This is all high-grade information I am being given here, every word. I can't reply to any of it individually just yet, because I have to keep momentum. But I have read every single comment and will have to think about each one, since they have been written by men that are way smarter than me.
And once you hear something, you can't un-hear it. So I'll have to consider all of them whether I feel like it or not.
Adaptability to "weekend stock class racing" has drawn the most attention, and my knowledge bank of what that would be like in 1975 is zero. So, for the time being, let's shelve that item until I can replace it with something that is better informed, realistic, and that I can make with the resources I have.
The proposal ought mainly be to excite the imagination and get it moving in a basic direction- I've often chained myself to it, and it doesn't make for happiness.
It is critical that the end-user purpose, the "what is this bike for, exactly?" be very carefully defined. But its early in the game for that, because I don't know what options there are.
That is where you come in- throwing things at me that I didn't know, or things I had no idea existed.
There aren't words for how valuable that is. The end result, whatever it is, is going to be much better for you being part of it. Joining the forum, and documenting every phase of the process may be one of the wiser things I've done. That is kind of neat, I think. I'll probably never meet you, and yet this bike will be end up being a kind of a team effort.
The next logical step is to put downthe "Five Limits". These have all been very well thought through- they are basic principles of building that I have set down for myself to follow. They aren't going to change much. Later it occurred to me that they are much like the unwritten, internal guidelines I followed when building completely unrelated things that succeeded beyond my hopes.
I've already put a hundred hours or so into this bike, thinking I was doing "the build"- but in fact it was just a recon/education/assessment mission. And not even a very good one. That was a gut punch.
I rolled it back outside and left it alone for two weeks. I bought that 750 tank and set in on and thought, alright, I think we are Go. The look is right and gives me something I need. What is the right thing to do now?
"Join that forum, document what you're doing, avail yourself of help for once in your life" was the answer. It looks like it was the right one.
Next post will be "Five Limits".
Then, later today or tomorrow, a video walkaround of what we have, whats been done or is ready to do, what our resources are.
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