#Yamaha XJ650 Turbo
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saddlebums · 1 year ago
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Turbos at the Greenwich Concours D'Elegance
Forced induction aplenty in Connecticut
There was a whole lot of head-spinning iron to take in at the Concours, but the star(s) of the show for this abnormally-aspirated motorcycle owner were the five factory Turbos of Brad Beers.
This is simply the finest collection of factory turbocharged motorcycles in the world. The Barber Motorsports Museum in Alabama is a respectable second. How do we know this? Because everyone who's seen both collections has given the nod to Brad. That's how.
Yeah, there were some great cars there. My heart skipped a few beats when Dale pointed out the 1964 Bill Thomas Cheetah to me. First one I've seen in the metal and it's more gorgeous than the hundreds of photos my eyes have burned holes into.
But those Turbos...
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Yamaha XJ650 Turbo
Art from The James Bond Lexicon
By Alan J. Porter and Gillian Porter
Art by Pat Carbajal
Never say Never Again 40th Anniversary
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mortorcyclewheelpe · 4 years ago
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82-83 YAMAHA XJ650 TURBO SECA FRONT WHEEL RIM AXLE PIVOT BOLT https://ift.tt/2BFZMLe
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pu55ycake · 5 years ago
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Yamaha inaugura museu de motos clássicas em Amsterdam
Collection Hall reúne modelos de série e máquinas de corrida lendárias
Para preservar a história da empresa na Europa, a Yamaha Europa inaugurou, em Amsterdam (Holanda), sede da empresa no continente, seu Yamaha Motor Collection Hall. O evento de inauguração, realizado em 25 de setembro, contou com a presença de lendas do motociclismo esportivo, dirigentes da empresa, jornalistas especializados e figuras-chave do mundo das motos.As Yamaha TZ e RD representam as vitórias da marca japonesa nas pistas da motovelocidade
“O Yamaha Motor Europe Collection Hall é dedicado à memória do nosso passado nas corridas e à memória do que acelerou o coração de nossos clientes. Um” lar “para nossos modelos icônicos e tem duas vocações: primeiro para inspirar nossa engenheiros e designers em seu processo de criação de modelos futuros e, em segundo lugar, apoiam a credibilidade e o valor emocional de nossas novidades, no que diz respeito às nossas criações passadas “, declarou Eric de Seynes, Presidente da Yamaha Europa.
Coleção tem modelos de 1961, como a YAS-1, até um protótipo da MT-03, lançada recentemente
A coleção marca os esforços da Yamaha Motor Europe para preservar a história da marca nas pistas e na indústria de duas rodas mundial, contendo diversas motos importantes de 1961 até os dias atuais. Ao lado das clássicas motos de produção em série, há uma impressionante seleção de lendárias máquinas de corrida, cujas histórias estão repletas de sucesso, desde os primeiros dias de Dakar, até as pistas de asfalto do Mundial de Motovelocidade e de Superbike.As máquinas vencedoras no Rally-Dakar, nas provas de enduro e de motocross também têm seu espaço
A Yamaha YZE750, com a qual Stephan Peterhansel venceu o Rally Paris-Dakar em 1991, pode ser vista ao lado da YZF-R1, que Ben Spies levou à vitória e dominou o Campeonato Mundial de Superbike de 2009,em seu primeiro ano no cenário mundial. Os fãs de motocross podem desfrutar de muitas máquinas de corrida lendárias, incluindo a Yamaha YZ450F, campeã do mundo com Stefan Everts em 2006, além de uma evolução dessa moto que manteve a trajetória de vitórias, no l’Enduropale du Touquet de 2015, com Adrien Van Beveren.
A coleção da Yamaha Europa também fornece uma visão única do passado de desenvolvimento da marca, com o conceito MT-03 de 2007 em exibição, além de ícones do passado, incluindo a Yamaha MF1 de 1961, YL1 de 1969 e YAS1 de 1968. Adicione o XJ650 Turbo de 1986, entre muitos outros, e a coleção é realmente um banquete para os entusiastas de duas rodas.Collection Hall, infelizmente, não está aberto ao público
A má notícia é que o Yamaha Motor Europe Collection Hall, localizado na sede da empresa na capital holandesa, não é aberto ao público em geral. As motos de coleção viajarão pela Europa e poderão ser vistas em vários shows e eventos organizados pelos distribuidores nacionais da Yamaha Motor. Uma pena, uma coleção tão rica e importante como essa não estar aberta à visitação. (Por Arthur Caldeira)
  via Blog da Infomoto https://ift.tt/2p2JSEb encontrado em http://infomoto.blogosfera.uol.com.br
source https://pinturahidrograficacomofazer.weebly.com/inicio/yamaha-inaugura-museu-de-motos-classicas-em-amsterdam
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mulheresemdieta100 · 5 years ago
Text
Yamaha inaugura museu de motos clássicas em Amsterdam
Collection Hall reúne modelos de série e máquinas de corrida lendárias
Para preservar a história da empresa na Europa, a Yamaha Europa inaugurou, em Amsterdam (Holanda), sede da empresa no continente, seu Yamaha Motor Collection Hall. O evento de inauguração, realizado em 25 de setembro, contou com a presença de lendas do motociclismo esportivo, dirigentes da empresa, jornalistas especializados e figuras-chave do mundo das motos.As Yamaha TZ e RD representam as vitórias da marca japonesa nas pistas da motovelocidade
“O Yamaha Motor Europe Collection Hall é dedicado à memória do nosso passado nas corridas e à memória do que acelerou o coração de nossos clientes. Um” lar “para nossos modelos icônicos e tem duas vocações: primeiro para inspirar nossa engenheiros e designers em seu processo de criação de modelos futuros e, em segundo lugar, apoiam a credibilidade e o valor emocional de nossas novidades, no que diz respeito às nossas criações passadas “, declarou Eric de Seynes, Presidente da Yamaha Europa.
Coleção tem modelos de 1961, como a YAS-1, até um protótipo da MT-03, lançada recentemente
A coleção marca os esforços da Yamaha Motor Europe para preservar a história da marca nas pistas e na indústria de duas rodas mundial, contendo diversas motos importantes de 1961 até os dias atuais. Ao lado das clássicas motos de produção em série, há uma impressionante seleção de lendárias máquinas de corrida, cujas histórias estão repletas de sucesso, desde os primeiros dias de Dakar, até as pistas de asfalto do Mundial de Motovelocidade e de Superbike.As máquinas vencedoras no Rally-Dakar, nas provas de enduro e de motocross também têm seu espaço
A Yamaha YZE750, com a qual Stephan Peterhansel venceu o Rally Paris-Dakar em 1991, pode ser vista ao lado da YZF-R1, que Ben Spies levou à vitória e dominou o Campeonato Mundial de Superbike de 2009,em seu primeiro ano no cenário mundial. Os fãs de motocross podem desfrutar de muitas máquinas de corrida lendárias, incluindo a Yamaha YZ450F, campeã do mundo com Stefan Everts em 2006, além de uma evolução dessa moto que manteve a trajetória de vitórias, no l’Enduropale du Touquet de 2015, com Adrien Van Beveren.
A coleção da Yamaha Europa também fornece uma visão única do passado de desenvolvimento da marca, com o conceito MT-03 de 2007 em exibição, além de ícones do passado, incluindo a Yamaha MF1 de 1961, YL1 de 1969 e YAS1 de 1968. Adicione o XJ650 Turbo de 1986, entre muitos outros, e a coleção é realmente um banquete para os entusiastas de duas rodas.Collection Hall, infelizmente, não está aberto ao público
A má notícia é que o Yamaha Motor Europe Collection Hall, localizado na sede da empresa na capital holandesa, não é aberto ao público em geral. As motos de coleção viajarão pela Europa e poderão ser vistas em vários shows e eventos organizados pelos distribuidores nacionais da Yamaha Motor. Uma pena, uma coleção tão rica e importante como essa não estar aberta à visitação. (Por Arthur Caldeira)
  via Blog da Infomoto https://ift.tt/2p2JSEb encontrado em http://infomoto.blogosfera.uol.com.br
https://pinturahidrograficacomofazer.weebly.com/inicio/yamaha-inaugura-museu-de-motos-classicas-em-amsterdam em https://pinturahidrograficacomofazer.weebly.com/
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olivereliott · 7 years ago
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Turbo Maximus: Derek Kimes’ boosted Yamaha XJ750 Maxim
There are many gems buried in our Bikes of the Week column, but occasionally a machine pops up that deserves a fully-fledged feature of its own.
A week ago we stumbled across this remarkable Yamaha at the Forged Invitational show. ‘Turbo Maximus’ took top honors at the Jekyll Island event, which is not surprising when you consider the XJ900 engine transplant, the properly engineered turbo conversion, and the delicious race replica bodywork.
A few days ago, owner Derek Kimes wheeled the Yamaha into the studio of the man who captured the atmospheric images from the show—photographer Steve West. And so we can now dig into the story a little more.
Derek is a relative latecomer to the world of bike building. After serving eight years in the US Navy, he left the beaches of San Diego and moved to Atlanta to pursue a degree in engineering. While studying, he started working on bikes to learn hands-on skills, and found out that Bryan Fuller’s shop was located nearby.
“My savings were drying up and I needed a part-time job. I sent an email to Bryan and to my surprise, he responded. I started working part-time, sweeping floors, taking out the trash and doing small tasks to help the guys at the shop.”
“I am so grateful that Bryan gave a guy with no real fabrication or welding background a chance to prove himself at his shop. Without that chance, this bike would never have happened.”
Derek spent many nights and weekends in the shop, working on his skills after hours. But despite that, this is the first and only bike he’s ever owned.
“I bought it used, in completely stock form, in 2005,” he recalls. “It’s a 1982 Yamaha XJ750 Maxim, originally painted black. I enjoyed riding it but wanted to make it better.”
Then Derek fell in love with the XJ750R (0U28) [below] that raced in Japan in the 1984 Suzuka 8 Hours—the only XJ series bike that Yamaha prepped for the track. And that’s where the inspiration for this restomod came from.
“I thought to myself, how would an OEM build this? I have learned to respect the amount of engineering that a manufacturer puts into a model; matching the quality level of OEM parts is a very difficult task.”
So Derek decided to transform his old XJ750 into a modern, fuel-injected, boosted superbike. “People said I was crazy—why do that to a tired old XJ? I wanted to prove them wrong.”
The 750 engine came out, and a 1983 XJ900 mill was swapped in. It’s been been fully rebuilt by NASCAR engine builder Jordan Hersey of Atlanta, GA, with 9:1 custom forged pistons, adjustable camshaft sprockets from an FZ750, and titanium valve springs from Kibblewhite.
A custom lockout clutch designed by Eric Isaacson of E-FAB in Des Monies gets the power to the back wheel, and Derek has swapped in a larger stator from an XJ700 Midnight Maxim. This bumps the amps up from 18 to 26—because every amp counts when converting to EFI.
Ditching the carbs was no easy task. There’s no off-the-shelf kit, and no real guide to help with installation. “There are literally miles of wires, so packaging was a real challenge,” says Derek.
“I had to add a fuel pump, fuel filters, and a dozen or two sensors. It took time, but I was able to route the system so that it’s mostly hidden from the eye.” The heart is a MS3Pro Engine Management System, and the ECU controls the turbo too.
Monitoring the fuel ratio is essential, which is usually done by measuring the temperature of the exhaust as it leaves the combustion chamber. But in a race environment, there is often one sensor per cylinder, and that’s the setup Derek has chosen.
The throttle bodies are from a 2003 Suzuki GSX-R600. “These are a great choice, because each individual body can be spaced to line up with your ports. The entire system communicates via CAN BUS to an AIM MXS dash.”
The turbo system itself is extremely neat. “I wanted it to look like the bike was designed originally to be turbocharged. You see so many turbo bikes with the turbo hanging way out, or the charge tube is wrapped around the engine.”
To avoid this, Derek chose a Borg Warner S1BG turbo. It’s big enough to give him the 200 horsepower (on E85 fuel) that he wanted, but small enough to tuck in between the frame and front wheel.
To hide the intake charge pipe, he’s cut a channel on the bottom right side of the tank, so it can travel straight back from the intercooler. Above the turbo there’s a custom Bell intercooler—which left a problem with locating the oil cooler. So the oil lines are now routed underneath the bike to the rear, where an Earl’s oil cooler sits just in front of the back wheel.
In 1983, Yamaha made its own turbo XJ: the XJ650 Seca. And its oil pump had a scavenging port, designed to suck the oil from the turbo back into the engine to avoid oil pooling. It was a direct, bolt-in oil pump swap from XJ650 turbo to the XJ900.
To continue with the OEM theme, Derek has used ‘AN’ fittings for almost all the hoses—a challenge with the many tight spaces in which to plumb. He’s also used Jiffy-tite quick-connect ‘dry break’ fittings on the fuel tank for easy removal. The exhaust system is custom, though: gases exit via stainless steel headers leading into a titanium Akrapovič slip-on muffler.
Despite the extensive engineering on the engine, the front part of the frame is original. Further back, Derek’s fabricated a new tail section and swingarm, converting the rear suspension to a monoshock setup using a 5-way adjustable piggyback rear shock.
It’s not just a grinder job. Derek had the frame laser scanned, measured and straightened at GMD Computrack for precise alignment, and powder coated for protection.
Then he installed forks from a 2015 Yamaha R6, upgraded with Traxxion Dynamics AK-20 cartridges. And to prevent wobbles when the full 200 horsepower kicks in, there’s an adjustable Öhlins steering stabilizer.
The quality of finish on the bodywork is just as astounding as the engineering. The front fairing is a F1 replica by Airtech Streamlining, heavily modified to fit with the help of fiberglass specialist Patrick Henry of Atlanta.
Gustafsson Plastics made the windscreen, but Derek fabricated the riveted-on aluminum fins at the base, and the bezel around the JW Speaker LED headlight. Which is offset to one side, just like the one-eyed XJ750R racebike.
Keen eyes will spot that the tank is from a Yamaha XS750. Derek relocated the mounts to install it on the XJ750 frame, and then topped it off with a Racefit fuel cap. The tail unit is a completely custom one-off though, with a seat upholstered in Alcantara and black leather.
The paint is from the talented Mike Lewis of Gary’s Body Shop in Atlanta. Harking back to the mid-80s racing XJ, it’s one of the few cases when the old cliché holds true: it makes Derek’s blown beauty look fast even when standing still.
Top-spec rubber helps to keep the shiny side up: The 17-inch tires are Metzeler’s Racetec RR K2 compound all round, and there’s a 5-inch wide rear wheel with a FZ1 caliper and FZR 1000 brake rotor.
To call ‘Turbo Maximus’ a restomod would be selling it short. It’s a re-engineered masterpiece, and one of the few occasions where mechanical brilliance is matched by a keen eye for aesthetics. We can’t wait to see what Derek builds next.
Images by (and thanks to) Steve West | Instagram
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jorgefspinto · 7 years ago
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For $2,500, Could This 1982 Yamaha XJ650 Seca Turbo Put You On The Right Track? http://ift.tt/2CRjLRU
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daemonexmachina · 9 years ago
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Dreaming of the turbocharged ‘80s.
Mike Todd’s Yamaha XJ659 Turbo Seca, in Portland.
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saddlebums · 3 years ago
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Martin Moto Modern Classic Ride-In and Turbo Fest
September 25, 2021
Though the term "Modern Classic" still has me scratching my helmet, I'm always willing to make the 120+ mile trip to Boyertown, PA, to attend the annual event, where the attendees are the highlight of the "show." It reminds me of the joke:
"Doc, my brother thinks he's a chicken."
"Really? Have you ever confronted him about this?"
"Well, no -- to be honest we need the eggs."
The "eggs" on this early fall Saturday were a surprise collection of '80s-era Japanese Turbo bikes. Who knew? Having help run the T.M.I.O.A. (Turbo Motorcycle International Owners Association) with Backroad Bob Miller for many years it was like taking a trip down memory lane, only all of these abnormally-aspirated bikes were more pristine than they ever were, even when nailed to the showroom floor almost 40 years ago.
Along the way we took in a couple of covered bridges in Bucks County, PA. No surprise there.
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