Re: [SkunkworksAMA] Sorta off-topic, but interesting to any motorcycle lovers. And it's furry!

From: G. Love <drake_wolf_17_at_yahoo.com>
Date: Sun, 25 Dec 2005 16:48:55 -0800 (PST)

sweet ride. I've always liked the look of motorcycles, more the 'rice rockets' than the big Harley D's. what does it take to get a motorcycle lisence?

-G. Love

"Take a wild, friggin guess" <a_change_of_plans_at_yahoo.com> wrote: Hey all-
   Just uploaded some pictures of the bike I built. They're in
 the "Files" section, in the "Other" folder. The folder name
 is "Twinstar photos" or something like that.
   Anyway, I thought I'd put these online so anyone interested in
 this kinda thing could check them out. Below is a list of some stats
 and modifications, for those curious few:
 
 Original bike: 1982 Honda CM200T Twinstar (yeah, it's a small bike,
 but damn near bullet-proof, and a lot of fun to scoot around on).
 Displacement: 194cc
 Modifications:
   Stretched frame about 3 inches. Increased rake of steering head.
 Removed any non-essential frame parts. Gas tank is a 3.5 gallon King
 Sportster tank with a right-hand side fuel outlet. The seat is a Le
 Pera medium solo seat, modified and mounted to a hand-built seat
 bracket assembly. The rear fender used to be the front fender to my
 1995 Honda Shadow 600. Taillight is a non-DOT-approved Sparto
 chopper taillight. Turn signals are dual-LED clearance marker
 lights. Headlight was originally an off-road truck light, which I
 removed the original lamp assembly from, and replaced with a 5.75"
 headlight unit. Handlebar switchbox housings are hand-made, and
 incorporate lighted switches for the turn signal functions.
 Speedometer is a CAT EYE bicycle computer. Indicator lights are
 actually LED bolts, mounted to the top of the left-hand side "battery
 box" (only the right-hand box contains the battery. The left-hand
 box contains all the electronic circuitry and such). Four indicator
 lights: green (neutral), white (low beam), blue (high beam) and
 purple (running lights). This bike can be run with all the lights
 off. Dual fog lights are _old_ prefocused units I had bought about
 10 years ago. Left and right side boxes were originally circuit
 board project boxes from Radio Shack. Rewired the entire bike, and
 it now features a keyless ignition set-up (as well as a motion-
 sensitive alarm system built for about 12 bucks). Intake system was
 redesigned as a ram-air unit, and filtration is performed by a small
 3" diameter UNI air filter. Exhaust is a stepped system, going from
 1 3/8" at the cylinder, to 1 3/4" outer diameter for the headpipes.
 They merge together beneath the engine in a 2" O.D. collector, and
 exit through a rebuilt 2" core Supertrapp car muffler. Rear
 suspension was replaced with 1" square steel stock, and the afore-
 mentioned seat was connected to a frame-mounted hinge. Two bolts,
 capped with rubber bushings and steel washers, prevent the seat from
 coming up any higher than in the photos (they slide through slots in
 a heavy-guage steel panel mounted to the top of the frame, beneath
 the seat). The seat pan is attached to a 150/100-lb Progressive
 Suspension rear shock, which is also mounted (at the bottom) to the
 frame backbone. This allows the seat to soak up some of the bumps
 one might otherwise encounter on a rigid cycle. The back tire is a
 4.60 X 16, which is the largest I could fit on the rim without
 rubbing against the swingarm (stock tire is 3.50 X 16). The bike was
 painted entirely with spray cans (the black paint is a hammered
 finish paint, while the top of the gas tank is a color-changing paint
 that goes from green to purple). The artwork and lettering I cut out
 at work, and sealed them under clear polyurethane paint. And for
 those of you wondering what the symbols on the side are, they are the
 hieroglyphs which spell Onika's name.
   Total price to build? Less than 600 bucks! Total time involved?
 I lost count, man. And I can honestly say I will probably never
 undertake such a demanding project ever again. I'm now just waiting
 for a rectifier unit and the tachometer (which will be mounted on
 that flat aluminum panel between the handlebar mounts).
 
 --JMH



                
---------------------------------
 Yahoo! DSL Something to write home about. Just $16.99/mo. or less
Received on Sun Dec 25 2005 - 16:48:57 CST

This archive was generated by hypermail 2.3.1 : Sat Nov 30 2019 - 17:52:09 CST