John Alwine, the head of Alwine Racing, is quite excited about unveiling the new bike and motor combination, “We’ve been waiting for this for a long time. This motor and motorcycle chassis, are the results of years of hard work. We put a lot of thought into this.”
This particular Top Fuel motorcycle is as unique as the motor that resides within it’s frame rails. Both the chassis and the power plant are interestingly developmental in their nature.
Another interesting aspect of this chassis is that the back bone of the bike is not only removable to make engine maintenance easier, but the chassis was made with two interchangeable back bone segments, one for an inline four cylinder motor, the other to accommodate a V-Twin T/F engine. Not only is the design concept of the chassis innovative thinking in it’s nature, but so too is the bodywork.
More than one Top Fuel motorcycle pilot has been blown off of a machine once air traveling at over 225mph finds it’s way between the motorcycle and the pilot. It just lifts them suddenly off the bike. The new Alwine T/F motorcycle has body work expressly to prevent that from ever happening again. The Alwine team has been approached by several sources concerning wind tunnel testing and if circumstances permit during the 2014 season, the bike may indeed be headed into just such a facility before the end of the season. While the chassis and body have their unique characteristics, their eccentricities are mild compared to what lies beneath the sleek new skin of this motorcycle.
Residing within the frame rails of the new bike is a new motor expressly designed and built for Top Fuel motorcycle drag racing: ATF-1. Alwine Top Fuel 1 is an inline four cylinder motor designed by John Alwine that is similar to a Suzuki Hayabusa, but is made for Top Fuel motorcycle drag racing. The crank shaft bearing journal spacing is the same as the famed “Busa” and the cylinder stud spacing is within 1mm of stock OEM Suzuki Hayabusa cylinder stud spacing, per the last rule book produced by AMA/DRAGBIKE for Top Fuel bike specifications.
John Alwine commented in a recent phone interview “I wanted to keep my motor’s design as close to the last rule book as possible and as true to a motorcycle engine as I could.” He did this with very good reasons as bedrock for his intentions; “My goal is to make a Top Fuel motorcycle engine as strong, reliable, and as easy to work on as possible. My hope is to create engines that will make Top Fuel bike racing more reliable, so teams don’t need three or four engines to go racing with.”
His reasoning is based on knowing that the cost of having multiple engines is so expensive that the very cost alone, keeps some racers from advancing into the class of Top Fuel bike. John’s hope is that, if his motor design works out, it will help keep costs down, therefore more racers will enter the class and this can advance the entire class of Top Fuel motorcycle.
The new motor has an 85mm bore to the cylinders and a stroke of 74mm, yielding 1680 cubic centimeters of displacement. The crank shaft for the engine was made to John Alwine’s specifications by Moldex. GRP connecting rods attach to the MTC Engineering pistons that send the work below.
The cylinder head designed from conception by Alwine Racing, is a billet aluminum creation from Symonds Machine, of Dowagiac, Michigan. Symonds Machine performed all of the intricate CNC work on the ATF-1 motor. Phil Myers, of Goshen, Indiana, was the very talented CAD/CAM artist responsible for the programming that played a vital role in creating John Alwine’s vision.
While many valve configurations were considered in the design of the cylinder head, a conventional two-valve-per-cylinder with a single spark plug for each combustion chamber was implemented for the ATF-1 design which stands for Alwine Top Fuel motor design one.
The cam shafts, made to Alwine Racing specifications, are created by Web Cam, and are belt driven from the right side of the motor externally. The left side of the engine block handles the drive line power delivery and the entire lower end assembly rotates on plain bearings.
The supercharger is an HPS 2.1 screw type tasked to handle the induction duties. The fuel system and all related components are to Alwine Racing specifications.
The latest MTC Engineering Top Fuel clutch will deliver the over 1000 horsepower to the B&J two speed planetary type transmission. The bike is shifted pneumatically from the left hand grip side of the controls.
An MSD type 44 magneto will deliver spark and the latest in technology for data gathering will be employed to gather critical information on every pass. As to the critical question, when will the bike be on the race track, the answer is: 2014.
The world top speed record holder in the class Top Fuel motorcycle, Korry Hogan, who set the mark on April 10, 2011, while piloting the Hogan, Dryden, Alwine machine at 255 mph, is slated to drive for Alwine Racing. At press time for this story in December of 2013, the ATF-1 bike is better than 80% complete. By spring of 2014, it will come to life for the first time. When it does, testing will begin with much anticipation.
Cycledrag would like to thank John Alwine and the members of Alwine Racing:
John Alwine, Chris Alwine, Dave Alwine, Barb Alwine, Korry Hogan, Dennis Hogan, Laura Hogan and Charlie Bachman.
Alwine Racing would like to thank the following list of sponsors and people involved in their historic project: APE Raceparts, MTC Engineering, Brad Penn Racing Oil, Web Camshafts, Symonds Machine, Phil Myers, Schnitz Racing, Portable Shade, Worldwide Bearing, Race Visions Reborn, Van Hook Racing, Al’s Engines, Dale Schmidtendorff, Swiss Valley, Marty Powers, Kurt Alwine and Artie McElwee.