The results: the winning team beat the 2nd place team by only 13 miles!
So seven teams showed up to race on Saturday morning:
1982 Suzy GN125
2008 Yamaha Vino 125
1980 Honda CB125
2004 Honda CRF100
1982 GN125
1984 Honda Aero 125
And of course us.
We did a 19.2 mile odometer check to see how accurate everyone's odometers were. They were all off slightly, and in a race like this where everyone is essentially running the same size motor, it's going to be really close and the "mileage factor" will matter in the end. Ours was 1.010.
LeMans start! Here we are, waiting for them to say GO! right at 12 noon.
We were last out of the gate. My buddy Derek from Huntsville had spotted a little fuel dripping from the side of the tank he'd welded.. the little nipple he welded on as the crossover was from a brake line and was a little smaller than the stock one, so he put a 2nd zip tie on it.. no more fuel leak.
It's 7.7 miles from the shop to the bottom of our 28-mile loop, but you have to cut through town so it took a little while to get out there - maybe 20 minutes. I beat the other guys out there and did a loop. Once they got to the Walmart parking lot that would serve as our home base for the weekend, I swapped with the 2nd rider and off he went. Here I am, waiting for him to come back past.
Sweet digs! Derek hooked us up with another buddy's 30' camper. Art, the 2nd rider, came in after 2 laps saying that the bike had gotten really buzzy. Turns out the upper motor mount bolt - original to the bike - had broken. We took the lock & regular washers off, put some red locktite on the remaining threads and had just enough meat to get a nut on there. Another team member ran up to Tractor Supply and got us another bolt, which we replaced after 1 more lap.
We found a nut had spun off the exhaust stud, so we replaced that. Also had to fix this - Derek had welded this on to keep the back tire from rubbing on the center stand, and it had broken loose. Had to hold it down using zip ties.
The bike was running 300+ degrees, and we thought it might have been due to the huge front fender not allowing air to get to the head. So we cut the fender to let it breathe.
Around 3p, Derek - the lightest of our crew - hopped on and was screaming: doing the 28-mile loop in about 22 minutes. At some point we noticed that the headlight wasn't working, and it wasn't the fuse, so we did some electrical magic and had it running directly off the lighting coil, as opposed to the battery. Kept the light on until we could check it out at check-in.
At around 5:30p, I hopped on and rode back into town for the first of three check-ins. We changed the oil and rejetted from 100 to 105. We also found that a soldered connection on the lighting coil on the stator had broken, and that our little alarm system battery had fried. We removed the stator, soldered it back and reinstalled it. Luckily, Batteries Plus was open until 7p, so we threw the bad battery back in (to serve as a load on the system) and sent one of our team members over there to grab a new one. We had a $50 repair budget to use during the event, and this cost us $30 of that.
The score so far. Ram Jam II with 260.3 miles.