Dom the Phantom is a regular combatant at the Elvington Speed WheelieEvent in the UK, where riders with balls the size of cantaloupes balance bikes on the rear wheel for a full mile at speeds most sportbike owners will never see in their lifetimes. Most of the wheelie freaks favor the latest incarnation of Suzuki's GSX-R1000, but since breaking four ribs after wrecking his 2005 GSX-R1000 earlier in the year, he didn't have much of a choice but to seek out a new bike.
Used and abused B-Kings were just becoming cheap enough in the classified ads and Dom managed to find a slightly soiled B-King that came with all the right hooligan parts; big Rotrex supercharger, Power Commander, Öhlins rear shock and a tasty Scorpion exhaust that replaced the overweight and over-ugly stock B-King system. Featuring so much go-fast hardware, the B-King had obviously been drag raced and still sported bolt-on swingarm extensions, which came in pretty handy as Dom bought it on Saturday and raced it on Sunday. After five solid runs he managed a meager terminal speed of only 135 MPH in the quarter-mile.
It wasn't even a decent time, and not what Dom was expecting from the supercharged B-King's 'Busa-based 1300cc motor. A turn on the dyno revealed where the ponies were escaping from-only 70 percent of the fuel needed to make big horsepower was being burnt, and the blow-off valve wasn't working, plus a few other glitches like the header pipes were too close for comfort to the supercharger unit.
After these issues were ironed out the result on the dyno was a rear wheel count of 230 horses making a run for the stable door with 140 LB-FT of torque for company. It all sorted well enough for Dom to make a 133.7 MPH wheelie on the blown B-King and finish 29th in the results. That's pretty cool when you consider that in 2003 the world record over the distance was 137 MPH.
2008 Suzuki B-King
Motor: TTS Rotrex supercharger, Power Commander, Scorpion exhaust system
Accessories: MSD shift light and killswitch, Powerbronze windscreen, R&G frame sliders
Owner: Dom the Phantom, London, UK
Builder: TTS
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