Post 2: This will be fun and quick
Once I got home, I had the weekend so I figured I would tinker with the bike to see what I really had.
I grew up turning wrenches with my Pops but like I mentioned earlier, I didn’t have a great grasp of the ins and outs of mechanics. I don’t know how to weld, I can only do minor electrical work and I really prefer not to look at instructions. Most of you can imagine where this is heading…
After surfing the web and saying to myself “Nick, you’ve got this” I decided to tear down the bike move forward, ready to make this a low budget modern café racer. Boy did I have my work cut out for me.
Taking parts off, super easy – you just chuck everything.
I decided I was going to put a modern front end, new wheels/tires and replace the double chain while trying to avoid spending more than 5k on the bike. At least that was the plan that I highlighted to my fiancé.
Removing the front end was easy; no front brake = easy. Rear tire and chain, also not bad.
Then I started to realize that the plan I had may not have been as straight forward as I imagined. I know I was feeling ambitious, but was a little more time and money going to hurt anyone? Things were old on this bike; the dang thing was from 1971. I started looking at the internals and thinking, what in the heck…
Next to go was the rear suspension, the seat, the oil pan, the exhaust the rear fender. Everything that was there, gone. I had ridden the thing once (or twice, to my buddy’s shop… and back home). And now I had this (see below) - bare bones
Stripping it down was a blast – I thought, “Wow, that didn’t take long at all.”
My fiancé is confused now… “Didn’t you buy that to ride while the other one was getting built?”
I replied, “Oh yeah, but I am just going to do a couple things to this one. No biggie.”
Meanwhile, the skeleton of a bike sits in my garage. Now I need parts. What parts.
With the help of my tech and some internet searches, I was able to come up with “The List” (well… the first list). Front end, wheels, tires, chain, exhaust, seat, oil pan, rear swing arm. At this point, I’m still thinking that this will all be pretty simple as well.
I figured this would be done in a month and I’ll be cruisin’ before it gets “cold” in Houston.
Again, no intention other than to have this slightly modified bike. The internet is a dangerous place. I found some parts but not just any parts, really cool stuff. I started to imagine what this bad boy could really be.
First Orders:
Front Wheel assembly $ 970.00
Front End (GSXR forks, brakes) $ 600.00
Exhaust $ 571.00
Top triple tree with motoscope Mini $ 519.00
Oil Tank $ 355.00
Rear Hoop $ 340.00
Rear rim $ 327.00
Additional rear Rim $ 327.00
Lower Triple Tree $ 300.00
Rear shock absorbers $ 280.00
Frame conversion stem $ 190.00
Front Tire $ 188.00
Back Tire $ 188.00
Rear sets $ 178.00
Swing Arm $ 90.00
That was my starter list, but only if I had more foresight…