(909) 838-4587 ed [at] le-suspension.com
Race Prep

Race Prep

 

Guy rented a 250 Ninja from RaceBikeRentals.com last year, he had so much fun he went out and bought his own. The time has come to get it ready to race.
The before picture shows Guy’s Ninja in my shop.
The purpose of this visit was Race Prep. Rather than just pay someone else to work on his bike Guy and I worked together drilling and safety wiring, installing his transponder, frame sliders and race body work.
I charge the same amount of labor no matter if you help or not but if you help you get to learn how to work on your bike yourself, something that you need to be able to do if you want to have a smooth day at the track.
The after picture shows Guy’s race bike back on his trailer Saturday night. Look for Guy at the February WSMC race at Streets of Willow. If you have any questions about safety wire, be sure to ask, Guy is a pro now.

The Tony Challenge Report

Tony’s hooked!

It happens every time someone lets anyone else ride a GP bike. I still remember my first ride on my ’90 TZ and I’m sure Tony will always remember his. We weren’t sure how well this enterprise would go so we laid off the new body work and paint, just got the bike running and tuned it soft. Now that we know Tony is crazy enough we’ll start making it faster and better looking.

Some parts are on order and my old set up notes have been found. Stay tunned for “As the TZ Turns.”

By the way, Tony did 140 miles on his first day and won the Novice 250 GP race. Not many people can say they won their first race on a GP bike.

Tony’s racing, what are you doing?

Forgotten Bike Found

Forgotten Bike Found

 

Sean Wray was checking out my list of bikes I’ve raced, he noticed something missing and sent me this photo as proof. Seems I’ve raced so many bikes I can’t remember them all. My apologies Sean, and thank you for the picture. There is a great story to go along with it:

The crank in my 2000 TZ 250 failed during the Sunday morning warm up at Mid Ohio. Of course this happened on the far side of the track. Mid Ohio is bad about getting bikes back to the pits on Sunday morning, I found a gate so I could push my bike back. The gate was locked and the corner workers didn’t have the key. I asked some spectators for help. A bunch of guys jumped over and passed my bike to the people on the other side. They got my bike over the fence without a scratch faster than I climbed over. I yelled thank you over my shoulder as I started pushing.
At the top of the first hill I could see just how far I would have to push, most of it up hill. A guy and his wife were riding toward me on a Harley, I stopped them and got them to turn around and tow me back. I knew he would have no clutch control so I applied a death grip to his bike and off we went. Some sport bike riders saw what we were up to and jumped in front of us to clear traffic on the bridge. It truly was a “Mr. Toad’s Wilde Ride.”
Back at our pit I realized that I didn’t have enough time to replace the crank and make the race. Sean offered to lone me his ’96 TZ and after swapping some parts we were off to the races. The picture shows me, #6 on Sean’s bike after my practice lap, also know as the warm up lap and Sean, #62 on the grid for the start of the AMA 250 GP race. Sean has my black upper and lower and my front end is on Sean’s bike.
I don’t remember much of the race but I got some points and Sean didn’t damage my body work.
My list is now at 71 bikes raced. I kinda sorta think there’s another I’ve forgotten and of course your bike could be added to the list at any time.

Snow Day!

It’s winter time here and we’ve had a week of stormy weather, rain at the house and snow up in the hills. Today it was clear and time to go riding! I can ride my XR100 out of my shop, down my street and up into the hills. After gaining about 1000 feet in elevation on a fire road I started to get into deep enough snow that my tires did not make it down down to the dirt. I was able to keep going up for about three miles in the snow. In a few spots I had to help the bike by pushing, finally when the rear tire was packed with wet snow it was time to head down.

Down hill in the snow it crazy fun! The snow slows you down like deep sand so you have to give it full bunny to go anywhere. The straights are not very, mostly long weaves where you gain speed. The curves are a blast, you have to go in at full speed without backing off because you will be slowed down by the deep snow. Sometimes you get a nice long slide with the rear hung out and sometimes the front pushes. The goal is to keep both feet up and not back off. Crashing is no problem because the snow is soft.

Todays ride was a good one and I can prove it. I got home with a flat front tire and my rear fender was carried back inside my jacket. After making repairs I’m planning to take my friend Lenny with me tomorrow. When you see Lenny you can ask him how I broke his finger on one of these rides.

The Tony Challenge

Tony is 70 years old, he raced back in the day and came back to it because he could rent a 250 Ninja from RaceBikeRentals.com. He’s starting over again in the novice class and he wants to win.

Plan A was to get another Ninja and build the engine, this is allowed in the novice class. Plan B was my idea, I said a 250 Ninja with a factory/kit/cheatasmuchasyoucan engine would still be a 250 Ninja, nice bike and all but not much power. I offered Tony a TZ 250. Not just any TZ 250 mind you, my first TZ ever. She lived with a few others after me but she’s back now. Tony is financing the restoration and will test it tomorrow at Willow, if all goes well he’ll race it on Sunday in the new WSMC Novice 250 GP class.

By the way, it’s a 1990 TZ, 20 years old. Tony and the TZ together are 90 years old. They are at the track this weekend living, what are you doing?!

I’ll be here all weekend, stop by the Roadracing World garage and say hi. On Monday I’ll be at Streets of Willow, Hyper Cycle is having a track day, you could go and you can hire me for only $200.

Fontana Fastrack/WERA

EDventure Racing and RaceBikeRentals.com have teamed up for this weekends Fastrack/WERA event at Fontana, aka Cal Speedway.

You can get a deal from Richard on the rental of one of his 250 Ninja’s and you can get my Personal Coaching & Crew Chiefing for only $50 per day. Or you can bring your bike and get my help for only $100 per day. My normal price is $200 per day plus travel and track fees.

Come find us in the pits, we’ll be set up together.

Christmas Pie

My wife and I went to her parents house for Christmas dinner with her large family. We had the full dinner spread, a few games of Dirty Marbles and finished off with three kinds of pie, Pecan Pie, Coconut Cream Pie and Key Lime Pie. I had all three. Merry Christmas to all and to all a good Pie.

Another Great Day At Willow Springs!

Track Daz held their annual Turkey Daz this past weekend at Willow Springs and Edventure Racing was there. We set up in the Roadracing World garage on Saturday to work with Editor At Large Michael Gougis on a story for the 2010 Track Day Directory.

Then on Sunday two riders, Bert and Price split my fee and dropped over eight seconds each from their lap times. Both bikes needed some set up adjustments including tire pressure, sag and damping but most of the improvement came from debriefing after each ride and talking about better lines, braking markers etc. We also worked on rider note taking, if you don’t write it down, it never happened.

Racing and Track days are expensive and the cost of a Personal Coach & Crew Chief can be easily seen as too much but think of this. How much time and money will you have to spend to drop eight seconds from your lap times? Also, Bert was planning to replace his tires on Sunday but with my advice and adjustments he did not and therefore saved more money than he spent with me.

As you know I have a race shop, I only work on race and track day bikes. Just like my coaching I work on maximizing your resources. Bert sent his CBR1000RR with me after the riding was done. His bike has plenty of power, I’m going to make it a little easier to change the wheels, install EBC brake pads, send the shock and forks to Lindemann Engineering for springs and re-valving then deliver his bike back to him even better than it already is.

When I’m not helping nice people have more fun on the track I’m working on nice bikes in my clean race shop. I’m not making the kind of money I was as a service manager at a large dealership but my life rocks. See you at a race track in the future!

The Ninja Twins

Husband and wife Andrew and Niccole have matching 250 Ninjas and they both took over four seconds off their best lap times today on Big Willow at a Motoyard.com track day.

We spent a little time making adjustments to the bikes before their first on track session, then we rode until we were tired. We even did one session on Streets of Willow.

Look for Niccole and Andrew to do well in January’s WSMC race. In fact, I’m so confident in them that I’m willing to say that they will be the fastest husband and wife team on the track.

If you want the same kind of results I’m available for race and track days the world over and I’ll be at the Track Daz event next weekend.

Resurrection!

Resurrection!

 

This was my first TZ. It’s a ‘90 model, the last year of the parallel twins, the carbs are in front of the engine with the pipes exiting out the back. It’s small, light and has a very narrow power band. And that’s compared to other TZ’s!

I bought it from Bruce Lind in 1993 and raced it in Hawaii. It’s first owner was Stewart Hutchins. Dale Franklin rode in AMA events in 1990 but crashed hard at Westwood in Vancouver BC in late 1990 (ending his racing) and the bike was not raced in 1991. Shawn McDonald paid to have the bike repaired and Lind raced it in selected AMA and local events in 1992. I sold it to Jupiter K. in Hawaii and he sold it to Sean Wray who took it to New Hampshire. There is sat until I traded some 2000 TZ cases to Wray just so I could keep it from rotting away.

It’s been sitting in my race shop waiting it’s chance and that chance has come. Tony S. wants something with a little more zip than his 250 Ninja and boy is he going to get it. The plan is to get it running again and if all goes well we will make it fast and pretty.

Don’t let this picture fool you, this bike has had a tough life and does not look as good in life as on this blog.

Stay tuned for “As the TZ turns.”

Contact Us

33175 Temecula Parkway
STE A-413
Temecula, CA 92592
(909) 838-4587
ed@le-suspension.com