A CAFE RACER - Simply Named - The Road Warrior !

This will be known as "The Road Warrior"

     IN MEMORY ............................................................................................

 This Motorcycle is dedicated to the Brave Men and Women of HS-6, and to the memory of “Indian 617”,   recently LOST with all hands.

 The crew of Indian 617:
LCDR Eric Purvis, LT Allison Oubre, AW1 Grant Kerslake, AW2 Aaron Clingman, AW2 Sean Ward. 
 All were veterans of both Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom.

I have been so lucky to have met some of these tremendously brave people and its things like this, that make me sit back and think how lucky we are to do what we do in this free and great country.

I just wanted to pay my respects to Jack and all his colleagues, as they put their lives in Jeopardy without hesitation, to make sure we stay safe and sound.

I will always remember the crew of INDIAN 617 with uttermost dignity and respect.

         

OK here we go again.

This time we are going to take a slightly different route with this machine and have a Big, bulky, powerful brute of a machine that will shake windows and set off car alarms.

This will be a Cafe Racer that is built by me, but the idea from the Customer, and a slightly new concept from me, but, this sounds like it could be a fun ride with a new look.

So, pull up a seat and enjoy the ride, as this will certainly be a fun one.

   I hope to complete this Cafe Racer to the style the Customer has asked for.

Big Gas tank, short Racing seat, 4 into1 Yoshi with a few tricks up the sleeve.

The transition may take a little while as my guideline book is thrown to the way side, but this is all about self expressionism and I want this particular Cafe Racer Project to look just like the Customer explaned to me.

I shall be using a snotter as a donor and this time, the customer wants RED Frame and a cool Black tank, with Alloy rims that will really bling the bike out and scream Nostalgia racing.

I have my work cut out and I hope to accomplish this in time for him to cruise the streets of his town and wake up the sleepy residents with a thunderous roar of this 500 pounder.

I have to keep my cards quite close to my chest, as the chap is in the Navy and this is going to be his good luck charm, as well as a Rocket for him to launch when ever he see's fit.

Check this build as I am going "OverBoard on this Cafe"

I shall install an 836cc Kit. A street racing cam and a few more tricks that will wake King Neptune up on his Sea Bed.

The bike will be known as 'The Road Warrior" And I am sure it will get more attention than a Commander of a Sea Hawk Helicoter.

Have a look at the right on this build up, the Original bike is snotty, it is nasty and drips oil like the tin man's runny nose.

This Cafe racer will really turn some heads once it is completed.

I removed the motor without losing my arse grapes this time and the best trick is to settle the motor on a Milk crate, it is the same height as the frame bed and this makes the transition easier.

Sure, you can lay the bike over and pull the frame off the motor, thats if you are dead straight and then you will end up with oil all over the drive way, so I prefer the authordox way of straining the Bollocks out of your self ,and heaving like you were sea sick for 10 minutes.

I can pull these Motors out on my own with not too much problem now and the best bet is to remove the exhaust snouts, that gives you more room, as well as remove the square breather cap ontop of the valve cover, as that will give you about 1/4" or more.

OK, the Motor is out and I am tearing into it, this will get a New cam and the Motor will be completly gone through and should be faster than prune juice through a stomach.

I stripped the frame down to its nuts and then cleaned up a few marks, then it was time to cover the old head stock and off to the bead blasting machine, where I removed all the old enamel and got it to bare Metal.

I decided on this GumBall Red and it is a deep fresh look, I put plenty of powder on and cooked it at 400 degree's for 30 minutes.

This came out as sweet as a nut and I am stoked at the shine this gives off.

Then once this was done, I went and begaun the transformation of parts.

The triple tree was grubby and black, so the good old polishing skills came out and off I went, buffing like a fool and the result is always cool for me.

This thing will light up like the poor fellow below.

With new bearings attached and the lower tree powder coated gloss Black, I began to assemble this bike.

I took the forks apart and fitted New seals as well as polishing the lowers to a chrome looking finsih.

The fork ears I painted and attached to the front end, this is really looking great.

The rear swing arm is powder coated and everything re-packed with grease and now the fun begins.

The 1970's racing DID rims were polished up and polished stainless spokes with new tubes and rubber, this looks fantastic.

The hubs I tore apart and removed the bearings, polished and buffed the hub and new bearings and now it looks like a show piece.

I got the snotty rotor and marked where I wanted the holes and drilled the things myself, then champfered both sides and painted the ceter of the rotor, fitted new polished stainless bolts too and the Speedo drive got a damn good thrashing via the polishing mop.

Have a look and see what you think.

My own Clubman handle bars and the chrome headlight bucket set this off, I want Chrome, Black and Red to run through this Cafe Racer all the way from the front to the back.

Well the Motor has been a bit of a bugger but now ready for assembly and I will rest it on a wooden dolly and am getting ready to plop it in the Red frame.

The Motor is now an 836cc and has some headwork that I thought would help her breathe a bit better.

I used a WEBCAM 270 Cam, good for the street without getting too lumpy.

This will have electronic Ignition and maybe even a set of Dyna Coils too, as they are grerat for getting a good strong and constant spark.

Well, the Motor is ready but not all detailed, as I use the old covers so if I ding anything, I can simply change it all out once the Motor is in the frame.

This can be tough for a first timer, I bung these in on my own but make sure you have 2 people about.

Not easy trying to force feed your colon your Arse grapes once they plop out, believe me, my Mrs wont let me keep a cold spoon in the fridge anymore.

Right, I am now over the hump and need to get on with this build and she is now taking shape.

the Motor was ready to be thrown in the rails, so I  plonked the engine on a milk crate and then taped the frame up.

Lifting these can be a bugger but unless there are 2 people, you just have to grin and bare it for a few exhausting minutes.

I managed to plonk this monster in the rails and - with my foot on a floor jack, managed to raise the bottom of the motor, so the mounting holes lined up.

A good tip for you lot is to remove as much of the engine as you can, that way, you can have more room for wiggling the thing into place.

I always remove the breather cap ontop of the Valve cover, so that gives you some extra room, the exhaust spigots also take too much space up and that saves alot of fumbling with them removed, you will thank me later for that tip.

Right, after some fiddling and a few choice words that my neighbors must be proud of, I got the bugger in the area I needed it.

I was sweating like a case of TNT on a camels back, but I got the thing in the rails and thats all that matters.

Thats the hardest bit  completed and now hooking stuff up for this cool ride.

The Cafe is going to have a 2 set kit, one stock style tamk with a custom seat made by me and then a longer Cafe tank and race seat, that way, he can take his Mrs for a Burn up  - and then change the bike fairly easily and then it will look like another Motorcycle.

The stock Gas tank i have changed abit, I used a 1976 gas tank and made my inserts, I then ground the old gas cap off and fitted an Aircraft style one to make the bike more Aeronautical for the bike as I think this fits he needs and interests and, to go with that these, i painted the knee inserts the same color as his Seahawk, so that will tie in nice with his stuff.

The tank looks bloody great and have still to add my Signature Checkers and I think White pin lines will really bang this in for him.

I am also going to shorten the front fender for that bobbed race look and I am sure he will be pleased with that?

This is gonna look Hotter than the flares used on the Seahawk.

I am getting there and soon this will be another head turning machine that I am certain will bring many smiles.

OK, look down, yeah, see it? RED, that is what she is now, I liked the Grey, but this gas tank i made and one of My Tail section reace seats, looks the part and, boy is it a winner.

I really like the Classic lines and am sure Jack will love it when completed.

I have still to add a Race number, as well as some more bits and bobs, and I am going to Bob a steel rear fender and paint that to match and fit a classic looking Tail light to it.

OK, time has gone on a bit and I am trying to get a few things together for this bike, as parts are getting harder and harder to locate, even in japan, so I must try and push on.

I have now completed some cool stuff and if you look at the pics on the right, you will of course see what has been going on in my garage.

The Guages i took apart and replicated the dashboard of his Chopper, he will be suprised when he claps his eyes on this set up but wanted to trick this out a little for him, just to remind him of his Seahawk.

I am really happtythe way they came out and look good on the bike.

Also I have just painted the oil tank and gloss black and fitted that and now I needed to try and come up with a cool set up for his side covers.

Well, I sat there and wondered what  I could come up with to make the thing stand out and then I came up with the idea of his squadron logo, the screamin Indians.

Very cool logo and this now really does show some of his career on the bike and hope he likes this?

I am now going to fit a RED X-ring chain, they are almost $250 but they will last and look cool too.

I will be receiving the freshly made Yoshimura for the bike too and look forward to fitting that up.

I have now come up with a cool set up for the rear end, this time the Stabilzer bar got some serious treatment, and made from 6061 aluminum, it now has his name cut into it and fins machined into the rest of the stabilizer bar, I shall add some red in between the fins to detail it out, now this really has given the bike some character for sure and it is more personal for Jack, he has become a really good mate of mine and I want this looking cool.

Here I am on deck of the Mighty MIMITZ where the helicoptors reside at sea.

I added a good chain and sprocket set up as this will have some Horse power.

These chains are not cheap at $250 but you need it and dont want to bugger your cases snapping a cheesy cheap stock chain.

Also I have JUST fitted one of My new Yoshimura style 4 into 1 systems amd it fits great and tight.

I am sure this is gonna sound great, but still making Baffle today and should have that done by tomorrow.

Right, I have done more to the Road Warrioer and she is taking shape now and not too long to go until i fire this puppy up.

I have made all the bolts for the Motor and used Chrome Acorn nuts to make this stand out, I want my mate to remember me for this ride as this guy is such a cool chap, and I really have enjoyed creating this unique Cafe Racer for him.

Having been taken out TWICE on the USS NIMITZ, I will always remember this build and want to incorperate some of the stuff that he too remembers from his Navy days.

I shall try and get this completed, so he can ride the thing around the base to get all the other motorcycle fans all hyped up at this new ride.

Look out, I think I have figured this set up out, maybe a quick way home?

The bike has now had a lot of work done to it and I added some carbs today, I totally rebuilt them from a snotty set, that were more choked than a strangled chicken.

I then fitted these to the New intake boots that i purchased from Japan and added polished stainless hose clamps to make sure all of this looked good.

To complete this set up I wanted some cool old vintage Velocity stacks. I have had these for many years, saving them for a certain build and decided that this is the one.

These velocity stacks were from Japan and are really suited to this bike and am stoked how they look.

I am so stoked at these and I know he will like them too.

There are many tricks on this bike and it will take time for people to actually notice it, but thats half the fun and I am getting closer to completing this, but still more to do to the gas tank and seat as yet.

But will add more photo's as I go along, as I get many emails asking about this build and I am sure my old mate is checking up on the Progress and is eager to get his hands on this Road Warrior.

Almost done with this seat, it has Leather and snaps but still go to add a race number, but almost there and I love the way the Color works on this creation.

The front end is almost completed but, I am awiting a NEW front fender from the united kingdom, as this will add to the Nostalgia, as well as the Classic lines that i envisioned when i started to get an idea as to how this was going to go.

The harness and ALL the electrical is now all brand new, from the harness, the switches, the battery, the coils, the soilnoid, the Solid state rectifier set up too, so no issues with this puppy.

Plus I made a cool Custom oil Filter cover from the old one.

And this does make a nice transformation to the bike from the front end at least.

I also did a bunch of other things that i thought I would share with you.

Today i fitted the rebuilt carbs and then I made some Aircraftd braided overflow pipes and then made an Aluminum catch tube and used that to fill the void in the frame where the old main stand used to frequent.

As well as polishing all the parts i made, i did fit a New non maintenance battery and shall also fit a Batter tender to this, so no issues with flat batteries.

I also fitted a Solid state regulator kit so plenty of volatge at a constant 14.5 volts too.

New throttle cables and new clutch cable will be here this week.

new switches as well as Original GT grips from the 1970's add to the flvor of this ride.

There are a few more little tricks going on this but still in the mick up mode and hope to get all that done by next week with any luck.

The exhaust is my own style like Yoshimura and has a good baffle that sounds awesome. You can check the sound by going to my parts page and looking up the exhaust section, i think you will be bloody suprised to be honest.

I fitted my finned Breather cover too, very cool and out of solid 6061 billet T6 Aluminum too.

This is RED now and looks great on Jacks ride and many will comment on this as it fits nice and snug in the frame too.

I am also adding all the braided hose to the Motor.

And the Motor will look great once everything is polished and detailed.

As I think they look unreal when they are sat in the chassis, its just All Engine.

As you can see, I took all the honda logo's off and polished all the casesm to hell and bike, this is a stunning machine to say the least, I really want Jack to be more stoked than an old steam ships boiler when he see's this ride for him.

Ok next up was the brake caliper, as the old one was as stiff as road kill.

So, I took the piston out by using an old set of handle bars and a master cylinder, then I honed the bore and then I polished the caliper body, and also fitted new rubber seal and of course cleaned the piston up with a rubber polisher.

Now we are talking business, and this came out pretty good for a snotty piece of alloy.

I also had to polish the rear assembly as that was as bad, but I am glad I did now.

The next job is to polish the old caliper bracket and then fit it all to the lower fork leg, I will also use Aluminum Buttons headed bolts, as this gives me more room to fit a wider tire, as stock bolt heads will catch the tire as you try to fit it inside the fender later on.

The front fender fits like and Glove and dresses up that area really well.

I made an Engine mount out of 6061 Aluminum, then cut a recess and fitted The screamin Indian logo in the middle, this really is a nice touch to his ride.

next up, i thought about this for a while and as he used to road race, what would be better than a set of italian Torrozzi rear sets.

So I got the kit from italy and began putting it together.

These will be really cool on this bike and give him the old feel of the race days.

I love the way these actually work and the shifting is so much easier than the other after market brands out there to be honest.

OK, next up, I wanted to dress the sprocket cover up, so I cleaned all the oil from it and then went and drilled the heck out of it, making a pattern up as I went along.

I had an arm like popeye by the time I had finished this, but after I had Polished it and fitted the cover to the Motor, well, it was all worth it in the end.

This really is a cool set up and I know you will like this.

Next up, I wanted to try and build a Cool front headlight, so this time I thought I would incorperate a cool look, as he flies the Seahawk Helicopter, I would use a Tri-Bar style Bezel to look a bit like a Propeller or on his Seahawk, the ROTOR Blades.

This works quite well.

So, now we are getting there, not too much more to go and I can fire this baby up, but am stoked at the way she sits and looks right now.

The wiring is now all complete and I wanted to test the light.

I have also added another cool set up for the bike, I added a neutral light, but this time I applied it to the Main Nut on top of the steering stem, then wired through the stem and into the back of the headlight.

The bike is now going to get all buttoned up as I am finalizing a few things on this Creation.

I made sure everything was working correctly and now I just have a few more bits and bobs to iron out, the next step is to fit some of my chrome Bar end Mirrors on the Clubman's and that should be the front end done.

These are always a great set up as these are not them ugly Elephant ears you see on a lot of bikes, I have always used this set up.

I really wanted to have as much detail as I could muster for this USN themed Cafe Racer, and I thought it would be great for me to make an ID tag, the old dog tag and have all the information on it like owner, Vin number, Engine Number etc and tell them who built it.

I shot down to the Local Army and Navy store and got them to press me up a Dog tag, where upon I curved it to fit the frame rail ,and riveted it to the bike Chassis for all to see.

I am stoked how this looks now, and am sure Jack will be too?

I am now getting close to completing this long haul, but worth every minute as I have become great mates with jack and of course, got to know the USS NIMITZ Aircraft carrier, as well as the HS-6 Helocopters too.

I am now getting a few more things tied up and thought about how i could make something cool for the starter cover, as often this is missed out for any sort of detail work on builds etc, i usually paint them and decal them, but this time I wanted to keep some of the Helocopter them going and thought that I would attempt at making a .50 cal Ammunition box.

I actually broke the handle off my Harbor Freight tap and die set, and then I looked at the handle and thought, I could attach this to the starter cover, of which was welded, then stripped of all chrome, i then bead blasted and powder coated the starter cover a Drab Olive Color.

Then had the stenciling done on the top and simply clear coated, but then , I attached it and Bang!

There you go, one cool Ammo box that some of these helicopters have to carry from time to time.

After this I wondered what else can I do, I mean I have cleaned, polished, buffed, chromed, painted, powder coated and carefully gone over the Cafe bike to see what else I could do for this great guy that has put his life on the line, for us to be able to have the liberty we do.

I thought I would actually detail all the Allen Head bolts on the bike, and this will help the design flow, as the color is the same as the frame.

Now, doesn't that look the dogs wobblies?

The rear light is a cool set up and should sit on there proudly once worked out how to make a bracket, for it.

Here she is getting ready for it's debut at the International Motorcycle show in LONG BEACH.

That's the New owner and boy is he happy with the end result.

This was a long build but, worth it all, I met some of the crew when I visited them at the base, and now tragically some of them are not here now, - I know they are looking down giving the thumbs up on this bike, as it has many Naval themes on it.

I then thought about not only the bike being honored to them, I thought a Helicopter helmet with all their names airbrushed on the back of the helmet, alongside the colors of the bike and of course in memory of the Squadron, would be a fitting completion to this Motorcycle.

The headlight represents the blades of the Helicopter that the crew fly in.

Looking like a badly beaten trailer trash wife, this will soon be bruising the tarmac.
 
This will be torn down to its underpants and then like Steve Austin, we can rebuild him.
 
Motor is tired as your Granny after watching the Christian channel.
 
Cosmetically, this would be in the running for ugly bird of the week.
 
So, the creation will begin and soon, this snotter 750 should be re-vitalized.
 
Well, here is the frame, now as Red as a Baboons Arse.
 
Poweder coated battery Box and stainless bolts make this look the dogs wobblies.
 
Polished triple tree, painted fork ears and detail,detail, detail.
 
MY Clubman bars too, New top clamps and a Chrome headlight bucket.
 
Polished 1970's Aluminum Rim, polished hub, polished stainless spokes and I also polished the balls out of the fork bottoms.
 
Hand drilled Rotor and More attention to detail for this Classic Cafe Racer.
 
Polished Hub, polished and drilled brake plate, finned spacer, this is so Cool.
 
Look at that Polished Rear rim, stainless spokes and a Huge bad ass tire, I am envious myself.
 
Now we are talking, look at that stance, tis is a Kick ass ride Already !!!!
 
Now awaiting the Motor, and I am about to sling her in any minute.
 
Here she is, on the wooden Dolly and about to crack my back, getting her into the chassis.
 
Well, here is a quick way to get your Colon to crap Chunks. Fit this on ya own.
 
The Motor is now in, I struggled for abit, but managed to plop her in the cradle.
 
But now she is in, I can breathe easier, and it looks the Dogs Wobblies eh?
 
This bike will have more grunt than an angry pig once on the tarmac.
 
OK, here is the first of 2 gas tanks this Cafe Racer will own.
 
I have still to add pinlines in white and checkers in the middle, I want the gray to represent the color of the SeaHawk, and the Gas cap is Aeronautical.
 
I have mocked a seat up, but this one will have a flatter hump, to allow him to take his Mrs out for a burn up on the freeway. But also I shall have another longer tank and Rocket seat that will allow him to use for himself.
 
This time I though I would have another go, as I wanted the gas tank to really stand out and now I am so stoked at the effect this has.
 
This is now looking like I wanted it to and am gonna be happy having a Blast on this Classic Cafe Racer.
 
I have now made custom guages for his bike, check these out.
 
His Seahawk display is now copied onto my guages, very trick and he will like this.
 
Altitude meter is a must and is just like the Helicopters.
 
Painted oil tank and ready to fit in the frame.
 
The Screaming indians, a reminder of his Squadron now painted on side covers.
 
Custom made Aluminum stabilizer bar for the rear end.
 
I shall paint inside the fins RED to make this kick out, boy will this look cool.
 
Paint the bar red and then once dry, I use a rag and Thinner to clean up.
 
Now this looks great and has smooth lines, the detailing stands out now.
 
New old stock bolts fitted and this really does look trick on the bike.
 
Custom Chain guard is hand made, drilled,bent and chromed and really looks Great.
 
Well, I thought an X-Ring 530 RED chain would not only enhance the look of the rear, this chain is the best out there and at $230, it bloody better be.
 
This fits so well.
 
These hug tighter than a thirsty baby to a mothers nipple.
 
I then wanted to make some engine mount bolts using High grade all thread.
 
Adding Chrome Acorn nuts and washers, dress the area up for sure.
 
Now, doesn't that look a lot better than the stock boring Steel Honda Bolt?
 
Removed the Clutch cover, cleaned all the dirt, oil, grime and snot from it and then I polished the balls out of it, fitted new gasket and greased the release plate and all back together with polished stainless Allen head bolts.
 
Removed the gear shift cover, but, the stock screws were softer than a Bunch of Librarian kick boxers. So had to use the impact screwdriver to get them puppies off.
 
Don't get wrists like a Russian Shot Putter trying to unscrew every bolt, sling the cordless drill in there, sure saves time and muscle.
 
I took the stator off too, as I am going to polish all these parts, oh yeah, Newbies? If ya gonna do this, make sure you drain the Oil first, else there will be more pools of 10-40 than the Tin - Man with no bladder control.
 
I machined an old filter cover and polished the whole area, now ready for detailing.
 
New Filter, O-Rings and Bolt, will finish this off nicely.
 
Looking good now, slowly taking shape and I am enjoying building this Cafe Racer.
 
My very New finned Aluminum Breather cover is perfect for this ride.
 
This fits snug in the frame and fills the gap up, to show off the inline four.
 
I used a new rubber gasket to seal this up tight and polished Allen head bolts.
 
Original 1974 GT Grips are gonna be used on this ride.
 
Now this has the Classic look of yesteryear and helps with any vibration in the bar.
 
NEW left side Handlebar switch was purchased from Japan and now looks Perfect.
 
Polished the old Clutch lever and now looks as good as new.
 
Next up, I made a new cable for the Battery, keeping the color scheme going.
 
Using my New parts, I decided to have a chrome Air breather filter.
 
Easy to mount to the left side of the engine and looks pretty cool to be honest.
 
Purchased Brand New coils, Genuine HONDA set, over $300 but, these are so cool and I like using Genuine parts where I can.
 
Of course, I had to have Genuine Plug Caps as well.
 
These sit in snug and everything is New, even the wire harness.
 
The old set of carbs were as crappy as a used diaper, these need a total rebuild.
 
Totally rebuilt, cleaned and adjusted, these are like New again.
 
These turned out so good and am happy I tore into them now, still have the stench of old Gas on my hands a few days later though.
 
Sometimes a bugger to get on, I use new intakes and a little grease and on they go.
 
New intake manifolds and stainless Hose clamps do dress this area up nicely.
 
yeah, New throttle cables are a muct, this will be like a new bike, just like all my other creations, and the throttle feels nice and snappy.
 
I managed to locate some Original Racing Japanese bell mouth velocity stacks, and these really set the carbs off now.
 
Looking like Hungry Crows, these stacks ate Bloody cool eh?
 
Fitted the hose and some cool braided aircraft style braiding to keep in the right guise.
 
Made an aluminum spacer for the throttle body and fitted Original 1970's GT grip.
 
Fitted the Braided aircraft hose to my Custom Breather unit.
 
More Aircraft hose, this time for the overflow bowls for the Carbs, these will dress that part of the motor up well and of course, is functional.
 
All cut to size and routed into a Custom resevoir I made, this is now taking shape.
 
The caliper all completly rebuilt with more shine than a a polished Bald head, this caliper is now ready for my Special Braided hose brake lines, and this is now done.
 
Fitting my New Braided hose brake line and this is Aircraft quality all the way.
 
Now, doesnt that look bloody cool ? I am sure you lot are Nodding ya heads?
 
Freshly polished Master Cylinder sits proudly atop MY Clubmans, now for my New product, the Aircraft quality braided hose, direct to your caliper and is a nice touch.
 
Took the old stator cover off, removed the stator and infield coil and then I went about and removed the Honda logo etc on a Linishing wheel, then buffed the outside up.
 
The stator and gear shift cover got the same treatment with new gaskets and polished Allen head bolts to finish the look off.
 
Yeah, this looks Bloody excellent and I am glad I went the extra mile on this set up.
 
I also added a New Oil pressure guage, as thats a Must for this Motor.
 
The Front Motor mount now has the logo of his Squadron inside it.
 
I drilled the Balls out of this thing and it looks cool now eh?
 
Filled the old display cluster out by hand to make a new set up with the Navy theme inside it to show a warning light, thats really important on the HS6 Helicopters.
 
Now has the same set up as in his Seahawk and works great too.
 
Here it is all lit up, as it would be in his ride when he is in the air, but hope that never happens whilst flying.
 
The seat gets his Lucky number painted on the side, and this looks great.
 
Gas tank gets the Logo on the side of the flank to show some of his history.
 
Top of tank looks the part with racing stripes and monz flip top aluminum Gas Cap.
 
Obligatory Navy key ring for the ignition key of course.
 
Well, I thought about this a bit and then came to the conclusion that if its a Miltary bike, then it needs to have a Dog Tag, so off i went to the store and made up a Dog Tag for the bike.
 
I wanted to keep some of the cool stuff the Seahawk has, and thought that I would change the Starter cover into a .50 Cal Ammunition box.
 
Say's it all really.
 
Now it is time to add some subtle detailing, like the heads of the bolts.
 
Even the Bar clamp got the same detail treatment.
 
clutch cover also had the detailing and i did this by hand with a paint brush.
 
Now were talking, this sets off the frame nicely and am glad I painstakingly did this.
 
The rear light was really hard to fit, my Buddy Rob, at Tach'd out motorsports, came to the rescue with a bracket he made out of some old Aluminum, but buy did it work out fine, and the light fits and looks good now.
 
Here am outside the show in LONG BEACH.
 
This is a Great looking Motorcycle, so glad I built this now.
 
Here she is, looking like a Champ and a very cool bike indeed, I love this machine.
 
The bike flows and is a nice color combination, and the owner is totally stoked.
 
The gas tank sits well and a nice aggressive stance of the whole ride.
 
The DID rim is a 30 year old classic and of course. my own license plate holder looks the part as well ,and people seem to like this style.
 
Here is the Helmet I created for Jack and it's the same color scheme as the bike.
 
Back end of the helicopter helmet by AGV , the original new paint was removed and then I wanted to make this look simular to the paint scheme of the Road Warrior.
 
It say's it all to be honest.