The motorcycle land-speed record is the fastest speed achieved by a motorcycle on land. It is standardized as the speed over a course of fixed length, averaged over two runs in opposite directions. AMA National Land Speed Records requires two passes the same calendar day in opposite directions over a timed mile/kilometre while FIM Land Speed World Records require two passes in opposite directions to be over a timed mile/kilometre completed within two hours. [1] These are special or modified motorcycles, distinct from the fastest production motorcycles. The first official FIM record was set in 1920, when Gene Walker rode an Indian on Daytona Beach at 104.12 mph (167.56 km/h). Since late 2010, the Ack Attack team has held the motorcycle land speed record at 376.36 mph (605.69 km/h).
The first generally recognized motorcycle speed records were set unofficially by Glenn Curtiss, using aircraft engines of his own manufacture, first in 1903, when he achieved 64 mph (103 km/h) at Yonkers, New York using a V-twin, and then on January 24, 1907, on Ormond Beach, Florida, when he achieved 136.27 mph (219.31 km/h) using a V8 housed in a spindly tube chassis with direct shaft drive to the rear wheel. [2] An attempted return run was foiled when his drive shaft came loose at speed, yet he was able to wrestle the machine to a stop without injury. Curtiss's V8 motorcycle is currently in the Transportation collection of the Smithsonian Institution.
Curtiss's 1907 record was the fastest any person had ever travelled under power: the rail record stood at 131 mph (211 km/h) (electric powered); the motor car record was 127.66 mph (205.45 km/h) (steam powered); while in the air, where weight considerations made the internal combustion engine dominant, the air speed record was still held by the Wright Brothers at a mere 37.85 mph (60.91 km/h).
The first officially sanctioned Fédération Internationale de Motocyclisme (FIM) record was set in 1920, when Gene Walker rode an Indian on Daytona Beach at 104.12 mph (167.56 km/h). The first FIM-sanctioned record to exceed Curtiss's 1907 speed did not occur until 1930, at Arpajon in France, when an OEC special with a 1,000cc supercharged JAP V-twin engine averaged 137 mph (220 km/h) over the required two-way runs. The 1930s saw an international battle between the BMWs ridden by Ernst Henne and various JAP-powered British motorcycles, with the penultimate pre-World War II record being taken in 1937 by Italy's Gilera, shortly before BMW set a final pre-war record of 173.68 mph (279.51 km/h) that stood for 14 years.
After World War II, the German NSU factory battled Britain's Vincent HRD and Triumph for top speed honors during the 1950s, with British-engined machines dominating the 1960s. New Zealand's Burt Munro (of the film The World's Fastest Indian), set a speed record at Bonneville in 1967 of 183 mph (295 km/h) for a motorcycle with an engine under 1000cc. A record which still stands. The record stands as at 2024.[ citation needed ]
A Japanese-engined streamliner motorcycle first took the record in 1970, and alternated with Harley-Davidson-engined machines as record-holders until 1990, when Dave Campos's streamliner powered by twin Harley-Davidson engines averaged 322.15 mph (518.45 km/h). That record stood for 16 years before being surpassed in 2006 by the Ack Attack team's twin Suzuki engined machine at an average of 342.8 mph (551.7 km/h). The BUB team, using a custom-built V4 engine, then alternated as record holders with Ack Attack over the next four years. As of November 2022, the Ack Attack team has held the motorcycle land speed record at 376.36 mph (605.69 km/h) since late 2010.
The fastest record certified by the FIM is that set in 1964 by the jet-propelled tricycle, Spirit of America. It set three absolute land speed records, the last at 526.277 miles per hour (846.961 km/h). While such records are usually validated by the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile, the FIA only certifies vehicles with at least four wheels, while the FIM certifies two- and three-wheelers. Breedlove never intended Spirit of America to be classified as a motorcycle, despite its tricycle layout, and only approached the FIM after being rejected for record status by the FIA. Spirit of America's FIM-ratified record prompted the FIA to add the new category of thrust-powered vehicles to its world record listings. Furthermore, most people think of the tricycle Spirit of America, now part of the permanent collection of Chicago's Griffin Museum of Science and Industry, as a car and not a motorcycle. [3]
Link to Bonneville Motorcycle Speed Trials AMA National and FIM World Records
Date | Location | Rider | Make | Engine displacement cc (cu in) | Speed | Comments | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
mph | km/h | ||||||
1903 | Yonkers, New York, US | Glenn Curtiss | Curtiss V-2 | 1,000 cc (61 cu in) | 64 | 103 | over the mile, first (unofficial) World Speed Record, Hercules V-twin [4] |
1905 | Blackpool, UK - Average Speed over 1,000m on 27 July 1905. | Henri Cissac | Peugeot 1,489cc V twin | 1,489cc | 87 | 140 | Blackpool Speed Trials |
24 January 1907 | Ormond Beach, Florida, US | Glenn Curtiss | Curtiss V-8 | 4,000 cc (240 cu in) | 136.27 | 219.31 | Unofficial record stood over 20 years [5] [6] |
14 April 1920 | Daytona Beach, Florida, US | Gene Walker | Indian | 994 cc (60.7 cu in) | 103.56 | 166.66 | [7] [8] |
6 November 1923 | Brooklands, UK | Claude Temple | Anzani | 108.48 | 174.58 | [7] | |
8 June 1924 | Arpajon, France | Tommy Turner | AJS Special-AJ Stevens | 799 cc (48.8 cu in) | 110.66 | 178.08 | [7] |
6 July 1924 | Arpajon, France | Bert le Vack | Brough Superior-JAP] | 867 cc (52.9 cu in) | 118.99 | 191.50 | [7] |
5 September 1926 | Arpajon, France | Claude F. Temple | OEC-Temple | 996 cc (60.8 cu in) | 121.44 | 195.44 | [7] |
25 August 1928 | Arpajon, France | Owen M. Baldwin | Zenith-JAP | 996 cc (60.8 cu in) | 124.27 | 199.99 | [7] |
25 August 1929 | Arpajon, France | Bert Le Vack | Brough-Superior | 995 cc (60.7 cu in) | 129.00 | 207.6 | [8] |
19 September 1929 | Ingolstadt, Germany | Ernst Jakob Henne | BMW WR 750 | 735 cc (44.9 cu in) | 134.67 | 216.75 | [7] The first successful use of a supercharger for a World Record. |
31 August 1930 | Arpajon, France | Joseph S. Wright | OEC-Temple JAP | 994 cc (60.7 cu in) | 137.23 | 220.99 | [8] First official record to exceed Curtiss' pioneering effort. |
21 September 1930 | Ingolstadt, Germany | Ernst Jakob Henne | BMW WR 750 | 735 cc (44.9 cu in) | 137.74 | 221.67 | [8] |
6 November 1930 | Cork, Ireland | Joseph S. Wright | Zenith JAP | 995 cc (60.7 cu in) | 150.74 | 242.59 | [7] |
2 November 1932 | Tát, Hungary | Ernst Jakob Henne | BMW | 736 cc (44.9 cu in) [9] [10] [11] | 151.86 | 244.40 | [7] |
30 October 1934 | Gyon, Hungary | Ernst Jakob Henne | BMW | 736 cc (44.9 cu in) [9] [10] [11] | 153.00 | 246.23 | [7] |
27 September 1935 | A3 autobahn (Frankfurt-München route), Germany | Ernst Jakob Henne | BMW | 736 cc (44.9 cu in) [9] [10] [11] | 159.10 | 256.04 [9] [10] [12] | [7] First record over 250 km/h (160 mph) |
12 October 1936 | A3, Germany | Ernst Jakob Henne | BMW Type 255 | 493 cc (30.1 cu in) [9] [10] [13] | 169.08 | 272.11 | [7] |
19 April 1937 | Gyon, Hungary | Eric Fernihough | Brough Superior-JAP | 995 cc (60.7 cu in) | 169.72 | 273.14 | [7] JAP supercharged [14] Fernihough was killed in a 1938 attempt [14] |
21 October 1937 | Autostrada A4 (Italy) (Brescia-Bergamo route) | Piero Taruffi | Gilera | 492 cc (30.0 cu in) | 170.37 | 274.18 | [7] Supercharged four-cylinder. Taruffi famous as Grand Prix driver. [8] |
28 November 1937 | A3, Germany | Ernst Jakob Henne | BMW | 495 cc (30.2 cu in) | 173.68 | 279.50 | [7] Last pre-World War II record |
1951 | A9 autobahn (Ingolstadt-München route), Germany | Wilhelm Herz | NSU Delphin I streamliner | 499 cc (30.5 cu in) | 180.29 | 290.322 | [8] First post-World War II record |
1955 | Swannanoa, New Zealand | Russell Wright | Vincent-HRD | 998 cc (60.9 cu in) | 184.83 | 297.640 | [8] |
25 September 1955 | Bonneville, US | John Allen | Triumph | 649 cc (39.6 cu in) | 192.719 | 310.151 | [15] Unratified by FIM [16] [a] |
2 August 1956 | Bonneville, US | Wilhelm Herz | NSU Delphin III streamliner | 499 cc (30.5 cu in) | 189.5 | 304.97 | [17] |
4 August 1956 | Bonneville, US | Wilhelm Herz | NSU Delphin III streamliner | 499 cc (30.5 cu in) | 210.64 | 338.992 | First record over 200 mph (320 km/h) [17] |
6 September 1956 | Bonneville, US | Johnny Allen | Triumph Tiger T110 | 649 cc (39.6 cu in) | 214.4 | 345.188 | [18] Unratified by FIM [19] [b] |
5 September 1962 | Bonneville, US | William A. Johnson | Triumph | 650 cc (40 cu in) | 224.57 | 361.41 | [20] |
1966 | Bonneville, US | Robert Leppan | Triumph Special [8] Gyronaut X-1 streamliner [19] | 1,298 cc (79.2 cu in) | 245.667 | 395.36 | Triumph Special twin-engined [8] |
1970 | Bonneville, US | Don Vesco | Yamaha "Big Red" streamliner | 700 cc (43 cu in) | 251.66 | 405.25 | [8] Two-stroke twin-engined [21] First record over 250 mph (402 km/h) |
1970 | Bonneville, US | Cal Rayborn | Harley-Davidson streamliner | 1,480 cc (90 cu in) | 265.492 | 410.37 | [8] single nitro-fueled Sportster engine nicknamed 'Godzilla' built by Warner Riley. |
28 September 1975 | Bonneville, US | Don Vesco | Yamaha "Silver Bird" streamliner | 1,480 cc (90 cu in) | 302.92 | 487.515 | [8] First record over 300 mph (483 km/h) |
28 August 1978 | Bonneville, US | Don Vesco | Lightning Bolt streamliner | 2,030 cc (124 cu in) | 318.598 | 509.757 | Turbocharged twin Kawasaki Kz1000 engines. First record over 500 km/h (311 mph) [22] |
14 July 1990 | Bonneville, US | Dave Campos | Easyriders streamliner | 3,000 cc (180 cu in) | 322.150 | 518.450 | Twin Harley-Davidson engines. Longest held official record, 16 years (see Curtiss' 20 year unofficial record) [23] |
3 September 2006 | Bonneville, US | Rocky Robinson | Top Oil-Ack Attack streamliner | 2,600 cc (160 cu in) | 342.797 | 551.678 | Twin Suzuki engines [24] |
5 September 2006 | Bonneville, US | Chris Carr | BUB Seven Streamliner | 2,997 cc (182.9 cu in) | 350.884 | 564.693 | BUB/Sierra Design V4 [24] |
26 September 2008 | Bonneville, US | Rocky Robinson | Top Oil-Ack Attack streamliner | 2,600 cc (160 cu in) | 360.913 | 580.833 | Twin Suzuki engines [25] |
24 September 2009 | Bonneville, US | Chris Carr | BUB Seven Streamliner | 2,997 cc (182.9 cu in) | 367.382 | 591.244 | BUB/Sierra Design V4 [26] |
25 September 2010 | Bonneville, US | Rocky Robinson | Top Oil-Ack Attack streamliner | 2,600 cc (160 cu in) | 376.363 | 605.697 | Twin Suzuki engines [27] First record over 600 km/h (373 mph) |
a. ^ At the time, it had been the accepted practice that the FIM would require the American Automobile Association to carry out official timing for any run in the USA. However shortly before the record attempt the A.A.A. had withdrawn from controlling motor sport, leaving no official body representing the FIM. Although every effort had been made to show the impartiality of the officials and the accuracy of the equipment, after several months the claimed record was not accepted by the FIA as the timing was "not carried out by an official certified by the FIM.". [1]
b. ^ The issues with official FIM timing of runs in the US were still not resolved at this time. NSU had solved the problem for their runs in August by including accredited timekeepers and officials in the team that they bought over with them from Europe. The British Motor Corporation had also been attempting record runs that year, and the FIA arranged for a British timekeeper to go to America for these. The equipment he had used for timing the runs was tested and approved by the FIA. However he had to leave America before Allen could make his run, and so the same equipment was used by two Americans who had been given written authority to act as timekeepers on behalf of the FIM. At the FIM meeting in Paris in October, the FIM postponed approval of the record, alleging that the timekeeper was not recognised by the FIM and that no official FIM observer had been present. After further deliberation and investigation, the FIM announced in April 1957 that they were unable to ratify the record claimed as the equipment used had not been approved by them. [2] [1] [3]
The land speed record (LSR) or absolute land speed record is the highest speed achieved by a person using a vehicle on land. By a 1964 agreement between the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) and Fédération Internationale de Motocyclisme (FIM), respective governing bodies for racing in automobiles and motorcycles, both bodies recognise as the absolute LSR whatever is the highest speed record achieved across any of their various categories. While the three-wheeled Spirit of America set an FIM-validated LSR in 1963, all subsequent LSRs are by vehicles in FIA Category C in either class JE or class RT.
Herbert James "Burt" Munro was a motorcycle racer from New Zealand, famous for setting an under-1,000 cc world record, at Bonneville, on 26 August 1967. This record still stands; Munro was 68 and was riding a 47-year-old machine when he set his last record.
Dave Campos is a top-fuel drag motorcycle racer and held the motorcycle land speed record from 1990 until 2006.
Chris Carr is an American motorcycle dirt-track racer and seven-time winner of the A.M.A. Grand National Championship. He has also competed as a motorcycle road racer at the national level and was a motorcycle land speed world record holder.
Zenith Motorcycles was a British motorcycle and automobile manufacturer established in Finsbury Park, London in 1903, by W. G. Bowers. Automobile manufacture only lasted from 1905 to 1906. The first Zenith motorcycle was the 'BiCar' of 1903, based on Tooley's Bi-Car design, which was purchased by Zenith for its own production. The BiCar was a unique design with hub-center steering and a low-slung chassis with the engine centrally fixed.
The Triumph Bonneville T120 is a motorcycle originally made by Triumph Engineering from 1959 to 1975. It was the first model of the Bonneville series, which was continued by Triumph Motorcycles Ltd. The T120 was discontinued in favour of the larger 750 cc T140 in the early 1970s.
The Triumph Tiger 110 is a British sports motorcycle that Triumph first made at their Coventry factory between 1953 and 1961. The T110 was developed from the Triumph Thunderbird and first appeared in 1954.
The TOP 1 Ack Attack is a specially constructed land-speed record streamliner motorcycle that, as of March 2013, has held the record for world's fastest motorcycle since recording a two-way average speed of 605.697 km/h (376.363 mph) on September 25, 2010, in the Cook Motorsports Top Speed Shootout at Bonneville Speedway, Utah. The Ack Attack's fastest one-way speed was officially recorded at 634.217 km/h (394.084 mph). This was the third time in four years the Ack Attack had broken the motorcycle land-speed record.
The Curtiss V-8 motorcycle was a 269 cu in (4,410 cc) V8 engine-powered motorcycle designed and built by aviation and motorcycling pioneer Glenn Curtiss that set an unofficial land speed record of 136.36 miles per hour (219.45 km/h) on January 24, 1907. The air-cooled F-head engine was developed for use in dirigibles.
BUB Seven Streamliner is an American-built streamliner motorcycle that held the motorcycle land-speed record from 2006 to 2008 and again from 2009 to 2010. BUB Seven and two other streamliners traded the title of "world's fastest motorcycle" during official speed runs at Bonneville Speedway in the summer of 2006. The other two competitors were Ack Attack and the EZ-Hook streamliner. In 2017, Valerie Thompson rode BUB Seven for more record attempts at Bonneville.
Project '64 is the name of the attempt to break the car land speed record for vehicles with an engine capacity of between 751 cc and 1000 cc in a 1964 Mk1 Mini Cooper 970 S. The Project '64 team was successful in 2012, setting a record of 146.595 mph (235.922 km/h) at the SCTA Speed Week at Bonneville Salt Flats. The Project '64 team had planned to attempt to raise the record in 2014 and 2015. In 2014 their car was not complete in time to ship to Bonneville due to delays manufacturing specialist engine components and in 2015 Speed Week was cancelled due to poor track conditions. They now intend to compete at Speed Week 2016.
The NSU Delphin III streamliner motorcycle set the motorcycle land speed record in 1956. Wilhelm Herz rode the machine to 211.4 miles per hour (340.2 km/h) at Bonneville Speedway in Utah, to break 200 mph (320 km/h) for the first time. Its fairing, designed in a wind tunnel at University of Stuttgart, gave it a drag coefficient of 0.19. The same engine powered Herz to a 1951 world speed record, with a less efficient frame/fairing, the Delphin I. The engine used an unusual rotary supercharger related to NSU's eventual development of the Wankel engine. In the supercharger, both a trochoidal inner rotor and epitrochoidal outer rotor spun around a stationary shaft.
Forced induction in motorcycles is the application of forced induction to a motorcycle engine. Special automotive engineering and human factor considerations exist for the application of forced induction with motorcycles compared to other forms of motorized transportation.
Don Vesco was an American businessman and motorcycle racer who held multiple motorcycle land-speed and wheel-driven land speed records. In his lifetime, he set 18 motorcycle and 6 automobile speed records.
Lightning Bolt is an American-built streamliner motorcycle that held the motorcycle land-speed record from 1978, when Don Vesco rode it to 318.598 miles per hour (512.734 km/h), until 1990. It was also the fastest vehicle participating in the 1978 Bonneville Speed Week with a one-way 333.117-mile-per-hour (536.100 km/h) run. It was powered by twin turbocharged inline-4 engines sourced from a Kawasaki Kz1000, with a combined displacement of 2,032 cc. The near-stock engines were linked at both ends of their cranks by two Gilmer belts and utilized the rear engine's gearbox.
Silver Bird was a motorcycle land-speed record setting streamliner motorcycle. It was powered by two motors delivering 240 horsepower (180 kW). It was the first motorcycle to set a speed record over 300 miles per hour (480 km/h), when ridden by Don Vesco at the Bonneville Speedway in 1975.
The Lambky Liner is a motorcycle land-speed record streamliner designed by Navy veteran and Vincent motorcycle restorer Max Lambky from Kansas, United States. It reached a top recorded speed of 250 mph (400 km/h) at the 2007 International Motorcycle Speed Trials, and an estimated 275 mph (443 km/h) in second gear before a supercharger spindle broke and spoiled a run in 2008.
Land speed racing is a form of motorsport.
Bonneville Motorcycle Speed Trials (BMST) (AMA Land Speed Grand Championship / FIM Land Speed World Records) is a motorcycle land speed racing event, held annually at Bonneville Speedway, US. The event is sanctioned by American Motorcyclist Association (AMA) as the Land Speed Grand Championship and Fédération Internationale de Motocyclisme (FIM) as the FIM Land Speed World Records. AMA-certified US National Land Speed records, and FIM-certified Land Speed World Records are set at this event. The event features motorcycles ranging from 50-cc to 3000-cc, as well as electric classes.