It is greatfun
but it can cost loads of money. It depends on how heavily you get into it. I've seen a lowly Cup Skorpion in the hands of a pro as guest rider running lap times under 2 minutes on the Hockenheim ring. For comparison, Andy Meklau ran 1.36 record with a 1000 Suzuki Superbike. In the 2005 1000km race, Meklau ran fastet lap with a works Honda CBR at 1.53, we ran our GSXR750 to second fastest at 1.54 (finishing 5th over all) und slightly wet conditions so Bindles Cup lap at 1.59+ I think it was, is pretty damn fast.
I do not want to speak for Chris Hunsicker, but he confided in me last year, that he was pulling away from SVs with his Skorpion racer. It is miles away from a Cup machine, tho, and I am sure
not what he would term economical transportation.
http://www.philadelphiariders.com/gallery/album100/P9100054I can speak from my own experience, bot for the costlyness and effectiveness.
http://www.zabernet.de/bill/Graphiken/twowheels/2007_right.jpgmore on my website:
http://www.zabernet.de/bill/tuning.htmlDon't ask what it cost to date! But it is good enuf to keep up with a 996r on the Lausitzring.
Ans good enuf for my friend Peter (also a one time pro) to set the all time fastest time at the Lueckendorf hill climb, running a full 5 seconds faster than the previous one.
http://www.zabernet.de/bill/Graphiken/twowheels/Carousel-2.jpgWeight ready to race with dual rotor and full fairing 125kg, 75+hp at the rear wheel.
All screws, bolts and nuts are either aluminum or titanium($$$). The Marvic mag wheels ain't cheap, either.
It is a lot of work, too, not outofthebox stuff like you do with a CBR or GSXR. The aluminum subframe both Chris and I have is no longer to be had.
I am running a one-off in-house built crankshaft made from scratch using unmachined forgings for the stock crank to start from. It has a very different main and of course a Carillo conrod. then I have a Yamaha works cluster, no longer available new from Yamaha and possibly not from OVER, either. Expensive either way. Newest indulgence is a one-off timing gear for the crank:
http://www.zabernet.de/bill/Graphiken/twowheels/installed.jpgOne-off billet triple trees, one-off billet rearsets...
Good brakes and a good strut can be had out of the box, tho. Both Chris and I run a Wilbers fully adjustable strut -
must. Chris has Brembo brakes as I did to until I changed to ABM billet parts.
If you want to go fast economically, get a an R6, but if you want to get involved and learn, both the mechanical aspects and good riding, stick with the MZ dive in...