ACE CAFE RADIO

    samedi 29 mars 2014

    Yamaha XJR café Racer


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    As the café racer building craze has gained momentum locally, we have watched the prices of  popular donor motorcycles become increasingly ridiculous. Let’s face it; café racers were a British phenomenon from the 1960s, so if you are not building your café racer from a 1960′s British motorcycle you are building a look-a-like and it does not then surely matter what donor motorcycle you use. International builders have turned certain older models, such as the Honda CB750 and BMW models from the 1970s into modern café racer icons. We love these creations but these models were never originally used to build café racers and we  despair at what is being paid for these motorcycles in shabby condition. So is there an alternative to having to pay through your nose for a thirty five year old donor bike of unknown mechanical condition? Our humble suggestion is to have a look for a donor from the more modern family of retro motorcycles known as “naked bikes.” Our Featured Yamaha café racer belongs to this family.
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    In the last decade of the twentieth century the Japanese manufacturers continued developing better handling and faster superbikes each year. A demand for more traditional performance motorcycles became apparent. In the 1990s all four Japanese manufacturers launched their modern interpretations of 1970′s superbikes which became known as naked bikes. These twin shocked, retro looking motorcycles offered a comfortable seating position for both the rider and the passenger yet had plenty of performance and far better braking and handling than the 1970′s models which provided their DNA. Yamaha launched their XJR1200 model in 1995. Powered by the powerful FJ1200 engine which had originally been launched as an 1100cc in 1984, this was a beast of a four cylinder powered naked bike, with 98hp on tap and a top speed of just below 230km/h. In 1998 the XJR1300 became available with 105 hp and a top speed of over 250km/h. The XJR1300 is still a current model in Yamaha’s range of motorcycles, proving the demand for less radical superbikes still exists.
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    Our featured Yamaha XJR café racer was built by Brotherhood Customs from Alberton to the owner Marius’s specification. This fine motorcycle’s standard petrol tank has been retained but Brotherhood Customs fabricated the seat and bum-stop. This was a grey import from Japan, meaning it was not a model imported by the official Yamaha agents. The non-adjustable Ohlins rear shocks were standard on the XJRs for the Japanese market. The aftermarket exhaust was on the motorcycle when imported but has been shortened. The front mudguard has been removed and fork boots fitted to the front shock absorbers. The side covers have been discarded and the frame detabbed. The Battery and electrical components are installed into the unobtrusive box beneath the seat. The standard airbox has been replaced with four individual K&N type filters. The XJR has been completely repainted.
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    Clip-on handlebars with bar-end mirrors have been installed. To get the correct racer lines required custom fitting the original gauges in a lower position. A smaller aftermarket headlight has been fitted.
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    If building your dream racer requires you to use an original1970′s motorcycle, then you will be prepared to pay the premium when buying such a motorcycle. If you want to build a café racer and are open to suggestion then consider a naked bike as a donor motorcycle. They look the part yet are modern in performance and braking. They are all based around indestructible engines and can be used as a daily or long distance ride. Currently they sell for about the same price as a very good example of a high demand 1970′s  model. Grab one before their prices also begin to skyrocket!

    Illustration: The cars of every F1 World Champion


    F1 winners p1
    What a terrific idea! Fijen.net has come up with this brilliant collection of illustrations detailing the cars, liveries and numbers of every single Formula 1 World Champion. It presents a fantastic opportunity to visualize not only the evolution of car development, but also the onset of new driver eras. We can’t help but wonder – what’s next?
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    MOTO ART BY FRANCIS OOI


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    Francis Ooi is the creative director of an advertising agency based in Singapore – a city-state famous for its sterile cleanliness, great chilli crab and compulsory fines for almost any activity not sanctioned by its strict government. It’s notoriously difficult to import vehicles into the country and the vehicles that are there are strictly controlled – even non-OEM indicator lights will get your bike impounded on the spot.
    This means the local custom scene operates below the radar and amateur enthusiasts like Francis are forced to find other outlets for what would otherwise be two-wheeled creativity. Fortunately for us, Francis is a talented illustrator and so he spent the past few months researching a creating the motorcycle posters you see here, each design is limited to 100 units and costs a reasonable $65. To ensure longevity the A2 sized posters are created using OffSet Lithographic 4C printing on Maple White Acid Free 220gsm paper.
    P Yamaha YZR500 740x522 Moto Art by Francis Ooi
    P Honda RC174 740x522 Moto Art by Francis Ooi
    P HONDA CB750 01 740x522 Moto Art by Francis Ooi
    P Ducati 900SS 01 740x522 Moto Art by Francis Ooi
    P Ducati 750imola 01 740x522 Moto Art by Francis Ooi
    via SILODROME

    ‘87 BMW R65 – Ellaspede Customs



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    Perception is a funny thing. It can be the difference between a positive or negative outcome, between liking or not liking something or someone and often the cause of missed opportunities. To change perception usually takes a change of mindset or to be shown there may be more to something than meets the eye. Until recent years, BMW R-series bikes from the 1980s could have been considered in a similar light. A bike for old guys into function more than form. Solid, dependable, but neither exciting nor innovative. Or at least that was a guy called Bruce’s perception of them when he visited Brisbane’s Ellaspede Customs as a customer. But that was a view which was soon to change – especially after eyeing a certain R-series on a little site called Pipeburn.
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    Bruce is a good mate of Ellaspede and visits regularly. Whilst hanging around the workshop he gained an understanding and appreciation of the build process and formulated a plan to build his own custom bike. As mentioned, his view of the R series changed after seeing their stripped back simplicity, along with the exposed airhead boxer twin and figured his 1979 BMW E21 coupe needed a German companion in the garage… so the search began for a suitable donor.
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    Not long after, he rolled in on a stock ’87 R65 mono. He could have kept searching for an R80, 90 or 100 but the smaller frame of the 65 lent itself more so to Bruce’s vision, so work began. Bruce had a clear idea of what it would look like and instructed us to “make the frame as minimalist and smooth as possible”. Like most standard bikes this meant a lot of cutting and grinding to rid it of the items that were excess to requirements.
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    Bruce supplied a Nitrohead seat, headlight, indicators and mufflers. Ellaspede made the frame suit the seat and suitably mounted the other items. The captured forks limited the ability to lower the front so they custom fabricated a top clamp to allow this, giving a tougher stance. Part of the vision included an under-seat battery/electrics tray, now occupied by a new lithium-ion unit, and many other electrical revisions.
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    Along with a new custom rear guard, Ellaspede ninja star plate mount and modified sparto-style tail light, other small adjustments were made to the frame before other friends of Bruce’s that own a panel shop applied all the paint work. “They are amazing guys who were able to execute exactly the vision I had. I particularly love the wheels. I didn’t want to build a black on black bike. I wanted a really subtle bronze/gold/flat finish and left it with them… and they nailed it”. The assembly stage saw help from yet more of Bruce’s mates as they wrestled the boxer twin and freshly rebuilt gearbox back into place.
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    Bruce’s vision took shape with each piece secured and part of that vision was the clean, tough look up front achieved by using one inch bars, Harley switch blocks and controls custom-wired through the bars to an Ellaspede aircraft-grade loom. Pirelli Scorpion tyres are the tarmac interface, which also helped the tough appeal. A 130 tyre may find its way onto the rear in the future. Pipe work is custom Ellaspede with the aforementioned short reverse cone mufflers giving a surprisingly deep, metallic note.
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    There are plans to replace the Bings and airbox with Mikuni carbs and pod style filters but in the meantime, Bruce has a very cool ride and while isn’t a patch on many of Bruce’s former bikes speed-wise, it has put the world’s biggest smile on his face.
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    The story of Bruce’s build is one of friendship. It happened through the work of many of Bruce’s mates coming together to achieve something of value and satisfaction. Whatever your view of BMW’s, custom bikes or the result rendered here, we’re pretty sure that this could only be perceived as a damn good thing.
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    via PIPEBURN