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Thinking about a cafe racer project, need some advice....
- SWest
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- 10 22 2014
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- 650ed
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loudhvx wrote: Ed, you keep posting that mono-shock bike over and over. I wish you would just finish it up some day so we can see it run.
It's almost finished..........
Ed
1977 KZ650-C1 Original Owner - Stock (with additional invisible FIAMM horn)
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- Move0ver
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- baldy110
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I will only customize a bike that was already in really bad shape or a common easy to come by, not rare bike. I refuse to turn anything complete and vintage into a custom, that to me is just wrong.
But then I'm old and set in my ways so now get off my lawn.
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- Dr. Gamma
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This Water Buffalo is a good example of what an old school cafe racer should look like. The fuel tank is a bit too big for my taste, but the rest of the bike is nicely done in my book.
Now to me this is THE ULTIMATE cafe racer bike bar none!!!!!!!
1972 H2 750 Cafe Racer built in 1974.
1976 KH400 Production Road Racer.
1979 Kz1000 MK. II Old AMA/WERA Superbike.
1986 RG500G 2 stroke terror.
1986 GSXR750RG The one with the clutch that rattles!
Up in the hills near Prescott, Az.
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- Webbie1
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Warner
1979 KZ1000 LTD, 1982 KZ1000 LTD, 1990 Honda CBR1000F
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- SWest
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- 10 22 2014
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- Webbie1
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SWest wrote: You won't regret it. I'm waiting to find a junky KZP to turn into this. :evil:
Steve
I listened, and realized that you guys are right. I'm man enough to admit it. Thanks for the intervention.
Warner
1979 KZ1000 LTD, 1982 KZ1000 LTD, 1990 Honda CBR1000F
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- Webbie1
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Black_n_chrome wrote: Cafés are all about taking what you got and making it what you want. Don't listen to the purists. I agree that small to mid displacement twins are the most traditional examples of a café racer, but that's because that's what the guys back then could get or had lying around.
I wanted to build one and the bike I found was a 1982 KZ750 twin. now it's a café bike and I love it.
A 4-cyl would be fun to ride but do understand the maintenance and repair costs are going to be considerably more than a twin as you have twice the carbs and cylinders.
Sportster cafés are sick af. Harleys hold their value better than most anything for one, the sportster tank is built to lay down on the way it humps up, and it's just a big, powerful bike to begin with. If you have the outlay to get a Harley that's what I'd do.
I just sold my sportster cafe....it was a Buell XB12Scg. Like a sportster, only fast with a killer chassis. 103hp and 82 ft lbs of torque, weight under 400 pounds. It was really a great bike....divorce forced that sale, but I got twice what I paid for it at least. 0-80 it was pretty good....almost on par with my liter sportbike. After 80, the liter bike would suck the paint off of it, but fun, nimble, torquey bike.
Warner
1979 KZ1000 LTD, 1982 KZ1000 LTD, 1990 Honda CBR1000F
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- Webbie1
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Move0ver wrote: The modern (dime-city-cycle) cafe racer image is what ends up giving us the unrideable art bikes from bikexif/pipeburn and a craigslist full of ruined bikes.
It's the next cool thing now that nobody cares about or can afford something from orange county choppers.
Trying to make a "race replica" (because at it's core, that's what a "cafe racer" is) out of a cruiser is just going to give you a bike that looks bad and rides even worse.
Play to the bikes strengths and you'll save money, save frustration, and wind up with a really cool daily rider.
For something like a vintage muscle bike here's what you need to do (after basic maintenance and service is complete)
-Racetech emulators and springs
-Hagon shocks
-Fork brace
-Braided brake lines
-Wheel bearings
-Stem bearings
-Good tires
That alone will make the bike much more enjoyable, safer, and more reliable. AND you'll see immediate improvements vs slapping a "brat" seat and mojave tank on it.
THIS was the post that finally made me change my mind. Your post really hit home with me and made me realize that you guys were right.
Warner
1979 KZ1000 LTD, 1982 KZ1000 LTD, 1990 Honda CBR1000F
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- gazzz
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Dr. Gamma wrote: What some folks today call a "cafe racer" is no where what a cafe racer really is. When I first got started in motorcycles, a cafe racer meant you copied a road race bike, but you made it street legal or close to it!!!!! The Brits had that part of the bike world pretty well covered back then. The early 70's the cafe racer craze hit the states. I also was hit by that bug as well. Back then your bike had to handle, brake, and corner better than a stock motorcycle. Looks were not as important as were the ability to have your bike be race track ready. I bet that 99% of these "creations" that folks build today and call them "cafe racers" would be damn right deadly if ridden fast let alone on a race track at speed!!!!
That's it: power, handle,brakes, cornering. I could only add my own point of view for modern cafe-racers: now it's also a motorcycle for easily cutting through city traffic.
As for the base for custom, I completely agree with baldy110. There is no need to hack good motorcycle when one is about to change wheels, suspension, brakes and to overhaul engine.
Kawasaki KZ650 cafe-racer: in progress
Kawasaki Zephyr 750 (810ccm, 4in4, spoked wheels)
Honda CB815 "Eight Fifteen" cafe-racer
Yamaha XJ "Eight Ball" cafe-racer
www.gazzz-garage.com
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- gazzz
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Norway:
Switzerland:
New Zealand:
France:
Kawasaki KZ650 cafe-racer: in progress
Kawasaki Zephyr 750 (810ccm, 4in4, spoked wheels)
Honda CB815 "Eight Fifteen" cafe-racer
Yamaha XJ "Eight Ball" cafe-racer
www.gazzz-garage.com
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