrating its 25th running, the annual Paeroa Battle of the Streets held this past February in the midst of the southern-hemisphere summer may not have put the town on the international race radar, but it presents a notable blip in the scope of Kiwi roadracing. It’s also an amazing opportunity. Of the half dozen or so street races conducted on the North and South Islands each year, Paeroa plays second fiddle to the famed Cemetery Circuit race held on the streets of Wanganui on Boxing Day, a December 26 tradition dating back to 1951.

Paeroa’s Hacksaw Circuit, so named for its saw-shaped silhouette, measures a mile in length and is comprised of five right-hand corners and a pair of lefts. Pavement bumps, cross-street humps, wicked camber changes, and knee-snagging square-edge curbs add to the challenge and character of the spectator-lined course. The main straight is in fact “Main Street” and also Highway 2. Clogging this major traffic artery for a motorcycle race has enthusiastic community support, albeit with a strict stipulation that the road reopen no later than 6 p.m. on race day. Hundreds of men and women, young and old, provide the volunteer labor to make such a happening logistically possible.

Suzuki New Zealand General Manager Simon Meade made things happen on my behalf, providing a bike and arranging a shakedown test at a local short circuit, not to mention trackside crew for the race. When Mr. Meade offered up a choice of any current GSX-R or -S model, the new for 2016 naked 1000 presented an interesting proposition. Upon learning that no Kiwi had yet to compete aboard the GSX-S, I put in a call to Yoshimura R&D stateside for setup suggestions, but that came up empty as well.

So we were on our own. Covering basics, the bike was equipped with a Nitron NTR R2 shock and had its fork recalibrated for my weight with Race Tech components by chassis guru Robert Taylor of Kiwi Suspension Solutions. Ray Clee of RCM Performance installed a Yoshimura Signature Alpha slip-on muffler and Bazzaz Performance Z-Fi TC with Quick Shift. The stock brake pads were replaced with a Brembo race compound along with the removal of an electrical fuse to deactivate the ABS. Meade hand-cut the DC initials gracing the number plates, a Kiwi custom signifying a foreign rider. Soft-compound Pirelli Super Corsa slicks provided the final ingredient needed to put the bike on competitive footing.

Suzuki-sponsored Battle of the Streets veteran Scotty Moir lent assistance for our private test at the Bruce McLaren Motorsport Park in Taupo, centrally located on the North Island. I only managed a handful of laps before rain set in, hardly enough quality seat time to explore the bike’s performance capability. As anticipated, the stock engine ran well, and I was relieved to learn the brakes provided ample power and consistent feel. But cornering clearance limits remained a question unanswered and a concern.

Race day began early with final course construction commencing at 4 a.m. as crews feverishly set out protective barriers and straw bales right up to the 8 a.m. practice start. The first session was reserved for all newcomers, offering guys like me a feel for the track before being mixed in with experienced madmen. But my orientation was short circuited when the engine suddenly quit running prior to completing a full lap. I also missed out on the first of two six-minute sessions for my class as Clee traced the problem to the bumpy street surface having disturbed a wiretap connection within the Z-Fi install, and applied a lasting fix. Sympathetic race organizers allowed me to join a couple vintage bike sessions to get my bearings prior to lining up for my first race.

The excitement of racing in close proximity to curbside spectators is unlike anything experienced on a traditional closed-circuit course.

Naked and alone (in spirit!), I rolled the GSX-S into my assigned third-row start position on the premier-class Formula 1 grid. The field was populated with liter superbikes; mine was the single high-bar bike in the mix! I wondered if I’d gotten in too deep, but a solid launch capitalizing on the GSX’s midrange grunt shuffled me forward a few positions entering the first turn. The excitement of racing in close proximity to curbside spectators is unlike anything experienced on a traditional closed-circuit course. Decades of street testing and roadracing experience helped me find the rhythm through dips and gutters and over paint and around all the other in-town obstacles to a fast lap on the street. I picked off a couple more riders, completing the 10-lap sprint in fifth place. Not only was I stoked with the result, but it gave me a second-row start for Race Two.

 

Source: www.cycleworld.com

Site Footer