LIBERALS ATTACK !!

LIBERALS ATTACK !!
LIBERALS ATTACK... THEY'LL KILL YOUR PETS! ACK! ACK!

CALL ME SNAKE

CALL ME SNAKE
ESCAPE TO NOWHERE... SNAKE!
Showing posts with label MOTORCYCLE GUYS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MOTORCYCLE GUYS. Show all posts

Friday, January 5, 2018

THE MIGHTY K1300S IS DOWN FOR A FIX!

REPLACING THE BATTERY POSITIVE LEAD HARNESS. HE SHUTDOWN IN SLOW TRAFFIC ON A REALLY HOT DAY.  BMW SAYS THIS WILL FIX THE PROBLEM... REPLACING THE STARTER RELAY ALSO.



HERE IS $180...



HOW ABOUT ANOTHER 100 BUCKS MORE!



I COULD RIDE THE R1200GS, EXCEPT FOR THE SNOW.


Thursday, October 6, 2016

THE NEW HONDA CBR1000RR SP. AND A 25TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION, THE SP2!

I LIKE IT! 




A TITANIUM FUEL TANK... THAT MAKES IT WORTH BUYING ALL ON IT'S OWN!

 

THE NAKED BIKE VERSION...


CHECK-OUT THE NICKSTER DOING IT ON THE NEW HONDA.




PHOTOS AND VIDEO FROM


Monday, September 26, 2016

FROM SUPERBIKE PLANET...KING KENNY


The Bike That Wouldn't DieThe original they-don't-pay-me enough-to-ride-that-thing-Kenny Roberts bike
by dean adams (1994)

Image by Mike Stuhler
It happens, oh, once or twice a year: the phone will ring at Kenny Roberts' house in Modesto and on the other end of the line will be a determined individual who through perseverance, good intentions or connections has obtained the King's private number. 
"They'll say, 'Yeah, I have your old race bike.' Roberts explains, "It'll be an old dirt tracker or one of the many Yamaha roadracers. I'll ask them some specific questions, was the frame broken and re-welded many times by the swing arm pivot? Inevitably, after a few questions it becomes apparent that they don't have the bike I raced." Roberts and friends own most of the significant bikes he piloted. Save one.
So, it was with a callused cynicism that Roberts heard through the grapevine that someone out there had one of his old bikes. But not just any old bike. He claimed to have in his possession Kenny's famed Yamaha TZ750 dirt track machine, the bike that he won the Indy mile with in 1975, a bike that tried very hard to maim Roberts on several occasions. Ahhh, that bike.
For those readers without a degree in motorcycle racing history—or simply weren't born in '75—this is the encapsulated story: In 1975 Kenny Roberts was having a bear of a time trying to retain his number one plate because of a charge by a likable man by the name of Gary Scott and his potent factory Harley Davidson. In previous attempts at the championship, Roberts utilized the standard Yamaha four-stroke twin to run down the booming XR Harley. Run them down he did, winning multiple Grand National championships when the series contained both roadrace and dirt track events. However, that success was not carrying on into 1975, the tired design of the Yamaha (helped along by flowbench masters Jerry Branch and Tim Witham) began to show cords, and even The King in his early prime could not stop the advances of Scott and Harley. Bad luck followed Roberts as well that season, clutches that were once infallible roasted, chains snapped, wires loosened and fell off. It was obvious to all at Yamaha that it was time for a new machine.
Roberts, his personal craftsman Kel Carruthers and key personnel at Yamaha scoured the corners of their imagination to find something that would give them an edge. What they needed was horsepower, big power. Hence, a scheme was hatched: Roberts wanted horsepower let's give it to em'. Although none of them realized it at the time they would prepare a machine that would put the fear of God into the King and add an illustrious chapter to racing history.
Although there were grave reservations on many fronts when the details of the Kel Carruthers-built Yamaha became known, hesitance did not stop the principles from assembling one Doug Schwerma designed Champion dirt track frame, a leaned on Yamaha TZ700/750 engine (the very same one Roberts had won Laguna with previously that year) billowing one hundred plus horsepower on the dyno and one set of Goodyear dirt track tires. With these menacing ingredients they threw in the best fabrication skills of Kel Carruthers and flipped the puree switch on the blender. Interestingly, with the aforementioned parts in front of him, Carruthers assembled the machine in just five days. Carruthers and company were not the first to see the potential of a Japanese multi-cylinder cradled in a dirt track frame.
(Although it is not generally known in present day, other riders had Yamaha TZ trackers before The King, including Rick Hocking, Steve Baker, Randy Cleek and the elder Skip Aksland, but these men were not Roberts neither were they assisted by Kel Carruthers so the results were marginal. Moreover, Erv Kanemoto built Kawasaki triple-powered machines for his riders: Gary Nixon, Don Castro and Scott Brelsford; Kanemoto Kawasakis were fairly successful, although not at the National level. The wound-tight Kawasaki, at least when compared with the brute force Yamaha, had a touch softer power curve and less horsepower. Too, it was time-consuming, Kanemoto recalls; the Kanemoto Racing triple shook so badly that Kanemoto made plenty of foot-trips to the track to find parts that had shaken off. He'd retrieve air filters and anything else not nailed on.)
Oh, la-de-dah, isn't life grand at the front of the pack Jay? Yes, dear Corky, dreadful about our chum Roberts having such a bear of a time on that contraption ... say, what's that frightful noise?
 The assumptions of this being a monster unleashed were confirmed once Carruthers stepped back from it in his shop. They realized that the Champion Yamaha was, in essence, over-kill, so much so that in the final races of the '75 season Carruthers affixed a kill-switch to the number three cylinder on the Yamaha. Roberts would push the switch on the entrance to corners, killing the spark to that cylinder in order to tame the wickedness of the machine.
In a late-night, pre-Indy phone call Carruthers asked Roberts how fast he wanted to go at Indy. "About one thirty should be enough," he estimated. Carruthers geared appropriately.
Roberts went to Indy without ever seeing the completed bike. Once he arrived the crew sat him on the seat and adjusted levers and the handlebars.
Before the bike took to the track many thought it too powerful and would not be able to obtain any traction. Roberts might have been one of these persons, but he won the first semi-final,  putting his name on the grid sheet for the National and from there, the rest is history.
Harley teammates Jay Springsteen (then a just rookie) and Korky Keener initially led the twenty-five mile main event quite easily, playing grab-ass and spraying each other with dirt as the laps ran down to the black and white.
Oh, la-de-dah, isn't life grand at the front of the pack Jay? Yes, dear Corky, dreadful about our chum Roberts having such a bear of a time on that contraption ... say, what's that frightful noise?
Sensing a threat, Keener looked back—very late in the race—and saw Roberts doing his patented water through a screendoor drive through the pack. The shriek of the Roberts TZ750 struck a chord deep within Keener, he signaled Springsteen with a single index finger that Kenny, like death with a black robe and scythe, was coming for them.
Grab-ass time was officially over.
Current Team Roberts manager Chuck Aksland, then a lad of eleven, had begged his grandfather to bring him back east for this event as he knew it would be a scorcher. He was not disappointed, "I still remember seeing hay scattering in the air as Kenny came out of turn four. I still think it was among the best races I have ever seen, top three easy," he says today (1993)
Roberts used the high line to make his charge, essentially bouncing off the bales in making the corner transitions, shaping a crude rectangle out of the oval. With all that Carruthers horsepower he came for Springer and Keener; and on the last lap all three held throttles WFO down the straight, in a flash Roberts clawed by the Harley boys and onto the podium, his margin of victory about two feet at the line.
There are those that say this is the bike and the race that made Kenny Roberts an icon. From nearly a dead last start, Kenny had spun and slid his way to the win. On a bike some thought unridable.
To put this machine's horsepower into perspective for a younger enthusiast, piloting this it would not be unlike racing a modern big bore Suzuki fitted with nitrous-oxide injection—in six inches of water.
The Champion Yamaha 750 is and was considered the definitive unbridled motorcycle, so much so that Roberts, when he got off the bike after narrowly winning at Indy, spewed the immortal Roberts quote: "They don't pay me enough to ride that thing," he said.
Win yes, but live with it? For a season? No thanks. With the King in its saddle the Champion Yamaha never really tracked straight, spinning and hopping on the straights. It tried very hard to toss Roberts over the top and Roberts, truth be known, hated the bike with a passion he would only again have for Freddie Spencer. He raced it twice more after winning Indy, with less than spectacular results,

The AMA, with the help of level-headed Kel Carruthers, quicly moved to ban the bike and the formula that brought it into existence. The argument that if the machine was allowed to breed it would eventually kill someone won the sanctioning body over.
Back to Roberts, modern day, phone in hand. All obvious signs of suspicion on his part disappeared upon learning that the person who claimed to have his bike was none other than Stephen Wright. 
In the realm of motorcycle restoration experts there are only a few true craftsmen, among them, Mike Pariti and Wright are the considered among the best, Wright's expertise in the area of board track racers from the early 1900s is unequaled. He is a celebrated author as well, writing both of the American Racer books, volumes that are considered the pinnacle historical record of motorcycle racing from its infancy. If that pedigree wasn't enough, Wright worked as the late racer and part-time actor Steve McQueen's personal motorcycle restorer for six years, assembling McQueen's vast collection of motorcycles to show quality. Therefore, when Wright says he's got a bike you used to race, you don't doubt him.
Even if the bike was put into the crusher. Yes, the crusher.
Once the AMA banned the bike from competition several persons wanted to get their hands on it for historical purposes, (including Carruthers whom as builder probably had more claim to ownership than anyone save Roberts).
From there the engine was removed from the chassis, the wheels sent back to the roadracing shop and the bike compressed to a neat little cube where it couldn't hurt anyone.
Or, so the story goes. 
But Yamaha America would have nothing to do with it and sent the bike to Europe for a promotional campaign. It was seen in late 1976 at a dealer show and one brave soul actually rode it at an English Speedway event, but the machine failed to bite that man, former world champion Peter Collins, as he was not able to shift beyond second on a very slick track.
From there the engine was removed from the chassis, the wheels sent back to the roadracing shop and the bike compressed to a neat little cube where it couldn't hurt anyone. Or so the story goes. A little chicanery occurred in this period as the bike never really went to its intended execution. Perhaps another bike tagged as this one went in its place or someone mistakenly checked the bike off the roster, but the machine never went to its demise. For a long while it sat in the back of the Amsterdam race shop with other racebikes put out to pasture. With most of its cosmetics removed save the tank, it looked like just another R&D exercise gone horribly wrong. Which really it was. It sat in that condition for a number of years until former Yamaha manager Kenny Clark, looking through the cadavers of this graveyard, began to study this particular machine. Although it was faded by constant exposure to the elements and sun, the phrase, Prepared by Kel Carruthers, El Cajon in Seventies hippie script on the fuel tank, raised the hairs on the back of his neck.
It didn't take a rocket scientist to determine this was not a machine that belonged in a graveyard but in a museum. He packed the bike up and sent it back to the States where he intended to restore it himself. Upon leaving Yamaha, Clark sold the machine in its dilapidated condition to Wright.

Determined, he set out to make the machine right again. Much damage had been done though. The ground up restoration would be the relatively easy part of the process. The difficulties lay in finding the correct parts, considering Champion only made five kits before the AMA banned the machine and this machine, being a factory built and developed racer, was in some ways very different from the kitted bikes.
Wright spent a good deal of time searching through the attics and garages of racers of the era, trying to find correct decals and other bits. With time and the help of many individuals —such as former Roberts mechanic, Merrill Vanderslice—Wright collected the correct pieces and finished the machine just prior to 1994 and started work.
Flash to the 1994 USGP, behind the Marlboro Roberts garage. Wright brought the bike to Laguna Seca and showed it to Robeerts. Roberts was obviously surprised and somewhat shaken by seeing this old steed in the flesh. He kept repeating, "I can't believe it, just can't believe it." For Roberts, a man who has done and seen plenty, the sight of this old machine unnerved him. He laughed nervously and spoke in broken sentences as the memories, both good and bad, rushed back.

Roberts wanted to own the machine. Wright wasn't ready to part with the noble racing steed just yet, but when that day came, said he would sell it.
The man most responsible for the machine's existence, Kel Carruthers, wearing a blood red Cagiva uniform, walked over and took a long lookat the bike. He examined many of the pieces individually: the foot peg and brake arm where Roberts hadn't been able to pull the machine back from the edge and it smashed into a wall at San Jose, along with the resulting welds where Ken Maley put the pieces back together again. He looked at the TZ700/750 pipes and the unique mounting system he had built to enable the exhaust to tuck in tighter than the kit allowed; the places he relocated the engine later that season. He said to no-one and everyone, "It's the bike," and walked back to Doug Chandler's V585, yet another in a line of machines he would help create but would never own. 
There was talk of Roberts doing a lap of honor on the machine at Laguna, someone mentioned that they thought Roberts might fit into Luca Cadalora's or Beattie's leathers.
However, after a few moments' consideration, most thought it a bad idea. 
He escaped with his wits intact twenty years ago, let's not push the issue.

IN THE WIND


Saturday, June 4, 2016

FROM THE CENTER OF THE UNIVERSE... FLATTRACK MOTORCYCLE RACING



SMITH WINS THE SPRINGFIELD MILE, THREE IN A ROW FOR THE 2016 MILER.

HE HAS GOT TO WIN THE NATIONAL NUMBER ONE PLATE!





A BMW DROPS IN FOR A WIN... SAY WHAT?!


HISTORY WAS MADE AT ARIZONA'S MILE GNC RACE WHEN DALTON GAUTHIER WON THE GNC2* MAIN ON A RON WOOD BMW.




AFTER A THOUSAND YEARS... A HARLEY LIQUID COOLED RACING MACHINE, FOR  DIRT TRACKING!



DAVIS FISHER'S #67 HARLEY-DAVIDSON XG750R IS SHOWN IN A PRESS RELEASE PHOTO
COURTESY OF AMA PRO FLAT TRACK AND THE HARLEY-DAVIDSON MOTOR COMPANY.




WHERE THEY BELONG... ON THE DIRT!





CHOPPERDAVE... http://chopperdaves.blogspot.com


FOR ALL THINGS FROM A CAMERA LENS.

DAVE KNOWS THE WORKING END OF A FLAT TRACK RACING MACHINE.








POPPA WHEELIE... http://pwheelie.blogspot.com

                                                      MY FAVORITE SITE FOR ALL THINGS WITH THE RUBBER SIDE DOWN.

                                A DOUBLE WET DREAM... PW WRITES;  Brit Flat Track Fan Neil Armstrong's Triumphs







SIDEBURN... http://sideburnmag.blogspot.com


                                  LEADING THE INTERNATIONAL CRAZE FOR FLATTRACK RACING...

                 WELL, MAYBE JUST CRAZY!






STU'S SHOTS R US... http://stusshots.blogspot.com

THE COMMAND CENTER FOR ALL RACING NEWS AND LINKS!

The King
King Kenny Roberts at The Indy Mile 1975
CLICK ON THE KING!


SUPERBIKEPLANET... http://superbikeplanet.com

THE BEST MOTORCYCLE RACING DIGEST EVER... OK, FINE, IT'S PRETTY DAMN GOOD!


WATCH THIS ONE...


Friday, April 29, 2016

DIRT QUAKE USA... AGAIN!


GO TO SIDEBURN.COM FOR THE FACTS... A WEEKEND FOR NORMAL CRAZIES!

Saturday, April 9, 2016

MOTORCYCLE MANIA


WHAT A MOTORCYCLE SHOULD BE... POPPA WHEELIE PIC 
THIS MACHINE IS PERFECT.


WHAT A FLATTRACKER SHOULD BE... CHOPPERDAVE PIC


ALL THE ABOVE...


THEY WILL SELL YOU ANYTHING.


 FROM SIDEBURN... COVERS OF MOTORCYCLE MAGAZINES
IT IS A CRAZY WORLD OUT THERE... MOTORCYCLES!



Sunday, November 29, 2015

NICKY HAYDEN... HONDA AND WSBK





I LIKE IT!  I WILL BE WATCHING WSBK AFTER A FEW YEARS OF NOT.

Thursday, November 5, 2015

THE HONDA 'GROM'... THE MINI 50 RISES FROM THE ASHES


AS BADASS AS ANYTHING ELSE! HAD A MINI TRAIL 50 BACK IN THE LATE 60'S. BOUGHT THE FIRST ONE FROM JOHNNIE ROSS MOTORCYCLES IN REDDING, CA.

Friday, October 23, 2015

PIT CREW!!


NICKY HAYDEN ... OFF TO WORLD SUPERBIKE IN 2016






NICKY HAS REPRESENTED HIS SELF,  FAMILY AND COUNTRY IN ALL THE RIGHT WAYS.  LET'S SEE WHAT HE CAN DO RIDING THE SUPER FACTORY HONDA.



Friday, October 9, 2015

Thursday, September 10, 2015

WAYNE RAINEY... STILL A CHAMPION


"Winning the Championship Screwed Me Up" 
At 1:29 p.m. local time on September 5, 1993, Wayne Rainey crashed at the Italian GP at Misano in Italy. Running a little too hot into the first corner on a mid-race lap, the back end of the bike broke away as he got on the gas and he was thrown. Initially he slid over the tarmac at 100-plus mph, frightening but relatively risk free. Then, as he reached the gravel trap, he started to flip over the ripples that had been raked into the sand. Just as the energy of the crash was spent, the bike caught up with him and smacked him hard in the back. Either at that moment or when he was flipping through the gravel trap, his spinal column snapped at the sixth thoracic vertebra. In a space of five calamitous seconds, he had gone from race leader, championship leader and reigning world champion to a champion in the broken shell of a body. It was a mentally and physically shattering event for Wayne, his family and friends and the whole world of GP motorcycle racing. 
In a space of five calamitous seconds, he had gone from race leader, championship leader and reigning world champion to a champion in the broken shell of a body.
Michael Scott has written the story of Rainey's life and career up to that tragic moment in time, including the desperation and determination that have laid the foundations for Rainey to move on with his life. The book was written in very close cooperation with Rainey and his family and the many people he worked with on his journey to the top. Wayne's father Sandy was the early motivator to his son, but in a supportive rather than overbearing way. His was a world of continuous improvement, determined that the son would have the best bike the father was capable of preparing for the dirt-tracks and ovals where the kids let rip. Corona, Ascot, Indian Dunes, Trojan Speedway became the crucible where the natural talents of Rainey and other top riders were honed. By his mid-teens Rainey had moved out of the Southern California scene to take on the U.S. National riders, linking up with legends of the sport such as Shell Thuet, John Reid and Itchy Armstrong. He never quite made it to the top of the dirt-track sport; he never won a Grand National despite being an Expert for two years. When Kawasaki stepped in and offered him a ride on their Superbike, the timing was perfect and the die was cast for greatness. 
His 11 years as a road racer are better known. He was U.S. national champion on a Kawasaki in 1983, only to have the factory pull out of racing. An odd-ball year in Europe running a TZ250 Yamaha for Kenny Roberts was followed by two years for Honda back in the States and another Championship title in 1987. The seeds had been sown for his fierce battles with Kevin Schwantz to continue outside of the U.S., and in 1988 they found themselves battling it out on the GP circuits around the world. 
Feeding on the competitive energy that was generated by the excellence of those with whom he raced, it was Rainey who was able to harness the skills he had worked so hard to develop, with a razor-sharp insight into the limitations of the bike he was riding. While Schwantz became the hero of the crowds packing European circuits to see his win or bust racing style, it was Rainey who was knocking on the championship door in 1988 and 1989. By 1990, he was the best roadracer in the world and the world championship was justifiably his, with an almost perfect performance. "When I crossed the finish line, and I was World Champion, I had a burst of emotion. I felt really great, for about two tenths of a second. Then it was gone, and it was like - wow, what happened to everything?" Then things went weird. "When I crossed the finish line, and I was World Champion, I had a burst of emotion. I felt really great, for about two tenths of a second. Then it was gone, and it was like - wow, what happened to everything?" Rainey found himself becoming obsessed with his racing, determined to win everything at all costs while receiving no joy in doing so. A bad crash at the end of the 1991 season left him with a badly broken leg that complicated his preparation for the 1992 season. More crashes followed as his driving determination pushed him over the limit. In the end Rainey was to triumph in the shadow of Mick Doohan's own peripeteia, that halted the Australian's almost unbeaten season and came within an ace of costing him his right leg. 
But it was a hollow victory. "In 1992 I pushed myself so hard that I was a pretty miserable guy to be around. I remember going to racetracks and sitting at the red lights just hating it. Because the intensity was so much greater than before. By the time '93 rolled round I was going to be World Champion, and I was prepared to do whatever it would take." "By the time '93 rolled round I was going to be World Champion, and I was prepared to do whatever it would take." 
He had the season licked when IT happened and the world of screaming two-strokes and screaming crowds was replaced by the silence of a hospital room and soft beep of a cardiac monitor. Lying in the gravel trap in a sea of pain and with an intense darkness pressing down on him, he had made a pact with God to give him the strength to resist the calm of death that threatened to overwhelm him. It got him out of the dirt and into the hospital bed and from that point it was the determination that had threatened to destroy him that was redirected towards saving and rebuilding his life. Anyone who has seen him at work in the GP pits running his official works Yamaha team, will appreciate the miraculous success of his recovery. 
Michael Scott's book is superb, providing a view of the American era of GP domination that has never before been revealed. Many of Rainey's friends and foes have been interviewed for the book, with extensive quotes from Eddie Lawson, Kenny Roberts, Kevin Schwantz and of course the family. Throughout the book, Rainey is completely candid, about himself, the riders he competed against, the crash and its legacy. His openness will have you wriggling with discomfort as the horrors of daily life within a body paralyzed from the chest down are recounted in pure factual objective fashion, without a trace of self-pity. 
It's clear that an exorcism is at work here, that the story and its telling is a part of the recovery process, laying the demons to rest. Despite the scale of the recovery, on bad days the black dogs can still be heard barking in the distance. Rainey tells poignantly of the emotions that suddenly overwhelm him as he watches a pre-season training session earlier this year trackside, his mind cruelly recalling the sensations of riding a 500cc racing bike at the limit. The man survived the crash, found fulfillment in a new career and peace with his wife Shae, son Rex and new found faith in God. The story of how this came to pass should be read by everyone. 

"Wayne Rainey - His own story" by Michael Scott. Published by Haynes $34.95
ISBN 1 85960 401 3
Note: The book carries this title: "Wayne Rainey - The Two Lives of a World Champion" in the U.S. market.

IT IS GOOD TO HATE


Saturday, August 1, 2015

WHEN CALLED... YOU MUST GO

Bikers' 'guardian angel' John Hinds makes final journey

Doctor's partner urges public to realise dream of an air ambulance service

By Ivan Little

PUBLISHED10/07/2015 | 08:00
01OF 77
Pacemaker Press 09/7/2015
Medical Team carry the coffin followed by Family members  during The Funeral of Dr John Hinds takes place at St Patrick's Church in Portaferry.
Pic Colm Lenaghan/Pacemaker
Pacemaker Press 09/7/2015 Medical Team carry the coffin followed by Family members during The Funeral of Dr John Hinds takes place at St Patrick's Church in Portaferry. Pic Colm Lenaghan/Pacemaker
The heartbroken partner of motorbike racing's 'flying doctor' John Hinds, who died in a tragic accident at the weekend, has called on people in Northern Ireland to back his campaign for the introduction of an air ambulance here.
Speaking for the first time about the Portaferry man whose funeral yesterday was attended by more than 1,000 mourners, Dr Janet Acheson described him as her "quiet man who will own my heart for ever".
Video: Mourners pay tribute to 'quiet man' Dr John Hinds
source: Belfast Telegraph
360p low
04:18
And as his remains were carried from St Patrick's Church in Portaferry, Janet placed a red rose on his coffin as the song he played to her every night before they went to sleep rang out over the chapel's PA system.
Janet fought back the tears and clung to Dr Hinds' parents Dermot and Josephine for support as she listened to the lines that said "rest in peaceful sleep" and "just give love to all".
Dr Hinds, who saved the lives of many road racing riders and spectators, died on Saturday morning after sustaining extensive injuries while providing medical cover at a practice session for the Skerries 100 motorcycle races in the Republic the day before.
Dr Hinds - who was a consultant anaesthetist at Craigavon Area Hospital and a lecturer in trauma science - was travelling on his own motorbike behind the riders when he crashed into a wall. Yesterday dozens of bikers, paramedics, fire officers and motorcycling marshals provided a guard of honour as his huge funeral cortege wound its way the three miles from the Hinds' family home to the church where John was baptised 35 years ago.
Two PSNI motorcyclists were at the head of the cortege, which also included dozens of motorbike enthusiasts from all over Ireland.
Fr Michael Hinds conducted the funeral service for his cousin and read out a message from Janet, who said John had radiated grace from the heart and peace from the soul.
She added: "John believed it was easier to ask for forgiveness than permission and that is how his achievements leave us in his wake. There has been much made of John's age, but as he used to say to me, with his infectious sense of humour: 'Age doesn't matter unless you are a cheese'."
Earlier, in a statement, Janet said: "I urge you all today on John's behalf to help us ensure that his dream of a first-class, world-leading trauma network - with a doctor-led helicopter emergency medical service at its core - becomes a reality so that it can start saving lives on our doorstep."
01OF 12
Dr John Hinds who was killed in a crash during Skerries 100 practice session. Photo: Stephen Davison
Dr John Hinds who was killed in a crash during Skerries 100 practice session. Photo: Stephen Davison
Fr Hinds said the role reversal as doctors fought to save John's life in Beaumont Hospital in Dublin was almost too perverse to comprehend, adding: "The administration of medical care was his role, his expertise and even to a large degree his raison d'etre in life."
Fr Hinds, who called his cousin the 'bikers' guardian angel', said he had been a great but unassuming and unaffected man who with his brilliant mind and skilled medical hands had "perpetuated life for so many other people without seeking reward or praise in return".
He finished his homily by saying: "Ride on in peace Delta 7, ride on" - a reference to Dr Hinds' call sign, which had been given to him after he volunteered to work with the Ambulance Service to respond to road and industrial accidents. An emotional eulogy was delivered at the Requiem Mass by Dr Fred McSorley, another road racing medic and a close friend of Dr Hinds.
Dr McSorley said John had been an extraordinary man, an inspirational teacher and doctor, who only two weeks ago had spoken passionately at a prestigious trauma conference in Chicago.
He said that he first met Dr Hinds when he was a young medical student who was keen to join his travelling doctors team at road races, but was too young.
"He just wouldn't go away," said Dr McSorley.
"Little did we know what a star he was to become and rapidly the master was being taught by the pupil." He said Dr Hinds usually got to the scene of accidents first.
He added: "So instead of being the travelling doctor, I was becoming the travelling second opinion."
Dr McSorley spoke of the shock among the medical team who arrived on the scene of Dr Hinds' crash at Skerries.
"They thought they were going out to a fallen competitor. They had no idea they were going out to Dr John, their mentor, their teacher," he said.
"Through extraordinarily different circumstances, they worked heroics, but they did exactly as John had been teaching them during the winter (training) sessions. They just stuck to his teachings."
Dr McSorley said after Dr Hinds passed away, Janet had urged him to go to the Skerries races to help the emergency medical teams, as it was what he would have wanted him to do.
Turning to Dr Hinds' legacy, Dr McSorley said his friend had realised it would take a long time to improve the trauma care system in Northern Ireland.
"He recognised that a helicopter had to be part of an integrated, reformed trauma service, so it was integral to the service and not just an add-on.
"That will take several years of hard work and John was the very person who would have driven that on.
"I don't know who will take that on now - hopefully someone will."
Dr McSorley made a plea for people who wanted to keep Dr Hinds' memory alive in the shorter term to become blood donors.
He revealed that blood from 54 donors had been used on Dr Hinds at Beaumont Hospital.
He added: "That kept him alive long enough so that the last of his family, his brother Colin, could fly over from London to be with him while he was still alive."
Dr McSorley said he hoped that in time his colleague's dream of improving the trauma service here would come true, with a helicopter at the heart of it.
He revealed that Dr Hinds' Delta 7 pager had been deactivated by the Ambulance Service on Tuesday.
"I would hope with the help and dedication of people here that in the years to come the call sign will be heard again (on a helicopter) - as clear to land on a heliport at the top of the Royal Victoria Hospital."
Dr Hinds was buried in a graveyard adjoining St Patrick's Church at the foot of Portaferry's Windmill Hill, with the sun shimmering on the Mourne Mountains in the distance.