The following has been provided by USMC... Oscar Cota,,,
Thanks Oscar..
Sorry for the late reply but here is the race breakdown.....
DNF (27th) first race
5th second race
16th Overall
Keep in mind that Sean was racing on a motorcycle designed in the late 1980's that was finished being put together at 10pm the night before with zero test time.
Also keep in mind that in the second race Sean was racing against factory level pro racers on state of the art factory equipment that race/ride on a regular basis. Sean on the other hand hasn't raced since June at Mammoth and has only ridden twice since then......here are the links to the two times he rode since Mammoth......
https://youtu.be/U1m3jJgygC4https://youtu.be/RxdB0eeR4uQSean was in awesome spirits when he arrived at the track and saw the rebuild bike that KX Guru Racing had delivered. Bike fired on the first kick and immediately there was a crowd drawn around the Fasthouse / Gasper Transportation canopy. Sean jumped on the bike and headed out for practice with only 1.2 hours on the hour meter which I had put on the bike during break in. After a few laps Sean came in a stated that the bike was definitely more responsive and powerful than before, the chassis felt much tighter than before, and Pro Action rear shock that Alex Ward at Crazy Al's racing had built was phenomenal. It was after practice that we encountered our first little issue. During a downshift the Torc 1 Shift Lever had stripped the threads and was rendered unusable. Sean came in and we had to ditch the Torc 1 shift lever for the stocker. This issue was not related to the quality of the shifter. Out of habit I usually torque all fasteners to factory spec and I had done the same with the shifter. Unfortunately the stock shifter and the Torc 1 shifter are made of different metals and factory spec torque is not sufficient for the aftermarket shifter. I'll speak more on this later in this write up.
Issue 2 came during the first race......
Sean got a rough start when he experienced some clutch chatter off the start and then began to fight a wheelie prone KX500 all the way to the first turn. Sean ended up with a 10th place start against some of the top Pro vet riders in the world. As the laps clicked away Sean was dicing through the pack and was about to make a pass for 4th on the 6th lap when he ended up pulling off the track. My heart sunk as I feared the worst of engine failures. Back at the pits Sean was all smiles and said the bike was running awesome but it felt as though the bike was running out of fuel. The weather out there was in the mid 80's and it seemed as though the bike was vapor locking. Sean decided to pull off the track in fear of the bike bogging off the face of a jump. To remedy this we obtained some heat insulation tape and taped the bottom of the tank where the head seemed to be heating up the fuel. We also wrapped the carburetor float bowl. Not sure if this was the issue or not we also cut the fuel down from 100% VP C-12 to 50/50 C-12 and 91 octane. This was no longer an issue for the rest of the race. I'll speak more on this later in this write up.
The final 2 issues came in race 2.......
Sean ended up getting a holeshot even with the clutch chatter issues and went into the first turn neck and neck with Factory KTM test rider Mike Sleeter. After the first lap Sean had settled into a 3rd place slot behind Mike Sleeter and World GP New Zealand racer Josh Coppins. Sean was on the heels of Josh Coppins the majority of the race and every spectator present was going crazy over the #207 KX500 ripping around the track. Sean Eventually ended the race in 5h place against some of the best riders on the best machines. As it turns out Sean had lost the tip of his Torc 1 racing rear brake lever on the second lap and was racing severely handicapped without a rear brake for the whole race. Sean had also experienced Shock fade which made the bike very bouncy and unstable going though the rough Glen Helen track. Despite all these factors Sean still brought the KX Guru Racing prepped KX500 home in 5th place.
Now to touch on the issues experienced in detail.....
The Torc 1 Shifter was tight around the splines and had performed well during my break in ride. Sean had even mentioned that he absolutly loved the feel of that shifter. After consulting with my fellow KX Guru's I took the Torc 1 Shifter to the garage and tested it to failure. I tightened down the bolt of the shifter with an 8 mm wrench as tight as I could by hand and the threads never faltered. I then took my torque wrench and turned on the bolt and found that the bolt head snapped off before the threads gave out. The lesson learned here is that the Torc 1 shifter needs to be tightened down as hard as possible by hand with Loctite without fear of stripping threads because the quality of the metal of the Torc 1 shifter is top notch.
The issue of the bike bogging from lack of fuel.....
This is just a theory as cutting the fuel to a 50/50 blend and the heat strips seemed to cure the problem but we were running Motul 800 premix and it had been mixed at the track at 32:1. Unfortunately 32:1 is an old wives tale during the days when oils were not that great. Motul states that their mix is formulated to be ran at 50:1. Heavy oil mix causes a lean condition and with the unstable C-12 race fuel we can only imagine that the fuel was boiling because of this. Lean condition and race fuel caused the bike to run hotter which was evident by the discoloration on the head of the FMF pipe and the high temperature of the pipe at the stinger was radiating onto the shock which caused it to fade. Lesson learned.
The issue of the Torc 1 rear brake lever tip falling off....
After speaking with Ryan Pursley of Torc 1 he informed me that they do not Loctite their hardware because it is designed to be adjustable and it is in the instructions that once the end user adjusted the lever it should be secured with Loctite. Other than that the rear brake lever like the shifter worked and felt great.
All in all the weekend went great and Sean we extremely please and excited about the bike. We learned some lessons using KX450 components on a KX500 and we would have discovered these issues had we had a chance to test with Sean. We are going to continue on with the Torc 1 products as they are great products and we now understand that the proper way to install them on a vibrating KX500. Sean also mentioned that the Torc 1 footpegs that we adapted to the KX500 felt incredible and gave him improved feel and control of the bike. We will also be mixing the fuel according to manufacture specs and not according to the age old method of 32:1.
We now move on to the new Project KX500 with lessons learned from the current Beast. The goal will be to have both #207 KX500's side by side at Day in the Dirt in a few weeks. I encourage any questions that anyone may have as I was only able to touch on a few items in this write up.