Look closely at this picture and you will see an odd little round thing
just in front of and below the cylinder head. It's a turbocharger. Can you
say 135 brake horsepower at the rear wheel? The R100RS already offers a
tremendous increase in horsepower over the old two valve boxers of yore,
but for a mere four grand more Luftmeister can set you up with more torque
than a V-Max and more horsepower than a ZX-11. $3995 buys a complete kit
which includes the turbocharger and everything. This includes the four injector
kit, special computer chips, a complete exhaust system, the air to air intercooler,
boost gauges, aircraft quality pressure lines, a high pressure fuel pump,
and a bunch of other goodies. This complete turn key kit can be installed
in just 6hours. That translates into $300 installed, and if you make an
appointment at Luftmeister, you can get same day service and ride home with
almost twice as much power as you came with. The system even allows the
use of the BMW bags. Throw in your stuff and haul.
Matt Capri, owner of Luftmeister, rides the prototype of this model every
day to work. He hasn't had any reliability problems, despite the fact that
it has been thoroughly thrashed by dynos and journalists. Matt's bike has
a special boost control knob which allows boost to be cranked up to 15lbs
of boost. The package he sells only delivers 9 pounds of boost because he
doesn't want to have to worry about warrantee problems. Every pound of additional
boost roughly translates into approximately 10 additional horsepower on
this bike. Turn the boost all the way up, and it delivers approximately
175 horsepower.
Out of pure journalistic dedication to you, our faithful readers, I rode
this bike one day when Matt was running his turbo K100 on land speed record
runs at the El Mirage dry lakebed. Matt broke the record for his class with
a run of 204+ mph. Matt likes fast Bimmers. Meanwhile, I was sneaking around
in the back areas of the dry lakebed with the RS having a religious experience.
You see, I had turned the knob all the way up.
The bike pulls to the rev limiter like a wild beast making a survival sprint.
Despite the comfortable riding position, it made my arms feel like they
were going to get pulled out of my shoulder sockets. When the boost really
started pounding in, the rear tire kicked up huge, and I mean huge roostertails.
Lakebeds are hard, but later examination showed that the rear tire had ripped
long divots into the hard clay about eight inches wide and about four inches
deep. The only problem is that I kept running out of lake to run on in the
back stretches. Fifteen seconds of horsepower glory and then I'd have to
slow down to turn around.
When I reluctantly returned the bike, Matt knew I had been cranking up the
boost because I had burned through half a tank in maybe half an hour. It
happens. The bike was unscathed. It still started up easily enough, and
idled amiably. The turbo kit doesn't make the bike any louder. I feel confident
enough about it to say that it would make a fine daily driver. I want one.
Meanwhile, Matt has continued to break records with his K100. The R100RS,
due to technicalities in the SCTA rules, is in the same class as the K bike,
so it doesn't get the glory of record breaking runs. The K100 broke the
unfaired bike record of 180 mph by a whopping 17 mph June 12th. That's 186
mph after the course had been pounded by 106 cars, in the mid-afternoon
when the air was Mojave Desert hot. Matt lent the bike to a Japanese visitor
who had never even ridden a BMW, and the guy did 187 on a B lcense qualifying
run. That's what 300 horsepower will do to a bike. Wish I had been there.
On the K Bike, that is.
Luftmeister is the place to call when you want to make your BMW fast. They
sell all kinds of stuff, from long rod kits to competition brake rotors.
Give them a call at (310) 529-6425 and order the catalog. And if you're
in the neighborhood, drop by at 2725 Seaboard Lane in Long Beach. Tell them
Uncle Paul Peczon at CA Bike sent you.
back to http://www.oocities.org/MotorCity/Downs/7963