The new builder had some ideas he wanted to try out while the bike was apart. He enlisted Long and Jim from Buddha Paint (
http://www.buddhapaintoc.com/) to work up a killer new paint job, with rustic, gold leaf 750 emblems on the side covers, ghosted checkers on the tank, fender and side covers, and hand-masked checkers on the front and rear brake hubs, handle bars and rear grab bar, along with a Union Jack on the oil tank (to be a surprise when you pull of the right sidecover). For weeks afterward, Long and Jim were cursing about checkers, but they did some pretty incredible work and have good reason to be proud of their handiwork. If you look close, you can see the checkers in the first picture on the spine of the tank; they also follow down the fender and overlay the gold leaf adorned side covers. These ghosted checkers, while barely visible in the shade, really pop out in the sunlight. Long and Jim do some amazing custom work, from vintage bikes like ours to modern superbikes, to turbocharged, nitrous infused drag Hayabusa bikes with 360 rear tires.
With the frame powdercoated, reassembly commenced, including some new IKON shocks from down under and some new NOS switches I sourced. I also found some fork ears on ebay that we had black chromed to set off the polished metal and black gators. The wheels were rebuilt with aluminum Excel wheels and new stainless steel spokes topped off with newly painted hubs. The lower forks were machined to have ribs to match the gators, laser cut the brake rotors with checkers, laser cut the rear brake cover with Cafe Racer, and water jetted Cafe Racer into a new finned brake stabilizer. The rev counter and speedometer were rebuilt to new condition:
Honda750012 by
Donald Leonhardt, on Flickr
Honda750005 by
Donald Leonhardt, on Flickr
Honda750007 by
Donald Leonhardt, on Flickr
Honda750008 by
Donald Leonhardt, on Flickr