the Rennsport BMW Rs 54 of 1954 – the Bevel Drive Boxer
Transcription
the Rennsport BMW Rs 54 of 1954 – the Bevel Drive Boxer
OTL ON THE LEVEL BMW RS 54 Rennsport The Rennsport BMW RS 54 of 1954 – the Bevel Drive Boxer Special thanks to BMW Group Archive in Munich for these fine vintage images. And thanks to BMW Classic’s Fred Jacobs. And thanks to Sothebys.com for the larger color images. Take a look at their incredible auction fare online. whose “Earles fork” design was just about the most advanced available at the time. T It’s thought that only 24 were built between 1953 and 1954 though this number has been called into question. It isn’t really known how many RS54s are still around today but most estimates put the number at somewhere between 15 and 18. The BMW Rennsport RS54 was a 286 lb DOHC racing machine that produced 45hp from its boxer-twin. The front suspension was made under license from the Englishman Ernie Earles, While BMW had captured the world’s attention before WWII by repeatedly capturing the World Land Speed Record with its supercharged streamliners, winning the European Championship in 1938 and the Isle of Man TT in ‘39, all German factories (BMW, NSU, DKW, etc) were barred from international competition immediately post-war. Yet each he 1954 BMW Rennsport RS54 was one of the first racing motorcycle designs to come out of Germany in the postwar period, the FIM had very recently re-allowed German machines into their events and the engineers at BMW wasted no time turning out some remarkable new two-wheelers. JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2014 On The Level 11 ON THE LEVEL OTL BMW RS 54 Rennsport Notice the single bevel drive shaft above the cylinder, the unusual front cover, and the racing fuel take off from tank to carb. carried on developing their ‘old’ supercharged designs for domestic championship honors, while retooling for renewed civilian production. When Germany was again admitted to worldwide FIM-sanctioned events, each factory focused with renewed vigor. With the burgeoning German economy and exploding sales of two-wheelers, the BMW factory invested in upgrading their prewar RS255, built for supercharging, into modern, normally-aspirated GP racers. Their new engine retained much of the old Kompressor engine design on paper, with twin gear-driven camshafts compactly hidden in the cylinder heads, but the engine was nearly allnew, while the greatest change came to the now cutting-edge chassis. The introduction of a full loop, all-welded lightweight frame with a proper swingarm suspension and hydraulic damped 12 On The Level JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2014 shocks, plus the latest ultra-rigid Earles front fork design put BMW back in the game. What wasn’t expected was the announcement in 1953 that BMW would offer well-heeled professionals a genuine production racer, closely modeled on the Works (factory) machines. The RS (‘Rennsport’) 54 could be found in black and white (and blue!) in the factory catalog, although perhaps only a few were ultimately built by BMW. What the factory offered was a 286 pound DOHC dedicated racing machine producing a nominal 45hp, which on paper compared well with its competition, the Norton ‘Manx’ with its all-welded Featherbed frame and DOHC engine, which produced around 50hp, but was 22 pounds heavier. While the BMW had theoretical advantages as a production racer over rival Norton, with a lighter weight and a lower center of gravity, the BMW never handled quite as well, but then again, it never leaked oil, as from Norton’s notorious open cam box, over the rear tire! The RS54 was introduced two years before BMW roadsters converted to swing arm suspension front and rear in 1955, still using Earles forks and a far different frame than the RS54, with extended loops holding upright hydraulic shocks. The new road-going motorcycles never looked as rakish and fast, nor were they anywhere near as light, and the RS54 was the bike BMW JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2014 On The Level 13 ON THE LEVEL OTL BMW RS 54 Rennsport The ‘works’ team that built the BMW RS 54: From left: Hans Ulrich Schuhmacher, Sepp Eicher, Rudolf Schmalholz, Gustl Rettig, Project Manager Max Klankermeier, Josef Achatz, Max Wolz, Hans Plessl, and Hans Prütting, shown with two sidecar racers and two road racers in 1954. enthusiasts really wanted. But with such small and selective production, ownership was out of the question for all but a lucky few professionals, as the machine was built by the highly skilled works Rennsport division at quite a high cost. crankcase bolting. The typical BMW engine-speed flywheel clutch drove a four-speed gearbox, and the final driveshaft was housed inside the right-hand swing arm tube, although unlike the later production models, the swing arm did not hold oil. The RS54 initially had bore and stroke dimensions of 68 x 68 mm, while the ‘works’ racing machines used a 70 x 64 mm bore and stroke. The camshafts were driven by a shaft and bevel gear system running on needle roller bearings throughout. To keep the cylinder head short, the engine-driven exhaust cam was geared directly to the inlet cam, and moved the valves by short, flat rockers. Valves were set at a wide 82º angle in the semispherical heads, using duplex coil valve springs held by stepped aluminum keepers. For braking, an aluminum 200mm twin-leading shoe fullwidth drum brake hauled down the Earles forks, while a single leading shoe drum controlled the rear swing arm. Hydraulic drum brakes, as fitted to the later Works racers and sidecar machines, sometimes found their way to the RS54 as well. Other developments of the RS54 included a shorter-stroke engine, a five-speed gearbox, higher compression pistons, larger Dell’Orto SS1 carbs, and more. In the 1950s, the BMW factory produced 25 RS 54 type 253 and 8 Works type 256 racing machines. 30 mm Amal-Fischer TT carburetors (made under license in Germany since the 1930s) were mounted at a 15º downdraught. The crankshaft ran in three main bearings inside a one-piece cast crankcase, at the front of which gears drove the oil pump and magneto that sat atop the engine. The connecting rods used a flat section, as tests showed cracking with a more typical ‘I’ section rod. Forged Mahle pistons of only 8:1 compression ratio ran inside cast aluminum cylinders, with either a shrunkin iron liner, or chrome-plated plain barrel, with six stud Walter Zeller, official BMW racer from ‘51 to ‘56, was German 500cc Champion in ‘51, ‘54 and ‘55. Second place in ‘56 behind Englishman John Surtees on the MV Agusta. Walter Zeller stopped professional competition in 1957. He participated in historic races in Europe from 1979 to 1988 with his loyal mechanic Gustl Lachermeier, who accompanied him throughout his career at BMW racing. Gustl restored and prepared two marvelous bikes: a 1946 RS Kompressor and a Rennsport type 256 with an over square engine from 1968. 14 On The Level JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2014 The head and valve gear are seen. The bevel tube gear-drives the valve mechanism, and the twin cams are shown along with the valve lifters. There’s beauty and mystery in this image, and a very rare glimpse inside a piece of BMW history. JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2014 On The Level 15 Start of the International Solitude Race of 1955. Faust/ Remmert (53), Schneider/Strauss (34), and Noll/Cron (43) on fully fared BMW Works RS54 sidecar combinations. Thanks to Sotheby’s for this image of a machine recently sold at auction. ON THE LEVEL OTL Rennsport Rennsport – BMW Racing in the 1950s The 1954 RS 254 machine sold at auction by Sotheby’s. E arly on, racing bikes based on road-going machines quickly appeared. Many of these racing machines were assembled by owners who literally transformed their BMW road bikes into production-based club racers. By the end of the 1930s, BMW had become more involved with every aspect of two-wheel racing with great success. And there was more success on the horizon in the form of the Rennsport racing machines RS 53 and RS 54 Post WWII, the Fédération Internationale de Motocyclisme (FIM) was formed. One of the first tasks of this global ruling body for motorcycling was to ban the use of supercharged machinery. This effectively ended any hope of the famous and successful BMW RS 500 Rennsport Kompressors returning to the international stage. This decision was a harsh blow to BMW’s resurrection and was impacted further still with another FIM rule that forbade any German riders, teams or motorcycles to compete at international level. Finally, in 1950, following pressure from BMW and several European nations who realized BMW machinery production was central to raising the ailing European economy, the FIM cancelled the ban and allowed BMW full integration into international motorcycle sport. But BMW now had a problem with the lack of competitive machinery. Removal of supercharger-induced power meant existing RS 500 machines were robbed of 2530HP. Not only were the BMW machines down on power, but the competitors had the advantage of four years of unrivalled engine and chassis development, and development and data translates into success, as we’ve all learned from BMW’s recent WSBK project. Salvation for BMW racing department came from an enthusiastic team of designers and engineers. In 1950, Alfred Böning, 18 On The Level JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2014 Eberhard Wolff, Leonard Ischinger and Rudolph Schleicher set to work on improving the neutered RS 500 engine in order to gain more performance from the now normally-aspirated (carbureted) Boxer engine. The resulting machine was nearly at the same pace as the competition, but it required the skill of a young German rider to show the result of the team’s hard work. Twenty year old Walter Zeller won the 1951 German National (motorcycle) Championship. Considering the class of his opponents – including team mate legendary Georg Meier – this was a remarkable feat. Impressed with the young rider’s talent, Meier became Zeller’s mentor and this stood the young German in good stead in the years to come as a professional factory rider and then manager of BMW racing projects. Walter Zeller on the RS 54 at Salzburg in 1954. Meanwhile, BMW was laying out its future racing plans, which included not competing in the 1952 season of the recentlyformed world championship racing class entitled ‘Grand Prix’, which was set to replace the old international 500cc class. During this time, BMW continued developing the RS 500 into a new racing machine known as RS 53. The RS 53 was essentially a hand-built factory racing (ex-works) machine which employed interesting chassis and engine developments tested by Zeller and Meier, one of which was the first use of a rear swing arm on a BMW machine. The pivoting rear arm featured new rear twin dual shock absorbers – in the same vein as hydraulically damped telescopic forks – and was monumental in aiding traction at high speeds. Not only did the ‘swinging arm’, or ‘swing arm’ for short, assist the rear wheel to move over road deflections without interfering with chassis stability, the rear suspension units could, unlike the previous plunger-type units, accurately control the amount and speed of the rear wheel’s vertical movement. The swing arm consisted of two ‘arms’ holding the rear wheel hub while pivoting from the rear of the main frame. The right side of the swing arm also provided an enclosed space for the drive shaft. The engine had extensive porting work for more power, 48-52HP. Of course, factory riders were given all available technical assistance, but even so, the 1953 privateer customer Rennsport machines were never far behind the Works machines of Zeller and his fellow factory riders. Towards the end of 1953, a revised version of the RS 53 was shown. This new Rennsport model was designated RS 54 and was to be made available to customers even though it was claimed to be the closest thing to a works racing machine that BMW had built to date. Because of the cost of materials and the time spent to hand-fabricate each RS 54, only about 25 machines were made to supply ‘preferred customers’ – teams with the finances and ability to win major championships. It’s rumoured the BMW factory riders were also meant to have access to purchase these 25 bikes, but would not continual development have meant ‘additional’ machines being produced? Rear wheel and swingarm of the RS 54. JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2014 On The Level 19 ON THE LEVEL OTL Rennsport Dieburger Triangular Race 1955: start of the solo class up to 500 cc. The first starting line-up shows: Ernst Riedelbauch (no. 1), W. Zeller (no. 21) and J. Forrest (no. 13), all on 500 cc BMW racing motorcycles. The RS 54 Boxer engine wasn’t much further developed than the original Kompressor engines of the late 1930s, and the recent RS 53, but did incorporate the latest components for reliability and increased power. The bore and stroke of 66 x 72mm gave a capacity of 492cc. Compression was given as 8:1 and fuel was delivered by two Amal-Fischer 30mm carburetors. Inside the engine it was a tuner’s delight - shot-peened and polished components, connecting rods of special shape, needle roller bearings for the cam followers, and bevel gear-driven double overhead camshafts in each cylinder head.. Power output for the RS 54 was reported as 55 hp in ‘stock’ trim. Racing of course meant that severe lean angles would be encountered at every circuit. Because of the Boxer engine design with the bulging cylinder heads, the cylinders were the only restriction to cornering angles. Previous experience ensured BMW engineers had gained as much clearance as possible by building a compact cylinder head with optional chamfered covers if required. Adding fuel to the fire that the factory team had their own ‘special machines’ unavailable to the privateers, came the acknowledgement the Works bikes were running higher compression figures and a shorter stroke engine of 68 x 68mm, which changed again later in its model life to 70 x 64mm. 20 On The Level JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2014 BMW privateers Faust and Remmert take the checkered flag on their series production RS 54. Other technical steps for the factory machines came in late 1954 with the advent of a new five-speed gearbox, hydraulic rear brake, and mechanical fuel injection. BMW was no stranger to the power-enhancing property of fuel injection but it was difficult to fully make use of it on tighter circuits where throttle action was constant on-off and in-between. Some riders would swap between traditional carbs and injection, especially at longer, flowing circuits. What the RS 54 did arrive with in 1954 was the adoption of an anti-dive front suspension system consisting of a leadinglink front fork. The fact that the RS 54 weighed in at a mere 286 pounds dry was superb, but it could have been lighter still through the use of ‘normal’ telescopic forks – which BMW originally championed. Although the strut-front suspension did a fantastic job of neutralising the inherent dive that comes with telescopic forks, the weight, stability and rising front end that came with the Earles-type set-up caused problems in tight, slow speed turns. This was compounded by heavy flywheel torque reaction from the engine on closed throttle and made even worse with fuel injection when used. Quite a few racers relished the prospect of riding such a revered machine as the RS 54, but most couldn’t adapt their riding styles to accommodate the RS 54’s riding quirks and failed to benefit from its light weight and performance. The RS 54 proved to be a superb racing motorcycle in national races throughout the next decade but never won the premier and growing 500cc Grand Prix World Championship despite the likes of Zeller riding superbly. But where the RS 54 failed to secure world championship status as a solo machine, in the ever-popular sidecar class it became the most successful sidecar competition machine in the history of motorcycling sport. It started in 1954, when Wilhelm Noll and Fritz Cron partnered onboard a RS 54 sidecar outfit and won that year’s World Sidecar Championship; a feat they repeated in 1956. BMW also took the winning cup in 1955 but with Willi Faust and Karl Remmert. It JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2014 On The Level 21 ON THE LEVEL OTL Rennsport seemed then, that the RS 54 had found its true vocation in life. The Boxer engine’s low center of gravity and the fact sidecar outfits do not lean so the engine width had no bearing on corner speed, and tractable midrange power was a recipe for success. Between 1954 and 1974, RS 54-powered sidecars secured 19 World Sidecar Championships. This amazing feat has not been beaten to date. We’d see these machines in AHRMA races, no doubt, but for their rarity, hence very high value. At a recent sale, of one of these sidecar outfits sold for over $160,000! The surviving few carried on being raced in national championships and won many of them. Unfortunately, the RS 54 never saw the same level of success in international premier classes. Around 1957, BMW cars had become affordable and the ‘in thing’ for personal transport. Motorcycle sales fell dramatically and caused major policy shifts within BMW in an effort to stem the fall in sales and, therefore, profits. One such measure was the end of the official factory racing team. The entire motorrad division almost became history but for a Board While the success of the RS 54 as a BMW racing machine was being written into the history books as a beautiful and rare example of BMW racing technology, it was also going into the record books as the most prolific sidecar championshipwinning machine. But what became of the RS 54 as a solo racing machine? of Directors successful vote to stay the two-wheeled course, thankfully. Imagine what moto life would be like today without our beloved class-leading BMW motorcycles! 22 On The Level JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2014 So, BMW withdrew from international and major national championships. It wasn’t just BMW who chose this route; many other European motorcycle manufacturers adopted the same position before moving on towards bankruptcy. Once again BMW had to draw up survival plans and the company prepared to hold back a tide of uncertainty with an all new model range. The rest is history. The period poster is from yet another racing triumph in 1966. Tina Doggett Doggett Insurance Agency LLC eRs b M e M RA $$ $ $ e v A s ph: 414.727.2228 www.insuremybiketina.com JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2014 On The Level 23