DAYTON, Ohio.
(July 2, 2010)-- Ongoing research and development has pushed the Brock's Performance SuperSport-prepped,
stock-wheelbase BMW S 1000 RR into the coveted 8-second E.T. bracket.
During the
recent "No Hatin'" race series at Kil-Kare Raceway in Xenia, Ohio, the bike
recorded a scorching 8.95 run with Jeremy Teasley in the saddle.
Stressing that
it's "business as usual" at Brock's Performance while the AMA Dragbike series
undergoes restructuring, shop owner Brock Davidson vowed not to let turbulent
times deter him from developing products and testing them in the sport's most
competitive regional venues.
For Kil-Kare,
the BMW was run in AMA Dragbike SuperSport trim. SuperSport rules are the most
stringent in motorcycle drag racing. The only allowable deviations from stock
are lowered suspension, modified gearing, aftermarket exhaust, a fuel-injection
controller, ceramic wheel bearings and very few other changes.
"We're working
hard to improve the BMW's performance," said Davidson. "To do any kind of
systematic testing you must have a standard to run against. The SuperSport rule
structure is still the way stock-wheelbase performance is gauged."
To extract every
bit of acceleration from the bike, Brock's enlisted the services of local drag ace
Jeremy Teasley to lay down clean runs on the short, low, lean, 200-horsepower
machine. With two AMA Dragbike Real Street championships under his belt,
Teasley is widely regarded as one of the best sportbike drag racers in the
business.
Running off an
8.90 national record set by Rickey Gadson on a Brock's-prepared ZX-14 last
season, Teasley clicked off successive quarter-mile runs of 9.12 and 9.04
seconds before hitting a 8.971 at 157.93 mph. He went on to lower the mark with
an astounding 8.950. Teasley's best 1/8-mile time of 5.83 seconds was just over
one-hundredth of a second off Gadson's national record. All this, at a track that
was not prepared to national-event standards, with an adjusted air density
altitude of 3800 feet.
"With the S 1000 RR having a better power-to-weight ratio of any
production sportbike, we felt strongly that we were going to do some damage in
the SuperSport class with the BMW this season and it is very disappointing that
AMA Dragbike suspended operations after we got only two races in," said Davidson.
"Nonetheless, we're going to continue doing what we do best: developing,
testing and selling products that make streetbikes fly. I still hold out hope
that there will be another national-level SuperSport class in the somewhat near
future. When that happens, we'll show up with a finely tuned, powerful weapon, ready to do battle."