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Boosted and Ballistic: A 350-pound nitrous-fuelled W650

Kawasaki W650 cafe racer with a nitrous kit by Schlachtwerk
It might have immaculate retro style, but you wouldn’t pick the Kawasaki W650 for its performance. With 50 horses on tap it’s a fun enough runabout—and you could squeeze out a little more out with exhaust and intake work. But it’s no wheelie machine.

No one bothered telling Tom Thöring of Schlachtwerk though. Every time he builds another W650, he finds new and creative ways to extract more goodness from the long-stroke parallel twin. We’ve seen W650s with 58 and 70 hp roll off his bench—but this time he’s pulled out literally every stop.

Kawasaki W650 cafe racer with a nitrous kit by Schlachtwerk
This 1999-model W650 (now a ‘W854’) delivers a healthy 82 hp to the back wheel, and excludes excludes the extra kick from the nitrous system. Yes—this W comes with a liquid boost.

Tommy built the bike for a friend in nearby Frankfurt, who regularly accompanies him to the Sultans of Sprint races. “He loves the sprint series,” says Tommy. “At the race he helps to push start my bike, and he gives me last minute instructions like a coach.”

Kawasaki W650 cafe racer with a nitrous kit by Schlachtwerk
Tommy’s friend—nicknamed Macaco—decided he wanted a race bike of his own for next year’s Sultans of Sprint series. So he commissioned Tommy to build him a light and sporty W650 racer that’d still be practical for sunny weekend rides.

Tommy obliged, and straight away bored out the Kawa motor to 854 cc. It’s now sporting ported heads, race camshafts and a reinforced clutch. The stock carbs are still in play, but they’ve been rejetted and mated to K&N filters. (A set of Mikuni flatslide carbs is on the to-do list). And the exhaust is a completely custom stainless steel affair, right up to the under-seat muffler.

Kawasaki W650 cafe racer with a nitrous kit by Schlachtwerk
Macaco’s W854 is also fitted with a very handy quickshifter—but fitting it was no cakewalk. “I had to change the whole footrest system,” says Tommy, “because for the sensor I needed a gearstick, or rod, to integrate it.” He’s used LSL rear sets, which also had to be modded to accommodate the kickstarter.

Then there’s the NOS. Tommy used a wet system with a programmable controller, from Nitrous Express. Installing the ignition kill module was easy, but squeezing the nozzles in between the carbs and engine was far trickier.

Kawasaki W650 cafe racer with a nitrous kit by Schlachtwerk
He breaks down how the system works: “After arming the system, the start signal for the extra power is a wide open throttle (WOT) sensor. The WOT starts the extra power, and the controller increases the additional power smoothly—so it’s not like a bull kicking your ass.”

“With the selected jets I can add 50 more horsepower to the bike, but the system is able to give much more. The setup is working really well: since Macaco lost his Nitrous virginity, he can’t stop laughing on the bike.”

Kawasaki W650 cafe racer with a nitrous kit by Schlachtwerk
You’d think all that boost would call for some serious frame mods, but Tommy disagrees. He’s made hardly any changes to the frame, save for revising the passenger peg mounts. Instead, he turned his attention to the W’s real weak spots: suspension and brakes.

The spindly stock front end has given way to a set of triples and upside-down forks from a 2005 Yamaha R1. Out back is a custom-made aluminum swingarm, 90 mm longer than stock and with 80 mm of adjustment to switch between race and street geometry. Holding up the rear is a new pair of shocks from YSS.

Kawasaki W650 cafe racer with a nitrous kit by Schlachtwerk
As for the brakes, Tommy’s installed a Suzuki GSX-R1000 caliper, 320mm Pro Brake disc and Magura HC1 master cylinder up front. The rear’s been converted from a drum to a disc, with a two-piston Brembo caliper doing duty.

The wheels are new too. Gone is the standard 19F/18R spoked combination, replaced by a pair of forged alloy hoops that Tommy commissioned specifically for this bike. The front measures in at 2.5×18” with a 110/80 Conti Road Attack, and the rear is a 4.0×18” with a 150/65 Conti Classic Race.

Kawasaki W650 cafe racer with a nitrous kit by Schlachtwerk
Up top is a custom-made, 9l aluminum fuel tank, kitted with a Monza gas cap. The paint color is BMW ‘Le Mans’ blue, and the Korean writing on the tank reads ‘Macaco’ (he has Korean roots). “The paint job is done by a nice guy called Paolo,” says Tommy. “Every time I take bike parts over for painting, he rolls his eyes, but his work is really good.”

The seat’s custom too, made to cover the full length of the frame and carry a passenger if needed. Finishing kit includes R1 clip-ons, a Motogadget speedo, new head and taillights on custom brackets, and tiny Kellerman turn signals.

Kawasaki W650 cafe racer with a nitrous kit by Schlachtwerk
Tommy’s changes have resulted in a significant overall weight saving. The new wheels are 24 pounds (11 kg) lighter than stock, the new exhaust system only weighs 7.7 pounds (3.5 kg) and the swingarm is significantly more svelte. Tommy’s also removed the Kawasaki’s heavy electric starter, and fitted the smallest battery he could—a small 1.1 Ah unit, hiding in a tray under the seat.

The bike now weighs in at 356 pounds (161.5 kg), and that’s with all liquids onboard. With 82 horsepower at the ready and proper brakes and suspension to back it up, it should have no problem tearing up backroads on the weekends.

Kawasaki W650 cafe racer with a nitrous kit by Schlachtwerk
And when Macaco’s ready to hit the track, he only needs to let out the extra 80mm of wheelbase, fill the NOS bottle…and hold on tight.

Schlachtwerk | Facebook | Instagram | Images by Marc Holstein

Kawasaki W650 cafe racer with a nitrous kit by Schlachtwerk

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The Never-Ending Story: Building a Yamaha TR1 drag bike

Yamaha TR1 drag bike by Schlachtwerk
The European sprint scene has exploded in the past few years. As well as the famous Glemseck 101 sprints, we’ve now got the Sultans of Sprint and Essenza series. And no self-respecting festival is complete without the roar of tuned machines racing down the eighth-mile.

The bug has bitten many custom builders, but the adrenaline rush has a downside: building a successful drag bike is a journey that never really finishes. And no one knows that better than Schlachtwerk’s Tommy vom Hof, whose Yamaha can blast through 200 meters in less than five seconds.

Yamaha TR1 drag bike by Schlachtwerk
Tommy is best known for the rapid, performance-oriented Kawasaki W-series customs that roll out of his Offenbach, Germany workshop. But in 2014, he decided to tear down a humble TR1 tourer.

The air-cooled 981cc V-twin had already spent over three decades on the road, and was built for the long haul. “It had all the touring goodies you can imagine,” says Tommy. “A really big fairing, heated grips, hard bags, and a radio!”

Yamaha TR1 drag bike by Schlachtwerk
After Tommy finished, he nicknamed his remodeled TR1 the ‘Skinny Beast.’ She was sporting 18” forged aluminum wheels, Yamaha YZF-R1 forks, a high-performance Wilbers shock, big brakes, and sticky modern tires. “It was 172 kilos and 75 hp,” Tommy recalls. “Not bad for an ex-touring ship.”

Tommy decided to chance his luck on the drag strip. He entered the TR1 into the Cafe Racer sprint for street legal bikes at Glemseck, and won. “After that, I couldn’t sell the bike,” says Tommy. “So I decided to keep it just for race use. I was in love with the mean green of the Ford Focus RS paint.”

Sultans Of Sprint drag racer by Schlachtwerk Motorcycles.
Things started getting serious: Tommy was invited to enter the Skinny Beast (above) in the biggest and fastest class at Glemseck in 2015—the Sprint International. So he bored out the motor to 1062 cc, and fitted ported XV750 heads, race cams, 40mm Dell’Orto carbs, a BT1100 Bulldog crankshaft, and better tires.

Plus a ‘wet shot’ nitrous oxide system that lifted power momentarily from 95 to 115 horsepower. It was enough to win that race, too.

Yamaha TR1 drag bike by Schlachtwerk
By now Tommy was well and truly bitten by the drag racing bug—and had a reputation to maintain. As 2016 rolled around, it was time to get Skinny Beast ready for the Sultans of Sprint series.

On went a 80mm longer aluminum swingarm that also trimmed four kilos of weight, an M&H Racemaster drag slick, and an extra ten horses of nitrous power via a more sophisticated controller.

Yamaha TR1 drag bike by Schlachtwerk
This setup was enough to win two stages—but a burnt clutch led to a DNF at Glemseck, and dropped Tommy to third in the overall standings.

This year, the changes are way more drastic. Tommy’s converted the TR1 (can we still call it a TR1?) to a fuel-in-frame setup with an XV750 frame, allowing him to ditch the conventional tank and run a carbon fiber monocoque body.

Yamaha TR1 drag bike by Schlachtwerk
He’s also ditched the rear subframe, fitted an even lighter aluminum swingarm, and trimmed some more kilos off the exhaust system. Skinny Beast was renamed ‘Grandma,’ and she weighs a positively svelte 325 pounds (147 kilos).

“This bike is now only fit for one purpose—the 1/8th mile,” says Tommy. “Cornering isn’t possible any more…”

Yamaha TR1 drag bike by Schlachtwerk
Tommy’s 2017 journey is going well so far. He took second place at the Sultans of Sprint opener at Monza, and won the Montlhéry round. This weekend, he’ll be lining up at the Bikers Classics in Belgium.

But it may soon be time to knock Grandma on the head. “I’m now thinking about building a Kawasaki W-series dragster,” says Tommy. “The W is not the strongest base bike, but I’ve built a lot of W650/800 customs, so now it’s time to build a really fast one.”

The journey continues.

Schlachtwerk | Facebook | Instagram | Sultans Of Sprint | Images by Marc Holstein

Yamaha TR1 drag bike by Schlachtwerk