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Archive for November, 2010

New Bike: 1978 Honda CB750 Cafe Racer

16 Nov

The Bike: 1978 Honda CB750K Cafe Racer

All this cafe racer talk lately has led me to the local classified ads, “just to see what’s out there.”  And last week, staring me in the face, was an ad for a good looking 1978 Honda CB750K inline-four cafe racer.  And the seller didn’t want cash.  He wanted a dirtbike instead.  Well, it so happened that I had a dirtbike, and one that I didn’t want anymore anyway.  In fact I was planning to sell the KX450F in the spring.  So I contacted the seller and he was interested.  I hauled the big KX up to Salt Lake City and after a two hour conversation about motorcycles, tools and man-caves, we decided to trade bikes, straight up.

Fact is, I’m a street rider at heart.  In the past year I’ve bought two dirt-biased machines, a Yamaha WR250R and a Kawasaki KX450F and after spending a little time in the dirt, I realized that the Yamaha 250 was plenty of motorcycle for me.  So I sacrificed the 450 for a cool winter project bike, and I’m excited to get started on the Honda.

It’s already basically a complete cafe racer but there’s still a lot to do.  For starters, the turn signals don’t work and the high beam won’t come on.  I’ll need both to license the bike.  Also the front brakes are wooden but I’m pretty sure new pads will do the trick.  And since the bike has high flow filters and exhaust, it’s running really lean with the stock jets.  I’m definitely going to need to rejet the carbs to let in more fuel.  As far as I can tell it’s not leaking any oil and the engine gaskets look pretty solid.  Hopefully I can get some years out of the engine without rebuilding it.  It is a 1978 after all, but the engine only has 10,000 miles so things might work out.

Aside from the mechanical problems there’s quite a bit of cosmetic work to do.  The bike still has the fat, bulbous and decidedly ugly 1978 fuel tank.  I’m looking to replace the tank completely, preferably with a classic “loaf of bread” tank that will really change the lines of the machine.  The existing cafe racer seat is fine but there are a lot better ones out there and I’ll probably be replacing it eventually as well.  Overall I’m looking to give the machine a clean cafe racer-ish look, but still retain the black and chrome classic motorcycle appearance, avoiding the ornateness seen on so many cafe racers.  It needs to be simple.  I’m going to retain a few things though.  I think the red Pegasus graphic on the tank is super cool and so is the flat black paint.  I’ll probably keep the dice graphics on the bodywork too.

So I have a pretty big project ahead of me.  I’ll be fun.  I had to sacrifice a newer, perfect running dirt bike but I think it’ll be worth it.  I’ll update the blog as the bike takes shape.

Here are a few more photos of the bike:

2006 Kawasaki KX450F

The sacrificial lamb: 2006 Kawasaki KX540F

 
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Posted in Current and Future Bikes

 

On motorcycle power, weight and riding bliss

15 Nov

The 2009 Suzuki TU250, a simple little bike

If I were a more intelligent person I would have determined what sort of motorcycling I liked before buying a single machine.  Unfortunately I’m not intelligent, which is obvious because it’s taken lots of motorcycle purchases for me to begin to dial in to my motorcycling style.  For most riders there’s an incremental progression from lighter, less powerful bikes to heavier, more powerful ones.  I’ve seen the process happen over and over again.  People move up to more weight and more power.  But historically I haven’t been that way.  I’ve never owned a bike with more than 85 horsepower or 700cc, and more and more I  like smaller, lighter (and often slower) motorcycles.  This year alone I’ve bought two 250s, and those two bikes are far less powerful than bikes I bought before.

So I got to thinking when I read Peter Jones’ article in the current Cycle World magazine (December 2010) about his recent purchase of a 1975 Honda CB200.  His bike has a tiny 200cc engine which couldn’t possibly make more than 15 horsepower.  Probably less.  He thought, before riding the bike, that riding it wouldn’t be worth it because it was so underpowered.  It would only be worth only the novelty of riding it.  But once underway he noted, “I realized that with every bike I’ve ridden in my life, from bored-out ‘Busas to tricked-out Bimotas to full-race Yamaha R1s and everything in between, all I’ve been doing is trying to relive the visceral excitement of my first day on a motorcycle, that magic moment of turning a throttle and being effortlessly rushed into the wind, flying down the road breast to breeze, naked and powerful all at once like a superhero…I’d been searching for it by racing, by riding bikes with huge horsepower, by going crazy speeds–trying to force the moment back with a ham fist when all it needed was a gentle twist on a little bike on a sunny day.”

And that sentiment, I think, is something that’s become apparent with my motorcycling style, something that I’ve felt for some time.  Often too much thrust can drown out the simple thrill that is motorcycling.  It becomes a thrill ride.  I worry that too many motorcyclists, including myself, ride fast or heavy bikes because we want to show that we’re the biggest, baddest rider on the road.  I think that mentality misses the whole point of riding, for me at least.  I should care less about what others’ think and more about what I actually enjoy.  Others might truly enjoy superlative machines, which is fine by me, but I’m discovering that it’s not my thing.

This is why my bikes are still small and light.  A big part of my recent interest in the Ryca CS-1 cafe racer is the smallish 650 single and 320 pound weight.  It’s a cool bike that should allow me to have fun while still enjoying the purity of motorcycling.  This isn’t to say that there’s nothing comfortable about riding a full-dress Harley or fun about riding a race-spec superbike, but these rides seem to be missing something.  All I can figure is that they’re equipped with everything but simplicity.  And when it comes to motorcycles, simplicity is the most important component.

 
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Posted in Musings

 

I’m in trouble again: Ryca CS-1 cafe racer

10 Nov

Behold the Ryca CS-1 cafe racer. I'm in trouble, no doubt about it.

I’ve tried hard this year to not buy motorcycles.  I should be upgrading my house instead.  The interior is dated, you see, and not in a good way.  The house itself is great–it’s all brick and it even has a new roof–but the mauve carpet and pink linoleum need to go, among other things.  But being me, I’ve failed almost completely at staying away from motorcycles.  I’ve failed so completely, in fact, that in the past 12 months I’ve added a Yamaha WR250R, a Kawasaki KX450x, and a Ninja 250R.

And now this.  Just when I thought I had everything, the Ryca CS-1 cafe racer came along and suddenly I can’t get the bike out of my head, which is what always happens before I buy a new motorcycle.

The Ryca is a motorcycle that excites me because it’s a minimalist, retro, sexy machine that is simply a motorcycle, pure and simple.  It’s not a bullet bike or a cruiser.  It doesn’t have any wind protection, and aside from the lightly padded seat, no creature comforts either.  It’s all black and chrome, as it should be.  It’s a bike that should be ridden by James Dean.  It’s the real deal.

Sort of, anyway.  To build the CS-1, Ryca starts with the pedestrian, unimpressive Suzuki s40.  The s40 is an entry level cruiser with a nontraditional single cylinder 650 engine instead of a v-twin.  Check it out:

The Suzuki s40, which Ryca transforms into the CS-1

By installing a kit, the S40 morphs into the Ryca CS-1.  This is nothing like turning a Fiero into a Ferrari by installing a kit, however, because in that case all you end up with is a a cheap, silly looking fake Ferrari.  In the case of the CS-1, you have a custom motorcycle that looks like, well, a custom motorcycle because it is one.

On their website Ryca offers a couple purchase options.  You can buy your own Suzuki s40 and buy the conversion kit from Ryca and install it yourself, or you can buy a complete machine directly from them.  For the complete bike, Ryca will buy a Suzuki s40 and perform the installation.  Since this is a new project from a small custom bike builder, they’re accepting $100 refundable deposits to get in line for a machine.  In a moment of weakness, I sent in my $100.  I guess I’ll wait for my turn in line, which should be in the next couple of months.

If I decide to buy a bike from Ryca I’m stuck with an important decision.  Ryca can build the motorcycle complete, and I’m assured that the job will be done well and quickly.  All I have to do is run to Los Angeles with my flatbed and drive home with a new motorcycle.  Easy.  But that seems like such a sissy option when considering a custom cafe racer.  Part of riding a custom motorcycle is riding around with the love you put into the machine, which would be zero if I bought the bike pre-modified.  It would be a truly pure motorcycle if it had my touch.  But I know myself, and there’s even odds that a component will go flying across the shop, accompanied by some choice phrases intended to belittle the object.  Part of the frustration stems from the fact that I’m rather mechanically inexperienced, and completing such a project would provide some valuable experience.  Also, I have almost nothing to do this winter when it’s too cold to ride, and a big project would be fun.  We’ll see what happens.

 
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Posted in Musings