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    jeudi 11 avril 2013

    HONDA CB550F BY KDI CYCLES


    Honda CB550F
    For a one-man band, Kevin Dinsmoor has had remarkable success. Based in the small town of Colchester in Connecticut, USA, he’s carved out a reputation as a builder of finely crafted vintage customs—like this Honda CB550F.
    “The concept was hatched a couple of years ago,” says Dinsmoor, who runs KDI Cycles. “I wanted to prove to myself that I could build a bike from swap meet junk.” With $450 in his pocket, Dinsmoor bought a tired 1975 Honda CB550F, a swing arm, two wheels and a tank—all from different vendors.
    Honda CB550F
    Despite the budget nature of the build, Dinsmoor decided to avoid the retro café route. (“I have so many old café racers that go way too fast for the tires and brakes—and I like to ride fast!”) Instead, he decided to take the resto-mod approach.
    Work started on the engine. It now has a crankshaft lightened by six pounds and balanced by APE, allowing the revs to spin up much faster. Dynoman big bore pistons bump capacity up to 605cc. Dinsmoor also swapped out the stock CB550F cylinder head for a Mike Rieck special—complete with 1 mm oversize valves, titanium retainers, and heavy duty springs.
    Honda CB550F
    A Web Cam #358B ‘hot street’ cam was dropped in, and a Keihin CR29 carburetor bolted on. Gases now exit via a custom Yoshimura-style exhaust. Other uprated parts include a Pamco high performance electronic ignition, a Motogadget speedo, a Barnett clutch and a custom-made transmission output shaft. The starter motor has gone, saving a few more pounds, with the space now taken by a crankcase breather.
    The stock CB550F suspension has been replaced by newer components better able to handle the extra power. The front end is now from a 2003 Honda CBR900RR, and the swing arm from the swap meet, a 1995 VFR, has been modified by Pro Kart.) The rear suspension, steering damper and brakes are all from a Suzuki GSX-R750. The wheels are Marchesini, now shod with Michelin Pilot Power sportbike tires.
    Honda CB550F
    Dinsmoor has excelled at the bodywork, with a keen eye for matching parts or creating his own. The tank is from a 1976 Kawasaki KZ400, but the seat unit is hand-made from aluminum. The fairing comes from Glass From The Past, and sports a Honda Accord fog light. The powdercoating was handled by Competitive Edge Coatings, and the paint by K&W Custom Auto. They’ve both done a magnificent job.
    Honda CB550F
    And if you detect a Ducati Paul Smart influence in the colors, you’re right. “That came from my visit to the Barber Vintage Festival, where I saw some amazing Ducks,” says Dinsmoor. The number 16 on the tail? “I raced WKA Karts for ten years, and my last number was 16. Kind of fell in line.”
    For more on this lovely CB550F, head over to this build thread on the Do The Ton forum. And follow KDI Cycles’ news via Facebook.
    Images courtesy of Ron Agnello, © Strongbox Photography Studios LLC. Shot at the New England Air Museum.
    Honda CB550F
    from BIKEEXIF

    JMR CL360 Tracker


    JMR CL360 1 Lside 800
    This is Josh Mott, owner of JMR Customs of Boise, ID. We came across a 1974 CL 360 Honda donor while dropping a Moto Guzzi off to a customer. The lady had the bike sitting in her garage, it was in rough shape. When I say rough shape, I mean it was probably the worst one I have come across.  I asked her about it and she seemed relieved that someone was willing to get it out of her garage. I brought it back to the shop and checked the normal spark and compression. The bike had both so I cleaned the carbs and she fired first kick.
    JMR CL360 2 Front Crop 800
    After I found out the bike ran I started trying to come up with ideas. Street trackers have always struck my interest because when I was younger I had raced a lot of flat track. The CL came with stock scrambler up pipes so I went with a Mini XR 750 Harley theme.
    JMR CL360 3 LSide MS 800
    Most of the work was cleaning. I did have to freshen up the top end, rebuild the carbs and rebuild the suspension front and rear. One things I would like to point out is the main stand, mainly because you hardly see anyone using them these days.  Other things I really like include the front hub with machined holes, the counter shaft sprocket cover with machined out holes and the crinkle paint on the motor.
    JMR CL360 5 Combo 800
    Parts mounted include the mini megaphone mufflers, dirt track bars, Mulholland shocks and a Trail Tech speedo.  The fabrication work included a battery box to hold all the electronics, lithium iron battery, side number plates and the headlight. The headlight was built by hand out of 16 gauge steel using 50 watt bulbs, it was built to be a multi-use number plate. It still keeps the flat track look while being a headlight and dashboard for the trail tech.
    JMR CL360 4 Rside 2 800
    The bike rides amazing and sounds cool as hell. I am very pleased with how this bike came out considering what I started with. I cannot wait to show the previous owner what her old bike looks like now. This bike is currently for sale and will be on ebay within a couple months.
    JMR CL360 6 Wheel 800
    I’m not sure we can add much to Josh’s own write-up. We don’t get enough trackers on here, and we love the little Harley styled Honda. Good work – as usual.
    Photo kudos goes to Just Kate Photography. Check out more from Josh at the JMR Facebook Page or ay the JMR Website
    JMR CL360 7 RsideRA 800
    from thebikeshed

    Brough Superior; l'histoire


    La Rolls de la moto

    Histoire constructeur : Brough SuperiorAu début du 20ème siècle, la famille Brough dispose d’une solide expérience du milieu automobile. Suite à une brouille avec son père, George Brough décide de fonder sa propre marque de motos qu’il nomme Brough Superior en 1919. Si ce nom sonne comme un affront à son père, il est surtout le reflet d’une qualité qui sera toujours l’une des marque de fabrique du constructeur. George Brough parlait d’ailleurs de concevoir la Rolls de la moto.
    En 1921, la toute première Brough Superior à voir le jour est dotée d’un Vtwin Jap de 986cm3 capable de la propulser à plus de 160 km/h. Trois ans plus tard, le modèle le plus connu de la marque est présenté, il s’agit de la SS100. En 1926, c’est au tour de la SS680 de faire son apparition.
    Réputé pour la qualité de ses machines, Brough Superior demeure une marque luxueuse et peu accessible. Chaque machine est en effet testée et adaptée à son futur acquéreur sous peine de retourner en atelier. Toutefois, la marque s’intéresse un moment à la production de modèles moins coûteux.

    La Brough Superior Austin

    Brough Superior SS100Au début des années 30, George Brough met au point la Brough –Superior-Austin, un modèle expérimental mu par un moteur quatre cylindres automobile issu d’une Austin Seven. Munie d’une marche arrière, la moto est vendue plus chère que l’Austin Seven.
    Parallèlement, la marque se fait connaître grâce à ses nombreux records de vitesse. Ainsi, en 1924, une Brough Superior atteint les 180 km/h avant de dépasser, cinq ans plus tard, les 200 km/h. A la fin des années 30, le constructeur britannique parvient même à coiffer les BMW au poteau en atteignant les 230 km/h.
    Si ses records de vitesse lui assurent une certaine notoriété, Brough Superior peut également compter sur la publicité gratuite que lui fournissent plusieurs célébrités de l’époque. De nombreux personnages célèbres ont en effet pris le guidon d’une Brough Superior, à l’image de Lawrence d’Arabie qui en posséda sept. Il décéda d’ailleurs quelques jours après avoir été victime d’un accident à moto.

    Vers une renaissance ?

    Lawrence d'Arabie au guidon d'une Brough Superior Ss100A la fin des années 30, Brough Superior continue d’innover et dévoile sa Golden Dream, un bloc-moteur de 1000cm3. Cependant, la Seconde Guerre mondiale scelle le sort de l’entreprise qui cesse toute production après 1940.
    Il faut ensuite attendre 2008 pour entendre à nouveau parler de la marque. British only Austria rachète cette année-là les brevets du constructeur dans l’intention de reproduire la célèbre SS100 de 1927 à partir de pièces et de méthodes modernes. Le projet serait encore en développement à l’heure actuelle et les quelques rares modèles subsistants s’arrachent aujourd’hui à des prix tout aussi exhorbitant que ceux des prix de vente de l’époque.

    Plus d'infos sur Brough Superior

    from lerepairedesmotards

    A flying start for Sordo / Sordo démarre fort

     Dani Sordo (Citroën DS3 WRC/Michelin) was the fastest driver on today’s Qualifying Stage. The Spaniard has chosen to start 13th on the road when the 2013 Vodafone Rally de Portugal 2013 begins on Friday.
     
    Dani Sordo (Citroën DS3 WRC/Michelin) a signé le meilleur temps de la Qualifying Stage. Il s’élancera en 13e position demain, pour la première journée du Vodafone Rally de Portugal 2013.
    Dani Sordo completed the 4.98km Qualifying Stage in a time of 3m1.6s, which was seven-tenths of a second better than Sébastien Ogier who is not in tip-top shape after picking up a throat complaint two week ago. The Frenchman’s team-mate Jari-Matti Latvala was third (+0.8s) and Mads Ostberg was fourth (+0.9s).
    Mikko Hirvonen was 1.3s slower than Sordo in the other factory Citroën DS3 WRC/Michelin, ahead of Novikov Neuville. Andreas Mikkelsen, who is making his debut at the premier level this week, was a cautious eighth (+6s), while Nasser Al-Attiyah (Ford) and Al-Qassimi (Citroën) posted identical times (+6.6s).
    The result of the Qualifying Stage allows the fastest WRC drivers to choose their start order for the rally’s first day and is consequently extremely important, but careful tyre management also promises to play a key role in Portugal. The priority drivers may only use up to 24 tyres (four per tyre-change opportunity [5] + another four for shakedown) from an allocation of 24 hard-compound gravel tyres and 16 softs. For this morning’s test stage, some drivers, including the Volkswagen and Citroën runners, chose four ‘soft’ tyres, which means they will have to use the same covers during the rally, even though fine weather is predicted for the duration… The Ford drivers (except Novikov) opted for the hard-compound Michelin Latitude Cross H2 for qualifying which they will be able to use again in addition to the other 20 H2s they have available.
    At 1:00pm local time, the 13 drivers who took part in the Qualifying Stage took turns to announce their preferred starting position. Unsurprisingly, and throwing superstition to the wind, Dani Sordo elected to start in 13th position, just behind Ogier, Latvala and Ostberg… The bulk of the ‘road sweeping’ work will be done by Dennis Kuipers, Michal Kosciuszko and Martin Prokop…


    En 3min01s6, l’Espagnol Dani Sordo a réalisé le meilleur chrono sur les 4,98 km de la Qualifying Stage, devant Sébastien Ogier (+0s7) qui n’est pas au mieux de sa forme. Le leader du championnat a contracté un virus et traîne un vilain mal de gorge depuis une quinzaine de jours. « Je ne prends plus de médoc, ils ne font plus effet. ». Son équipier Jari-Matti Latvala s’est classé 3e (+0s8) et Mads Ostberg 4e (+0s9).
    Derrière le top-4 réuni en moins d’une seconde, Mikko Hirvonen pointe à 1s3 sur sa Citroën DS3 WRC/Michelin, devant Novikov et Neuville. Pour ses débuts dans l’élite, Andreas Mikkelsen s’est montré prudent (8e, +6s). Nasser Al-Attiyah (Ford) et Al-Qassimi (Citroën) ont fait match nul (+6s6).
    La Qualifying Stage, qui, en fonction des résultats, permet aux pilotes WRC de choisir leurs positions sur la route pour la première journée, est très importante. Mais ce week-end, la gestion des pneumatiques sera aussi un paramètre essentiel. En effet, les pilotes prioritaires peuvent utiliser au maximum 24 pneumatiques (4x5 changements + 4 pour Shakedown) à choisir parmi 24 « hard » et 16 « soft ». Ce matin, certains ont opté pour quatre pneus « soft », comme les pilotes Volkswagen et Citroën, ce qui les obligera à les réutiliser pendant le rallye. Or, le beau temps est prévu tout le week-end… Les pilotes Ford (sauf Novikov) ont choisi des pneus Michelin Latitude Cross H2 « hard » pour la qualif qu’ils pourront réutiliser avec 20 autres pneus de même type H2.
    A 13h00, les 13 pilotes ayant participé à la Qualifying Stage sont montés sur l’estrade au milieu du parc d’assistance pour choisir leurs positions sur la route. Sans surprise et sans superstition, Dani Sordo a choisi de partir en 13e position. Ogier, Latvala, Ostberg… le précéderont sur la piste. Le gros du balayage sera assuré par Dennis Kuipers, Michal Kosciuszko et Martin Prokop…
    Ordre des départs 1ère journée
    1. Kuipers (Ford) – 2. Kosciuszko (Mini) – 3. Prokop (Ford) – 4. Al-Qassimi (Citroën) – 5. Al-Attiyah (Ford) – 6. Mikkelsen (VW) – 7. Neuville (Ford) – 8. Novikov (Ford) – 9. Hirvonen (Citroën) – 10. Ostberg (Ford) – 11. Latvala (VW) – 12. Ogier (VW) – 13. Sordo (Citroën)…
    from best-of-rallylive