For drag bike purposes, rear springs are pointless, so the RSD crew built this R18 into a hardtail racer with a custom frame. Both fenders were modified, but retain their stock shape. The R18 fuel tank was also retained, as it was not only stylistically correct, but it is large and wide, allowing the racer to lay down on it for aerodynamic advantage.

Advertisement
Advertisement
Image for article titled The BMW R18 Dragster Is The Kind Of Buff Race Bike You Dream About
Photo: Roland Sands Design

From there, the recipe was a pretty simple one. Move the mid-controls to the rear of the bike for maximum drag stance. Replace the clutch and brake hydraulics with off-the-shelf RSD parts. The front fork was lifted directly from BMW’s R nineT, while the front brake assembly was cribbed from an S1000 RR sport bike. Add in a custom drag seat from Saddlemen, and a set of Dunlop drag slicks and you’re ready to rip up the strip.

Image for article titled The BMW R18 Dragster Is The Kind Of Buff Race Bike You Dream About
Photo: Roland Sands Design

With a whole slew of American custom shops working on this R18 chassis, it seems BMW is pretty serious about the custom market, and is doing what it can to be accepted by the scene. Will this gambit pay off? I’m not sure but I like the R18 a lot more after seeing the RSD Dragster than I did before, and I already kinda liked it.

Advertisement

Neat bike. BMW, let me ride it!

H/T: RideApart