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    jeudi 11 septembre 2014

    2006 Triumph Bonneville ‘Pegaso’ by Tamarit Motorcycles


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    After many years selling custom Triumph parts and building bikes under the name 8Negro, the Spanish workshop have decided to rebrand and start trading under the new name Tamarit Motorcycles. With a new name and a new found enthusiasm, the guys chose a 2006 ‘carbie’ Bonneville as a donor for this scrambler project. From it’s initial inception during a round of beers, it has become the showcase bike to show the capabilities of the Spanish workshop – especially their in house fabrication and new parts range. We are glad to present the latest from Tamarit Motorcycles, a Triumph Bonnie scrambler they call ‘Pegaso’.
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    After a run of five customers bikes, all built to different specs, it was decided that a bike was needed that could show the skills of the Tamarit crew. A 2006 Trumpy was chosen for the build, with the idea to build it as “a true scrambler”. Once the build brief was decided upon, the bike was stripped back and the work began for the parts required to customise it. A mix of both inhouse manufactured and outsourced parts make for a neat late model Triumph scrambler, which makes a change from the factory Scrambler model.
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    According to Tamarit, the majority of the build was taken up by engineering their own componentry, making adequate molds & casts in order to be able to produce the parts en masse. Once their own touches were manufactured, the build didn’t take long at all, it was simply a matter of assembling everything they had gathered together, or made.
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    The factory seat and rear guard has been replaced with a unit of Tamarit’s own making, the lines flowing like an old school scrambler bike. Standing proud below that is the Papillon style exhaust, designed for this bike but now part of the Tamarit parts catalogue. Other in house produced componentry include the chain guard, bash plate and foot pegs.
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    At the front end sits a set of Renthal bars, with the factory grips being replaced. Perched below this is a 3/4 headlight, and gaiters fitted to give the front forks a better chance off road. A smaller speedometer and turn signals replace the factory units, the final touch being a swap to more capable offroad rubber.
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    From an idea over beers, to the launch of a showcase machine for their custom parts business, Tamarita have produced something different from an old favourite. The best way to describe the journey is said best by Tamarita themselves: ‘At that moment we decided to make our own parts, by hand and trying to make them so “beautiful that convey something special as if they had soul “. Amen to that.
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    AUTO FABRICA TYPE #2


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    Auto Fabrica, or ‘The Perfectionists’ as they are commonly referred to here in The Shed, are back with Type 2, another exquisite piece of engineering art, this time built around the SR500. A punchy lump chosen for it’s solid, reliable track record and it’s willingness to being stripped back to the barest of bones, ready for a ground up re-build.
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    Auto Fabrica’s mission was to create something that hadn’t been done before, easy to say but harder to do when so many people have used the SR for builds in the past. Of course, the simplest way to make a bike unique is to do something outlandish just for the sake of it, but that’s not AF’s style. They wanted to make a totally individual looking bike, while still adhering to the understated style they are renowned for. Not easy.
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    The look is a perfectly balanced blend of old school and modern design, a nod to the past but with a firm focus on the future. To create the one-off tank AF fired up a huge industrial English Wheel, once used to form aluminium sections for aircraft wings. This beast was used to roll the 2mm ali’, before it was panel beaten into it’s final form. The aim wasn’t just to create a pretty tank, it had to be functional too. It had to take into account the ergonomics of the rider, have a decent range (15 Litres) and it had to fit perfectly with the frame and everything else that had been created.
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    Aluminium was the metal of choice on this build. Chosen for it’s light weight, higher quality, better strength, and how much easier it is to work with. The seat unit in particular shows it was the right choice. Sleek, simple and home to the rear light too. AF consider the stance of the bike to be the most important thing of all to get right.  It determines how the bike is ‘read’. To achieve the perfect stance they dropped the forks 2 inches and sourced a set of 325mm Marzzochi shocks to raise the rear. A lot of the guy’s time was spent reducing bulk, shaving off all unnecessaries to create the desired minimalist effect.
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    Natural grey was chosen for the majority of the tank to do justice to the clean look. But a large chunk of white has been used to subtly highlight the shape. The natural properties and finish of materials were mostly left untouched, like the exposed welds on the exhaust and the aqua blasted and polished parts on the engine. The seat is upholstered in a natural tan coloured leather, as are the other rider touch points. Performance has been improved by re-jetting the carb to make sure it’s in balance with the new exhaust system (which was also made in house). Other performance improvements come from the dropped down riding position and the huge weight loss.
    Type 2 is another killer lesson to us all. Just when we think our own bikes are beginning to look quite sharp, along comes a build from Auto Fabrica that slaps us hard around the face and says, ‘try harder’.  Keep on making us feel inadequate guys, it’s character building. To see more face slapping work, contact AF at info@autofabrica.com, or find them on Instagram and Facebook.
    via The Bike Shed

    WHY WE RIDE: mid-life crisis philosophy & motorbike riding

    Cruisers and Harleys vs dirt bikes, adventure bikes and trials bikes? This video explains how to age recklessly, remain emotionally immature and be a dirty old man but not get arrested. Above all it explains why we ride motorbikes, and why turning 50 is no excuse to wimp out of the adventure that is motorbike riding (apologies to cruiser and Harley Davidson riders, this vid is just having a dig at mates who ride those beasts!).


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