Harley-Davidson XR-750

The Harley-Davidson XR-750 is a racing motorcycle made by Harley-Davidson since 1970, primarily for dirt track racing, but also for road racing in the XRTT variant. The XR-750 was designed in response to a 1969 change in AMA Grand National Championship rules that leveled the playing field for makes other than Harley-Davidson, allowing Japanese and British motorcycles to outperform the previously dominant Harley-Davidson KR race bike.[1] The XR-750 went on to win the most races in the history of American Motorcyclist Association (AMA) racing.[2][3][4][5]

An XR-750, number 16, through the dust at Scioto Downs, Ohio

The XR-750 is associated with the careers of racers Mark Brelsford, Cal Rayborn, and Jay Springsteen, and was the favorite motorcycle of stunt performer Evel Knievel.[6] Knievel used the bike from December 1970 until his final jump in January 1977. An XR-750 was included in the 1998 The Art of the Motorcycle exhibition, and one of Knievel's bikes is in the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History America on the Move exhibit.[1][7]

Rule changes obsolete KR racers

XR-750 dirt tracker
Also called70-XR-750
PredecessorModel KR
ClassDirt track racing
Engine748 cc (45.6 cu in) air cooled V-twin, 2x 36 mm Mikuni carburetors
Bore / stroke76 mm × 81 mm (3.0 in × 3.2 in) (1970 iron head)
79 mm × 76 mm (3.1 in × 3.0 in) (alloy head 1972 )
Top speed115 mph (185 km/h)[1]
Power82 hp (61 kW) @ 7,700 rpm[1]
TransmissionTriple chain primary, 4-speed, chain final drive
Frame typeSteel twin loop full cradle
SuspensionFront: Ceriani telescopic fork
Rear: 2x Girling shocks
BrakesFront: none
Rear: optional
TiresSpoked wheels, aluminum rims. 4 in × 19 in (100 mm × 480 mm)
Rake, trail26°, 3.44 in (87 mm)
Wheelbase56.75 in (1,441 mm)
Seat height31 in (790 mm)
Weight295 lb (134 kg) (claimed) (dry)
Fuel capacity2.5 US gal (9.5 l; 2.1 imp gal)
Oil capacity2.75 US qt (2,600 ml)

The AMA Grand National Championship Class C rules, introduced in 1933 and revised in 1954, had an equivalency formula limiting flathead, or sidevalve, engines to 750 cc (46 cu in) displacement, while more modern overhead valve (OHV) engines could be a maximum of only 500 cc (31 cu in).[8] Over time, this displacement advantage kept the older flathead technology on the track and discouraged a broader field of competitors. At least 200 homologated examples of a model had to be built and made available to the public.[8] The flathead Harley-Davidson KR series had dominated Class C racing, but by the late 1960s BSA, Norton and Triumph had little market for 500 cc OHV motorcycles, and there was increasing pressure for a single displacement, without reference to valve configuration.[8] The public was buying 650 cc (40 cu in) and larger displacement British bikes, and they would prove to be competitive, given the chance.[8]

With the British marques gaining influence in the AMA, in 1969 new rules were established that there would be one maximum displacement for dirt track racing, 750 cc, with no regard for valve type, though the 500/750 OHV/sidevalve split was kept for the time being in road racing. OHV engines began to dominate racing, in spite of Mert Lawwill's efforts to delay the inevitable on his flathead Harleys, and the KR bikes were a decade out of date and could no longer compete.[8]

Development

XR-750 c. 2015: Team Latus
XR-750 c. 2015: Engine left
XR-750 c. 2015: Engine right
XR-750 c. 2015

With limited time and money in 1969, Harley-Davidson's racing manager Dick O'Brien and his team used elements of existing designs to put together a new OHV racer, but rather than start from scratch they decided to modify their existing OHV racer: the Sportster-based 900 cc (55 cu in) XLR magneto-equipped race engine with a 3.0000 in (7.620 cm) bore and a 3.8125 in (9.684 cm) stroke. It was too large to be legal, so a modified version was created using the same basic upper end parts (iron heads and cylinders) but with a drastically shorter stroke and shorter connecting rods to reduce the displacement to the 750 cc (46 cu in) legal limit.

[8] These iron head XR-750s of 1970–71 were prone to overheating (humorously called "waffle irons") as well as having insufficient power. The engine was again re-designed for 1972 with an all-aluminum head and cylinder package with bigger bore and shorter stroke for the same 750cc displacement. The frame and the running gear were held over from the KRTT racer, with a Ceriani front fork and two Girling rear shocks.[8] The fuel tank, fenders, and rear seat/fender combination were fiberglass, with a snap down seat cover over a foam cushion.[8][9] To comply with AMA homologation rules, two hundred examples were made and could be had upon request at Harley-Davidson dealers, at a price of US$3,200, which today with inflation would be about US$ 21,067.[9]

Not unlike other Harley-Davidson engines, the unit construction left and right engine cases split vertically, and formed four cavities: a center front crankcase, a center rear gearbox, a right side cavity gearcase for the timing train, where the four camshafts are housed, and a left cavity for the three row primary drive chain.[8] A row of four camshafts had also been used on the KR racers, inherited from the sidevalve Model WL, and even earlier Model D of 1929.[10] While the single camshaft of other Harley-Davidson designs was cheaper to manufacture, and quieter, four cams allowed better performance, such as greater flexibility in adjusting the cam timing, and the short single camshafts are durable, and give the pushrods a straighter path to the rocker arms.[11]

XRTT road racer

XRTT road racer
Also calledXRTT-750
PredecessorKRTT
ClassRoad racing
Engine748 cc (45.6 cu in) air cooled V-twin, 2x 36 mm Mikuni carburetors
Bore / stroke79 mm × 76 mm (3.1 in × 3.0 in)
PowerEst. 70–100 hp (52–75 kW) (early-late)[9]
TransmissionTriple chain primary, 4-speed, chain final drive
Frame typeSteel twin loop full cradle
SuspensionFront: Ceriani telescopic fork
Rear: 2x Girling shocks
BrakesFront: 4 leading shoe drum
Rear: single disc
TiresSpoked wheels, aluminum rims. Front: 3 in × 18 in (76 mm × 457 mm)
Rear: 3.5 in × 18 in (89 mm × 457 mm)
Rake, trail24°, 3.63 in (92 mm)
Wheelbase54 in (1,400 mm)
Seat height28 in (710 mm)
Weight324 lb (147 kg) (claimed) (dry)
Fuel capacity6 US gal (23 l; 5 imp gal)
Oil capacity4 US qt (3,785 ml)

The road racing version of the XR-750 used an aluminum oil tank, had a 6 US gal (23 l; 5 imp gal) fiberglass fuel tank, and a fiberglass fairing which included extra heat shielding to protect the rider's left leg when riding in a tuck position.[9] On the top center of the fuel tank was a leather pad with a round cutout for the left-side fuel filler cap.[9] Like the dirt tracker, it used a Ceriani fork and Girling shocks, two 36 mm Mikuni carburetors and tuned dual reverse cone exhaust.[9] Instrumentation consisted of a Smiths tachometer.[9]

Unlike the dirt tracker, it came with brakes: a rear disc brake, and in front, a Fontana four leading shoe drum brake,[9] which is two twin leading drum brakes paired side by side in two drums.[12] The XRTT is the final example of a competition motorcycle with drum brakes, superseded by disc brakes on all other racing bikes due to the excessive unsprung weight added by the very large drum brake assembly.[9] The official horsepower was never published, but estimates for the early 1972 engines were in the high 70–79 hp (52–59 kW) range, increasing to an estimated 100 hp (75 kW) or more by 2008.[9]

Racing

Riders on XR-750s have won 29 of the 37 AMA Grand National Championships from 1972 to 2008 inclusive.[2] Besides having more wins than any other bike in AMA racing, it has been called the "most successful race bike of all time",[2] and has a claim to have more wins than any other racing motorcycle in history.[5]

In 1989, Lou Gerencer, Sr. built a hillclimbing XR-750 with an extended swingarm that made the bike half again as long. Adapted with mechanical fuel injection and nitrous oxide, Gerencer estimated his engine produced over 150 hp (110 kW). The overstressed engine did not last long, but held together long enough to win the AMA hillclimb championship.[9]

Street XR

Harley-Davidson XR1200 Sportster

As with the KR, customers began asking for a street-legal XR from its debut. Harley-Davidson was slow to capitalize on this demand, finally introducing the Sportster XR-1000 street bike for the 1983 model year, 13 years after the XR-750 racer. The XR-1000 used XR-750 heads, but kept the Sportster engine, frame and other equipment.[10] Costing nearly twice the price of a base model Sportster XL, the XR-1000 sold poorly and many performance enthusiasts simply bought an XL and upgraded the heads, carburetors and exhaust themselves at significantly less total cost.[10] The XR-1000 was discontinued after only two years, and after another 24 years the Harley-Davidson XR1200 was introduced in 2008 in Europe and 2009 in the US.[13] The XR1200 has less in common with the XR-750 than the XR-1000 did, but has so far found a warmer reception.[13][14]

Former Harley-Davidson racing team rider, Mert Lawwill, constructs and markets modified Harley-Davidson XR1200 bikes that are street-legal versions of the Harley-Davidson XR-750 that he raced in the Grand National Championship.[15][16]

Jumping

Evel Knievel began jumping the XR-750 at the height of his career between December 1970 and October 1976 (although a failed practice jump was made in January 1977 and captured on film). Prior to the failed practice jump, Knievel jumped either cars or trucks (or a combination of the two) on the XR-750.[17]

Bubba Blackwell's Harley-Davidson XR-750 jump bike

The longest jump Knievel made over cars was 129 feet over 19 cars in 1971 and was featured in the movie Evel Knievel starring George Hamilton.[18] The longest jump over buses was first attempted with Knievel crashing at Wembley Stadium in 1975 in an attempt to jump 120 feet over 13 buses.[19] Five months later, Knievel jumped the XR-750 over 14 buses for his personal record, and world record for almost 25 years,[20] of 133 feet at Kings Island.[19]

Knievel set most jump records using the XR-750, but since 2008, most jump records are held by stunt performer Bubba Blackwell.[21] Currently, the longest jump on the XR-750 by Bubba Blackwell was successfully made in 1999, when he jumped 15 buses at 157 feet.[20] On August 6, 2015 the daredevil stunt performer Doug Danger[22] at the Sturgis Bike Rally at the Buffalo Chip, broke Knievel's record for most cars jumped on a XR-750 with 22 cars. Knievel attempted this feat of 22 cars in Monroe, Washington on September 1, 1972 and cleared 21 cars but landed on the safety deck covering the 22nd car. Bubba Blackwell attempted the same 22-car jump In 2001 with horrible consequences. He flipped end-over-end when he missed the landing, nearly died and was in a coma for months. Danger accomplished this feat on Evel Knievel’s actual vintage 1972 Harley-Davidson XR-750. With no modification to the bike other than relocating foot pegs to accommodate Doug's height.[23][24][25]

An Evel Knievel XR-750 suspended mid-air as if jumping, at the Harley-Davidson Museum

Notes

  1. Leffingwell, Randy; Guggenheim Museum Staff (1998), Krens, Thomas; Drutt, Matthew (eds.), The Art of the Motorcycle, Harry N. Abrams, p. 319, ISBN 0-8109-6912-2
  2. Gingerelli, Dain; Everitt, Charles; Michels, James Manning (2011), 365 Motorcycles You Must Ride, MBI Publishing Company, p. 106, ISBN 978-0-7603-3474-4, Most successful race bike of all time.
  3. Girdler, Allan; Dewhurst, David (2004), The Harley Davidson Sportster, MotorBooks International, ISBN 978-0-7603-1615-3, retrieved 2011-07-08
  4. Saunders, Andy (19 March 1996), "Bartels' XLR 1200; Mile racer for the street", Motorcycle.com, retrieved 2011-07-08
  5. "Europe's riders get their own legendary Harley", Bristol Evening Post, Bristol, England, p. 46, 19 June 2008, ...the legendary Harley-Davidson XR 750 TM flat track racer - a no-nonsense, purpose-built race bike that has notched up more wins than any other racing bike in the history of the sport, this bike does not disappoint.
  6. Barker, Stuart (2008), "Major Career Statistics", Life of Evel: Evel Knievel, Macmillan, pp. 279–300, ISBN 9780312547356
  7. Girdler, Allan (1991), Harley-Davidson XR-750, Osceola, Wisconsin: MotorBooks International, pp. 8–16, ISBN 0-87938-510-3, OCLC 22812271
  8. Leffingwell, Randy; Holmstrom, Darwin (2008), The Harley-Davidson Motor Co. archive collection, St. Paul, Minnesota: MotorBooks International, pp. 298–308, ISBN 978-0-7603-3184-2
  9. Norris, Martin (1992), Rolling thunder, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Courage Books, pp. 24–25, ISBN 1-56138-131-4
  10. Buzzelli, Buzz (2006), Harley-Davidson Sportster Performance Handbook (3rd ed.), MotorBooks International, p. 184, ISBN 978-0-7603-2353-3
  11. Martin, Gill (November 1975), "The Brakes of the Game", American Motorcyclist, pp. 10–13, retrieved 2011-07-10
  12. Myles, Paul (31 August 2008), "Motoring Myles: Harley's Got Grip ..At Last", The People   via ProQuest (subscription required) , London, p. 31
  13. Brown, Stuart F. (6 September 2009), "A Harley lands in America, by way of Europe", New York Times, p. AU9, retrieved 2011-07-16
  14. "Backmarker: Mert Lawwill". motorcycle-usa.com. Retrieved 2 January 2016.
  15. Girdler, Allan (2005). Sunday Rider. Retrieved 2 January 2016.
  16. Life of Evel, Stuart Barker, St. Martin's Press, 2004
  17. Los Angeles Times, "Evel Knievel Goes For Broke", February 27, 1971
  18. "Knievel Hurdles 14 Buses" (Google News), The Montreal Gazette, Associated Press, p. 40, October 27, 1975, retrieved 2011-07-05
  19. "Backwater Bubba Leaps for Leno, Knieve's Marks" (Google news), The Tuscaloosa News, Associated Press, p. 8, February 27, 2000, retrieved 2011-07-05
  20. "Success!", Golf Coast Newspaper, October 2008
  21. "Doug Danger — United States". CycleJumpers.com. Retrieved September 20, 2016.
  22. Bornhop, Andrew (August 7, 2015). "Doug Danger Breaks Knievel's Record Daredevil jumps 22 cars at Sturgis, on Evel Knievel's 1972 Harley XR750!". Cycle World. Retrieved September 20, 2016.
  23. Panerio, Marry (August 12, 2015). "7 Monumental Moments of the 75th Sturgis Rally". BuffaloCjip.com. Retrieved September 20, 2016.
  24. "Motorcycle History". Ride Apart. August 3, 2015. Retrieved September 20, 2016.

References

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