Hondaman Mark recently wrote of some sprint cars he had seen had chopped off 750 cases(transmission removed) with big bore kits in the jugs and cam in the ported heads that turned out 15,000 and more with modifications. Hopefully he'll see this and chime in.
Indeed they did! The guys were running midget cars in south and west Illinois, circa 1972-3 when I had my shop there.
Those guys had to be magicians, IMHO. The one I knew best called his the 'slow one' in the bunch, as he only got 12k RPM from it. But, he spent much less time wrenching on it between heats that did the other guys. One guy could get 16k RPM from his in 1st and 2nd gear, and it sounded like it, but he stated [often] that it had a 'flat spot' between 14k and about 15.5k RPM after which it tended to just jump up to 16k, but could easily drop back below 15k RPM, so it was difficult to run there in the races. He called it the "15k RPM wall in these engines" and his spark advancer, easily the most complex 'gadget' I've seen in such a situation, had 2 little pointed, wasp-waisted "fingers" (his words) that advanced downward through 2 slots in the (larger, but flatter) advancer weights above 14k RPM (in the usual place on these engines). These "fingers" would retard the timing a bit (at his "RPM wall" speed) above 15k RPM which, in conjunction with a larger throttle opening, would make the engine 'jump up' to just past 15k RPM, and let him control it to 16k where it wouldn't go any faster. It sort of sounded like an ON/OFF switch when he demonstrated it, but was one sweet GP-like sound!
They weren't 750cc, but "something bigger" (I think the Class limit was 1500cc), and these engines were all sans transmissions, with the oil pumps driven off the bolt-end of the cam. The box-shaped oil pumps were piped to/from their oil tank(s) and cooler(s). The alternators were removed and (I was told) the end of the cranks modified to engage the 4- and 5-speed manual trannies they had (5 cars total), manually shifted. The intakes were all fabricated manifolds with various carbs on them, mostly 2-bbl Carters IIRC. The thing that was amazing to me at the time: they ALL ran points! The points had 2 of the flat springs on them, hand-built by just one of the racing club's members, and the opening ramp of the spark advancers was flatter to prevent severe points wear. One had a hand-built transistorized ignition (not the 16k RPM car) that was triggered by the points (probably similar to the ones I make now), but he often had a misfire around 3000-4000 RPM that could be heard when driving slowly.
Those guys were all farmers, and geniuses IMHO. The midget cars were their hobby after the fields were planted, and they were the "Honda guys" who were against the "Offy guys", the latter whom ran some sort of Offenhauser engines. I never got to look at those (wasn't really interested, to be honest about it...). Their engines were running up to 10K RPM, and they had started the "club" years before. They were NOT happy about "the new Honda guys" and they positively hated the the "Kawasaki guy" who had one car with a Kawi 500cc triple (plus unknown mods) in it. They were forever calling insults at him for the smoke, but the Honda guys thought it helped with the mosquitos, so they didn't give him a hard time at the meets, or at the local bars. He wasn't competitive in the races, but had a good time with it from what I could tell. I heard some years later that the Offy guys forced new rules against the 2-strokers to get him/them off "their" tracks, though, after I heard he went to a 750cc triple after I left the area. Some people's kids...