Burt Munro

New
Zealander Burt Munro was a motorcycle land-speed record-holder of the 1960s.
One of his dreams was to run his homebuilt 1920 Indian Scout motorcycle, dubbed
the Munro Special, on the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah. He saved for years in
spite of limited means to make the trip to America. He finally came over on a
shoestring budget in 1962. Munro was 63 at the time with a bad heart, yet he
still managed to overcome numerous obstacles to set world records, even as a
muffler was burning the flesh on his leg. In 1967, Munro coaxed his beloved
streamlined Indian to 183.58 mph. That set a record in the category of
"streamlined motorcycles under 1,000cc. To qualify, he made a one-way run
of 190.07 mph, the fastest ever officially recorded speed on an Indian.
Munros inspirational story was made into the movie "The Worlds
Fastest Indian" in 2005. The movie, starring Anthony Hopkins and directed by
Roger Donaldson, was met with favorable reviews. Many in the motorcycling
community called "The Worlds Fastest Indian" the best motorcycle movie
since the legendary documentary "On Any Sunday" made in the early 1970s.
Munro was born in Invercargill, New Zealand in 1899. He began riding
motorcycles at the age of 15. His first bike was a British-built Clyno. He sold
the Clyno to a blacksmith in 1920 and bought the Indian Scout, which he would
continuously modify for the rest of his life. He later bought a 1936 Velocette,
which he also modified and competed on.

In his mid-20s, Munro began competing in various forms of motorcycle
racing in Australia. He rode in hillclimbs, trials, road racing, drag racing,
flat track and early scrambles events. In other words, if there was a
competition on two wheels, Munro probably tried it. He also participated in
economy runs and once recorded 116 miles per gallon in one of the runs.
In the mid-1940s, Munro and his wife divorced. He wanted to build a house
with low ceilings to combat the New Zealand summer heat, but it was against
local building codes. Instead, he got around the codes by building a low
garage. It served as both his workshop and living quarters.
Munro
quit working in the late 1940s so he could devote his time fully to improving
his Indian and Velocette racing bikes. During this period, he honed his skills
at designing his own parts for the bike. Munro found unique sources for raw
materials. As an example, he once carved out rods for his Indian using a Ford
truck axle. It took him five months, but the rods lasted over 20 years, through
countless high-speed runs. He experimented with a variety of metals by trial
and error, once melting down old gas pipeline and combining it with other
melted metals to cast pistons for his bike. He converted his Indian to overhead
valves from sidevalve. He made his own cams, often filing them by hand. From
wheels, to engine part to the streamliners shell, Munro custom made just
about every part of his bikes. It didnt take long for the Munro Special
to have very little of the original Indian Scout remaining.
Munros dedication to his motorcycles was enormous. For years, he worked
16 hours per day in the shed. In later life he backed off a bit and was working
just 70 -hour weeks. While many of his neighbors viewed him as somewhat
eccentric, he did not live the life of a hermit. Munro was a member of a
motorcycle club and attended many club events and had a lot of friends whom he
helped and who in turn helped him in his racing endeavors.
Starting in
the 1940s, Munro earned a number of New Zealand speed records. His first record
was the New Zealand open road record set in 1940 at a speed of 120.8 mph. That
record held for 12 years. He earned the New Zealand beach record of 132.38 mph
in 1957 at the annual Canterbury Speed Trials.
By the late 1950s,
Munros bikes were getting so fast that he was running out of room to run
them on New Zealands speed courses. He considered trying to run on some
of Australias dry lakes, but in 1957 after visiting the Bonneville Salt
Flats in Utah, his goal became to compete on the flat and vast expanse of
Bonnevilles salt bed.
With his savings and additional funds from
motorcycling friends in New Zealand, Munro finally made the trip to America in
1962 aboard a rusting cargo ship. In order to pay for his ocean crossing, Munro
worked as the ships cook. Once in the U.S., Munro bought a dilapidated
Nash station wagon for $90 in Los Angeles to haul the Munro Special to
Bonneville.
Munro arrived at Bonneville ready to make his runs only to
be told he was not pre-entered so he wouldnt be allowed to compete. At
home in New Zealand, riders simply showed up, signed up and raced. Munros
American friends, among them Rollie Free and Marty Dickerson, both of them
long-time, well-respected members of the Land Speed Record fraternity, talked
officials into letting Munro make his runs. Tech officials looked the other
way, ignoring many of Munros unorthodox means of putting his ancient
Indian together.
In his inaugural run at the Salt Flats, Munro set a
world record of 288 km/h (178.97 mph) with his engine configured with 850cc of
displacement. Munro continued to compete at Bonneville through 1967, when he 68
years old. He survived a crash at top speed in 1967.
In a New Zealand
motorcycle magazine, Burt was quoted as saying, "At the Salt in 1967 we were
going like a bomb. Then she got the wobbles just over half way through the run.
To slow her down I sat up. The wind tore my goggles off and the blast forced my
eyeballs back into my head - couldn't see a thing. We were so far off the black
line that we missed a steel marker stake by inches. I put her down - a few
scratches all round but nothing much else."
In 1975, Munros
failing health cost him his competition license. In spite of this, he still
managed to make a few clandestine runs on his beloved Indian and Velocette.
Doctors said Munros lifetime of heavy crashes caused damage to his heart.
In January of 1978, Munro had returned from his daily walk when his heart
finally gave out.
During his life, Munros accomplishments were
little known outside a select group of motorcycle enthusiasts. With the release
of "The Worlds Fastest Indian" in 2005, Munro suddenly became a cult hero
in New Zealand. There, the movie became the biggest domestically produced film
ever produced.
Munro had a son and three daughters. His son, John,
said that Munro would have shrugged his shoulders and smiled at the popularity
he obtained after his passing.
Im sure he would have never
believed the popularity the movie gave him, said John Munro. I
think he would have been quietly pleased at being able to share his life with
millions of people.