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Team Punisher goes 200 at the Texas Mile

PostPosted: Sat Oct 29, 2011 7:58 am
by LUCKY DAVE
We finally did it, made a 200.8 mph pass at the Texas Mile :D
Team Punisher consists of myself, Marc Rittner(LA), and Micah Shoemaker(TX).
This project has consumed 3-1/2 years of development time for my team mates and I, plus multiple grenaded engines, cubic dollars, and the usual blood, sweat, and tears.
The bike we ride started life as an Aprilia RSV, a 990cc V-twin Italian sport bike modified for land speed racing. It's longer, lower, has full streamlining, and a supercharger, water/methanol injection (for charge cooling and detonation suppression), and a wet nitrous oxide system. No part of the bike is stock.
Power output is 350-ish rwhp
So,....what's it like to ride a pass on The Punisher?


To start with, you rehearse next morning's pass in your head a hundred times while trying to fall asleep early so you will be wide awake to ride your best at -hopefully windless- daybreak, while your team mates are still out in the trailer wrenching on the bike until 2 am. Toss and turn, toss and turn.
Waiting in staging line, the butterflies in your stomach are like a rock band trashing a hotel room, but you yuk it up with the competition anyway and try to enjoy yourself.
When your lane is about to be called, your team puts heat in the engine and attends to the nitrous pressure (adjusts the bottle temperature) and configures the electronics while you zip up your leathers and get your earplugs, helmet, and gloves on.
It's time to lower the bike off the stand and sit on it. Your team helps you clip the dead man switch lanyard to your left glove where it won't be in your way, and they stop talking to you. Or maybe they don't stop, I don't know, I'm "in the zone" by that point and don't hear them, or anything else.
When it's your turn, team mates push you out to "on deck" position and you start the engine.
The vehicle in front of you launches, and the starter waves you up to the line. At this point, nuclear bombs could be going off and I wouldn't notice, my concentration is absolute.
The starter gives you the go ahead, your select first gear and set your shifting foot on the peg ready to shift into second, and......go!
This bike only needs about half or less rpm at launch, and we're easy on the clutch getting moving. With this gearing first gear is good for 80mph or so. As the clutch is fully engaged I smoothly open the throttle wide then shift into second early, at 9k-ish rpm, quickly rev second to 9k-ish rpm, then go for third and press the nitrous button. Shifting the first two gears early helps control wheel spin off the line.
You're going fast enough now that big wheel spin or an abrupt wheelie isn't so likely, so it's time to think about making sure you are completely tucked in out of the airstream. The bike is still trying to hard wheelie and spin the tire, just not as hard as it was.
As the nitrous comes in like a rocket booster up your a$$ things start to happen in a real hurry, a good run requires shifting at exactly 10.5k rpm, not more, not less so you have to be on your toes to get it exactly right.
Hold the button down and run through the rest of the gears, looking for the mile marker when you shift to sixth. The engine pulls the upper gears with an urgency that words can't describe. Hold it WFO till just after the marker and shut the throttle, only now do you see the landscape blurring by and realize just how fast you're really going.
Use the brakes and make the turn off onto the return road, reach down and disarm the nitrous and flip on the aux fan switch, ride up to the timing stand and receive your 200.8 mph slip.
All in a day's work.

Re: Team Punisher goes 200 at the Texas Mile

PostPosted: Sat Oct 29, 2011 8:00 am
by LUCKY DAVE
Contributors
PM me for contact information

AF1 Racing - parts, tuning services, logistics - Micah Shoemaker/Ed Cook
Interface PNP - custom Megasquirt engine management - Tony Finley
Microblue Racing - friction management - Craig LeClaire
AirTech Streamlining - aerodynamic management - Kent Riches and Dutch
Professor Larry Armi PhD, Scripps faculty, turbulent flow consulting
Lozano Brothers Porting - engine design and nitrous tuning - Mike Lozano
Peak Performance - tuning services - Danny Dinardo
Smaltmoto Exhaust - custom stainless exhaust system - Konstantin Von Badewitz
Spoon Valley Racing - supercharger mounting kit - Joakim Augustsson
Pro-1 Racing Heads - valve seats, guides, portiing, Newen valve job - Charlie Lawlor
Mountain Performance - Rotrex superchargers and supercharger pressure management - Matt Webster
McIntosh Machine and Fabrication - custom swingarm lengthening - Terry McIntosh
C & B Tools - Solidworks design, custom machining and tooling, fabrication, welding - Daryl Collins
Maggard Machine - custom machining - Tom Maggard
The Knurl Machine - custom machining, fabrication, welding
Mark's Machine - custom exhaust fabrication - Mark McDade
Ray-bon Welding - certified aircraft welding Montclair - Ray and Bonnie
Nitrous Express - nitrous solenoids, nozzles, progressive controller, bottles, jets - Mike Wood / Mike Golightly
Murdoch Racing Enterprises - custom lockup clutch - Jay Regan
Earl's Supply #1 Lawndale - custom hoses and AN fittings - Tom
Web Camshafts - custom billet camshafts - Melissa
Carrillo Industries - Carrillo Rods and CP Pistons - Richard
Aprilia Racing USA - parts and services - Amauri Nunes
Falicon Crankshafts - custom crank modifications and balancing - Rafael
Ferrea Valves - custom stainless steel and superalloy valves - Scott
R/D Spring - custom valve springs and titanium retainers - Zach
Cometic Gaskets - custom head gaskets
Ace Performance - ceramic bearings - Sal Spatafora
Woodcraft CFM - custom rearset controls, clipons
Devil's Own - water/methanol injection components - Devil Doc
GP Suspension - custom modified suspension components - Dave Hodges
Brake Tech - Ferodo Brake Pads - Jeff Gehrs
Hypercycle - high performance motorcycle engines - Cary Andrew
Vulcan Engineering - mechanical seals - Spencer Reynolds
SRCO - custom machine work and processing - Bill Skinner
Xtreme Performance Coatings - ceramic exhaust coatings - Alan
Magnecor - high performance suppressed ignition wires - Steve Brown

Re: Team Punisher goes 200 at the Texas Mile

PostPosted: Sat Oct 29, 2011 8:05 am
by LUCKY DAVE
Team Punisher is the only twin cylinder member of the 200 mph club, and at only 990cc the smallest engine by far. The next fastest twin ran 161....
All other members of this exclusive club are running four cylinder turbocharged engines, most displace 1400cc or more. Some are making 800+ rwhp.
The Punisher is the "Little Twin that Could"

Re: Team Punisher goes 200 at the Texas Mile

PostPosted: Sat Oct 29, 2011 12:10 pm
by pdy
Dave:

Congratulations - that's awesome!!! I know you have been driving towards this for some time.

Great, exciting write-up too. :beerchug:

Re: Team Punisher goes 200 at the Texas Mile

PostPosted: Sun Oct 30, 2011 8:24 am
by Jad
You are nuts  :bowdown:

Re: Team Punisher goes 200 at the Texas Mile

PostPosted: Sun Oct 30, 2011 10:15 am
by stevemckay
CONGRADULATIONS!!!!!!!!!!!!! GLAD TO HEAR THE NEWS ON TWO FRONTS,ACHIEVING YOUR GOAL OF 200 MPH, AND COMING HOME IN ONE PIECE. :beerchug:

Re: Team Punisher goes 200 at the Texas Mile

PostPosted: Sun Oct 30, 2011 10:40 am
by mrondeau
Great job. I know that you've been working on this for a while. Glad you achieved your goal in spite of how lofty it was.  :bowdown:

Re: Team Punisher goes 200 at the Texas Mile

PostPosted: Wed Nov 02, 2011 12:29 pm
by LUCKY DAVE
A few pics.....

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Re: Team Punisher goes 200 at the Texas Mile

PostPosted: Thu Nov 03, 2011 1:16 pm
by ZombiePorsche44
Great Job Dave! and I agree with Jad, you're Nuckin' Futs and obviously have much bigger cajones than I, I bow to your 200.8 run  :bowdown:

Re: Team Punisher goes 200 at the Texas Mile

PostPosted: Fri Nov 04, 2011 5:29 pm
by Dan Chambers
Wow! That's awesome!! Congrats on a long-sought record. How great!

And yes .... you're Freakin' Crazy to go that fast on 2 wheels!