Career
He has also competed as a motorcycle road racer at the national level and was a motorcycle land speed world record holder. Carr began his racing career as an amateur racer in 1983. He turned professional in 1985, finishing seventh in the Grand National Championship earning him the American Medical Association.
He slowly climbed the points standing each year.
After finishing second to his Harley-Davidson teammate, Scott Parker in 1990 and 1991, he finally claimed the Grand National Championship in 1992. He ran the Grand National Series full-time until 1995 where he finished third while winning rookie of the year in the American Medical Association Superbike road racing series.
Carr left the dirt tracks to go road racing for two years (1996 and 1997). Carr was in contention for the 2006 Grand National Championship at the final race at Scioto Downs in Columbus, Ohio before dropping out with mechanical problems.
Carr was inducted into the American Medical Association. Motorcycle Hall of Fame in 2004.
On September 5, 2006, Carr broke the motorcycle land speed world record at the Bonneville Salt Flats (Utah), with a two-pass 350.8 mph (5626 km/h) average. He was the first motorcyclist to break the 350 mph barrier. Carr"s fastest run was at 354 mph (5678 km/h).
On September 28, 2008, Rocky Robinson broke Carr"s record driving the Top 1 Oil Ack Attack streamliner.
Carr regained the title on 24 September 2009 with a speed of 367.382 mph.(Pending FIM ratification). This was later topped by Rocky Robinson and the Top 1 Ack Attack team on September
25, 2010. Robinson set a new record of 376.363 mph (kilo average)(Pending FIM ratification) and had an exit speed of 394 mph.
Carr is part owner of American Supercamp, a nationally renowned dirt track school taught on 80cc-230cc bikes. Away from the track, Carr is an active golfer and reader.