click analytics

Motorcyclist dies attempting land speed record on Salt Flats

Monday, September 8th, 2008 by admin

Tragedy struck the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah last week when 47-year-old Cliff Gullett, of Team Bullet Costella-Gullett Racing, lost control of his bike at nearly 240 mph. Gullett, an experienced racer who held nearly a dozen land speed records on motorcycles, was competing in the 500cc class (two-stroke, two-cylinder) riding the Costella-Gullett Motorcycle Streamliner. He crashed after completing his return run — the record is pending ratification by the governing racing bodies. A memorial service will be held next Saturday in his hometown of Bozeman, Montana. Our condolences are extended to the entire Gullett family including his wife, son, and daughter. Our appreciation to 3seriesisking for alerting us to the sad news.

Rumormill: Tata looking to buy stake in MV Agusta

Monday, April 28th, 2008 by admin

motorcycle, motorcycles, mv agusta, mv-agusta, MvAgusta, tata, tata motorcycle, tata motors, tata mv agusta, tata-motorcycle, tata-motors, tata-mv agusta, tata-mv-agusta, Tata-mvAgusta, TataMotorcycle, TataMotors, TataMvAgusta

Volkswagen may not be the only auto manufacturer interesting in a storied Italian motorcycle maker. Hot on the heels of its purchase of Jaguar and Land Rover, rumors are swirling that Tata may be considering purchasing a stake in MV Agusta. According to a few Indian and Italian sources, Ratan Tata, chairman of the Tata Group, is reportedly in talks with Claudio Castiglioni, the man running the show at MV Agusta.

Tata’s involvement with MV Agusta could inject a unique flavor to the Indian conglomerate’s portfolio, which has already been boosted by its acquisition of the two aforementioned classic British marques. A healthy injection of cash could do wonders for MV Agusta as well, considering what it has already proven capable of even in its currently meager financial position.

[Sources: Faster and Faster, India Automotive, Motoblog]

Australia’s monster motorbike from hell

Friday, April 25th, 2008 by admin

australia, australian-motorcycle, monster, monster motorcycle, monster-motorcycle, MonsterMotorcycle, motorcycle

Proving once again that it is always easier to tear things apart than it is to build them is the Australian monster, as seen above. The builder, Ray Baumann, says that “this is a way of taking a bit more care,” if you can believe that. You see, his previous job was as a stunt driver. He claims that it is much safer riding this monster bike crushing cars than it was to jump them on a much smaller machine. Weighing in at 13 tons and standing about 10 feet tall, the monster doesn’t appear to have any suspension travel at all. The frame appears to be an upside-down ladder design, with wheels and tires from Caterpillar. What does it take to move this maxi-machine? A Detroit Diesel engine hooked to a 6-speed Allison automatic transmission.

[Source: World Car ]

Awesome-Ness custom bike exhibit to open in May

Friday, April 25th, 2008 by admin

arlen ness, arlen ness mororcycles, arlen-ness, arlen-ness-motorcycles, ArlenNess, ArlenNessMororcycles, custom motorcycle, custom motorcycles, custom-motorcycle, custom-motorcycles, CustomMotorcycle, CustomMotorcycles, motorcycle, motorcycle museum, motorcycle-museum, MotorcycleMuseum, motorcycles

Arlen Ness, a legend to the custom bike community, started out by painting customer bikes on the weekends as he worked to deliver furniture during the week to pay the bills. Gradually, his skills and reputation transformed his small company into the parts-selling juggernaut that it is today. Along the way, Ness has created quite a few one-off creations, many of which are now considered to be classics. Some of them, like the ‘57 Chevy knock-off “Ness-talgia”, twin-engined and twin-supercharged “Ferrari-bike” (above) and Bugatti-inspired “Smooth-Ness” recall iconic automotive designs of years past. According to Ness, those three bikes represent some of his personal favorites, and each of them, along with many others, will be on display at an upcoming exhibit at the Motorcycle Hall of Fame in Pickerington, Ohio called Awesome-Ness. Interested in attending? The event will run from July 24 through the end of June 2009.

[Source: Motorcycle Hall of Fame Museum]

TomTom RIDER 2nd Edition gets updated with new features

Thursday, April 24th, 2008 by admin

download, firmware, motorcycle, navigation, Rider, rider 2nd edition, Rider2ndEdition, tomtom, tomtom rider, TomtomRider, update, upgrade

With prime motorcycling weather nearly here, TomTom has prepped an update to bring a handful of new features to its RIDER 2nd Edition. Aside from including Map Share technology and the “Help Me” menu, the enhanced 2nd Edition GPS will also provide a latest map guarantee, trip statistics and itinerary planning. Reportedly, the upgraded unit will go on sale early next month for £349.99 ($691) / £399.99 ($790) depending on whether you’re picking up UK / Ireland maps or all of Europe, but existing 1st Edition / 2nd Edition owners can snag the update gratis via TomTom HOME. No word on a North American release just yet.

Read

VW Chairman Piech wants to buy motorcycle manufacturer

Thursday, April 17th, 2008 by admin

ducati, motorcycle, volkswagen, volkswagen gx3, volkswagen motorcycle, volkswagen-gx3, volkswagen-motorcycle, VolkswagenGx3, VolkswagenMotorcycle

Ferdinand Peich, the Chairman of Volkswagen, wishes that the German automaker had purchased Ducati all the way back in 1985 when the iconic Italian motorcycle marque was experiencing financial troubles and was for sale. “I would still like a small, valuable motorcycle manufacturer,” says the 71-year-old Peich, who rides a Ducati himself. Considering the close ties that Volkswagen has with Porsche, which helped create Harley-Davidson’s sportiest models, we could imagine some amazing two-wheeled creations rolling out of Wolfsburg. In fact, there’s a certain three-wheeler called the GX3 that we’d love to see back in the product pipeline ASAP.

[Source: Automotive News - sub. req’d]