paso wrote:Hi Andy great to have you here the more ex dragbike or current Dragbike racers the better
Im sure mr Lee will have a photo of DC226 somewhere.
Regards Phil
Thanks Phil.
Just trying to trace my mis-spent youth, I guess.
I had been a regular race fan, attending meets around the country since about 1971. In 1976, while a full time student sponsored by my employer, I decided to become more active in the sport. After talking to a number of folks at various meets, it became apparent that there were two completely different ways to do that.
Either, plan and build your own bike, then go racing OR take the "jump in the deep end and learn to swim" approach by purchasing an already existing bike.
So, jump I did and purchased a blown unit 500Triumph that I later learned was what was left of Norman Hyde's World record sidecar outfit. It was neither pretty nor quick, but was cheap and easy to work on.
My first trip down the quarter on it was at the "Pod" but at an NSA sprint event and not a drag race. After talking to a number of racers, they suggested this route because they said racers at sprints were more likely to help a newbie (such as me) if issues arose.
I remember that first run like it was yesterday.It felt like nothing I'd ever experienced - and you have to be aware I'd been a pro-rugby player since I was 16 years old. An unglamorous 13.34 seconds at 112 mph, but to me it felt like I'd been shot from a cannon. I was now 100% hooked on this noisy yet exhilarating motorsport.
Back in the pits and my buddies and I had no idea what to do next or how to do it. I have to confess that we didn't even know where or how to drain the oil...or for that matter why. So we're all sitting around this ugly little heap of a drag bike, looking quizzically at each other when who should walk up to our little group? None other than Brian Chapman of Mighty Mouse fame.
So after we all had got over being gob-smacked by a "big-name racer" talking to us, we followed his every spoken direction and got that little 500 ready for another run. Thanks Brian where ever you are. You made us feel like we belonged. He even pointed out a hairline crack in the pressurized side of the intake manifold, suggesting that it probably wouldn't be detrimental but that we should get the torch to it and bead it up with weld. Things were just getting neater by the minute.
Now you need to understand that up until the Triumph, all our bike mechanical experience had been with Japanese motors and, in particular, those of the two stroke variety. Now I'd jumped into a such a deep end because I'd no knowledge of the machine I'd just ridden down the track.
However, I had had just enough foresight to purchase a Haynes manual for unit 500 Triumphs before heading to the sprint. Since we didn't wish to give the appearance that we had no idea what we were doing, one of us would climb into the back of our transporting van, close the doors, read a relevant section, then return to the rest of us and explain what to do next. So what should of taken just minutes to do, took a heck of a long time, must have looked extremely comical. Especially when the rest of our group appeared to be just milling around the bike, doing absolutely nothing in particular until the one guy reappeared from the van before a spanner was turned. Then for a while, a whole lot of spannering occurred until the Haynes information was processed., followed by a lull while another team member dived into the van to read the next section. We weren't smart enough to continuously rotate a reader into the van while the rest of us worked on the bike.
Thinking back, we must have looked like a Laurel and Hardy movie to the other racers, but we got through it, made a few more runs and went home with the biggest smiles we'd had for a long time. And that was the start of an 8-year racing experience.
Anyhow, thanks again for the welcome and I just hope someone has photos of one or more of my bikes. Either EC 226 (Last Chance 1) or DC 226 (Last Chance 2) or BC 226 (Last Chance 3). I used to have a photo done by one pro cameraman, but it has disappeared over the years. I do have a shot taken at the August '83 Drachten meet, but I'd sure like to track down shots from an English venue. I recall one National Drag Racer magazine picture (maybe even a cover) had me on DC 226 in the far lane running at my only time at Blackbushe.
Thanks again
Andy