Two-wheel motorsport has a whole range of different vehicle classes - down to single-cylinder machines. The limited engine power of these bikes is not a disadvantage, if the weight - namely, the mass to be accelerated - is also reduced considerably. Instead of metallic alternatives, plastic bearings make an important contribution here. And they display even more advantages in the tough everyday racing environment.
At Krämer Motorcycles (KMC) there is exactly one product to buy: riding pleasure on two wheels. More precisely: a Supermono racing bike, which by virtue of its extreme riding characteristics not only won the title in the single-cylinder championship, but can keep up well in the current season in the Super Twin race. The machine, offered under the model name HKR-EVO2, has a top speed of 230km/h. In the Northern Irish road race Tandragee 100, Shaun Anderson achieved an average speed of 100.485 miles/hour (161.715km/h) and became the first and only racer ever to surpass the magical 100-miles/hour mark on a single-cylinder motorcycle.
Although the company is still relatively young, a lot of development work has gone into the machine. It began in 2009 as a private project of three friends, Christof Henco, Markus Krämer and Nico Rothe - whose initial letters (HKR) denoted the type designation - to develop their own motorcycle purely for motorsport purposes. This led to the founding of Krämer Motorcycles in 2014 by Markus Krämer, who previously worked as a development engineer at KTM. Accordingly, the decision for the central component was not difficult: the single-cylinder engine KTM 690 LC4 served as a drive unit from the beginning. Around this was built the rest of the bike, partly with standard parts and partly with self-developed components.