Thanks to Mr. Robert Conan from St. Louis who mailed to introcude me to a very rare Harley Davidson flat track racer. I have made posts of some ultra rare bikes like the NOVA, Apollo and the likes. From Mr. Conan, I got to know about another such rare bike from the Harley Davidson stable. I swear I have never even heard about it. A frantic search through my books, internet and phone calls to friends; I got some ray of hope as to knowing the bike. Oh! The bike, it’s called LUCIFER’s HAMMER. I searched for pics high and dry and landed up with only a few pics and very little information. Readers are welcome to add on and correct the information and of course will be greatly appreciated. So, the following info is whatever I gathered through books and the net. You must be familiar with HD racing, mainly the XR TT750 and the VR 1000. In similar lines, in the spring of 1983, Lucifer's Hammer was the first big twin for a decade to carry Harley-Davidson's famous black and orange racing strips. That year Jay Springsteen won the Battle of the Twins event in Daytona and the same year in October in Daytona again, Gene Church was victorious in the Battle of the Twins event finals. It all actually started one year ago in 1982 when Dave McClure rode a prototype XR1000 street bike at Daytona which indicated that HD is on to something special for the tracks, a full-on racer project. The team of Don Tilley (working on the engine), 4 times AMA champion for HD, Carroll Resweber (working on the chassis) and Peter Zylstra (overall design) lead by Dick O'Brien started together and they were also given the opportunity to see the machine as a test-bed and gauge the public reaction when HD plans to release the bike as a Roadster (XR1000) and it was also unveiled at the same Daytona meet.
The engine consisted of a modified competition XR750 bottom end and light alloy heads mated to iron Sportster barrels. Twin 42mm smoothbore Mikuni carburettors took care of induction and for the 10.5:1 compression ratio, 110 octane aviation fuel was the choice. To improve combustion, each cylinder boasted twin spark plugs. In dyno tests, the engine was recorded belting out a monstrous 106bhp @ 7,500rpm, but Don working on the engine was not too sure whether the bike can hold all that due to reliability issues and so he imposed a rev ceiling of 7,000rpm, at which point the big twin was down… but by only 2 bhp, still pumping out 104bhp. The power delivery spread was also excellent with strong revs coming out from 4000 rpm onwards. All Don felt with so much power at such a small band, 4 gears are enough to take that all out and the gearbox proved to be more than adequate. The surprising part of the frame was that Carroll Resweber used a XR750 frame which was crashed by AMA champion Mark Brelsford at Daytona in 1972, fully ten years before the Hammer's 1983 win. Of course, the basic single spine and twin tube cradle was heavily reworked with extra gussets and bracing and it was mated to an all-new box-section swing-arm. The front suspensions were a pair of 40mm Forcelli Italia forks and twin Fox gas shock absorbers at the rear with Brembo brakes, twin 300mm floating-front disc brakes and single 250mm disc at the rear. The bike runs on Campagnolo magnesium wheels, 16” front wheel and 18” rear, both shod with Goodyear racing tyres. It weighed at 130kg and the bike had a whooping top speed of 254kmph (158mph) and to think about it, it only had 4 gears! And a 10 year old frame! Wow!That was of course difficult to beat by any parameters and it shows! when it won in 1983 debuting in Daytona. After the successful debut, Gene Church and his Hammer won three AMA Battle of the Twins titles. The photo on the left is Gene with U2 drummer Larry in 1989.
Engine: 998cc. OHV, 4 stroke, V-twin
Transmission: 4-speed
Power: 104bhp
Weight: 130kg (2861bs)
Wheelbase: 1,420mm
Top speed: 254kph (158mph)
Actually that was not the only Lucifer’s Hammer. There was another Lucifer's Hammer and this was a Buell RR1000. You see the photo, that’s Gene Church with the Buell Lucifer’s Hammer and sans bodywork. The second Lucifer’s Hammer or LH2 was a marriage of an XR750 lower end with an XR1000 top end. The chassis was a Buell RR1000, the second RR1000 that Erik Buell made and Don Tilley still has it. What I couldn’t understand was that any company has to get 50 production versions of the bike to homologate it and then so how come there are only 2 LH? Somewhere I read #2 to #50 were all RR1000 but only the first bike was named Lucifer’s Hammer. As I said, not much history anywhere, so anyone with some more clarity would be really appreciated for their contribution.
From :
http://raregems.onsugar.com/Lucifers-Hammer-from-HARLEY-DAVIDSON-3610046
留言列表