What I wanted out of a chainguard was: 1. a modest profile, as though it weren't here, 2. coverage for oil fling off, 3. ability to adjust chain, and 4. enough beef to satisfy the tech inspectors at the strip. The first guard I had satisfied 1 and 2, but failed at 3 and 4. When you have any amount of curve to the tail of the guard, following the sprocket, its going to hinder adjustment.
This ought to do it: made from 1 single piece, cut and bent.
By putting the strengthening bendover on the inside, the profile stays minimal:
The material is about twice as thick as the first one, and with the bend, the length of the blade, its plenty strong.
I'll send it out for polish or chrome later.
So many cafe's / resto-mods are "finished" without a guard, seems like an oversight to me. I don't like chainlube on my gear. Carpy's guard he sells now (fits K2 and up), the blade isn't as wide as the chain, allowing for sneakby. Could be because if it were wider than the chain, and you use a shock with a full length spring, you have to notch the guard to clear the spring. This immediately introduces a weak spot in the guard which will break over time. So he shortcutted it and made it too narrow to be effective.
Mine is notched for the spring clearance and the bendover runs the full length of the blade, reinforcing the area across from the notch.