Also, this build is/will-be *extremely* slow. I've got a 2 year old and a pregnant wife who tends to give me the dreaded "fine" when I tell her I'm heading into the workshop or worse, buying a part.
That being said, I've gotten so much info from the site and Pete's and Big Rich's builds in particular that despite documenting most of it on Instagram, I told Pete I'd finally add a build thread.
Here is the inspiration sketch (still subject to change):
(So I'm essentially reinventing the Triumph Scrambler?)
The philosophy behind this bike is to build it from the ground up, learning as much as I can and DIYing/fabricating as much as I can. I want to touch, learn about, and customize/improve every single part on the bike.
So while the future updates will likely be "added a bracket!" every 3 months, here's the progress so far:
I know many users on this forum get very upset when people chop up perfectly good bikes, so let me assure you: It was *not* a perfectly good bike:
But hey, it was $250 and has a proper title.
So to supplement the "Bike In A Box", I bought a friend's untitled GS450 project for another $100. Again....not in any sort of viable condition.
Did lots of sketching various ideas and figuring out what I wanted out of my bike and decided I really wanted a scrambler capable of comfortable highway, but most at home on fireroads and dirt trails and maybe some mild singletrack.
So first thing I did was cave to peer pressure of my buddy and decide I was going to upgrade instead of resto-mod. So I decided I'd go monoshock and dual disk front brakes, cause why not?
So with advice found on this site and confirmed on others, I decided to go with a GS850 front end and swap in a swingarm from a Ninja250 with a shock from a Ninja ZX6.
The front end swapped right in, but the swingarm needed a little less than an inch shaved off the sides and the bushings that were welded into the frame needed to be ground flush, but other than that, it fits perfectly!
I visited Dave from Vudu Vintage in Austin (used to live in Houston, TX now I'm in Flushing, MI) and he helped me put in an upper shock mount, resulting in the new stance for the bike:
Next up, I got tired of having to lay the frame on it's side or lean it up against stuff, so I fabbed up new centerstand bracketry. (The monoshock interfered with both the side stand and the center stand. I've had both on most of my previous bikes and I pretty much only use centerstands, so I'm not even bothering with a side-stand on this bike). Biggest concern with the centerstand was clearing both the monoshock dogbone pivot and the oil pan. Very small window, but should fit once the engine is back in.
Ok, this is getting a little long-winded, so the next posts will mostly be pictures to speak for themselves!
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