I wanted to take some time with this post because it deals with a lot of the quintessential reasons for why I originally posted. So, if my post seems a little long, please forgive me.
mysta2 wrote:Why would you want to try to recreate something that you know nothing about? What's wrong with buying yourself a project bike, and restoring it. If you think you can't afford a project bike I really doubt you can afford to build one (from the ground up?). After the engine which can easily cost you 6 grand and the frame at maybe 3 grand (I'm not talking about cheap crappy parts), you still have a long way to go before you reach the "nickle dimeing" stage. One of my friends is currently building a bike and it's amazing all the things you think are little before you start that turn out to be big, (same deal with my own project) I'm not sure what you're calling "ground up" it sounds like you don't want a custom, ground up to me means starting with a pile of raw steel, a motor, carbs, tires, and brakes and ending with a bike.
First I think many presumptions have been made what I want to do or what I’ve intended by your post. Mostly at this point, I was trying to see what is out there and exactly what I wanted. Some things are obvious. First are the things are bikes I don’t want:
• Tour Bike
• Crotch Rockets
• Under 800cc
• Chopper
• Off-Road Bikes
That would lead to the next point. There are many bikes that are over 800cc that would be more practical then an HD and that is obvious. But I have had one by a foreign manufacturer before and I spent the time on that bike wanting nothing more then to set it aflame and to get myself a Harley.
Now, it would be nice if I could find a bike that was in distress and give it some care and bring it back to spec’s but I don’t think that its going to happen around here. I would love to think that it could happen but that’s like trying to find a supermodel to marry in the middle of Flint Michigan. Most of the bikes that are around here are people whom want to dump there Harleys for around $14,000 (that seems to be the magic number here) and they are usually the tour bikes. So with that in mind there are a couple of other things that I refuse to do:
• Buy a new Harley Davidson; it would take far too long to look at this option.
• Buy someone else’s old crap
Now that I have said what I won’t do, the list that I will do is much larger because at this point, everything is on the table. To presume what I will do is a little to far premature because the part of the plan that your talking about I haven’t even considered. At this point, I’m doing an open forum of what I do like and that is:
• Low Rider
• Fat Boy
• 1958 Duo Glide (possibly not to spec)
Now, you claim that I’m reinventing the wheel and to some degree you maybe right. I will admit that a Harley is a very, very, very expensive proposition indeed. At best, at this time I plan to devote about $5000 a year to it. I will admit that this figure is nothing stellar or anything to be proud of. So I hope in a few years from idea to road that it maybe accomplished. But the first thing to bear in mind is that I haven’t made my mind up on anything with the exception of the two things that I won’t do.
What I have decided is that I’m never going to be taken advantage of again which is part of the reason why I may not put the thing completely together but I would hope to have some hand in it. When I owned my foreign bike I knew less then nothing and I was soaked because I didn’t know the basics of small engines. But at the time I didn’t know any better and I didn’t know what to question. This time around, I want things to be different. I don’t want to claim that I will be able to fix everything but I don’t want to have to rely on every F&*%ing dealer that is out there for something a little more sophisticated then an oil change. And that’s why I’m doing my studying right now (or will start soon) because there will be subjects that I will never be comfortable with and some things I can’t do but at least if I can hold a conversation with a mechanic, I want to be able to hold an intelligent conversation and know what he is talking about and there will be an improvement.
Another reason why I’m doing this is to buy the tools. I know that I could rely on someone to do everything but I don’t want to do that. I know your probably thinking why buy the tools for the transmission or something other that you have specific in mind but you don’t know what I have. When I said that I’m starting from scratch, I meant that more then literally. I think that I might have 4 screwdrivers and one very small ratchet set around this whole d#$%ed house and that is it. Most of the time when I need something, I have to borrow it or hope that a relative has it and it’s getting pretty f&%*ing old.
Outside of that, the dealer that I have last spoken to has been one of the best that I have even seen. I say that because he was cool about how he sold his bikes (or parts therein). Frankly, he would sell me new, used, part, whole, aftermarket or any other configuration. I know that some ways of doing things are cheaper then doing them others but that’s not what I’m after. Frankly, one of the biggest objectives in doing this is just to know the piece of steel that is between my legs when I’m riding it. It doesn’t mean that I have to go forge the steel myself, but it does mean that when it leaks or doesn’t start that I will have some direction of knowing and possibly the knowledge to fix it. So to presume that I expect this to be easy, cheap, efficient, or hassle free is the least from my mind.
mysta2 wrote:I think the last thing you need to do if you want to learn what it's like to build a bike it watch American Chopper, those guys don't build bikes to ride, and they make it look easy... it's not.
I’m not sure that if you were being sarcastic or truthful by this remark but I have never once watched an episode with the OCC crew and I probably never will. First, I hate yelling and reality TV. Second, I hate choppers. Third, I’m afraid that they will raise my expectations and I don’t want that. Right now they are very low because I expect this to be one of the hardest, most grueling and expensive ventures I’ve ever faced and I want to keep it that way. Right now, my only goal is whatever I decide on will see some real road time and that is it.
I know personally, I’m not intimidated by anything and maybe that is really a bad thing. Just like when I talk to my cousin and we talk about tearing down a motor and putting new head gaskets on or doing something else that touches includes tearing into one you would think that its brain surgery or rocket science. Personally, I’m not intimidated but on the other hand I’m not stupid either (or at least I think). Because I always respond (with the proper manuals) how are you going to learn? But he always tells me that it’s too expensive and not worth the time. Maybe he is right…
mysta2 wrote:I certianly respect your' standoff approach I've always been more of a head firster because I can't learn jack from a book... my crash course methods have cost me a lot of money (but it's never in vain)
Well, I would learn best with a working or non-working bike the best and then take it step by step but that’s far too expensive and a waist of money…so working with the knowledge is the best option at this point, I would think…
Pick up a J&P Cycles vintage catalog (all harley, all the time)[/quote]
Thanks for that…I didn’t know anything about that magazine…