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Number One
9th April 2008, 11:16
5:00AM Wednesday April 09, 2008
By Ben Kuttner


A New Zealand man is about to find out whether he has the world's fastest Kawasaki.

Every two years on Lake Gairdner, a vast Australian salt flat, teams of motorcycle enthusiasts gather to challenge and defend the land speed record for production motorbikes.

This month, Whangarei coach builder John Howe will learn whether he has officially broken the record for production motorcycles on his Kawasaki ZX14, by clocking 358.9km/h on January 27 - beating the previous record by 1.8km/h.

The motorcycles competing have to be street legal, which means they can be improved only with standard production parts.

The record is unofficial until a Swiss company, commissioned to carry out the time-keeping, sends Howe his certificates this month.

Bikes on the two-way run take 5-6km to achieve full speed before reaching the 1.6km stretch where the Swiss time recorders have their equipment at the ready.

The machines then need a further 3km to slow down and stop.

This is the third time Howe and his team - a group of motorcycle mechanics from Wellington - have had a crack at the speed record.

They spent 22 hours in testing to perfect the bike for conditions in Australia, matching air density and humidity.

"One man couldn't do this - a good team with excellent back-up makes it all happen," Howe said. Another tip is timing the run for early morning, because the intake of a Kawasaki functions best in cold, dense air.

Howe was up against seven teams from the UK, US, Australia and New Zealand,

On the perfectly flat Lake Gairdner, about the size of Lake Taupo but without the water, it was all over very quickly - the race took a year to plan, but just 10 minutes of waiting, then 10 minutes of full throttle.

"Waiting was the anxious period," Mr Howe said.

"But during the run there's no fear, just doing the job. No traffic officers to ruin your day."

GO JOHN AND TEAM!!!!

BarBender
9th April 2008, 11:20
Approx 360 on production parts? Awesome!!

Lets hope it gets the record.
Great effort!!

BiK3RChiK
9th April 2008, 11:25
Wicked! :rockon:

Edbear
9th April 2008, 11:27
Hope we get to see the vid!

Clivoris
9th April 2008, 21:08
Golly. That's rapid.

homer
9th April 2008, 21:15
does anyone know what the top speed is of a suzuki bus
i had heard that the zx14 isnt as great as what you believe they are , wtf
most powerful production bike made , not that great ?
i dont think so . I think its wicked

Cajun
10th April 2008, 08:33
does anyone know what the top speed is of a suzuki bus
i had heard that the zx14 isnt as great as what you believe they are , wtf
most powerful production bike made , not that great ?
i dont think so . I think its wicked

all are limited to 299km/h from factory.

But that can be removed, and then its how much money you throw at it and gearing

marty
10th April 2008, 08:42
all are limited to 299km/h from factory.

But that can be removed, and then its how much money you throw at it and gearing

my bus is still pulling reasonably well at 300 indicated (on a closed road), i would say with a taller gearing and a nice big salt flat it would do well into the 300's - especially with some decent off the shelf mods done to it. the busa's have taken the flying sprints out down dannevirke way for the past few years - the kwaka is yet to feature there with any prominence.

Carterton Flying 1/4 Mile (402 Meters)
Sunday, 3 February 2008
Name Bike Time Mph Kph
Malcolm Breadmore 2006 Suzuki GSXR 1300 4.6152 194.84 313.57
Paul heard 2007 MV Agusta 312R 1000 4.8969 183.64 295.53
Warwick Stenning 2007 Kawasaki ZX14 1352 4.9393 182.06 293.00


Note that's an OLD busa.......

Cajun
10th April 2008, 08:54
my bus is still pulling reasonably well at 300 indicated (on a closed road), i would say with a taller gearing and a nice big salt flat it would do well into the 300's - especially with some decent off the shelf mods done to it. the busa's have taken the flying sprints out down dannevirke way for the past few years - the kwaka is yet to feature there with any prominence.

Carterton Flying 1/4 Mile (402 Meters)
Sunday, 3 February 2008
Name Bike Time Mph Kph
Malcolm Breadmore 2006 Suzuki GSXR 1300 4.6152 194.84 313.57
Paul heard 2007 MV Agusta 312R 1000 4.8969 183.64 295.53
Warwick Stenning 2007 Kawasaki ZX14 1352 4.9393 182.06 293.00


Note that's an OLD busa.......

note that busa had nos sitting under his rear cowl.

Warwick Stenning is my brother in law (on the 14), i am in process of ordering him some parts so he go bit faster

I will be taking the 08 busa down to the next sprints.

And what you speedo says your doing and your doing are also very different things

Edbear
10th April 2008, 08:55
my bus is still pulling reasonably well at 300 indicated (on a closed road), i would say with a taller gearing and a nice big salt flat it would do well into the 300's - especially with some decent off the shelf mods done to it. the busa's have taken the flying sprints out down dannevirke way for the past few years - the kwaka is yet to feature there with any prominence.

Carterton Flying 1/4 Mile (402 Meters)
Sunday, 3 February 2008
Name Bike Time Mph Kph
Malcolm Breadmore 2006 Suzuki GSXR 1300 4.6152 194.84 313.57
Paul heard 2007 MV Agusta 312R 1000 4.8969 183.64 295.53
Warwick Stenning 2007 Kawasaki ZX14 1352 4.9393 182.06 293.00


Note that's an OLD busa.......

When the Busa was released in '99, the whole world scrambled to see just how fast it was, and while there were unsubstantiated claims, the best confirmed reading was 311km/h at the Avalon Runway in Aus.

marty
10th April 2008, 09:18
so 311 wasn't fast enough?

and i did say 'indicated'