Nikolaus Wogen
Meet Ducati's Squadra Alpina, all previous champions in the
Pikes Peak International Hill Climb. From left to right: Greg Tracy,
Micky Dymond, Carlin Dunne, Gary Trachy.
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Nikolaus Wogen
Meet Ducati's Squadra Alpina, all previous champions in the Pikes
Peak International Hill Climb. From left to right: Greg Tracy, Micky
Dymond, Carlin Dunne, Gary Trachy.
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Nikolaus Wogen
Don Canet was favored to win the event on two wheels,
riding the Victory Empulse RR electric motorbike. He adapted well to the
electric machine and qualified in first place on Friday.
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Nikolaus Wogen
Canet seen in testing on Thursday before the race. Slippery
track conditions on Sunday morning meant he was not able to make the
most of his run and had to settle for second fastest overall (he won the
Electric Bike class, though).
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James Harris | Randels Media Group/Revvolution.com, Official Photographers of the PPIHC
The fastest man on two wheels in Sunday's race was Bruno
Langlois, riding a Kawasaki Z1000, who beat Canet by more than four
seconds.
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Nikolaus Wogen
Once you get to the top, you have to wait there until the
entire field has run before you can descend to the start line. And as
you can see, the weather up on the summit that day was pretty horrid!
COLORADO SPRINGS,
Colo.—The Pikes Peak International Hill Climb was an all-car affair for
most of its 100 years. But the past few decades have seen motorcycles
return to the mountain, getting faster (and more dangerous) since the
entire road was paved in 2011. As with their four-wheel-riding cousins,
bike racers have started looking at electric motors, which, unlike
internal combustion engines, aren't fazed by altitude.
This year, 36 bikes, quads, and sidecars were entered
in Sunday's race. They would get first crack at the course; running the
cars first creates the risk of dirt or rocks being dragged onto the
road, and the 12.4-mile (19.99km) route is already unforgiving enough.
"Unfortunately, now that it's all pavement and the speeds
are higher, the risk factor is much greater [and] the future of bikes
could be in peril. They've had a death the past two years,
unfortunately," explained Don Canet. Canet is
road test editor for Cycle World and
has competed at Pikes Peak in recent years. To try to manage the risk,
all of this year's motorbikes have to have single-piece handlebars, and
the fastest liter-class Superbikes are no longer allowed. "Not to say
the bikes we're running now aren't nearly as fast, but at least it's a
move—probably to appease the insurance carrier," Canet said.
Bike manufacturer Ducati has also been trying to assist
with rider safety at the mountain. This year it partnered with the race
organizers to create the Squadra Alpina, a team of four Pikes Peak
expert racers (Carlin Dunne, Micky Dymond, Greg Tracy, and Gary Trachy)
acting as mentors for the bike competitors. "We want people to be safe,
but to continue this beautiful race we need a safety program—an active
or interactive safety program," Dunne told Ars. "First and foremost,
we're racing Pikes Peak, all of us together."
Dunne and his colleagues took groups of riders out onto the
course and pointed out different hazards and road conditions to be aware
of, keeping an eye on issues to bring up with race control as
necessary. "Having us there means we can facilitate riders' meetings,
debriefings; we can pull riders aside if needed. We'll be competing as
any other racer. If I'm feeling the asphalt is cracking, I'll get race
control on it. And we want to make sure no one is running wide or taking
dangerous lines," Dunne told Ars.
Certainly, everyone we spoke with over the course of the
race week was enthusiastic about the contribution the Squadra Alpina was
making to this year's event. What other race provides a free series of
masterclasses for other competitors?
Despite the danger, Dunne told us that racing at Pikes Peak
was a unique experience. "It's hard to be concise. To me it's an
emotional experience," he said. "The environment is unlike any other
race course. Going up to 14,000 feet, the change in environment—it's
very surreal. It causes you as a person to be more present than you ever
are in your normal life. Everything around you—the smells, the
feelings, the conversations—sear into your mind. There's a magic about
that."
Something evidently clicked early on because Dunne won the event in
his very first year as rookie in 2011 and then set a record for the
fastest ever two-wheeled ascent (9:52.819) in 2012. The following year,
he switched to electric power and set another record—10:00.064—that
still stands. "Riding an electric motorcycle is far different—the weight
and the bike characteristics," Dunne said. "Everything down to the
gyroscopic effect of the internal combustion engine, something we
normally take for granted."
With Dunne not racing this year, Canet was favored to be the fastest
rider in Sunday's race. He would be racing a Victory Empulse RR
prototype electric bike, similar to one that performed well at last
year's Isle of Man TT (another insanely dangerous road race for
motorbikes held in the British Isles). "The bike makes a claimed
192lb-ft (260Nm), so it pulls really strong off slow and medium-speed
corners, and there's plenty of those at Pikes," Canet told us. "Beyond
5000rpm—the base speed of the motor—the torque starts falling off. It'll
continue revving and I'll build speed into the triple digits, but it's
not pulling as hard as a gas-powered liter-class bike would at that
point."
Canet told Ars that he found the Victory quite easy to adapt
to. "My left foot was kind of bored—no shifting, no clutch—but the
chassis is really well sorted." That TT-bred reliability helped a lot,
as it meant his pre-race testing (at Thunderhill in California and at
Pikes Peak in the lead-up to the race) could focus on getting used to
the bike. "It made it a luxury for me to get on it and get used to the
subtle differences of an electric bike. It's so quiet. The first thing
that's bizarre is getting on the brakes and you just hear the brake pads
against the rotors; there's very little other distraction like engine
vibration or exhaust note that I'm used to."
Fastest in qualifying, Canet would be the first bike to run
the course on Sunday morning for the race. Unfortunately, running first
was more of a liability than if he had been further down the order.
Overnight weather meant there was snow and ice on the top section of the
mountain, and although the organizers delayed the start by over an hour
hoping it would all melt, the conditions were treacherous on some of
the road's fastest sections. Canet lost time after hitting a patch of
oil and then had to tip-toe through the final few corners which were
still muddy and slick. His time? 10:17.813.
The course conditions saw several other riders get into
trouble, and a series of lengthy red-flag delays ensued. The delays
meant that by the time the (gasoline-powered) Heavyweight class bikes
were ready to run, the track was much drier. Bruno Langlois took full
advantage and beat Canet's best time by more than four seconds. As with
the cars, 2016 just wasn't the year for electric-powered to scale Pikes
Peak the fastest.
Listing image by Nikolaus Wogen
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