ACE CAFE RADIO

    mardi 10 décembre 2013

    Down & Out’s R80 Scrambler


    D&O R80 1
    It all went wrong when I saw the sub-frame. “So, Dutch, what do you think of this sub frame?” was Shaun’s innocent question. …The guys from Down & Out Cafe Racers had already made a great impression on all of us at the BSMC when they came and exhibited their bikes at The Bike Shed event last October. They bought with them a pair of mid-sized stunners; a Gold CB450 Brat/Scrambler, dripping with beautiful details, and aSuzuki 400 Tempter, which had been turned into Cafe Racer in metallic sunburst colours. That bike caught the eye of Bike Shed regular photographer Merry Michau and now belongs to her (Oi, Merry, where are those Tempter photos?).
    D&O R80 2
    It was clear that Shaun, Carl, Simon & Co weren’t into compromises or short-cuts when it comes to bike building, and not only that, they were really nice guys. Northern charm & talent won us all over, and Shaun & I started to chat – a lot. …So – back to that subframe…
    …Shaun is pretty flexible when it comes to bike builds, happy to work on any base model that comes his way, so eventually a BMW had to appear in the D&O workshop and when it did he decided to look at building a bolt-on replacement subframe which he might sell-on to a few Shed Builders. He wanted my opinion on the height, length and kicked-up rear – but I wasn’t just looking at the frame, I was looking at the whole bike. Having written-off my R100 Cafe Racer I was in need of a new daily ride and had settled on another ‘reliable workhorse’ BMW. “The subframe looks spot-on, Shaun… But, er, …what’s happening to the bike?”.
    D&O R80 3
    Now Shaun is a bit of a charmer, so after a lot of banter he suggested that I help guide the build as it went, and if I liked the end result than I’d get first dibs on buying the bike. …So what would you do? …Exactly. …You get totally excited about the whole thing and end-up completely immersed in a fantasy-bike build. I wasn’t really committed just yet, was I?, but I was certainly enjoying the whole process. …The Dutchess used to work in Sales. She just laughed at me. She could see what was coming: A slam-dunk for silver-tongued Shaun and a pretty much guaranteed sale. Maybe she was right, but this was just too much fun.
    D&O R80 4
    See if you can spot the starter button… no? Look again.
    Over the following weeks I watched the bike come together, while Shaun & I planned out the look and the spec, item by item. Having seen a zillion Beemer customs I knew what I wanted, but Shaun also had a clear idea of what he wanted to to present to the cafe/custom community. Fortunately we agreed on pretty much everything.
    Most of the time I was having to hold him back from doing too much. “This might be my daily ride Shaun… Keep it simple” but Shaun is a detail man, so we needed micro-switches on the braced Renthal dirtbike bars, and the wiring had to be hidden in the bars and frame. It wasn’t good enough just to have a small battery, it had to be in a custom built aluminium box with a leather strap and buckle. The bike had to have old-style rocker covers and curvy silver airbox, plus we needed a whole new loom to accommodate the Bates style headlight, because BMW hide half their wiring in that OEM bucket. This build was to be a labour of love and a showcase for Shaun’s talents.
    D&O R80 5
    One of Shaun’s touches I loved most was the replacement bear-trap footrests, welded seamlessly onto the original footrest mounts. Part of my brief was to keep the upright riding position (as much like the Dutchess’Dommie Tracker as possible) and I also wanted to be able to accommodate a pillion for when the Dutchess couldn’t be arsed to ride one of her own bikes into town.
    The bike already came with twin front discs on my favourite BMW “snowflake’ wheels, but brand new levers & MC insured improved stopping power. Twin stainless steel pipes lead to simple megaphone exhausts but we kept the standard Bing carbs and retained the use of the airbox instead of fitting cone style filters. Without the link-pipe the carbs tend to blow-off all too easily – and most Beemers really do run better with the airbox on.
    D&O R80 6
    As a daily ride the bike needed fenders, front and back, but we wanted to keep them short and sharp. Shaun made up a pair of aluminium items that covered as little as possible while still making sure I could ride in the rain. We debated for a long while on whether to powdercoat them black to blend in to the wheels and frame or leave them in raw metal, but the shiny-side won-out in the end, and it’s nice to see the quality of the raw materials sometimes.
    The seat was something we mulled over for a long time too. How deep should it be, and do we follow the kick-up or tuck into it? I was keen on a diamond stitch in chocolate brown to match the brown gummy-bear grips, but after some messing around we agreed on a simple tuck’n'roll pattern with enough padding for proper all-day riding. The leather came out matching the battery strap rather than the grips, and my jury is still out on that, but there’s always brown leather dye if I don’t learn to love it.
    D&O R80 7
    The low mileage engine had already been rebuilt and given new rings, and ran like a peach, so the bike was stripped down again to be sent off for cleaning and polishing or powdercoating. We decided to keep the engine mostly raw metal, but finished the cylinder fins in black as they get pretty grotty on London’s roads anyway. I also wanted chunky dirt-stye tyres, but grippy enough for normal roads and with enough of a rounded profile to pitch in to turns nicely. Heidenau K60s provided the answer.
    D&O R80 7
    The tank colour was also a subject pf great debate. Having always been into Black, Black and maybe Black, I has been converted into a colour-aficionado by becoming the owner of a Ducati Paul Smart replica, which had a metallic turquois frame. Suddenly, colour didn’t seem so naff, so I decided to paint the tank in stand-out YeYe Green, the same as Richard’s CX500 we featured earlier in the year. But on reflection I realised that the paint scheme really is the finishing touch on a bike, and we wanted something uber-cool. Sean asked what I thought of the old Honda livery he’d re-created on the CB450 – which everyone loved – and that settled it. Plus of course a matching white & gold BMW roundel which Shaun had made up specially.
    D&O R80 8
    After the full strip’n'finish the bike was put back together, checked-out and had the carbs balanced, and then it was time for a photoshoot. Talented bike snapper Simon took the bike out for a spin, and despite being a bit of an MX racer, and way too young for a BMW-fueled midlife crisis, he had to admit that the bike was “really torquey and easy to fly in and out of traffic on, really comfy too” – before making me promise never to tell anyone he’d said it. …Oops. Sorry Simon.
    By now you may all be getting bored with seeing so many BMW R-Series customs, but I’m really enjoying the fact that they are providing a staple, quality custom donor, that is allowing so many people to join the custom scene at an affordable (ish) level, and can be a scrambler, brat, cafe racer or whatever. Whether it’s a posh pro-build; completely remade, and as-new, (like this one), or a Shed-built Rat/Brat, they manage to balance being a proper rider’s bike with being something to be immensely proud of being seen on. They shift too. If you’ve never ridden one, prepare yourself for a big surprise – they’re not even heavy.
    D&O R80 J
    So. Did I buy the bike? You’ll have to wait and see. I just need to have a little chat with the bank manager and see if I can get a little extra help… If not, maybe she’ll be yours. Either way, she carries a little bit of  the BSMC in her mechanical soul… Meanwhile, can someone stop Simon thrashing around on MY bike?
    See more from D&O on their WebsiteFacebook Pages, and on The Bike Shed too – and thanks to Simon Krajnyak for the Photos.
    Posted by Dutch@TheBikeShed

    TRR 2013

    Screen Shot 2013 12 09 at 21.07.19 1050x578 TRR 2013


    Finnish kids getting buck wild! / Team Reckless Riders from Finland!


    Spontaneous resolution: Crumbling classics in the M.A.D. Gallery


    Swiss photographic artist Fabian Oefner appears to have put the great classics from Ferrari, Jaguar and Mercedes through a particle accelerator. His bizarre series of images can now be seen in the M.A.D. Gallery of MB & F in Geneva...
    Sound waves, centripetal acceleration, ferromagnetism - Fabian Oefner has visualised these everyday phenomena in his previous photographic artworks. The Swiss artist, born in 1984, likes to make "the magic that surrounds us" visible, and Oefner frequently does this by freezing processes so rapid that they are imperceptible to the naked eye. For his latest series, however, he has not deconstructed the mysteries of physics... but one of the great wonders of technology.

    Exploding classics

    Through extensive detailed work the artist has taken apart a Ferrari 330 P4, a Jaguar E-type and a Mercedes 300 SLR Uhlenhaut Coupé, photographed piece by piece and reassembled from thousands of frames, to give the illusion of its elements disintegrating in an explosion. "In the pictures you see a moment that, in fact, never took place," explains Oefner. "The ability to synthesise such an event and to freeze it in time is simply amazing." (Worried automotive collectors can be reassured that Fabian Oefner does not work with original cars, but with models.)

    Limited edition

    The photo series 'Disintegrating' is currently on display at the M.A.D. Gallery of MB & F in Geneva - and the pictures are available to purchase: each image is offered as a 120cm x 70cm print in a limited edition of 25 copies.The price per image is 1900 Swiss Francs.
    More information can be found at mbandf.com.

    Spirit’s xs400 Understated Cool


    Spirit SX400 1
    The xs400 is an often overlooked machine, but like it’s cousin, the SR, it’s a great basic platform for a practical custom that can be ridden every day. It’s also not the kind of bike that needs to be dripping with expensive Ohlins or Brembos, or have new wheels made up with extra-wide rims. Builds like these are all about simple good taste – and what makes them special is the detail. This bike, from Bike Shed Co-Founders Spirit of the Seventies, belongs to Charlie, who seems to be a very happy customer.
    Spirit SX400 2
    “I guess for me more than anything it is the sheer art, design, craftsmanship and attention to detail that goes into creating bikes like the ones coming out of Spirit’s garage that got me into this scene. Just to have that one-off bike that’s tailored to your own style is just an incredible feeling.”
    Spirit SX400 3
    “Also, it sets you out of the crowd of homogenous people that choose the same things and have no flair or excitement about them and just go through the motions. I wanted a bike that had style and character and that had its own soul, and not one of the new crappy plastic machines out there at the moment.”
    Spirit SX400 4
    “I set myself on an old 1980′s XS400 because I could see that once you stripped away the bulky seat and fenders, you would have a bike that would deliver bold lines but also could look clean and simple once it was stripped down. Once I had bought my XS400 and had it in my garage I found out that it had some pretty terrible carb problems, and I was told to cut my losses and get a new bike.”
    Spirit SX400 5
    “The only problem was that I had already found from my first day of owning it that I was completely and emotionally attached to this bike and could never part with it. I initially thought that I would customise the bike myself in my garage, but quickly found out I didn’t have the time to do that and study at the same time.”
    Spirit SX400 6
    “Around the same time as this was going through my head our family suffered a bereavement, and it was out of this loss that came a substantial amount of money my way. Being the rational and logical 21 year old I immediately grabbed my copy of Iron and Air I had on my table at home and saw Spirit of the Seventies on the front cover and thought, man these guys are the shit! So I started to play with the idea that these guys might be able to help me out.”
    Spirit SX400 7
    “I fired off an email to Tim and within days I was down at their HQ talking bikes and going through my ideas I had for the bike. I have to say too that I was probably a difficult customer because I had given them sketches and pages of notes on what I wanted.”
    xs400 pic
    Tim from Spirit pitches in here… “Charlie is not our typical customer, it’s not everyday that a 20yr old walks in and talks about a build. Charlie was keen for us to crack on. His 21st Birthday was on the horizon and he really wanted the bike to be ready for it. However, the bike wasn’t running correctly, despite paying a lot of money to an established bike shop to sort it out it was still running rough and it soon became evident that they had ripped him off…”
    Spirit SX400 8
    “All of this took time and ate into Charlie’s budget for the project. This meant that we couldn’t strip the entire bike and powder coat the frame, clean the engine up etc. He had very firm ideas of what he wanted and (see notes) and we had to try to work the now extremely tight budget as hard as we could to make his vision a reality. We used some parts that we had on the shelf such as the Renthal bars, leather grips and indicators.”
    Notes
    “The mudguards were cut down and shaped to fit, the original chain guard was drilled and powder coated, we also powder coated some of the engine covers. A simple end can, new chain and sprocket, fork lowers and wheels refurbished, headlamp bracket arms, top yoke and clock mount powder coated. Hagon shocks, Koso speedo, Glenn Moger made the seat including the base, D-Luck’s painted the bodywork.”
    Spirit SX400 9
    …and back to Charlie: “When I came to view it and take it home what they had delivered was above and beyond my sketches and truly left me speechless. Just to see the level of effort and detail that they had put into the bike, like the crafted metal plate surrounding the speedometer, to the brushed metal finish on the fenders. The paintwork and seat too are out of this world and the way the whole thing comes together is perfect.”
    Spirit SX400 10
    Charlie looks very pleased, and when you take a closer look at this modest-looking build you can see why. For understated cool, the devil is always in the detail. We hope to see Charlie & the bike at the next Bike Shed Event in 2014. Thanks for Sharing your story with us, fella. The bike looks mint.
    See more from Tim & Kev at Spirit of the Seventies on the Bike Shed, their Website & Facebook pages.