I had the honor of being invited to this prestigious event along with my friend Mike Sheetz. Here's his account of what happened. -Tom
2002 Dirt Rider 24
Hour Torture Test
By Mike Sheetz
This year I had the fortune of being selected to attend the Dirt Rider 24 Hour Torture Test through Blue Ribbon Coalition. Fellow selectee, Tom Niemela and I decided to make the journey in my rig, the freshly rebuilt 1988 Chevy Diesel Van, now dubbed “The Mystery Machine.”
The trek started Sunday evening January 27th. We left my place at 11P.M. and made south under light snow. We steadily progressed through the wee hours of the morning to Stockton, California for our only fuel stop on the southbound trip. We had encountered very heavy snow between Redding and Stockton, so thick that Tom (who was on driving duty at the time) was keying off of a semi in front of us, just trusting we were still on the road. After a full tank of diesel (at and astonishing 23 MPG), we soldiered onward. The snow let up as the sun was rising and we had clear sailing for the boring drive through the barren wasteland of middle California. We saw doom ahead as we approached the Grapevine, and began the climb, again in heavy snow after the reprieve, the snow didn’t let up ‘till we entered the city again, very strange weather for Southern California, we thought. We stayed in Lake Forest for the night at Rick Niemela’s house, brother of Tom.
We arrived at the test site at Glen Helen raceway a bit before 9:00 A.M., checked out some bikes, saw all the people, and sat through the riders meeting. There were more big names there than I can list, so I’ll just hit a few, Malcolm Smith, Dick Burleson, Johnny Campbell, Steve Hengeveld, Jeff Emig, Mike Keidrowski, Larry Roeseler, Chuck Sun, just for starters. There were lots of bikes being ridden and tested, but not all for the 24 hour shootout, so I’d better let you read the test, but there are some surprises, like KTM’s new 450, and 540 EXC’s, I did not misspell that either, 450, and 540. The Husaberg 470, with Revloc Clutch (drooling) CRF450R also with Revloc clutch. Mike Keidrowski’s DRZ. A Yamathumper 426 of course. You’ll just have to wait for the mag to get the real scoop though.
Tom and I rode off and on most of the day, it snowed off and on too, perfect traction, some complaints from the peanut gallery, but most folks seemed pretty stoked about the ultimate traction. They had set up a neat little off road loop, pretty tight in sections, fairly open in others. It reminded me of the best of Four Corners, without the whoops, and add some hills. The loop wasn’t very long, about 13 miles, plus the option of riding the Glen Helen Motocross track, which we did, so we could say we did. That hill that Ricky Carmichael fell off of at the national last year is huge, and scary to think of what might have happened to him. We shot some pictures, took a little bit of video, and played with our suspension settings, mixed in with bench racing with some of our hero’s. It was basically just a free for all funfest for Tom and I.
As evening approached Chuck Sun offered us a ride on one of his Revloc equipped bikes, a CRF 450R modified for off road. It had hand guards, a big tank and suspension by Dicks Racing of Las Vegas Nevada. We left out on a short loop, since darkness was closing fast and this Honda was not slated to receive lights for the night ride, since it is not equipped with a lighting coil. We hurried out just as the snow really started falling. Tom and I switched turns on the bike in the heavy snowfall, looking at the white covered ground, and ripping along, wiping our goggles every few seconds to gain vision on the massive blizzard coming down. We kept saying, man this is Southern California, it’s 28 degrees and snowing! What’s up with that?
The bike was a magic carpet ride, I cannot tell you how cool this thing was, it’s one of two bikes I’ve ridden with the Revloc, I can tell you that it’s cheating, but you can’t possibly understand unless you ride one, it’s that good. The engagement of the clutch is adjustable, and this one was perfect, with an early, smooth engagement, unlike the late, sudden engagement of the other bike I’ve ridden. It suited me well. Huge kudos’ to Dicks on the suspension too, it was as good as the clutch, perfect for my weight. I wish my bike was this good. The CRF can certainly be made to work off road. You’ve already read about the CRF, and it’s everything the magazines say, quite good. It feels just like you’d expect it too.
Eavesdropping on the the buzz, I would not be surprised to see the Husathumper 470 win the test, although there was lot’s of buzz about the 520 too, so we’ll have to wait and see. I was disappointed that the new Husky thumpers weren’t there, we’ll just have to wait for a report on them. There were a couple of Gas Gas, a new Husky and a TM, all two strokes tooling around, but not in the test. I made Tom take a picture of me with the new Husky.
The next day we hung out a little bit, the snow had let up, but it was still very cold, and the wind was blowing good. We said our goodbyes to some new friends and headed North for a smooth, uneventful trip north. We had a great time. When I read this year’s shootout I’ll have a different perspective on the whole thing, and some great memories to go along with it.
Photos by Tom Niemela (Click on thumbnails for a larger picture)