Ever  since the dawn of man, we have strived to go fast.  Motorcycle  enthusiasts and gear-heads perhaps have this desire slightly more so  than the average Joe.  A few such men - Matt  Markstaller, Bob Carpenter, and Jason DiSalvo - have pulled together a  team of people to restore Triumph Motorcycles’ legacy in landspeed  racing. Man’s passion has always launched innovation, and these three  men have set out to design, build and ride the world’s  most advanced streamliner, the Castrol Rocket.
Triumph  held the title of “World’s Fastest Motorcycle” from 1955 to 1970 with  the exception of a brief 33-day period. The Triumph streamliners to  carry world records were Devil’s Arrow, Texas Cee-gar and Gyronaut X1,  the last being at 245.60 mph (395.28 km/h). Today's bar now sits at  376.363 mph (605.697 km/h). 
Markstaller  serves as aerodynamic engineer; Carpenter is the high-peformance engine  builder; and Daytona 200 winner and Bonneville class record holder  DiSalvo bravely pilots Triumph’s latest entry. This cross-country team  converges on the Bonneville Salt Flats, a 40 square mile salt pan in  northwestern Utah, with the goal of a 400 mph plus record-breaking run.
The 2013 edition Castrol Rocket features Carbon Kevlar monocoque construction with two turbocharged Triumph Rocket III engines producing a combined 1,000+ HP. It is 25.5’ long, 2’ wide and 3’ tall, a true rocket on two wheels powered by methanol fuel and filled with Castrol 4T 10W40 full synthetic oil.
 










