So everyone knows the cafe has been done to death. There's kind of a recipe to make an "insta-popular" bike now. People even came up with a ridiculous "cafe line diagram" to put a bike together by. But where do we as builders and motorcycle enthusiasts take it from here?
These bike and another I have planned are my answer to that question. Both are cb550's. Possibly (in my opinion) the best in the cb line of the 70's. Great maneuverable bikes with ultra reliable engines. We've all seen beautiful representations of this bike and it's cousins. And few stand out from one another anymore. I even drive one of them as my "daily", a rear hooped, gsxr front ended, little ground pounder. These two bikes are meant to forget the norm while still looking at what has worked ascetically for motorcycles throughout time. I decided that one of them should be a bobber. Now taking the pressed frame of a cb how do you do that? Without just cutting the neck off and taking it from scratch. Something I did not want to do. I think that pressed frame, even though it may be hard to work with is part of what makes a Honda cb a great bike. It took me awhile to figure out but this is my take on it.
I decided one; use certain aspects that classically make a bobber a bobber.
two; attempt ascetic aspects which I've never seen done before to these models of bikes.
Three; not to modify the frame or engine so much so that it can be recognized easily as a Honda cb.
My inspiration comes from what Gravel crew has done to some xs and cb builds combined with Go Takami’s brat builds and a lot of influence from bsa/triumph bobber and choppers.
I’m gonna go pic heavy. With not much discription from here out. Started with just a frame and separately sourced motor. Threw everything together. To get her into a really rough rat bike runner. Rode her for a month an tore down an started rebuilding and shaping into a real bike.