Month: March 2010

Simply stunning pair of Moto Guzzi


Axel from Hamburg Germany has sent in a nearly perfect pair of Moto Guzzi. A cafe and a racebike.

Axel Writes:

I´ ve been building Guzzis for 14 years, specialized in modifying Le Mans models for street and track.
I would be very happy, if you would show my bikes on your excellent website.
Anyone interested in custom Guzzis, please contact me via my domain “www.roll-it.org” or call +49 40 81901891 / +49 160 6370483 (mobile).
Thanks for your effort.


Regards from Hamburg/ Germany,
Axel

I mean… DAMM! that’s nice!

NOTE: I don’t generally allow advertising on the site and very rarely post personal contact info from posters (even when asked to) but in this rare instance I am making an exception. Please don’t bombard be with link requests to every online do-rag store on the planet.

And…

WOW! TRAFFIC HAS EXPLODED TODAY!!


Took a look at sitmeter and noticed that traffic has exploded the last few days. I know that I got a link form the always excellent Pipeburn on the CB550 post which must have accounted for most of it.

I don’t catch all the back-links so please consider this a Great Big Thanks to you gents and anyone and everyone else who has linked and/or stopped by. If you’re new to the site please take a look around. There are certain “tendencies” to the posts but I do think we’ve got something for everyone. Cheers!

Steve Ducharme.

Ducati Sport 1000 Modern/Classic Racing at Daytona.


Stunning modern/classic. A “best of both worlds” way to race I suppose.

One Tough Triumph..


Honestly forgot where I got this. If anyone knows where it’s from please let me know so I can give a proper shoutout. Oops… spoke too soon. Photo is titled “Underground Bobbers”. Looks to be these gents HERE

Vincent Black Shadow at the Daytona infield.


 
 

Maybe next year I should wear a BLACK T-shirt instear of yellow.. LOL

  
A 150 MPH speedometer.  This was a HUGE deal at the time.
  

Reader Ride! Fantastic CB550 Cafe Racer!


Update: I’ve corrected the post title to reflect the fact that this is a 550 and not a 500. Yes I knew that. I tell my daughter that rushing causes errors. I should take my own advice I suppose.

I love builds like this Eric sends in this outstanding garage built CB500 Cafe Racer. His solution to the spoked wheel / modern fork combination is something a lot of folks are looking for.

Eric Writes:

Hi Steve,

I cranked up the res on my camera and snapped some more pics yesterday afternoon; I hope these look a little better. I also included a pic that I took when I first picked it up just to give you an idea of where I started from.

As far as the mods go, I fitted a set of forks from a 2004 GSX-R 600, using a Harley narrow glide wheel which fit surprisingly well between the calipers; it was almost a plug-n-play operation. The rotors are 320mm units from a Hayabusa which required 10mm spacers underneath the calipers. The eBay front end also came complete with clipons & controls so I decided to go ahead and use them; the right control wouldn’t fit with the bar-end mirror so I binned it in favor of a Motion Pro throttle assembly and start/kill switch from an R6.

I cut everything off of the frame just aft of the shock mounts and welded on a hoop made from some old handlebars I had laying around; the battery & other electrics were mounted to the new rear hoop and hidden underneath the bumstop. All unneeded brackets & tabs were shaved from the frame before dropping it off for powdercoating. The rearsets are Tarozzi universals mounted to the passenger peg mounts. The rear wheel is a Harley 3.5×18 rim that I laced to the 550 hub with Buchanan stainless spokes.

I popped the top end off the engine and freshened it up a bit with a set of 59mm pistons and camshaft from a SOHC CB650 for a little extra oomph. Once it was back together, I laid on a few coats of Duplicolor’s engine primer & enamel. For the exhaust, I welded a pair of merged collectors to an old set of 4-2 headers and finished them off with a pair of repro Commando peashooters.

I’m a big fan of the DIY method so I’m fairly proud to say that with the exception of the cylinder machining and powdercoating, everything on the bike was “garage built” by myself.

So that’s probably a little more than you needed (or wanted) to know, but I hope it’s helpful. Let me know if you have any questions or if there’s anything else you need.

Thanks!
Eric

My kinda bike! Much appreciated Eric!

Good old fashioned Suzuki GS1000 Superbike Vintage Racer


Great Build! Gor that looks like FUN!

A few "obligatory" Jay Springsteen Vintage Harley shot from Daytona.


He’s there every year and I never get tired of looking at his bike.