Claiming the title of “World’s Fastest Streetbike,” Wild Bros Racing’s Bill
Warner rode into the record books at the East Coast Timing Association’s Maxton
Mile on April 11 with an astounding 272.340 mph pass in the standing mile.
In preparation for Maxton, Warner, 41, a tropical fish farmer and marine
biologist from Tampa Bay, Florida, went to a Texas Mile event two weeks earlier,
stripped the bodywork off his turbocharged, 1298cc Suzuki Hayabusa and made two
255 mph passes-the fastest unfaired, naked-bike runs ever recorded-at one point
data logging a rear-wheel speed over 308 mph as the tire spun trying to harness
more than 600 horsepower.
Setup dialed in, Warner and his team arrived at the all-concrete, one-mile
course on a former air base in Maxton, North Carolina, planning his weekend
record assault using the 253 mph MPS/BF-1650/4 class record as his target.
Warner’s third run on Saturday, a 257.604 mph pass, did the trick, but there was
more to come. On Sunday, he posted a pair of 256 mph test runs in the morning
with stock body panels before Shane Stubbs upped the ante, and the nearly
five-year-old fastest-streetbike record previously held by Lee Shierts at
260.288 in the MPS/BF-3000/4 class, with a 264.375 mph blast.
“I was excited for him,” says Wild Bill, “but Shane went a bunch faster than
I expected him to go, so I reached in my bag of tricks.” Warner pulled out three
key ingredients to a better run: a leaner air-fuel mixture (“Because leaner is
meaner in turbo racing,” he insists), two pounds more turbo boost in top gear
and a set of top-secret, custom bodywork.
“I figured that one of two things were gonna happen, either I would have to
shut it down early or I’d put in a really good run,” Warner continued. “You get
really motivated in these situations. I stayed in the throttle and kept the bike
straight up, charging forward.” This little bit of inspiration is all he needed
to post his 272.340 mph run-obliterating the class and track records, making
this ‘Busa the fastest vehicle ever run at Maxton.
Warner was so motivated and charging forward so quickly that he failed to get
the bike slowed down in time for a corner halfway through Maxton’s shut-down
zone:
“My timing was off because I was traveling so much faster, it caught me a
little off guard. I went in at the wrong angle and hit the third traffic cone at
167 mph.” This ripped off the front fender and damaged his hand-built bodywork,
which took 300 man-hours to perfect, but didn’t wipe the smile off his face.
Fellow land-speed-record-holder Paul Livingston was blown away by Warner’s
accomplishments:
“I was shocked and excited to hear about Bill going 272 mph,” says
Livingston, “but what knocked us on our asses were the 255 mph naked runs. This
makes him a hero-even among the hard-core land-speed guys.”
Brock’s Performance President Brock Davidson put a lot of homework into
finding the right land-speed team to sponsor.