ACE CAFE RADIO

    mercredi 7 octobre 2015

    REVERB MOTORCYCLES THE TIDDLER


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    Small is currently very big. This was no more apparent than during Sunday’s wildly successful Distinguished Gentleman’s Ride as seen all around the world (and to which you can still donate!). Particularly at the city rides. It was clear that many folk had chosen to forgo the big-bore arms race, to take up a more Lilliputian lifestyle choice.
    Be it due to regulation or just a change of scenery, small capacity singles and twins can be all you need in the city when the grind sets in. Threading something closer to 100kg than 200kg through the traffic is a revelation. Plus, they’re just so darn cute. Of course as a first stepping stone into the two-wheeled world, there’s no reason you shouldn’t go all out and make your bike your own.
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    As it was when a customer got in touch with Sussex based Reverb Motorcycles. With the client adamant he had no intention of taking his bike test it was the perfect project to pimp-out a learner-legal ride. The brief was delightfully open. Apart from the colour scheme which had to match his crash helmet, the client gave Reverb free rein to make ‘the sweetest little café racer out there’.
    Finding a non-knackered donor for the right price was a little tricker however. Despite the prevalence of sub-125 machines, most have led a tired life. After looking at several ‘lemons’, a sweet little CG125 was found. However after stripping it down back at the workshop, reality presented itself and the frame ‘resembled a Black & Decker Workmate‘. The search continued.
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    Finally a sound, honest Honda CB125S1 from the mid 70’s was sourced. Chosen for it’s super-reliable and unstressed 122cc OHC single cylinder engine, the 9000rpm redline producing around 12bhp would give a bitesize cafe-racer experience to the new rider. Despite the low power, it only weighs 114kg as standard and by the time unnecessary weight was shed a light, nimble-handling machine with sprightly performance was left.
    Of course, with the long, touchy-feely arm of the law looking of their shoulder, Reverb couldn’t breath on the motor. ‘L’ Plate rules are rules, after all. But with it’s diminutive dimensions, the name was easy: ‘The Tiddler’ was born.
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    Great care was taken in stripping, cleaning, refurbishing and saving any parts re-usable for the build. Mark at Reverb’s philosophy is simple. “It’s all too easy to loose the soul of a bike simply by bolting on random new parts . If something is fit for purpose or can be modified then we’d prefer to re-use everything possible.”
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    With the bare frame stripped, it was de-tabbed and additional tubing was added to the mid-triangle for strength. Out back the subframe was hooped and new rear set mounting lugs and indicator points were fabricated. Completely Tig welded and hand linished, the finished frame was sent off for blasting a some satin black powder coat.
    The wheels received similar treatment. Happy with the original rim sizes but not the condition, only the hubs were retained. The refinished items were treated to new bearings and seals before being built up on chunky aluminium rims with stainless spokes.
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    To achieve that classic head-down, arse-up Café Racer riding position, the original bars and pegs were replaced with some more build-appropriate items. A set of Tomaselli Ace bars were adorned with a matching quick-action throttle and the original, refurbished switchgear. The riders feet now rest on custom rear sets. Hangers made from 15mm 631 steel support pressed steel cranks, Tarozzi control rods and one-off rear brake controls. It’s all ceramic coated in satin black for durability.
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    Of course, for the archetypal Café Racer look, it’s hard to beat the style of a defined bone line and solo seat hump. Thus the CB tank was given a new filler neck, TIG welded to accept a classic aluminium Monza filler cap. The seat was built up from a buck in 6mm fibreglass under which the new battery and wiring could be housed. A sliver of fluted, brown leather will let the rider know when it’s time to stop.
    Special thanks need to go to the guys at Davida, who happily gave Reverb the paint codes to match their beautiful Ninety-2 ‘Two Tone Deluxe’  helmet. The simply luscious paint, comprised of too many coats to mention was finished with period Honda logo airbrushed detail.
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    Along with the new handmade loom, complete with electronic ignition, the engine was freshened to ensure all 12bhp were available upon request. A top-end rebuild and full service, built back upon crankcases which were stripped, blasted and painted gives the engine new life. Combined with a full carb rebuild and re-jet, the little OHC engine can once again hit the high notes.
    With pitted chrome and rusted external springs, it was clear the front forks would require attention. Many, many hours spent searching the web and a few late nights chatting with some American contacts bore results. New OEM seals, external springs, caps, and gaiters were fitted to the rebuilt units. Combined with new Hagon shocks and some retro rubber ‘The Tiddler’ was ready hitch up it’s skirt and hit the town.
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    Of course this story has an inevitable ending. The customer loved the bike so much he couldn’t resist ordering another bigger, faster, louder bike so he promptly took his test, and passed. While this is great news for Reverb who are busy planning his next build, it also means The Tiddler is up for sale. So if you’re around 5’8” or under, not too bothered about brutish looks and horsepower, this might just be the bike for you.
    As Mark says, “The end result shows that you don’t need a large motorcycle to join the Cafe Racer culture – even learners can enjoy it”.
    via The Bike Shed

    RESTERAMPE: HERMANN KÖPF’S DUCATI PANTAH 500



    Hang out at a few European motorcycle events, and you’re bound to run into Hermann Köpf. The shaggy-haired Munich-based photographer is the editor-in-chief of the exquisite magazine Craftrad—and a total petrolhead.
    When an informal Germany v France rivalry was set up at this year’s Glemseck 101 festival, Herr Köpf couldn’t help but put his name down. His steed: this pick-n-mix Ducati Pantah 500.

    Hermann actually started building the Pantah long before Glemseck (“to have a cheap and trashy vehicle that can also be used for flat tracking or similar nonsense,” he states). But between work and family life, it took him over a year to complete.


    With a garage full of carbureted Ducatis (like this 860 GTS), the Pantah was a logical choice. Hermann found a frame on eBay and an engine in the local classifieds, and got cracking on his resterampe* race bike.


    “The bike is completely built with spare parts I had lying around the garage, eBay shops and swap meet finds,” he says. “Using an original or complete bike to be stripped would have been stupid—even though the Pantah was never really a pretty bike.”






















    Up front, Hermann added the Showa upside-down forks, 17-inch wheel and Brembo brake setup from a Ducati Monster. The rear wheel’s an 18-inch unit from a Pantah SL. For maximum grip on everything from dirt tracks to drag strips, Pirelli’s dual-sport MT60 (front) and MT90 (rear) tires were chosen.

    The fuel tank’s a Mike Hailwood replica that had to be chopped and welded in places to make it fit the Pantah’s frame. The seat is literally an upholstered plank—it’s been made using a “top-notch” skateboard deck. Hermann looped the rear of the frame to match the curve of the kick tail.


    Hiding under the tank is a compact Lithium-ion battery. All the wiring’s been redone, and now runs inside the frame. The exhaust is a two-into-one Conti Sport system, and the airbox has made way for foam air filters.


    Believe it or not, the Pantah’s plated—thanks to barely-legal lights and tiny turn signals at both ends. There’s also a front fender, and an inner fender under the seat to keep muck from the back wheel out of the filters.

    Rearsets and Tommaselli MX handlebars were installed to give the Ducati a fairly neutral riding position. And the final livery is a basically a bunch of stickers slapped onto the busted-up blue tank—a perfect fit for the bike’s built-to-thrash vibe.

    Hermann only managed to squeeze in 30km on Rudi die resterampe before racing it at Glemseck—just enough for a quick carb tune. Still, he pitted it against Southsiders front man Vincent Pratt’s T120 Triton, and won…convincingly.

    “It is quite fast for a 500cc, and light,” he says. “The Triton had no chance.”
    *Resterampe refers to a well-known German store called Rudis Reste Rampe. ‘Reste’ means leftovers or discounted items, and ‘rampe’ is a ramp or chute.
    via BIKEexif

    DOWN & OUT CAFE RACERS TRIUMPH T100


    If you’ve met Shaun, boss man at Down & Out Cafe Racers, then you’ll know he isn’t the sort of chap to be caught adjusting his cravat in the mirror of a CG125 brat. Coming from a background in building choppers Shaun and his crew up in Barnsley, Yorkshire like their bikes to have a proper presence, stance and perhaps more importantly a proper finish.
    One of the perks of the job is that occasionally Shaun gets to build himself a bike, exactly how he wants it, without a customer’s requirements to adhere to. And if you recall the very first Bike Shed Event you’ll no doubt have noticed the peanut tanked, gold and white CB450 with a whopping 16″ Firestone squeezed between the fork legs that was next to the bar in the first arch. So it’s no surprise that some of the recent Triumphs to leave the workshop wear rather fat front ends. The Bike Shed London 2015 poster bike, yup, that was his last personal project.
    D&O 2For his latest T100 the old girl’s legs needed to be spread a bit wider to accept an exceptionally thick 17 incher. The adventure rider’s tyre of choice is Continental’s TKC 80, renowned for its capability off road but also its ability to offer decent grip on the black stuff. With 180 x 17s fitted front and rear this is not a bike for a retiring wallflower. To ensure he didn’t touch the sides Shaun entrusted Fastec Racing with the job of machining the oversize triple clamps to hold the 2011 CBR1000RR forks. The normal off-the-shelf D&O alloy mudguards weren’t wide enough to cover the TKCs so a mate’s English Wheel was borrowed to shape a pair, a very nice job too.
    D&O 3A Harley-Davidson hub was spaced out in the mounts and laced to a 5 1/2″ rim to accept the fat rubber while Triumph 1050 discs are gripped by the original Tokico radial 4-pots. The result is pretty spectacular, and before anyone starts moaning about turn-in, knobblies on a wet road etc let me pre-empt you. Bugger off! You’ve missed the point. It’s Shaun’s own bike and he wanted to to say Ayup, look at mi proper bike, not Hello, I’ve removed 0.75 degrees of rake to enhance corner entry and overall finesse of the front end feel. Apparently feelings are something us southerners get in our fingers when we clasp a glass of shandy that’s a bit too chilled.
    D&O 4Down & Out source their donor bikes from the horse’s mouth and circumvent the need to trawl the web, or worse, to find low mileage, nearly new or bikes straight off the nearby production line. That means more effort and budget can be put into upgrades rather than repairs. But not all components are expensive, CNC’d exotica. Shaun and right hand man Carl scratched there heads and rooted through the stock room for an exhaust solution, yet ended up tripping over this silencer at an auto jumble. Nice when it works out like that. Mated to a D&O stainless system the Hinckley twin sounded ripe at last weekend’s Distinguished Gentleman’s Ride in London.
    D&O 5If you’ve read the feature of the Bike Shed London 2015 poster bike then you know that for one there’s a deal of repetition on my part but also that Shaun likes a clean cockpit and goes to great lengths to get as close as possible to having just a set of bars and a couple of levers. German outfit LSL manufacture some tasty aftermarket products, so here we have their bars and risers, ignition relocation kit and billet brake fluid reservoir. A GSXR750 master cylinder and clutch perch with D&O levers further tidy the job whilst ensuring those radial callipers have enough welly behind them. Motone mini buttons replace the stock switchgear and all wiring is hidden within the bars.
    D&O 7The custom loom continues into the Bates style headlamp, mounted with trick, stainless bracketry which doubles up to house the very neat little indicators, again D&O own-brand. Despite their best wiring efforts though these modern Triumphs don’t take too kindly to having the clocks removed as all the factory fitted boffins will fall out and the ECU gets its knickers in a knot. Luckily ze clever Germans at Motogadget have a neat fix for this, the M-Tri allows for plug-and-play fitment of their range of mini speedos whilst allowing the bike to actually run.
    D&O 8Whilst leafing through the Motone parts catalogue a host of other snazzy parts were added, we’ll let you play spot the posh parts. Whilst the guys were fitting these, Pro Kustom started on the tank and JVB side panels. We’ve seen the matt black and silver up close, it’s a great finish and surprisingly resilient too. Slight side note to any jacket and jeans manufactures, keep sharp bits in your sewing machines and away from fuel tanks, cheers.
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    The guys are a dab hand at looping the subframes on Bonnies and in this case their handiwork is shown off by the stubby seat, keeping a bit more visual bulk towards the centre of the bike. Further burliness comes courtesy of a set of engine bars, not the usual fare of the custom builder but these look the business complete with the low slung pothole visualisation device. Shaun wanted to incorporate further practicality into his daily commuter so fabricated a stainless steel bracket to hold a canvas pannier and from here it looks like four bread cakes and a couple of bottles of Timothy Taylor’s will fit perfectly. Decent.
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    Down & Out are giving people exactly what they want and the order book reflects just that, so we reckon Shaun deserves a new company vehicle every now and again. Not only that, it doesn’t take a rocket surgeon to work out that not everyone is as experienced as Shaun and Carl, nor have the relevant facilities so why not offer bolt-on parts that arrive in the post, without the additional headache and hard work. That said, they’ll gladly put your name on the list and build the bike of your dreams.
    via The Bike Shed

    Snapshot, 1973: Helen Stewart shoots back


    During the 1973 Austrian Grand Prix, Helen Stewart shoots back at photographer Rainer W. Schlegelmilch, as her husband Jackie races to a second-place finish, edging one step closer to his third World Championship victory…
    Aviators, retro cameras, rose-gold watches and denim shirts – it’s certainly true that fashions go full circle. Helen Stewart would have enjoyed the race, as the Scotsman, who started from seventh on the grid in his Tyrell, drove an impressive race finishing only behind Ronnie Peterson’s Lotus. Just three races later, during practice for the season finale at Watkins Glen, Stewart – and the whole Formula 1 fraternity – would be rocked by the tragic death of his teammate François Cevert. Though he had already decided to retire at the end of the season (and wrapped up the Drivers’ title), Stewart and the Tyrell team pulled out of the race as a mark of respect. As a result, the International Cup for F1 Manufacturers was gifted to Lotus-Ford. 
    Photo: Rainer W. Schlegelmilch/Getty

    Triumph.........


    mardi 6 octobre 2015

    The Toyota FJ40 Is a Rugged Companion


    "One of my favorite things about this vehicle is the total pure utility of it," says Josh Commons, "…the only creature comforts—apart from a heater—is that the seats are padded."
    Built to be rugged, long-lasting, dependable, and easy-to-repair, the Toyota FJ40 has earned a reputation for being one of the world's best vehicles for going off-road, anywhere, any time. Family owned since 1992, Commons had it for 10 years before selling it to his sister, who sold it to their parents. After a time, it was passed back to Josh and hasn't left his possession since.
    "I've owned it long enough to go full cycle to where the brakes and the wheel cylinders wore out and needed to be rebuilt," Commons says. "You're turning the same screw you turned 20 years ago…it's kind of special."
    8,000 feet up, Commons takes us to the beautiful mining ghost town, Boulder City. Not many vehicles—let alone off-roaders—can survive the journey, but the FJ40 almost makes it look like a piece of cake.
    "I don't see these as disposable, I see them as infinitely rebuildable," he says. "It's definitely an heirloom now."

    Drive Tastefully®

    polemical perspective ; Distinguished Gentlemen? Maybe. But not discriminating. The motorcycle industry has its head up its ass. Again.

    Executive summary: The fact that motorcyclists just spent a precious weekend day raising money for prostate cancer research, instead of spinal cord injury research, is bullshit.  

    Wasn’t the Distinguished Gentlemen’s Ride charming, on September 27? Think of all the money they raised for prostate screening. The thing is, the motorcycle industry could’ve just looked for prostate problems instead of funding high-tech screening apparatuses, because the motorcycle industry already has its head up its ass when it comes to choosing which 'charitable' causes it supports.


    Don’t even get me started on the way prostate screening is part of a giant medical fraud, largely promulgated by the insane American for-profit “health care” industry (with assistance from drug companies in some places with otherwise-rational health care delivery systems, like the UK and Australia.)

    According to the NIH: 
    We can find microscopic evidence of prostate cancer in around half of 60-year-old men if we look hard enough. Yet only 3 in 1,000 will die from prostate cancer over the next 10 years. How can this be? Because prostate cancer isn’t just one disease: it’s a spectrum of disorders. Some forms of prostate cancer grow very rapidly and kill the men who have them. Some grow so slowly that, even without treatment, men die of something else before the cancer causes symptoms. And other forms look like cancer under the microscope but never grow at all or may regress spontaneously.http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK126168/

    According to Dr. Otis Webb Brawley (Chief Medical and Scientific Officer and Executive Vice President of the American Cancer Society):
    A number of studies in the U.S. and Europe have shown that there is a type of prostate cancer that is localized to the prostate and of good prognosis, meaning it rarely progresses or causes harm if left alone.All of the organizations that set treatment guidelines based on the scientific evidence recommend that men diagnosed with this type of cancer be carefully observed. These cancers can almost always be effectively treated if found to be progressing. With careful observation, the majority of men will never need treatment and can be spared the burdens of unnecessary therapy.These low-risk forms of prostate cancer are commonly diagnosed through screening and commonly overtreated in the U.S. Indeed, the massive problem of overtreatment and the resultant large number of harms to the population is part of the reason that a number of respected organizations such as the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force and the American Academy of Family Physicians now recommend against routine prostate cancer screening.
    So if you’re one of the dandies who took part in the DGR last month, I hope you love your motorcycle, because to be clear: Encouraging screening in the U.S. equals encouraging unnecessary and overaggressive treatment in literally hundreds of thousands of cases per year. This wastes billions of dollars that would be better spent in other ways, not to mention this: The #1 complication associated with all aggressive prostate cancer treatment is loss of sexual function. 

    It's possible that these 30-something hipsters think, "Oh, by the time you're 50 or 60 you don't want to have any more sex, anyway." But I'm here to tell you that you fucking do. In fact, most 50- and 60-something guys would rather have another decade or three of sex, even if it meant risking the remote chance they'd die from prostate cancer at 70, or 80, or 90... a year or two before they died of something else. 
    Thousands and thousands of American men are treated for harmless cancers—and no, ‘harmless cancer’ is not an oxymoron—every year, generating $8,000,000,000 in revenue for hospitals, which is why the for-profit health care industry loves you Distinguished Gentlemen. Of the quarter-million men who’ll be treated for prostate cancer in the U.S. this year, roughly half—whether treated surgically or with hormone therapy—will never have another orgasm. The majority of them would have lived their entire natural lives happily fucking their wive and/or girlfriends (both if they were lucky) or their boyfriends, or at least the occasional hooker. Whatever! Then they'd've died of other causes, while their prostate cancer was asymptomatic.

    Like I said, I hope you really love riding your motorcycle, because if the prostate cancer business—and that’s what it is, a business, that you provided a bunch of free advertising for—has its way, your motorcycle is all you're gonna' ride.


    The Distinguished Gentleman's Ride 2015 from TinMen on Vimeo.
    I love this sexy video, but how ironic is it that all this is in promotion of prostate screening, which is one of the worst things that has ever happened to sex.

    To be clear: I don’t really give a fuck whether you believe me, or you think I pulled these figures out of my ass. Because that long preamble was to get to a point that no motorcyclist can seriously argue, and it’s this:

    The only medical research the motorcycle industry and motorcycle community should be funding is spinal cord research. But we won’t fund it or talk about it because we’re terrified of admitting that a spinal cord injury can happen to any of us, any time we get on a motorcycle. 

    Ask Wayne Rainey or Joan Lascorz, or Doug Henry or David Bailey if they worried about prostate cancer when they were racing. No way. But all of them wondered if they’d walk away from their careers when they were over, because every pro rider ponders the risks from time to time. 

    So should recreational riders; almost 7% of all spinal paralysis is the result of motorcycle crashes. Considering the relatively small number of riders in total, it’s clear that being a motorcyclist dramatically increases your risk of paralysis. And here’s the thing: There’s a ton of promising research on spinal injury treatment; stem cells, electro-stimulation... we may well live to see the day when a spinal lesion doesn’t mean you’ll spend the rest of your life in a wheelchair. And the three million bucks raised by you Distinguished Gentlemen could have made a real difference.

    I’ve been arguing this for years now, and I’m so fucking tired of it that, at this point, I’ll just refer you to an older post if you want to read more, here.

    Triumph got a ton of great PR by leveraging their involvement with the Distinguished Genitalmen’s Ride, and I get it, they’ll never put that effort into spinal cord research because it unsells bikes by reminding us all of the inherent risk and the worst-case-scenario. But I’m going to keep making this case until someone, somewhere, decides they’re going to look out for motorcyclists, instead of profits.