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Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/127836
it better, so I decided to have a go at
building it."
That bath-time brainwave came in
August 1991. Eight months later, Andy
snaked the ASP onto the streets in a
highly unofficial road test that proved
his ideas had point as well as purpose.
Two seasons of racing the EXUPengined bike himself on British circuits
refined it into a trick piece of hardware
that really worked - though it was
almost accidentally that he discovered
just how well.
"Stuart Jones is one of Britain's top
national-class riders, with literally hundreds of race wins to his credit," Stevenson says. "He also tunes a mean Yamaha motor, and when my own engine
blew up he lent me one of his to finish
the season with. I repaid the favor by
lending him the ASP for a race meeting
at Aintree, his local track. On his 12thever lap aboard the bike, he broke his
own outright circuit lap record, set with
the same engine in a stock Yamaha
frame. After cleaning up in the day's
races, he came home, picked up the
phone, and ordered a chassis from me.
That's how the ASP2 came about."
Developing a mark II version of his
radical chassis concept allowed Stevenson to rethink some compromises he'd
been forced to adopt the first time
around, and to evolve a more rational
design which in tum will form the basis
of ife forthcoming ASP street bike he
aims to put into production later this
year.
It's a long way from building a bathtime brainwave to becoming a fully
fledged motorcycle manufacturer, but
Andy Stevenson is a determin.ed individual, whose belief in his own ideas
was reinforced by the positive feedback
from everyone who's ever ridden his
bikes.
,;It ounds like I'm gilding the lily,
but nobody was ever negative about
either ASP after riding th~," he says.
"There were always suggestions about
how to improve them, which is
inevitable. Honda are always updating
their designs, so why shouJd.n't I? But
the message that kept coming through
was that people wanted to see a street
version. I knew if I didn't do something
about it, I'd regret it for the rest of my
life. So my wife Katharine and I talked it
over, and decided to go for it, together
with my elder brother Jon. We applied
for a European innovation grant from
the EU in Brussels which repays 50 percent of our prototype-development costs
- and got it. Together with a British government Enterprise Zone subsidy aimed
at regenerating industry in the former
coal-mining area we live in, this was
enough to make the project viable when
coupled with our own cash resources up to the point when we're ready to
start production and can take cash
deposits."
Stevenson says that moment is less
than a year away. Since the financial
basis of the ASP Motorcycle Company
was assured, things have started to
move very quickly. The two Stevenson
brothers now own a 1500-sq.-ft. factory,
with sufficient space for batch manUfacture of up to 10 ASP street bikes at a
time, the prototype of which is already
complete in rolling-chassis form, awaiting bodywork.
Testing is due to start in June, with
production beginning next winter for
delivery of the first batch of 10 street
bikes in May 1998.
Technology speaks for itself, but it
needs styling to sell it to the public at
large, and the ASP roadster's smooth
lines have already been finalized, cour-
(Left) The 125-bhp VZF750 engine Is • fully
stressed chassis member.
(Below) The man behind the blke Is the man
behind the bike: Andy Stsvenson. Stevenson's
road version ofthe ASP is due In 1998.
(Below) This cutaway drawing by street bike stylist Scott MacFarlane Is
the original EXUP-engined ASP road racer.
tesy of technical illustrator Scott MacFarlane in his bike-design debut.
"I'm only interested in building a
high-quality, tailor-made product for
customers who want something avantgarde but effective, hand built to the
highest standards," Stevenson says.
"Our bikes won't be cheap - target selling price is 20,000 pounds (about
$33,000) tax free ex-factory with a new
Yamaha Thunderace motor - but there'll
be nothing else like them on the street in
terms of quality of manufacture, excellence of handling and distinctive
appearance. The bodywork especially
will be built to a far higher standard
than anything else, thanks to a flew
manuJacturing process' I'm having
patented. We couldn't ever hope to
match Bimota's volume, but we are aiming to surpass their standards of quality."
.
The fact that Yamaha UK has agreed
to supply ASP with engines underlines
the commitment to excellence the company has succeeded in convincing others it possesses - emphasized by the fact
that, according to Stevenson, every single chassis part on the street ASP apart
from the lights, wheels, brakes and tires
will be purpose-built, rather than bor-'
rowed from someone else's parts bin, as
was inevitably the case with the road
racer prototypes. Instruments will be
digital products of the British race-car
industry, apart from a custom-made
analogue tachometer which will have a
shift light rather than a redline, in keeping with best HRC / Aprilia GP practice.
Apart from improved breathing due
to a specially designed airbox and Seot. tish-built Muller Teknik exhaust system
tha t's expected to yield around 5 percent extra performance - just as similar
modifications to the same engine do 01).
the Bimota YBll- ASP will fit the Yamaha Thunderace engines in unmodified
form.
In terms of chassis layout and detail
execution, .Stevenson says the street ASP
will follow broadly the same design as
his second prototype, using the slantblock engine as a fully stressed member,
to which the pair of triple-box-section
extruded-alloy swingarms will be bolted
with chassis subframes.
. Special Maxton shocks built by suspension guru Ron Williams - architect of
so many Isle of Man TT victories for
Joey Dunlop and th~ Honda works
team, then later for the rotary Norton
equipe - will be used, though rather surprisingly there won't be any linkage for
the rear suspension. Instead the shock
will be mounted in a horizontal position
above the gearbox, operated by a cantilever arm off the top of the swingarm.
"It's heavy, complicated, expensive
and unnecessary," Stevenson says of a
linkage system. "We ran a dead-straight,
linear 2:1 linkage on the ASP2, and Ron
says a rising-rate Unkage only confuses
the shock. He figures to get much better
response out of internal shock design."
. Complimenting the Maxton shocks
will be an array of other top-grade
British components. The ASP street bike
will use Saxon -bolt-up composite
wheels, with magnesium centers and
spun-ailoy rims (though carbon rims are
available as an option where homologation permits), fitted with Dunlop 0364
tires, PPM cast-iron discs (32Omm fronts
and a 220mm rear) and Harrison Billet-6
ASP2
Eagine
.
Uquid-cooled DOHC 20,valve in-line four-eylinder four·stroke
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748cc
125 bhp at 12.800 rpm