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The Beginning

This article is excerpted from BRAG's FUELL™ magazine

Let's go way back in time, Erik. What was it that first got you into motorcycling?                           

When I was little, growing up in Gibsonia, Pennsylvania, I always liked going places. I liked bicycles, sleds, ponies, horses - you name it. I just liked being out in the air versus in a car. When I saw my first motorcycle, I thought, "Man, it's like a car and a sled combined!" Motorcycling is fun and cool combined. After my first blast down the road, I was hooked. The very first ride did it.

What was your first ride?
It was on an old step-through Super Cub Honda®. The son of one of my mother's friends had one. He was 16, and I was 12. I begged him to let me ride it, and he said I could take it to the end of the driveway. But I just had to keep going, so I shot out on the road and took off. I had to, to avoid getting punched out!

Well, that did it. I got the motorcycle bug very bad. It didn't take long until my heroes were all racers. But eventually, I would develop a huge respect for the guys who designed the bikes, not just the guys who raced them.

I got my first official bike at around 14. It was a moped - a 90 cc Perilla, three-speed with pedals. It was called a Slug hi - which is "Ram Jet" in Italian. The only time it made noise was when I pedaled, which was most of the time, since it had absolutely no power.

Next, I took a giant step up and got a 74 cubic inch Harley® in a basket. To be exact, it was a '57 Panhead in a '52 frame with KHK front end. Red metal flake paint and those crazy two-piece ape hanger handlebars, which would come loose and swing back and forth. You should've seen it! I'd shove wads of steel wool into the mufflers to quiet it down for the cops, but when I was really hauling, it would shoot these glowing balls of flame out the back. Man, that's cool stuff when you're a kid!

When I was about 16, a buddy of mine on a Harley Sprint beat me in a race down one of those twisty Pennsylvania roads. That did it. Beat by a Sprint! Here I am on my chopper, making all this noise and thinking I'm cool. I made myself some flat bars and figured there was more to motorcycling than just looking cool.

Then I got a Velocette with full Avon fairing, clip-ons, rear sets a roadracer on the street. It was the best bike around for a guy like me. It didn't take long for me to fall in love with riding instead of showing off. Then I went through a smorgasbord of Japanese imports.

Sounds like you had all the earmarks of a died-in-the-wool gearhead.
Well, I grew up on a farm where nothing ever worked, so you had to fix anything before you could use it. I became a tinkerer because I had no choice. Dad liked for us to fix everything and keep it going, so it was just natural for us to buy old stuff and tinker with it. He was the kind of guy who, when I'd come in the house on a freezing winter morning and complain about the battery being dead on the tractor, would say, "Can't you just turn the crank to start it?" It'd be frozen solid and five degrees and I'd be out trying to muscle that crank. That's just the way it was.

But Pennsylvania was great for Motorcycles. The Pittsburgh area where I lived was just a hotbed. Lots of racers around, so it was easy to get caught up, and there was always a friend to go with.

Well, then I started college but dropped out because of too many other interests. Soon I was spending all my time working in bike shops, riding, and going to night school for engineering. I was just starting to race motocross seriously when I got badly injured. Since I couldn't ride, I got a job as a mechanic for a road racer, which was cool, but he quit and I took over riding. All of a sudden I was a road racer. At that time I was racing what was essentially a 350 Kawasaki® single that I'd turned into a road racer, if you can believe that. I beat a lot of the big guys, too. That thing had tons of torque! It was very, very cool for me to beat them with an air-cooled single. My interest in tinkering combined with riding was already insatiable. Well, that's how I started club racing, and in a few years I was out there doing Formula One on a TZ750 Yamaha® and Superbike on a 900SS Ducati®.

That had to be expensive without factory backing?
Well, I had to do just about everything by myself, so I was machining parts, sourcing parts, building my own stuff. I spent every penny on racing, so I had no money to stay at hotels and eat decent meals. When I graduated from engineering school, I wanted to work at Harley-Davidson so I could put my passion and knowledge to work on Motorcycles - and get paid for it full time.


 








 

 

WHAT'S NEW

1125 R Makes Stunning Debut 03.25.08.

Cologne, Germany

The brand-new Buell 1125R delivered a stunning debut at the start of the German racing season on Easter Saturday, posting 2nd and 5th place finishes on Hockenheim’s demanding Grand Prix circuit.

Over the past 33 years, the 1000-km of Hockenheim has not only become the established prelude to the German motorcycle racing season, the traditional endurance race is also considered the most important German production-based racing event for motorcycles. This year, BMW and KTM each supplied selected teams with extensive factory support, both competing in Class 4 for four-stroke motorcycles of unlimited displacement with three cylinders or less that features the best and most popular riders. No fewer than four BMW HP2 Sports and five KTM RC 8s claimed chances to win in a grid of 32 motorbikes that also held numerous Ducatis and Aprilias.

But as it turned out, others were to provide the true sensation on March 22nd – the only two competing Buell 1125R, entered into the race by the Buell dealers of Bonn and Hannover. Both bikes had only arrived in Germany three days before Easter, but despite minimal preparation, caused a stir right from the start with scorching lap times at low ambient temperatures on a dry track. In the sprint race over 14 laps, riders Axel Reimann and Ray Buchmann realized the 1125R’s full potential and left nearly the whole field behind, beaten only by the factory supported BMW under former Moto GP racer Jürgen Fuchs and professional racer Marcus Barth.

Volker Schirmer, manager of Buell Hannover, could not disguise his enthusiasm over his team’s second place finish. “I am absolutely ecstatic. The 1125R is a quantum leap in output and performance. The 146hp twin-cylinder engine, developed by Rotax to Buell specifications, is a perfect match for the best chassis that Erik Buell has ever designed.”

After coming in fifth, riders Julius Ilmberger and Martin Kratzer were also delighted with the new Buell. “With slightly harder tires, our chances would have been even better,” said Andreas Binner, boss of Buell Bonn. “But even so, I am really happy – my boys have done a fantastic job, and the 1125R is up for success.”

To learn more about Buell motorcycles, visit your local Buell dealer today and experience the pure streetfighter attitude, style and performance only found on board a Buell. For the Buell dealer nearest you, pull into www.buell.com.

    
 
The Ulysses® XB12XT: 01.21.08

The XB12XT takes adventure sport touring to a new level. Standard with such amenities as side and top cases and heated grips – this bike is ready to take you where you want to go. Don’t forget about the exceptional torque and premium styling. 

Check out the VIDEO on the XB12XT or for more info click here
 

DEMO DAYS

HERITAGE HARLEY-DAVIDSON/BUELL

MAY 24TH, 2008 (2008 MODELS)

SEPT. 12, 2008 (2009 MODELS)

 
The 1125R: 07.08.07
   The most important component on a motorcycle is always the rider. If that seems obvious, that's because it is. At least to us. It's why every decision made over the course of this motorcycle's development was based on how it would directly benefit the riding experience. The only innovations you'll find on the 1125R are the ones that make you smoother, quicker, nimbler or more comfortable. From its powerband to its ease of maintenance, it all exists for a reason. And that reason is you.

Check out the 1125R Mini Site

 
Lightning® XB12STT: 01.24.07
      Blending the hard-core attitude of a streetfighter with the agility and style of supermoto, this defiant urban assault machine is the ultimate in moto self-expression. It features a 1203cc Thunderstorm® air/oil/fan-cooled, fuel-injected 45° V-Twin that's perfectly suited for aggressive riding.
For more info click here
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 



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