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Motorcycle was clocked at 157mph, court told (w/photo)
dailytelegraph.co.uk/ ^
Posted on 06/18/2003 8:15:48 PM PDT by chance33_98
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To: wardaddy
Two stroke streetbikes are cool. Looks like even 500GP is moving to four strokes though, and now MX 4 strokes are pretty common.
I had a CR450R back in 1981, I weighed about 120 wet and the thing would get to 60 in about 2.5 seconds if I could hang on and keep the front end down.
My first streetbike was an 81 GPz550, then I sold it for an 82 1000 Katana. Funky ride, also lighting fast when it came out, 11.29@122mph IIRC.
Now my 96 ZX9R sits in the garage a lot, kids sort of change your schedule.
I like the new GSXR, but its ugly -I hope Honda can find some horsepower with the promised CBR1000 next year because I think the big RR's are great looking rides.
121
posted on
06/19/2003 12:02:50 PM PDT
by
xsrdx
(Diligentia, Vis, Celeritas)
To: wardaddy
"Buy your son a murdercycle for his last birthday."
122
posted on
06/19/2003 12:17:12 PM PDT
by
Travis McGee
(----- www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com -----)
To: Mr. Mojo
For a real high-speed treat, try dialing in at 135 on one of the old Mercedes 560 SEL's. If you're on an open highway, you have absolutely no feeling of speed whatsoever. Your only real indication is the speedometer (and maybe the Geo or two you smush along the way). It's like a high-speed baracalounger.
123
posted on
06/19/2003 12:21:34 PM PDT
by
atlaw
To: Travis McGee
I don't want a pickle ...
124
posted on
06/19/2003 12:22:02 PM PDT
by
cinFLA
To: Travis McGee
Pith master bump...
You need to screenwrite an Elmore James style movie with those lines...
125
posted on
06/19/2003 1:04:10 PM PDT
by
wardaddy
(I was born my Papa's son....when I hit the ground I was on the run.....)
To: hobbes1
Same engine, mine is a 95 flhtc.
(with a few goodies thrown in so the Honda guys don't beat me up too bad...:-)}
126
posted on
06/19/2003 1:13:22 PM PDT
by
JoeSixPack1
(POW/MIA - Bring 'em home, or send us back! Semper Fi)
To: xsrdx
My road warrior days are over though I wish I had a stable of Dukes, Bimotas, Aprillas etc for investment purposes.
a good 900 desmo goes for multiples of the original price and looks great....
...so does a cherry H2 actually..
Who was that early GP racing great from the US...even before KR....I remember he wore a flat top haircut....??
I used to ride a friend's RD 350 or 400 (?)...it was a little pocket rocket too...
The GPZs were arguably the first modern outta the box cafe bikes mass produced you know...
127
posted on
06/19/2003 1:49:55 PM PDT
by
wardaddy
(I was born my Papa's son....when I hit the ground I was on the run.....)
To: dalereed
I got a ticket for doing 20 in a 35 on Hawthorne Blvd., cruising in a lowered '54 Merc. That was before I caught the "need for speed". Corvettes only, now.
To: Travis McGee
(elmore leonard)....geez a dissolving cerebellum is a terrible thing to endure..
129
posted on
06/19/2003 2:09:06 PM PDT
by
wardaddy
(I was born my Papa's son....when I hit the ground I was on the run.....)
To: chance33_98
Boys will be Boys.
130
posted on
06/19/2003 2:14:41 PM PDT
by
VaBthang4
(Could someone show me one [1] Loserdopian elected to the federal government?)
To: clintonh8r
>>>My guess would be Huyabusas, capable of approaching 200 mph. <<<
Huyabusas sounds about right. But I understand in the ER they call these 'donor' cycles.
131
posted on
06/19/2003 2:15:14 PM PDT
by
MalcolmS
(Do Not Remove This Tagline Under Penalty Of Law!)
To: xsrdx
It's not dead sexy like the Miura, but the Iso Grifo was one interesting piece of machinery, too. Those were the early days of Shelby-American and everyone was playing with the engine-transplant concept. Iso used a Can-Am spec Chevy big-block. All that torque made the lack of V-12 music easier to overlook.
To: abner
Not only that, why would the camera be on a turn? Seems silly to me. I think you're right. The speed radar works by detecting how fast something is moving away or toward it. A vehicle travelling through a turn (i.e. moving laterally with respect to the radar) would show a lower speed to the radar its than actual speed.
To: Semper
From the picture it seems as though he is riding on the right side of the road - don't they drive on the left side in GB? They do indeed, as in Japan, though in Germany they drive on the righthand side like Americans [mostly!] do. But the pic of that particular '67 Lambo Miura is of Kirk Stevenson's during *Italian Car Day* in Atlanta last year.
Those folks put on quite a showing; even had a couple of Ducati and Guzzi motorbikes show up last year.
That's Kirk's Miura, which was voted best Lamborghini at the event, on the right, next to the red ragtop.
-archy-/-
134
posted on
06/20/2003 11:04:31 AM PDT
by
archy
(Keep in mind that the milk of human kindness comes from a beast that is both cannibal and a vampire.)
To: Charles Martel
It's not dead sexy like the Miura, but the Iso Grifo was one interesting piece of machinery, too. Those were the early days of Shelby-American and everyone was playing with the engine-transplant concept. Iso used a Can-Am spec Chevy big-block. All that torque made the lack of V-12 music easier to overlook. The purists with the Italian silk shirts and pointy-toe shoes would be outraged, but I suppose a 12-hole Jag engine might be transplanted into one....$700 Canadian for one [running!] from Longrun....
135
posted on
06/20/2003 11:13:43 AM PDT
by
archy
(Keep in mind that the milk of human kindness comes from a beast that is both cannibal and a vampire.)
To: wardaddy
Who was that early GP racing great from the US...even before KR....I remember he wore a flat top haircut....?? Mike *the bike* Hailwood? Not from the U.S., and I think of him with more of a receding hairline, but back around '67 when he took the French Grand Prix at Clermont Ferrand on a Honda 250cc 6-cylinder he may have had a crewcut. Flattracker Joe Leonard comes to mind, too, I think he got into GP bikes for a bit before switching over to Indy cars, and he wore his hair like the former Marine he was.
136
posted on
06/20/2003 11:34:59 AM PDT
by
archy
(Keep in mind that the milk of human kindness comes from a beast that is both cannibal and a vampire.)
To: SoDak; USAF_SSgt
137
posted on
06/20/2003 11:49:37 AM PDT
by
archy
(Keep in mind that the milk of human kindness comes from a beast that is both cannibal and a vampire.)
To: archy
Whoah baby! That's a bike.
138
posted on
06/20/2003 11:54:45 AM PDT
by
SoDak
To: mhking
Brings new meaning to "crotch rocket"...IMHO, "numnutz" is the more appropriate terminology in this situation.
I'm sure FReepers will come up with plenty of other substitutes for these speeding weiners.
To: martin_fierro
This is the Martin-Fierro Butt Cycle, AKA The Spanish Moon Shot!
140
posted on
06/20/2003 12:15:57 PM PDT
by
JoeSixPack1
(POW/MIA - Bring 'em home, or send us back! Semper Fi)
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