Marine Turbine Technologies Y2K Superbike - Specifications & Review

Y2K Superbike

Article Complete Info

Articleid245003
CategorySport
MakeMarine Turbine Technologies
ModelY2K Superbike
Year2002

Chassis, Suspension, Brakes & Wheels

FrontbrakesDual disc
Frontbrakesdiameter320 mm (12.6 inches)
Fronttyre120/60-ZR17
RearbrakesSingle disc
Rearbrakesdiameter320 mm (12.6 inches)
Reartyre200/50-ZR17

Engine & Transmission

EnginedetailsGas turbine
Gearbox1-speed
Onequartermile9.800 seconds
Power320.00 HP (233.6 kW)) @ 52000 RPM
Topspeed402.3 km/h (250.0 mph)
Torque576.30 Nm (58.8 kgf-m or 425.1 ft.lbs) @ 2000 RPM

Other Specifications

CommentsThis bike is hand crafted and production is limited to 5 per year. The Y2K is powered by a Rolls Royce Allison gas turbine engine running on diesel fuel. Try to imagine 0-200 mph in 15 seconds!!

Physical Measures & Capacities

Dryweight208.7 kg (460.0 pounds)
Fuelcapacity34.00 litres (8.98 gallons)
Powerweightratio1.5337 HP/kg
Seatheight800 mm (31.5 inches) If adjustable, lowest setting.

About Marine Turbine Technologies

Country of Origin: United States
Founder: Ted McIntyre II (MTT)
Best Known For: MTT Y2K turbine-powered motorcycle

Company History

MTT turned a jet helicopter turboshaft into the heart of a road-legal motorcycle, creating the Y2K—an engineering spectacle with turbine whine, surreal smoothness, and thrust that felt aviation-grade. The chassis, brakes, and heat management demanded serious design to tame extreme exhaust temperatures and deliver stable handling. Built in tiny numbers, each bike is effectively a hand-crafted prototype validated to live on public roads. While impractical for commuting, the Y2K opened imaginations: what happens when aerospace components meet motorcycle packaging? It also showcased American boutique fabrication at its wildest, from composite bodywork to meticulously routed plumbing. Historically, MTT’s Y2K joins Britten and Bimota in the pantheon of audacious engineering projects that expand the category’s boundaries. Most riders will never pilot one, but its influence is cultural—proof that the motorcycle can be both science project and sculpture, and that performance can arrive as a smooth turbine rush rather than piston pulses.

Other Years

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