August 31, 2006 Part 1
By Bandit |
www.samdixon.com
Hey,
We’re heading to Bonneville tomorrow along with the Discovery boys, Wink Eller, and every speed nut to roam the earth. Just yesterday we pulled all our bling together for our Bonneville Sponsors, and it came out killer, thanks to Chris Kallas, 5-Ball racing artist. Renz Wear in Pedro and Chris Tronolone in Hawaii.
We’ve been hammering on the bike every night till after 2:00 in the morning. A HORSE deadline hung over my head all week and the words were on the tip of my tongue. I was going to write about this effort and brotherhood.
I’m still going to carve out the story, if Geno will extend my deadline by 12 days. If he doesn’t, snooze he looses. You’ll read it here on Bikernet. Let’s hit the news so I can scramble back down to the shop and test ride the Salt Shaker:
TALLADEGA NIGHTS COMES TO BIKERNET– Sorry it took so long to get these, but please find a couple shots of composer Alex Wurman (“Talladega Nights”) proudly displaying his collection of bikes.
–Tom Kidd
Costa Communications
We will interview Alex as soon as I return from Bonneville.–
Bandit
DOUG KEIM SECRET–To build bikes like the pros, it’s integral that you pick the right parts. A smart yet simple decision is to work with top-of-the-line parts by working with Doug Keim Creative Cycles products. Already being used by many of the top custom builders, the Doug Keim Creative Cycles Oil Star attaches any three oil lines in a more natural round shape than the standard flat shape of most other clamps out on the market.
CNC-machined from 6061 T6 billet aluminum; the Oil Star Line Holder is finished in polished or high-quality chrome. Just remember, to build like the pros, work with parts that make the most sense. The Oil Star is part of the Doug Keim Creative Cycles parts line, the entire line can be seen on the DKCC website.
For more information, contact: Doug Keim Creative Cycles, (732) 751-1403, www.creativecycles.com/
MOTORCYCLE RIDERS FOUNDATION PRESIDENT RESIGNS– MRF President Karen Bolin tendered her resignation to the MRF Board of Directors last evening citing several serious health issues as the reason.
Kirk “Hardtail” Willard who is the current Vice President of the MRF will assume the role as interim President until the scheduled elections in September are held.
“We are obviously deeply saddened and concerned in hearing this news. The Motorcycle Riders Foundation and the entire motorcycle community owes Karen a great deal of gratitude for her service over the years and on behalf of the MRF our thoughts and best wishes go out to her, said Kirk”
CUSTOM CHROME CONTINUES TO REFINE AND IMPROVE– Morgan Hill, CA- Following the recent announcement appointing Holger Mohr as President, Custom Chrome and acting Custom Chrome Europe Managing Director, Global Motorsport Group (GMG) is pleased to announce the appointment of Dan Cook as the acting CEO of Global Motorsport Group. Dan will report directly to Jeff Fenton, Chairman of the board at Global Motorsport Group.
Effective September 5, 2006 Dan Cook, currently GMG’s COO, will replace John Lott, CEO. John has chosen to leave GMG to pursue other personal and professional interests. The company wishes John success in his future pursuits.
“I’m excited about the opportunity and GMG’s future, commented Cook. Global has been fortunate to have very loyal dealers over the years and remains focused on serving their needs. The business as a whole is being completely refocused and reenergized to this end. We began repositioning the business earlier this spring by implementing a more streamlined distribution and operations network, and by dedicating both financial and human capital to ensure we stock the newest, highest quality parts for our dealers”. In the move, Holger Mohr will continue to head up Global’s Custom Chrome business worldwide, while Tim Dodd will maintain responsibility for Global’s Motorcycle Stuff business.
THE SUNDAY POST CHANGED LIVES–I just tuned in to the Sunday update and laid these old eyes on a blue eyed hardbelly with pouty red lips, a wasp waist and creamy milkers the size of New Jersey….and she even has freckles in the valley between ’em !! I am in LOVE again and life is worth living once more !!! She is fuckin’ perfect !
Just gazing upon her is worth every single penny of the $16.60 I paid to join up….yes, I also bought yer damn book ! Thanks for showing me life as it should be….and can we see more of her ?
–Dusty
We gotta thank Sam Dixon, the photog behind Michele McCurry’s images. —
OKLAHOMA UNDER INVESTIGATION–I read the week of August 24th post, with special interest in the article by Tiger Mike Revere, State Coordinator of ABATE of Oklahoma. I noticed the enforcement problem concerning some officers thinking that spotlights are headlights, and they ticket bikers for too many (three) headlights.
There was a similar problem by some officers in Minnesota some years back, as I recall, and tickets were issued. The defense quite accurately stated that Harley-Davidson must certify that their product meets and complies with any state laws in order to sell motorcycles in that particular state. Therefore, if they are in compliance with state law, there cannot be tickets issued for illegal headlights (since there is only one headlight, the others being spotlights).
You might want to pass this along to Tiger Mike. The stock configuration of headlight and two spots is a legal system and does not constitute three headlights, or else Harley would not be able to sell their bike in those states with restrictions on the number of headlights.
–Pan
CYRIL HUZE SIGNATURE BOBBER–If you are a Bobbers fan, here your opportunity to own a Cyril Huze Signature Bobber featuring very cool features (if you buy as is) plus the ones that you can decide directly with Cyril if you want him to complete it following your wish list & budget.
First, the frame was hand made with no stretch, a 32-degree rake for a true bobber look. Transmission plate is welded to the frame, rear axles are CNC machined for a 1″ rear axle, and the frame neck got internal fork stops. A custom gas tank was hand made, then Frisco mounted with recessed brackets for a very clean look. The rear fender was fabricated to be also the oil tank and contains 4 quarts of oil. Custom oil lines exit invisibly and are routed through the frame post
Engine is Rev Tech modern with a retro Panhead look. Size is 100″ 4×4, highly polished, and is EPA & CARB legal for use in all 50 States (E.O. # M-073-001). Transmission is 6-speed,left side drive. All the hard work of setting up the drive line has been done, and includes a BDL 3″ open belt, chain final drive and a brake/sprocket kit. Front end is Springer type wide glide with Z-bars on 7″ risers. A custom battery box was fabricated and sit at the bottom of the frame just behind the transmission.
Rear wheel is 60-spoke with a 200/55 x 18″ Avon Venom tire. Front is 60-spoke with a 120/70 x 21″ Avon Vemom tire. You can buy this awesome custom chassis as is or let Cyril turn it in another masterpiece.
Cyril Huze
Tel: 561-392-5557
Fax: 561-392-9923
www.cyrilhuze.com
BIKERNET MARRIAGE COUNSELING–When I was married 25 years, I took a look at my wife one day andsaid, “Honey, 25 years ago, we had a cheap apartment, a cheap car, slept ona sofa bed and watched a 10 inch black and white TV, but I got to sleepevery night with a hot 25 year old blonde.
Now, we have a nice house, nice car, big bed and plasma screen TV, butI’m sleeping with a 50 year old woman. It seems to me that you are notholding up your side of things.”
My wife is a very reasonable woman. She told me to go out and find ahot 25 year old blonde, and she would make sure that I would once again beliving in a cheap apartment, driving a cheap car and sleeping on a sofabed.
Aren’t older women great. They really know to solve your mid-lifecrises….
CHOPPER EXPO OF ATLANTIC CITY–Oct 01, 2006:Chopper Xpo 2006 of Atlantic City, 1 Miss America Way, Atlantic City, NJ — BIGGER and LOUDER — Fun for everyone 100’s of top bike builders and vendors 300,000 sq ft of space in Atlantic City Convention Center. The place for all your motorcycle needs (and wants). Food, Beer, Fun, Kids Only Section, Adults Only section, Tattoo artists, live music, after parties, autographs etc…..
609-748-4167
SHOW CANCELATION– Thank you for posting our event, the SMTS Car, Truck & Motorcycle Show on September 16th at Green Cove Springs, Florida. However, we have had to cancel the show entirely and I cannot find your original e-mail so that I could remove the listing myself.
Can you please remove it so people don’t come out and find that it has been cancelled? I would hate to do that to people. Thank you so much for posting it originally, wish it didn’t have to be cancelled.
–Gale Hill, Event Coordinator
HARDBIKES TORTURE TESTS THEIR MOTORCYCLES TO ENSURE DURABILILTY AND PERFORMANCE–Hermitage, PA – July 31, 2006 – Hardbikes torture tests their production motorcycles with real world riding to ensure durability, performance and quality workmanship. Harry Bostard, infamous biker-at-large and Motor Drome rider, has just completed 15,000 miles on a production SC330 Chopper taken right off the production line in April of this year.
“Everyone talks about the quality and durability of their bikes but actually proving it to the riding public can be another matter all together,” said Bob Kay, Hardbikes VP Sales and Marketing. “Hardbikes has stated their commitment to quality and reliability from day one and we have developed a system to assure that every one of our custom motorcycles will be the best handling, most reliable custom bike on the road.”
Hardbikes employs a multi-phase quality program that begins with the motorcycle design. Bob Kay taps his 35 years of motorcycle experience and develops a motorcycle blueprint. Kay?s design is turned over to engineering to proof out every aspect from chassis design to component compatibility. The next phase requires 10,000 road miles, in real weather under all types of real world conditions. As issues come up in the evaluation program they are resolved and integrated back into the production cycle.
As Bostard pulled into the 2006 edition of Sturgis he said, “This is the best handling, most comfortable, long fork chopper I have ever ridden.” Not a bad comment after 15,000 miles.
Bostard received a lot of comments during his cross country test trip on the SC330 big-meat Chopper. The most common remark was how many enthusiasts were surprised to see a beautiful custom chopper actually being ridden long distance.
Hardbikes is very proud and stands tall next to every custom motorcycle created out of their Hermitage, PA facility. We encourage everyone to visit their local dealer and take a 330 for a test ride.
NEW EXILE FORK FROM STORZ/CERIANI–We are pleased to announce a new version of the Storz/Ceriani 55mm Inverted fork produced exclusively for sale by Exile Cycles.
Exile Cycles founder Russell Mitchell in collaboration with Steve Storz of Storz Performance has introduced the new 55mm fork for his latest creation, the “RX Streetfighter”, which was featured in a recent episode of the Biker Buildoff television series. The first Exile machine to use swingarm rear suspension, the RX Streefighter uses Storz/Ceriani fork legs with specially designed Exile lower legs and triple trees. The new forks will also fit Exile’s rigid frames and are available with Mid or Wide style trees.
The lower fork legs are machined from solid 6061-T6 billet aluminum in a one-piece design that includes the brake mounting tabs. Fork features include a precision cartridge damping system, progressively wound chrome silicon fork springs, and a built-in lowering kit that allows the overall length to be shortened by 1″.
The billet triple trees are also a Russell Mitchell design, featuring windows machined through the upper and lower trees for a clean, lightweight competition style appearance.The fork legs and trees are finished in a polished, black anodized finish.
A 4c jpeg image is attached. If additional product information is required, please contact:
Storz Performance, Inc. 805-641-9540
For sales inquiries contact: Exile Cycles 818-255-3330.
2007 DYNA PRO-STREET– Bassani Pipes has just released their record setting PRO STREET exhaust system for 2007 Harley Dyna models. Developed specifically for use on machines fit with the latest “closed loop FI” system, these new pipes have accommodations for the factory Oxygen sensor which is a requirement when running the OEM injection. Aggressive “Let’s-get-it-on” styling combined with superior exhaust flow characteristics put the latest from the Bassani works in a class all their own. Offered in Slash Cut and Straight cut styles for Mid and Forward Control models.
Pipes are fabricated from 16-gauge steel and feature stepped head pipes, rugged show quality hard chrome finish and Bassani’s unique tunable/replaceable flow-through baffle system.
2007 DYNA PRO-STREET pipes retail for $459.00. Call 866-439-4287 or catch them on the Web at
Continued On Page 2
August 31, 2006 Part 3
By Bandit |
Continued From Page 2
VT BIKERNET RACE GIRL REPORT–By the way I made it to the semi finals… 9.38 seconds was my best pass and qualified 5th in the V-Rod Destroyer class.
–Valerie Thompson
KATMANDU COVERS COTTONWOOD HORSE SMOKE-OUT WEST FOR BIKERNET–With the effervescence of Cottonwood just weeks away, I wanted to let you to know that I continue to be the one of hardest working women in the biker lifestyle journalism. I will be one of the lackeys from The Horse Backstreet Choppers in Arizona for this inaugural western event. I am excited about meeting the builders and the people that will attend. I can tell you that with first hand experience that a Horse Back Street Choppers Smoke Out is, by far, one of the coolest parties one will ever attend. But you know that, Chief, since you’ve been to one in Salisbury!
Then, three days after that, I am heading to New England for an ol skool chopper show put on by the home boys in Willimantic, Connecticut. Gary Gagnon and his wife, Brenda, owners of Thread City Cycles, find the time every spring to make it to Willie?s Tropical Tattoo in Ormond Beach, Florida for that show and they knew that they could bring the same favor to northeastern Connecticut. October is a great time of year in the eastern parts of the states for riding and so far, invitations have been sent out to 77 neighboring shops and six biker bars in the tri-state area. Rodz will be given special parking status as it should be.
Now New England can get in on the action as well. Dave Perewitz said he would like to ride over from Massachusetts for the day since he leaves for Daytona and Biketoberfest the following weekend.
I look forward to meeting the shop owners, builders and biker folks in Connecticut and beyond. Call Gary and Brenda at 860-456-2453 or reach them at threadcitycycles@yahoo.com. Tell them I sent you.
–KAT
CLERGY/COP LESSON–A young clergyman, fresh out of seminary, thought it would help him better understand the fears and temptations his future congregations faced if he first took a job as a policeman for a year.
He passed the physical examination and then came the oral exam to test his ability to act quickly and wisely in an emergency.
Among other questions he was asked, “What would you do to disperse a frenzied crowd”?
He thought for a moment and then said, “I would take up a collection.”
–from Rev CarlR
THE REBEL BUELL/SPORTSTER REPORT–Rub a dub dub, give the tank a scrub and make it nice and shinny. Now for registration…
–Rebel
THE DOUG KEIM SOLUTION–In a matter of seconds Doug Keim Creative Cycles has a solution to rid you of an eyesore on your ride. Do you love your Mikuni HSR 42 or HSR 45 carb but hate that really ugly idle adjuster hose that just hangs down with no where to go? Or how about that unattractive white plastic knob on your awesome set of Dual Mikunis?
The solution to these aesthetic issues is a Doug Keim Creative Cycles CNC-Billet Idle Adjuster Screw. Problem solved with a simple swap and a few seconds of your time.
The Idle Adjuster Screw is part of the Doug Keim Creative Cycles parts line, the entire line can be seen on the DKCC website.
For more information, contact: Doug Keim Creative Cycles, (732) 751-1403, www.creativecycles.com.
MICHIGAN GOVERNOR VETOS HELMET REPEAL–As you may recall, the helmet repeal bill (SB297) in Michigan had been passed by the legislature and sent to governor Granholm for her signature — and she decided to veto the legislation on June 23rd. She claimed that “Repealing the requirement that motorcyclists wear helmets would be costly to all Michigan families.” Also that “…the bill would force higher medical and insurance costs on all Michigan citizens.”
This is the same as saying that bikers are irresponsible, burdensome, and do not have insurance. She also defied her obligations of protecting the rights of individuals, to include adult and personal choices.
“I Am Not A Public Burden”
BROTHER STARTS INFIDELS MC–Finally joined the site to see the girls… Lifelong rider, blah blah… I need feedback on an idea: with all the shit happening in the world, and with the loonies in the middle east calling us all infidels & trying to kill us, it’s time someone formed the “Infidels MC” (I checked the net; there was a club in Wisconsin, but it doesn’t appear to be active; followup is required.)
Club colors could be a pig humping osama etc. I’m thinking an internet based club, big on merch. Membership could be fairly open: must own bike(s) and gun(s) and use both. Profits could be used for worthwhile things like sending BBQ ribs to the troops in Iraq… Not sure if bikernet.com is the proper venue, but maybe you know who would run with such an idea…
No I don’t do drugs (much)
–Billy H
vapex@shaw.ca>
Northern Alberta
NEW SCREAMIN’ EAGLE STREET PERFORMANCE MUFFLERS–MILWAUKEE (August 21, 2006) – The new Screamin’ Eagle Street Performance Slip-On Mufflers from Harley-Davidson Genuine Motor Accessories are tuned to satisfy the most discriminating Harley motorcycle enthusiast. The aggressive sound quality of these street-legal mufflers is paired with performance comparable to Screamin’ Eagle II race-use mufflers. The chrome-plated mufflers feature a new ballistic-shape inlet and embossed Screamin’ Eagle signature script.
Each set of Street Performance Slip-On Mufflers has been specifically designed and tuned by Harley-Davidson engineers for 2007 fuel-injected Sportster models and 2007 Dyna, Softail and Touring models powered by the new Twin Cam 96 engine, with a variety if tip designs. See dealer for fitment details.
For additional information on Harley-Davidson Genuine Motor Accessories, see your local Harley-Davidson dealer or visit the Harley-Davidson Web site at www.harley-davidson.com. To find a dealer near you, call toll free 1-800-443-2153 in the U.S.A. or Canada.
RALLY IN THE ROCKIES CANCELLED– MANCOS -Rally in the Rockies organizer Dan Bradshaw, and vendors and attendees hold a meeting in what would be the rally’s beer tent at Echo Basin Ranch east of Mancos on Tuesday. Bradshaw called opposition to the rally from Montezuma County “discriminatory.”
The vendors say they are out thousands of dollars. The rally’s owner says bikers are coming regardless and are furious about the cancellation of the events. And local government officials are bracing for the main body of bikers to arrive today and Thursday.Vendors face losses
John Huddleson, who sells and sews patches for bikers, said he spent $800 on fuel on his trip from San Diego.”We don’t have all kinds of money to bang,” said Huddleson, who said he found out about the cancellation Tuesday.
Huddleson said county officials would find that bikers will be coming regardless of their decisions.”The bikers don’t really care, you know,” Huddleson said. “They’re going to come.”
Mario Frenette of Los Angeles said he hadn’t heard about a problem with the rally until he arrived and planned to make the most of it.
Bikers agreed that their events are no more dangerous or destructive than other events and called opposition to the rally an expression of discrimination.”The word discriminatory is with a capital ‘D’,” said Jeff Kraus, who said he planned his summer around filming the rally for South Bay Custom Cycles of Compton, Calif.
Bradshaw said Montezuma County and the Southern Ute Indian Tribe had greatly increased the potential for trouble by shutting down his rally.”They’ve created a firestorm that I have no idea what will happen,” Bradshaw said. “The tribe and county kicked 30 (thousand) to 70,000 bikers.”Mancos town leaders said Tuesday they were ready for anything this Labor Day weekend as businesses, law enforcement and residents gird for an influx of motorcyclists whether or not Rally in the Rockies events are held.Sheriff Gerald Wallace said rally organizers had told him they plan to protest in the Cortez area.In Mancos, Marshal Bryan Jones said extra officers will be ready in case things get out of hand.Town leaders said rumors had been flying.
Bradshaw said he would fight the county for damages over the canceled rally.
By Thomas Munro and Chuck Slothower | Herald Staff Writers
–from Rogue
TWO INTO TWO JUG HUGGERS– Jug Huggers are performance pipes with a twist and have the right mix of air flow and back pressure to make for increased performance and incredible sound. The oversized removable heat shield gives the Jug Huggers a 2 1/2″ fat look. Max-Flow performance baffles and chrome billet aluminum end caps are standard.
Optional stealth baffles or torque chambers give you the option of getting the right performance from your motorcycle.
Accessories:
* 1/1/2″ Stealth Baffle 22-00037/2 * 15″x16″ Fiberglass Packing 22-00042 * Torque Chamber Kit 25-0010
For: Harley FLST Softail ’84-’05
From: Metric Thunder
Who: Thunder Bob
Details: Click Here for 2 into 2 Jug Huggers
Pricing: Thunder Bob is taking $80 off retail
BIKERNET RADIO UPDATE–Bikernet Radio is broadcasting two new shows. Check out the lovely Dee and her trip to Sturgis. She’s all about body shots and living the lifestyle.
Bob Kay checks in and gives us the 411 on the bikes as well as the Girls of Bikernet. He has a link to all of the pics. You don’t want to miss it! Click here to listen to Bikernet Radio!
HUGH KING REPORTING IN–See you on the salt. Here’s a picture of me enjoying the X bike in Sturgis. It was a big deal for me to get up on that 150 hp mustang because of my injury. But I did it, and now I’m hooked. Going to have it in Bonneville. Oh yeah!
Matt Hotch and Goldhammer face off on the salt.
BUSTED KNUCKLES–Wrenches are flying and I’m pumped fulla shit to write about. Still need to scrape Sturgis off my chest, another Bonneville update and book chapters.
The shop calls, then the road and finally the salt. This will be a feeling the flame year, getting a taste for the salt and for the capabilities of the Salt Shaker. The 1940 Bonne Belle will make it next year. We found K-model racing cams this week. I’ll be taking notes like a meth freak chews toothpicks.
As soon as we’re back the content will fly at Bikernet like darts in a world tournament, so hang on.
Ride Forever,
–Bandit
August 31, 2006 Part 2
By Bandit |
Continued From Page 1
BIKERNET TESTIMONIAL–My husband (Bob Provance aka hamsternm) had me open your bikernet site for him, since I was on the computer at the time. Well, he came to ask if I had, “Yes” I responded. I left out that I had opened it a couple of hours earlier, and had never left. I was having a great time. The pictures. The articles. The Events Calendar. The Free Departments. The Sponsors.
“Oh for crying out loud, I may never sign off!” I also joined Bandit’s Cantina while I was surfing. I have been Bob’s co-pilot for over 40 years and totally enjoy every minute we spend riding. OK, maybe not the moments that include ‘hail’.
I love your site. Being an old COBOL programmer, I really think your web designers are talented.
–Carol Provance – an old broad in the wind.
ps, guess I’ll let Bob look at your site now
STEALTH REPORT ROLLING IN FROM NC–Well we are at the end of August, we have one more month of summer! The summer has really passed by quickly. Here at STEALTH BIKE WORKS it has been a good summer for us. People are still finding out that we are here. We have built a strong foundation and a strong customer base. I could not have done it alone. Thanks to the SBW crew, Max, Chopper John, “THE MEANEST” and J.C. our shop dog!
For me what makes being at the shop everyday is that I learn something everyday, be it with bikes or people. As far as bikes go I have learned so much from Max. You are never at an age where you can not learn something new. As far as people go, well that is another story in itself. The one thing that I have learned that is most important to me is to keep things in balance. Don’t get too low when things are going bad or slow and don’t get too high when things are going great. Both of these can change very quickly, so I try to take things in stride and keep going. I have also learned that no matter what you do you can not please everyone all the time but we try and succeed more times than not. Some people just are never satsified. I have learned not to dwell on this. You let it go and move on.
I think we have developed our style this past summer and people know we are an old school-bobber style bike shop. Ninety percent of our customers are into this style of bike so our inventory reflects this style. Word of mouth from our customers to potential cutomers has help us a lot. That is why before each bike goes out Max and I both test ride them. When we agree everything is cool with the bike, then we call our customer. We really try to give our customers their money’s worth at SBW. If a problem should arise, we stand behind what we do.
I guess you could say we are still learning everyday and that is a good thing because when you stop learning you become complacent and start to take things for granted and that is when you get into trouble. We are still a small shop but we take BIG pride in what we do.
One thing we are kicking around at STEALTH BIKE WORKS is the idea of starting an SBW chopper-bobber riding club sponsored by SBW. It is in the early stages right now. We will see how it goes. Well I guess that is it for this week. If we can help youi with anything give us a call at 704-882-0889.
Until next week, RIDE!
–STEALTHMAN
NEW EDITION, THE 2007 EAST SIDE DS-SAVAGE–This is a 2007 East Side DS-Savage: It is a 113ci. Show Polished and Diamond cut motor with a Magna Charger (Blower) with 8-1 comp. w/ 5 over polished pistons a big cam and pushing over 220 hp. Our new limited edition Phat front end with hidden brake calliper, Air suspension, This is the first 330 two spoke rim ever made and has a new 4″ sintrifical clutch which means you dont have to hold the clutch in, in first gear, you simply give it gas and it goes ( Like a snowmobile), then 2-6 is easy pull shifting. It has internal twist clutch & throttle, one off gas tank and one off primary all molded with a kickass paint job.
East Side exhaust with a high gloss black porcelain coating with East Side tips and heat sheilds. With this low compession you can put this bike in a parade and still have the crazy horsepower that everyone wants without overheating.
Just wanted to show what we are up to. The new motorcycle mall is getting very close to finishing and we will keep everyone informed when the grand opening party will be. Dont forget to stop in at the East Side Bar & Grill for some good drink and Spanish food.
–Dave Torres / President
East Side Custom Choppers Inc.
ROGUE SENTS CONGRATULATIONS TO WILLARD–I would like to Congratulate Kirk “Hardtail” Willard on becoming the President of the Motorcycle Riders Foundation.I have known Kirk for some time and sure he will do a great job.
I have offered to be of any assistance I can to him.I hope the motorcycle riders of the country will assist him as the have past presidents.
—Rogue
Motorcycle Hall Of Fame Member 2005
www.bikerrogue.com
NEW MAG, BIKER BEAUTIES DUE TO HIT THE STREETS–Also, Biker Beauties is going to the printers on Tuesday. The glossy cover page is already off to the printers. The back cover is a poker run for the Leukemia/Lymphoma Society on Sept 24th in Virginia Beach. Livia will be appearing there with the magazine. The inside back cover is the bikernet ad that ran in the Kids and Chrome Book at Sturgis.
Starting Sept 15th we have 7 straight weekends of events we’ll be appearing at. Our first issue will definitely not have any remaining issues at the end of October. 🙂
Posters and Magazine subscriptions can now be purchased on –Sam DIXON INTERNATIONAL RULES OF ENGAGEMENT–A virile, young Italian gentlemen named Guido was relaxing at his favoritebar in Rome when he managed to attract a spectacular young blonde woman. Things progressed to the point where he invited her back to his apartmentand, after some small talk, they retired to his bedroom where he rattledher senseless. After a pleasant interlude he asked with a smile, “So, you finish?” She paused for a second, frowned, and replied, “No.” Surprised, Guido reached for her and the rattling resumed. This time shethrashed about wildly and there were screams of passion. The sex finallyends and, again, Guido smiles and asks, “You finish?” Again, after a short pause, she returns his smile, cuddles closer to himand softly says, “No.” Stunned, but damned if this woman is going to outlast him, Guido reachesfor the woman yet again. Using the last of his strength, he barely manages it,but they end together screaming, bucking, clawing and ripping the bedsheets. Exhausted, Guido falls onto his back, gasping. Barely able to turn hishead, he looks into her eyes, smiles proudly and asked again, “You finish?” Barely able to speak, the beautiful blonde whispers in his ear, “No, INorwegian.” –Joe Lankau BONNEVILLE EXHAUST FOR THE SALT REPORT–Perfect! The wrap will retain the heat and produce more exhaust scavenging which may let us run a tad more ignition timing. Don’t forget to read your rule book! Safety wire your criticals (axle nuts, rotor bolts, calipers bolts,) etc… Be ready for tech, ask questions, read. Tire pressures, steering damper settings, cables and hoses secured. It will be the “twodolla” part that kills us. Clear finger nail polish on the coil terminals and other electrical terminals. Put small wire ties on the spark plug boots at the coil. Don’t let them come off. Damn, this list is getting long. Wish I was there. Go ride, have fun. –Berry Wardlaw NEW TANKS SAVER TECHNOLOGY–Hope all is well. See our new McCuff Product Video(see it at: www.mccuff.com ) regarding a new invention that keeps gas off your tank, Stops the nozzle clicking at the pump, allows you to top-off if you want. It also squeezes more mileage from your tank capacity. See the video. Filling up is fun again. Everyone Wants One! –Greg QUICK, ENTER THE D&D PERFORMANCE EXHAUST BIKINI CONTEST– Join the D&D Performance Exhaust Bikini Contest. It is easy to enter. Just send in a picture of your bike with your favorite bikini honey. Each week we pull the best picture and award a D&D Performance Exhaust t-shirt. Then we pull them all together and the winner receives a set of D&D Performance Exhausts. Send a picture of BIKERNET ARTISTIC MOMENT–Riding through the Badlands is a religious experience to some. Ride Hard, –Whiplash Biker Photog AVON TECH ADVICE FOR THE WEEK–What is the benefit of a tubeless liner in a tire over a tube type tire. Imagine you make a bet with your friend that you can stick a pin in a balloon and it won’t pop. Might be a good way for one of you to make some money if there’s a wager on it. First, smooth a small square of duct tape on the deflated balloon. Then inflate the balloon and tie in a knot. Next stick the pin into the balloon where the duct tape is. Voila, no puncture. The duct tape wraps around the balloon similar to what happens when you ride on a tubeless tire and go over a nail. The inner liner wraps around the nail and slows down the leak very well so chances are you’ll just get a very slow leak rather than a very fast deflation like you would on a tube type tire. So it’s very important to make sure your tube is always replaced whenever you replace your tire so you have a good tube. –Sukoshi Fahey (Ms.) 28th ANNUAL VANCOUVER MOTORCYCLE TOY RUN– Coquitlam Centre (2929 Barnet Hwy, Coquitlam -www.coquitlamcentre.com/location/) Time: Ride leaves at 10:00am and proceeds full parade style to the PNEGrounds Phone: (604) 580-0111 or 1-877-580-0111 E-Mail: office@bccom-bc.com Website: www.bccom-bc.com Cost: A new childs toy or a monetary donation to the Lower MainlandChristmas Bureau. The Christmas Bureau kindly requests no stuffed toys.There is always a great demand for sport and educational toys and gifts forteenagers. We hope to make the 2006 toy run an even bigger success than last year andwith your help we can! Please spread the word. Lets make sure that everymotorcyclist in B.C. knows about this ride, so that more underprivilegedchildren and families can have a happy Christmas! If you are able to donate a couple of hours of your time to help out atwonderful fundraiser it would be much appreciated. There are various jobsavailable including selling raffle tickets, working barricades,etc. We willalso need help at the BCCOM table. Please contact us if you are able to helpout. office@bccom-bc.com or (604) 580-0111 or 1-877-580-0111 SATISFYING ROADS WELCOME HARLEY OWNERS ON THE ROAD CANDY TOUR–HERSHEY, Pa. (August 30, 2006) – Hundreds of Harley Owners Group (H.O.G.) members will spend their Labor Day week on the sweet roads between Hershey, Pa., and Huntington, W. Va., while on the H.O.G. Road Candy Tour Sept. 5 through 8. H.O.G. members will start the week off with sightseeing in decadent Hershey. On Tuesday, Sept. 5, Susquehanna Valley Harley-Davidson will host a dealership party from 12:00 p.m.-3:00 p.m. Riders will continue to York, Pa., taking in a tour of Harley-Davidson’s York Vehicle Operations facility on Wednesday, Sept. 6, from 8:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m. This facility is the home to where the Custom Vehicle Operations, Ultra and Softail models are assembled. In nearby Gettysburg, Pa., H.O.G. members can go back in time and visit some of the monumental sites during the Civil War followed by a dealer party at Battlefield Harley-Davidson from 3:00 p.m.-6:00 p.m. Riders will depart for Huntington, W.Va., on Thursday, Sept. 7, to finish off the week with 225 miles of magnificent riding. H.O.G. members will ride the beautiful Skyline Drive from Front Royal until it turns into the Blue Ridge Parkway near Lexington, Va. Friday, Sept. 8, the final host party will be held at Benjy’s Harley-Davidson in Huntington from 4:00 p.m.-7:00 p.m. Founded in 1983, the Harley Owners Group (H.O.G.) is the official riding club of the Harley-Davidson Motor Company. H.O.G. currently has more than one million members and more than 1,400 chapters worldwide, making it the largest factory-sponsored motorcycle organization in the world. H.O.G. rallies are held around the globe to celebrate Harley-Davidson motorcycle riding. THE ACCURATE SALT FLAT EXHAUST CONFIGURATION–Quick, do this. Hee-hee. Header components as follows, 1-3/4, 1-7/8, 2.00″. I want the these percentages of the total ength of each pipe (39″). 1-3/4=25%, 1-7/8=34% and 2.00=41%. In other words 1-3/4″=9.75″, 1-7/8″=13.26″ (13.250″) and 2.00=15.99″(16″). Yes sir, we did ’em just like that, sir.–Bandit Continued On Page 3
Accurate Engineering
McCuff Industries
mailto: soffordphotos@comcast.net
Sales Manager, North America
http://www.avonmotorcycle.com
http://www.avonmoto.com
Choppers Inc. Forever, Forever Choppers Inc.
By Bandit |
If you have been hiding in a hole lately, like Osama yo’ Mama or some other fuck, you might not know who Billy Lane, the creator of Choppers Inc. is? But after reading this, even Sado and his multi billion whatever camel bangin’ ass will know who Billy Lane is.
Discover, Build-Off Bike waiting paint.
If you’ve heard about the Space Coast of Florida. You know where NASA launches all those rockets? There’s a small, quiet town called Melbourne, home of none other than Choppers Inc. Yes the same chopper shop that is commanded by the one and only Billy Lane, master of the unthinkable. He uses everything from helicopter bearings to bottle openers as components for his two wheeled creations. He’s been featured in Bikernet previously, but this time we are going inside his shop. This is his little world, where the Choppers Inc. crew come up with all his whacked and cool choppers. It’s a steel and chrome haven where TV cameras, cool cars and the usual mayhem take place. It’s a place where friends are always welcome, Jack is always available and the beer is always cold. This is the fun trip into the Choppers, Inc. zone… Enjoy.
A Billy Lane signature, the hubless bike.
So let’s go back in time, to a place that time has forgotten, or maybe not, Miami. That’s were I met him for the first time thru a mutual friend who had a shop in South Beach. We said a couple hi’s and hung out some, not much more than that. I had bikes, but I was doing something else at the time. Everyone walks their own path. Some years later I met Billy once more. He was starting a shop in Melbourne and perhaps a new life, Choppers Inc. It was sorta re-born. Some people say that he was supposed to work for NASA, but decided to step onto the notorious Chopper path. I, for one, think he made the correct choice. So let’s fast forward a bit.
Billy Lane pondering the rains that threatened Daytona Bike Week.
Sturgis 2006 Is Calling
By Jeffery Najar |
Last year at this time I was pretty much doing the same thing I am now. Working every day trying to balance the bills, the family, the gym, writing, and getting in the occasional joy ride rather than just commuting back and forth to and from work. I really had no idea I would be attending Sturgis in just over a month, but as most of you know, I did attend the 65th rally.
If you read my report on the run to the Badlands with El Bandito himself, you already know of the adventurous trip we had.
Between fighting off the opal pushers in Arizona, to dodging bone-shaking storms in Colorado, every day put an obstacle in our path that would turn into memories we could look back on and laugh about later.
In my Sturgis run report, I never really reported on what I actually experienced at the rally. Since many that read this site have been to Sturgis, a lot of this will remind you of your first trip and hopefully it will allow you to travel back in time and smile on the memories. For the unfortunate folks that have yet to take the opportunity to travel to Sturgis, let me paint a picture of what you can expect once you get there.
My report will be different from the others you have read, because I am in no way famous. I don’t write for the national magazines or build bikes for a living. I didn’t get to travel in the “known” groups and attend all the “in” parties. I am one of the unknowns. I was just a face in the crowd. This is a peek into my trip to Sturgis for the first time.
I left Bandit and the rest of the crew just inside Deadwood. I didn’t know where to go or what to do from there. He told me to just follow the signs and I would be fine. I had no idea where I would stay, my phone wasn’t getting a signal, and to top things off, my bank had cut off my account because I didn’t let them know I would be travelling. I found out later they did this for my “protection”, but I think it’s just another way they can fuck with you.
I followed the sign and rode in with Billy “Wheels” Marvin. He had rode with us from Arizona to Sturgis, this being his first trip as well.
Two virgins wandering into the darkness with no clue where to go.
Billy and I made our way through what seemed like 100 miles, but it actually turned out to be 19. Isn’t it funny how angst can multiply the unknown to make the future almost unbearable? We ended up on Lazelle St. and found a place to park the bikes behind one of the vendors. I remember it sounded like thunder because of the constant rumble of V-twins.
I would later find out the rumble doesn’t stop for two weeks, 24 hours a day in some parts. We just started wandering up the street as we didn’t even know where to start looking.
Sturgis is unlike any place on earth. I would later find out the rally is actually spread out between several towns. I would travel to Deadwood, Sturgis, Spearfish, and finally ended up riding the Black Hills. I also made a detour to Mt. Rushmore on my final morning, but that’s getting ahead of myself.
So here we are a couple of cherries walking down Lazelle getting bombarded with sensory overload. I was walking, Billy was in his wheelchair. It still amazes me how this guy was completely independent and required absolutely no extra attention or help to travel across the country on a motorcycle. He still inspires me to this day.
Everything, and I mean everything, you ever wanted for your bike is at Sturgis. I meandered through one vendor to the next just amazed at the shit I was seeing.
I approached the West Coast Choppers booth, and there’s Chopper Dave sitting on the couch bullshitting with some people. It was surreal to see these people who I had only seen in magazines just sitting around shooting the shit.
I ended up at Indian Larry’s booth with a great guy named Chase. He gave me a beer and I sat with him while he sold t-shirts for Larry’s guys.
While we were there, Billy started geeking over this old man walking up. Come to find out it was the famous Deacon, who builds kick ass motors and bikes out of Hawaii. I hadn’t even realized till then that Chase was his boy! These guys can do some amazing shit with their bikes and let me tell you, they are a couple of wildmen! It was a little funny to watch as some poor fool sat on Larry’s bike. Chase came unglued, screaming for the guy to get off. The poor guy looked like he was going to piss himself. I felt bad for the guy.
I ended up leaving Billy with them and unfortunately never saw him again at the rally. I was tired, broke, and I had no clue where I was going to stay. To tell you the truth, I was a little scared. I didn’t know shit about this area and I didn’t know what to do next. All I kept worrying about is where was I going to get the money to get something to drink and eat. God must’ve seen I was worrying, because he sent a rescue just as it was getting dark.
I had finally made my way to the Full Throttle and was spending the last of the cash in my pocket getting ass prints on my head from the beautiful Angie. If you don’t know Angie, get the fuck off your ass and find her. Anyway, I had just spent my last bucks on a beer and Angie gave me an ass print on my head when my phone rang!
I was happy to see it was my buddy from Houston, Mike. He had been at the rally for a day already and was worried when he hadn’t heard from me. My phone was breaking up badly and the only thing he got was that I was at the Full Throttle. The last thing I heard was he would be there in a half-hour. I finished my beer and watched a guy burn his tire until it popped in the burn out pit. Fucking crazy! As I left I saw a woman who could bounce her tits like a bodybuilder bounces his pecs. It was the strangest thing I had ever seen. She had some big, fat, tits too! I decided to go to the parking lot and wait for Mike.
Walking through a parking lot at Sturgis is an amazing experience in and of itself. Just taking in all the bikes that are actually ridden and checking out the distance people traveled. Granted, there’s no real way to tell if they rode all the way or just trailered to the hotel, but it was still neat to see all the different license plates. The bikes in the parking lot would win most of the shows I have been to, but they are just the bikes people ride to The Mecca.
I didn’t care for this bike personally, but it was loud as hell.
My buddy Mike pulled into the parking lot and I was never so glad to see a friendly face in my life. He just smiled as I explained my predicament and how I was lost.
“I’ll buy you a beer,” was all he said. He had a shit-eating grin and just laughed, as I seemed more flustered than he had ever seen before.
We went back into the bar and had a couple of beers. It’s funny how I was panicked just a few minutes before but now didn’t seem to have a care in the world. All the problems just seemed to wash away as I felt myself letting go more and more. Before I knew it, I was having the time of my life without a care in the world. I guess it was the power of Sturgis, or maybe I was just fucked up. Mike did buy a few shots.
Mike’s old lady was staying back at their campsite and she was blowing his phone up!!! It didn’t matter that he was with a choirboy like myself, she didn’t trust him. I tell ya, it put a damper on the whole trip!
After a while we decided to leave and head to their campsite. Luckily they had found a woman in town who rented out her front yard. For $15 a night, you had a shower, toilet, and all the coffee you wanted. It was nice. I was so tired I could hardly put up my tent and woke up in the middle of the night wrapped in it like a plastic burrito. I didn’t care, I just wanted to go back to sleep. Just as I started to doze, I was woken up from the sounds of my buddy and his wife going at it. It sucked because I was alone; but then again I didn’t have to listen to any Bitchn either. You know, for a couple that was arguing just a few hours earlier, you couldn’t tell they were mad the way they were going at it. I finally just got up and went for a ride up the street.
Main Street was littered with everything from beer cans, bottles, trash, to people wandering the sidewalk. I couldn’t believe they were still out at 4 in the morning. It was eerie and cool all at the same time. I didn’t stay out very long, but did meet a man from Oklahoma who had spent his retirement money to buy a brand new H-D Ultra, and was traveling the U.S.A. He was having the time of his life and I started to resent him. That’s when he told me he actually resented me because he waited his whole life to go to Sturgis and I was already there at 31 years old. Hey, some guys have all the luck!
The next morning we woke up and went to the local high school for a pancake breakfast. I don’t remember exactly how much it cost, but it was less than ten bucks and you got a decent serving of eggs, bacon, and pancakes; good enough to start the day. We left after breakfast and rode out to the ’06 Harley unveiling. The bikes were beautiful and the crowd was intense. I don’t care what your motorcycle preference; you cannot deny the kick ass design of Harley Davidson. Shit, even their motorclothes are looking good. My buddy’s step-dad bought a normally $600 leather coat for $200. I wish I had a thousand bucks to blow in there because I guarantee everything was 50-70% off the normal price.
We left there and just rode the streets for a while. I wish I could tell you where exactly we went, but I was lost in the moment. My senses were blurred with the sheer amount of stuff to process. Normally I wave to people who I see riding, but this would be impossible in Sturgis. The trail of bikes coming and going is practically non-stop in every direction you look.
We eventually made it to Main Street to parade down the line. I enjoyed it, but my bike was getting hot. The line took too long to get through, so I only did the tour once. Pictures in magazines definitely don’t show the degree of heat you are dealing with when just waiting to go. I couldn’t believe the number of Fatboys, Heritage’s, and Road Kings I saw in Sturgis. I was glad I had the Apehangers and fucked up rattle can paintjob, otherwise I would have lost my bike LOTS of times. It is nice riding a new Harley, but it does suck when you see 200 of the exact same bike you are riding. Oh well, I guess if I wanted to be different, I could have built one from scratch. I did notice there were not too many kit choppers out and about, which surprised me. In Houston, they are everywhere and their riders’ look at Harley guys like, “Oh, you only ride a Harley.” I swear I want to shove my foot straight up their ass while pushing their fat-assed “custom” on top of them. I hate when people act like they are better than someone else.
We ate some grilled chicken for lunch and just walked around Main Street and Lazelle. About mid-afternoon we decided to go back to camp and get cleaned up before our nighttime activities. Because I had spent 6 days getting to Sturgis, I had to leave the next morning.
After a quick shower and a pretty intense game of quarters, we were ready to see the Sturgis nightlife. We ended up parking at the opposite end of Lazelle as the Full Throttle. We walked the strip making pit stops into each vendor and just window-shopping. The atmosphere was amazing as people from all over seemed hell-bent on nothing more than having a great time. Almost everyone we approached seemed to be smiling and having fun. For those not having fun, well they all gathered at The Knuckle Saloon. Here was where the action seemed to grow exponentially by the hour. Guys and gals signed up to fistfight. It was amazing and I had a ball. I did notice that many of the guys strutting through town trying to “act” tough seemed to walk right past this bar. Trust me, I know it’s easier to act tough than to actually be tough. I have the crooked nose to prove it.
We ended up at another bar named One-Eyed Jacks later and just had a blast. Drinking wasn’t all that happened either. It was just a fun party laughing and talking with all these people. I swear it was biker heaven. As it got later, the party seemed to grow. We went right along with it. The crowd seemed to flow like the tides; some had high tide, while others had low tide. We tried to go with the flow. We did travel through the Broken Spoke, Stroker’s, Easyrider’s, and finally back to Lazelle. It was a whirlwind of fun amplified by open pipes, laughter, beer, whiskey, and sometimes a little pot. Not only could you see the party, but also you could hear it, smell it, and even taste the fun.
I awoke the next day wrapped up in my tent again. I don’t even remember the last part of the night, but Mike and his wife said I had a great time dancing on a few tables. Supposedly I helped some young kid who had let his alligator mouth overrun his canary ass and he was getting stomped. Mike said I surprised everyone by breaking the whole mess up and getting the kid out of there. I don’t remember, but it doesn’t sound like me. I would usually walk by assuming he got what he deserved, so there’s proof that alcohol will make you do stupid shit.
We packed up and headed out to Mt. Rushmore. The rock was beautiful, but a mountain goat almost raped me. I thought they were tame. We started the long trip home at around noon. We headed east out of Sturgis towards Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, and eventually Texas.
I had 1300 miles to reflect on the trip and I was extremely glad when I got home. Now here it is a year later and I feel the pangs of travel eating away at me. I have no vacation left at work, no money for vacation, and I can’t afford to take a week off without pay. But to tell you the truth, that’s the whole point, isn’t it? That’s what makes it fun. We spend all year juggling life and trying not to fall, but what do we end up with in the end. Nothing, just the legacy we leave behind which starts with the memories we make for our families and ourselves. Sturgis is about saying fuck the house, yardwork, bills, and the job. Sturgis is about having fun and celebrating with all the other riders who share the same passion for life that you do.
Fuck it! I’m going again this year. Hopefully I’ll see ya there.
Sturgis 2006 Run
By Bandit |
This year has been nuts. I don’t know what got into me. At the first of the year we set a code to cut down on events and projects and take it easy. Here’s the glitch. We thought, mistakenly, we’d just build a bike to ride to Sturgis then take it to Bonneville. That V-Bike, the first Sportbike Panhead turned into two bikes, then three with a V-rod from Phoenix.
The plan seemed simple enough in the beginning. I caught the glitch in my prognosis and fortunately ducked out on the V-rod. I was down to building two bikes by myself, riding to Sturgis, joining the Hamsters again and riding home. Then three weeks later we would ride to Bonneville and get our salt feet wet at the Bubs International Speed Trials. Hell, I thought this was a breeze, just hit the salt once a year.
I’m not complaining. It’s all fun. I looked forward to the 2000 mile Hamster ride into the Badlands. They know how to do it, and have a blast along the way. The Hamsters take a lot of yuppie heat, but a great number of the 270-strong, group of custom bike enthusiast, ride. They ride a lot. I’ve known the core of the group over 25 years. In most cases many of the members are apart of this industry. Okay, so with a week to go before riding out, my V-Bike Panhead engine hadn’t arrived and it looked like a no-show.
Berry Wardlaw of Accurate Engineering recently completed a Biker Build-off with a fellow Hamster, Kim Suter, of KC Creations and Gypsy. His order desk was piled too high. A brother Hamster was due to arrive in a day or two to straddle my King and head out. The King was ready, but what the hell was I going to ride. I could jump aboard the Shovelhead from last year, but the aluminum tank started leaking again. I have a 1948 Panhead with dual carbs… Sin Wu suggested I contact Harley and see if they would like a long distance article on a new 96-inch 2007 King with a six-speed.
Give her a couple of margaritas and she sprouts her finest thinking. I contacted H-D and within an hour arrangements were made to compare two Kings while blasting to the Sturgis and back. Dale Gorman arrived in LA from Cape Cod and threw his duffle bag in the Bikernet Barracks. So there you have it, two 230 pound, plus, men heading out of town on two Kings. One a bone stock 2007 King, sporting a radio with XM hook-up, windshield and hard bags.
My King is a blacked out 2003 classic, 100th anniversary, with soft leather bags, Screamin’ Eagle heads, Screamin’ Eagle mid-range cams, a Screamin’ Eagle air cleaner, an H-D tear-drop air cleaner cover, Screamin’ Eagle, two-into-one exhaust, H-D blacked mag wheels, a Street Stalker front fender, highbars, no windshield, and one more, non-Harley performance accessory, a Keith Terry closed-loop fuel injection tuner. It’s still a pure 88-incher.
We packed light, no tour-packs, just what we could squeeze in our bags and in one Bandit’s bedroll apiece. I planted mine on the glide front-end nacelle as a windbreak and strapped it to the 16-inch highbars. Dale attached his behind him on the seat with crossed bungies and we rolled into grizzly Los Angeles traffic.
It's been five years since I rode with the Hamsters to Sturgis. Seemed like a lifetime. Dale and I rode to Sturgis at least three times. I was looking forward to a comfortable, weeklong run with some old bros, partying all across the west. Dale and I would shift from King to King noting our impressions. Our first stretch was the Mad Escape from Los Angeles to the home of Daytec and Atlas frames in Hesperia, California, some 98 miles into the Devor pass leading most weekenders towards Vegas.
Dale rode the ’07 King first and noted the 80-90 mph chassis walk on the interstate. Rubber-mounted dresses seem to flex at speeds and it’s generally due to the lack of rake and the driveline movement, with the swingarm attached to the transmission between two rubber biscuits. There’s a solution, the True-Track system designed be Wil Phillips.
This system adds another Heim joint under the transmission preventing driveline side-to-side motion. It takes a measly 10 minutes to install, and adds 80 percent more confidence to the ride. I installed one on the ’03 a couple of months prior and it dialed handling completely.
Dale also commented on the gearing. “It was hard to know what gear I was in,” He said. “All the gears seemed taller and I didn’t hit sixth until I was rolling along at 90 mph, but it’s cool.”
The ’07 appeared to be the virtually the same as the ’03 from a structural standpoint. Except for the 96-inch mill and the 6-speed transmission, they were the same bikes. The all black ’03 rumbled up the highway feeling fine except for the Aeromach highway pegs I installed. They were too close to my foot controls and I caught my boots between them. I need to adjust those suckers.
Here’s my thing about Kings. I tried to ride a customized dresser a few years back. The bike was killer, but it was a dresser. I grew up on choppers. I couldn’t handle it, but I can a King. Let me try to explain. It’s like a ’36 coupe guy driving a bus. A King works, like a hot rod aficionado in the seat of a ’59 Cadillac. It’s still cool. You can still pack your shit, and rock n roll, especially with apes. I actually think the factory could take Kings a step further and offer apes, a slightly stretched frame for bigger guys and stretched tanks for lowered ’59 Impala class. Something like Lake pipes slipping through traffic or across the country in style.Shot of Kings
So Dale and I slipped through traffic splitting lanes into the desert under a partially cloudy sky. The radio with the XM Satellite connection was a rush and a safety factor. Since no matter where that bike was the reception was as clear as a bell, so Dale wasn’t forced to precariously tune channels and volume surrounded by thundering 18-wheelers.
For some reason I haven’t been able to pump 13 psi of pressure into my H-D air adjustable shock for a while and we threatened to fix it on the road. No chance. We started checking fuel consumption at every gas stop as another comparison. In Hesperia after a tour of the Daytec plant and dinner at Phil Day’s estate we gassed up. We covered 117 miles with 3.1 gallons for 38 mpg. I was expecting more. I checked the oil temp with my digital dipstick gauge and came up with 221 degrees, which is bitchin’ for my twin cam. They run hotter than Evos and it’s a good notion to run an oil cooler. I wanted to compare it with the ’07 but the dipstick wouldn’t fit into the 6-speed case. I’ll bet he was running 20 degrees hotter.
Daytec produces 7,200 frames a year, with 200 employees, in their 50,000 square foot facility on the edge of the Mojave Desert. As we drank whiskey in Green Valley Bar with Clyde Fessler, an ex H-D VP, we watched the weather report, pointing out the ensuing heat wave and warning to avoid heat stroke by curbing alcohol intake or coffee. We ordered another round, and coffee was our first morning beverage, then more whiskey.
Let’s ride. We jumped up in the morning, grabbed a pot of steaming coffee, plus breakfast and lined up for the “Wind ‘em up,” call. We rolled from Hesperia behind Phil Day the back way, 70 miles into Yucca Valley, where the notorious Bob T. lives with the Chop N Grind racing team, in a tin shed. They were the sister team to our 5-Ball Racing crew. Dale and I gassed up. The girls with the rest of the Hamsters demanded breakfast, so we peeled out toward the Joshua Tree National Park, to avoid those sand snortin’ bastards in the Chop N Grind team. We had covered a brief 70 miles and both the ’07 and the ’03 took exactly 1.6 gallons for 43.7 mpg. That’s more like it.
We slipped through the outlaw territory of Joshua National Forrest, past massive and smooth Skull Rock and Fried Liver Wash. It was my turn on the ’07 and that baby was a gearing delight. I found 5th gear to be perfect through the general desert curves, and 4th fit the bill through a more curvaceous mountain pass. I could buzz along until I hit 80 before I shifted into 4th and 90 mph before 5th. The new King ran smooth as glass.Shot of babe on keys
At General Payton’s Museum at the Chiraco Summit, Dale pulled my King keys out of his pocket. A super hot babe resides on one side of the key bound thermometer. The mercury ran damn close to 120 degree. I told the ex-arm wrestling champion, to keep his big fingers off the girl. We had another 70 miles before we could hit the helmet free Arizona state line.
In the grizzly town of Blythe on the Arizona border we accumulated 141 miles and our gas intake was virtually the same for 37.6 mpg. The 96-inch ’07 was running along at the same gas mileage as the slightly modified ’03. Generally stock bikes are tuned to the lean side, so it made sense that the bigger engine was pulling the same mileage. Rolling into Phoenix we experienced a mpg drop to 30, the lowest of the trip. We musta fucked up our calculations.
Dale and I started a maneuver to avoid the morning pack and the afternoon thunderstorms. We pulled out about an hour before the scheduled departure time. In Scottsdale, we partied at Myron Larrabee’s Billet Bar and I hooked up with my lovely Bonneville racer, Valerie Thompson, who ran 2nd in her class in the Destroyer drag racing class. The slight girl, sponsored by Monster Energy Drinks, would ride our 120-inch Panhead on the Salt, in another month, and set a world record. Hang on for that story. ( Bedroll shot on the front of the king)
The next morning we loaded up to cut a dusty trail to Payson in the Tonto Apache Indian Reservation. We sliced through our second day and this was the best ride yet, with mild smokin’ curves through picturesque hills, Joshua trees and Yuccas. I also noted a trend. We were both packin’ Bandit’s Bedrolls. Mine worked perfect as a wind brake and Dale’s gave him some back support. His was bungied just behind his lower back across the seat and mine we tie-wrapped to the bars with heavy reusable ties. They are tough, strong and durable. I found that I could snap them in place easily each morning and they never budged.
Sin Wu ran out to the Kings just before we left and handed each one of us a Helmet Hog. They easily slipped into our small bag pockets for use with packing Helmets through free states. They worked like double DD bras over beautiful boobs, holding them comfortable and secure. Kinda gets me going. If you want one, try Helmet-Hog.com.
From Payson we ran into rain heading to Holbrook. Out of 99 miles we thundered through 50 miles of rain. Another trend was emerging. Again we used the same amount of gas, 2.3 gallons for 100 miles for 43 mpg. That number was more in keeping with what I believed a big twin was capable of. I owned several old Shovelheads that did 48 mpg on a regular basis. These were much larger displacement bikes, but also more efficient.
We peeled along the 260 toward highway 377 onto Interstate 40, then through thunderstorms, lightening and blinding road construction into Gallop. It was a grizzly ride demanding all our attention to narrowing road conditions, gravel, beveled lanes, fluorescent cones and thundering 18-wheeler pounding us with spray. In a sense the danger heightens the excitement of the ride. We dug around town peering through wet glasses trying, in vein, to find the correct Best Western Motel. We found it and scrambled to the bar where I noted Dale’s impressions of the ’07 King. I also checked the oil temp gauge on the ’03, but condensation attacked the lens and for three days it was useless.
Just after we rolled onto interstate 40 we were able to open both bikes up and the ’03 reached over 117, but the ’07 couldn’t cross the 100-mile mark on the easy-to-read speedo. “You killed me in every gear,” Dale said after we performed a series or roll on tests in 4th, 5th, and 6th gear. Stock bikes are so restricted out of the box that the 96-incher couldn’t keep up with my slightly modified ’03 88-incher.
Dale enjoyed the mountain handling after he put 15 pounds air pressure in the rear shocks. “The tires are shaky and I could lock the front dual discs too easily on the wet pavement,” Dale explained. “These bikes are not designed for tall guys, although it handled well in the rain.” Over the last couple of years they have added 1-inch axles front and rear for more stability and a tougher front motor mount. Although I beat him in the roll-on test, it wouldn’t take much to wake up the thunder in that 96-inch engine. “Hey,” Dale added, “I hit 103 mph going down hill.”
As we bellied up to the bar my cell phone rattled across the hard surface. It was Mike Lichter asking me to write a brief description of Old School and New School for his Journey Museum display. I ordered my first Jack on the rocks, while Dale and I discussed the ride, the weather, the blinding semis and made notes for Mike’s article. Maybe some of you read my blither about Old School and New. It’s all a bullshit way to describe one style or another. We had fun with the article. I dictated it to the lovely Sin Wu back in California and she sent it to Mike via e-mail. When I ride I leave the Internet connections at home.
The next morning we headed straight into Albuquerque for 150-mile blast to beat the storms. We were determined to make Sante Fe before the thunderclouds bunched against the hills and poured on our parade. Again we left earlier than the pack. Chaz, a Hamster prospect pointed out that my rear turn-signal bar was coming loose and I crawled around under the ’03 King with a new fastener to reposition the bracket and tighten her down.
We took the straight shot, whereas Corporal Hamster scheduled trails meandering into beautiful, off-highway passes and valleys. We had no intention of trying to peer through soaked lenses at picturesque, pine-covered mountains, in a driving rainstorm. As we rambled toward Albuquerque I had various thoughts of past Hamster runs. I could imagine Arlen, who has ridden to Sturgis, 30 years in a row, Barry Cooney or some of the guys who rode out first on Shovelheads and stretched Sportsters, breaking down from town to town. It was a still blast, an adventure at every curve, in every town and running from every cop.
I thought about the times when we searched each town for a girl or a party. I thought about racing from town to town. I liked the reduced speed signs. I always sped up. Times have changed, or I have, as we peeled across New Mexico heading for Sante Fe.
We arrived in the early afternoon, way ahead of the pack, and fought mountains of traffic to our motel. We checked in and found a Sushi bar. By the time we finished a luscious lunch it was pouring and we darted across the crowded boulevard to the Harley shop. They knew customer service and offered to ship Dale’s bling for free, so he wasn’t forced to pack it on the King. I also noticed that Dale’s turn-signals quit, then his horn failed. We check fuses and discovered the culprit. Evidently turn-signals and the horn circuit shared the same fuse.
Everything in Sante Fe changed from the last time I roamed through the seemingly southwestern artsy haven ten years prior. It went from a small town to a bustling tourists Mecca surrounded by 4-lane boulevards, new buildings, upscale restaurants, shopping centers and slick motels. Everything was crowded, congested and plastic. It set me in a mood of deep thinking that carried over to our dinner conversation. We discussed the stages of life for men and how women torture us and we torture them, with little understanding in between. We pondered how families work, how they don’t and how there are no generalizations about anyone. We all struggle, learn, succeed, fail and survive, or not.
We decided a plethora of books exist for women but few for men, and we should write one. On our way to Sturgis we ran into two major industry marriages unglued, the Daytec family and the Bourgets. It disturbed my heart, because I’ve been through it many times and know the pain, the rush, the desire and passion that shifts gears through life and often takes whole families and businesses down the tubes. Watch out! I ordered another Jack on the Rocks and voted for legalized prostitution. I believe, in my slanted thinking, it would save families from breaking up over fresh sex, but what the hell do I know? I just don’t believe that tying anyone, men or women, down with rules and restrictions stops the libido from functioning as nature designed.
Like Sedona, Arizona, maybe there’s a collision of creative stars over Santa Fe. An emotional Bermuda triangle vortex hanging over the clear starlit skies of Sante Fe, snagged my tired senses, or maybe I was just horny.
After a day’s rest in Sante Fe, checkin’ the jewelry selection for the girls and working out for the first time in a week, we were up at the crack of dawn and motored out of town with full tanks of gas. As we rolled away from the lobby, we noticed the bearer of bad weather, Harlan, out front polishing his dresser. Either he drank a dose of over-confidence or he was nuts. According to Dawson the storm clouds were bunching up against the mountains already.
We rolled out of Sante Fe away from the interstate onto 285. Somehow when we drifted into Antonito, Colorado, where we jiggled our empty tanks, on fumes. We tested the maximum mileage capacity of the two Kings. We scraped through 182 miles before we were bone dry and shaking the tanks for enough drops to whisk us into any gas station. We both took 4.5 gallons for 40.4 mpg.
When we arrived in the mighty upscale ski haven, the weather cleared and we dried out at a terrific Barbecue Rib joint, south of our Hotel and just north of downtown. Dale and I stumbled into Arlen Ness several nights in a row and had dinner with the Chopper Doctor and a couple of his customers. Arlen has always been Mr. Mellow, but one of his buddies had a fascinating story. From a kid, Mike Avila raced speedboats and became a 7-time world champion water skier. Ten years ago he was in a terrible, high-speed skiing accident and was listed as DEA a couple of times. He didn’t give up, and although he’s still somewhat handicapped, he’s at the brink of another World Championship, as the boat driver and team leader. He rode with Arlen and the Hamsters to Sturgis this year and fell in love with the area. “He bought a condo in Spearfish,” Arlen said, “and he’ll ride every year.”
We wanted to hang out with the smiling New Zealand babe in the barbecue joint, but the next morning, headed the other direction down the 82 toward Glenwood springs on Interstate 70 that curves through the White River National Forest toward another skiing Mecca of Vail through Frisco, Colorado and dropped us into Denver. Again, we hit the road early and prayed for a highway that slithered around the city, onto the 25 north to Cheyenne.
Riding through Denver is much like LA, in its level of congestion. Interstate 70 is a fantastic roaming highway bordered by rivers, sharp mountain passes, and greenery. On an open day, you could fly through this pass, as if it was cut from the mountain just for choppers. Roaming down the Loveland pass at 11992 feet, we came face to face with the city of Denver, increased traffic, trucks and construction equipment. I remembered breaking a primary belt 10 years ago on that pass.
Suddenly the highway peppered us with gravel and dust as we looked for the bypass to avoid as much city congestion as possible, and we found it. Less than ten miles up the road we slipped onto 25 North and pulled off for Gas. Jeff Levy tagged along with us, on his bright orange ’04 Electra, in the morning, and we hooked up with a couple of other fast-riding Hamsters.
Highway 25 is another interesting ride. It’s the yellow brick road out of Denver, a vast expanse of golden fields, and nothing much else surrounds an almost straight asphalt ribbon leading us north, past one of the largest H-D dealers I’ve ever scene. H-D of Longmont or Loveland is across the freeway from a massive Budweiser plant in the middle of no-place. Like the 15 out of LA heading toward Vegas, the nature of suburban sprawl may gradually connect small bergs together until Denver reaches the Wyoming border, just like Los Angeles spreads toward Vegas daily. Denver was hot as hell as we sped toward Wyoming and Cheyenne. We figured 260 miles for the day. It actually trip- gauged at 298 miles. We started at 8:00 a.m. and rolled into dusty Cheyenne at 3:00 p.m.
It was Saturday morning as we were headed home (our Biker Home of Sturgis), along 25 north from the bottom of Wyoming to almost the top, virtually on one highway, 85 roaming into the Badlands. Ten miles out of Cheyenne we rolled off 25 onto two lanes of 85 and zagged north to Torrington for one quick left on 26 then a right back onto 85 where we remained true into Lusk, then New Castle, 4-Corners and Lead, passed the outskirts of Deadwood into Sturgis 16 miles away.
Most of the Hamsters, at that point leaned west toward Spearfish along the same 90 freeway. In Deadwood we gassed up on a back street and I was already shouting to brothers I knew, who rode past. We were almost home.
We snuck in the back part of town to avoid the traffic and found our Sturgis abode at 1147 4th street. We parked, but couldn’t get in. We locked up the two Kings, strolled into downtown and visited Arlin Fatland at Two Wheelers, then Pepper at the Sturgis Museum. The town was bustling and we were trying to call for lodging assistance to our Sucker Punch Sally and Saxon connection, Ken Conte. We reached him and discovered we were parked at the wrong location. Our home was a Day Care Center for kids a block up on the corner of Willard and 4th. Whatta trip, sand boxes, miniature furniture, dinky lockers and toys scattered around the yard. We were home.
It was damn good to kick back, have a beer and relax, we arrived—Sturgis 2006. I’m not going to blither through every move on the Streets of Sturgis. We always seemed to have a mission or a goal. Bikernet supplied the Girls of Bikernet to the Hardbike Booth on Lazelle. We had to check it out.
I would like to personally thank these two girls for entertaining on Lazelle, with the Hardbikes crew, for the entire week, solid. I wanted them to wear something that touted Bikernet, but where the hell would they put it?
We sponsored the Thunder Road location on the outside of town, and Sam Dixon and Livia took over our booth in the Thunderdome, so we investigated and I became a celebrity judge for the AMD Championship of Bike Building.
We wandered through Michael Lichter's Journey Museum display of bikes, checked-out my writings, words from other authors and his photography. We visited friends from far and wide, industry guys, builders, broads and whiskey drinking partners.
Since I sponsored Billy Lane’s Blood Sweat and Gears program and the Kids And Chrome charity banquet to support the Kids Rapid City Hospital and the Sturgis Motorcycle Museum we got up early to attend the builders breakfast at the Broken Spoke, then we snuck out the back door and headed for home. We had a Bonneville bike to build and hit the salt with.
Sturgis was cool, crowded, yet the official numbers indicated attendance dropped a severe 40 percent. Was it gas prices, Middle East war, economy? Everywhere we turned new facilities were being built for the future.
Jay Allen from the Broken Spoke plans a new camping facility and concert center. Samson Exhaust, Kenny Price, bought a massive lot in Spearfish, brothers are moving to the region to support the growth. Confidence is high that Sturgis will continue to grow and draw 400,000 plus numbers annually.
It’s a blast, from the girls, the bikes, the shows, the concerts, the food and bars. The entire chopper industry is there, as if the sign at the beginning of town said DisneyChopperWorld. If you want to see it, it’s there. Did I mention the Lemonade girls?
I have one major regret. I was inducted into the Sturgis Hall of Fame last year. This year I recommended John Reed, for an appointment into the Hall of Fame. He didn’t plan on attending the Black Hills Rally but I forced the issue, when the appointment was confirmed. He jumped on one of his wild motorcycles and rode to Sturgis in just over 24 hours. John’s an English madman who has designed new products for Custom Chrome for 25 years. I discussed the induction breakfast with Pepper and she told me the format was changed to speed up the process, and I didn’t need to attend.
I will always regret peeling for the border Tuesday morning, instead of staying for the Wednesday breakfast. My apologies, John.
Instead of blithering on about Sturgis, I’m going to run a couple of sidebars about the rally from other industry individuals. Below is Hardbikes, Bob Kay’s report and a report from S&S on their activities. Ah, but keep going, there’s always an adventure tagged onto any Black Hills Rally and this one will snap your head back, so keep reading.
Bob Kay on SturgisHardbikes Working Sturgis 2006
Back from Sturgis and I’m just now getting back hitting on both cylinders. I know what you’re thinking, Babes, Bikes and Booze, right? Well that has changed if you are working the Sturgis show and we were w-o-r-k-i-n-g it! I had a drink at the start and end of the show and worked the entire week straight through.
In order to be successful you have to work the crowd and make sure you have a reason for the crowd to stop in at your booth. We brought in the Girls of Bikernet. Bandit knows his ladies and the Girls of Bikernet were very frisky. You can see them doing their thing right here.
The Biker and Rat's Hole Show crew came by and asked us to enter a bike. We rode our fat-ass drag race-style 330 Pro Street Tattoo Bike. Our production bike was placed in the ultra-custom class. Now only radical bikes end up in this class and in Sturgis you see the best bikes from the most renowned builders. So it was a big honor to participate.
It was even a bigger honor to take the 2nd place trophy away from some big name customizers. You just don’t see production bikes performing in this class. It’s truly a reflection of our engineering, design and paint team to make this happen. It also shows what Hardbikes is able to produce. It’s our goal to deliver a custom bike at production prices and the marketplace is sitting up and applauding.
We had daily Girls of Bikernet/Hardbikes fashion shows, gave out water, free t-shirts and of course the Girls of Bikernet were on hand posing for free pictures.
A new design trend in the industry is a jewel-like vintage look. The winner of the AMD bike show was a combination of bobber and board track racer with each component part a work of art. The time and energy put into the components is really taking the design to the next level.
The 2006 edition of Sturgis seemed to be a little less well attended. Usually we see the rally building throughout the week. This year it hit the high level mark the first few days and by the last concert of the week everyone was gone.
What I came away with this year is that competition is up. And that means enthusiasts have more to choose from than ever before. At Hardbikes we are ready for the challenge. We offer what no one else can offer. An ability to custom fit a bike to your exact specifications and allow the owner to build their own custom motorcycle with custom parts just like you see on TV. The difference is, owners build it at the Hardbikes website instead of the OCC garage.
Hope you all had a good Sturgis. Keep the rubber side down!
-Bob Kay, Hardbikes
Eric Herrmann’s Sturgis Report
Hope to see you at Bonneville. Here’s some Sturgis info if you’d like. Dustin Herrmann (age 15) on his first trip to Sturgis with his father Eric Herrmann, took 2nd place in the amateur hill climb. Dustin’s 1st two attempts were on a muddy hill shortly after a rainstorm. With no extended swing arm, Dustin came within 9’ of the first place finish in his category.
With help from industry friends Metzler / Pirelli Tires and tools borrowed from Bikers Choice / Tucker-Rocky, Dustin’s wide-open throttle clearly made him the crowd favorite. With a second place trophy, the 6:00 news, and a place in the record books, Dustin is already planning for Sturgis 2007. Father Eric Herrmann also challenged the hill and was victorious only by not ending up in the hospital. And I taught him how to ride.
The Proud Parent.
–Eric Herrmann
www.EricHerrmannStudios.com
S&S Sturgis Report
Sturgis 2006 was a busy time for the S&S crew. After successful appearances in Daytona, Laughlin, Myrtle Beach, and Laconia, the World Builders Showcase once again wowed the huge crowds. The Big Twin West Show (December 1–3, 2006 in Las Vegas) will be the last chance to catch this prestigious showcase of international talent.
Other S&S supported events included The AMD Pro Show, featuring the most talented and innovative builders from around the globe and the Kids and Chrome Benefit for Children’s Care Hospital & School, which generated over $8,000 through the auction of an S&S donated SH93 engine.
“What is the best way to promote our product? It is by letting the customers experience it for themselves,” stated S&S president, Brett Smith. Given this directive, the crew put together S&S’ first demo ride program at Sturgis Dragway. Carefully screened customers were given the chance to ride a test bike equipped with an S&S T124 Hot Set Up Kit, 6 Speed All Helical Gear Transmission, S&S High Performance Clutch Assembly, and S&S Slip-On mufflers. “Judging by their ear to ear grins and colorful comments, I think that they were thoroughly impressed with the brute power and tractability of the 124,” said S&S Events Manager, James Simonelli.
S&S collaborated with Rick Luebeck, of Luebeck’s Customs, and introduced a custom 106” Victory® at Sturgis’ popular Broken Spoke Saloon. This bike featured the new S&S 106” Hot Set Up Kit®, available exclusively through Victory dealers. Justin Bramstedt, S&S Testing and Development Engineer, put the 110+ horsepower to work, smoking the tire to the delight of the cheering crowd. “Based on the crowd’s reaction and the number of people who hung around to check out this custom Victory up close and personal, this Hot Setup Kit will be a very popular product line for us and an exciting new option for Victory riders,” said S&S’ new Director of Sales and Marketing, Timm Fields.
For more information about S&S Cycle, visit
Are you ready for the wrap up? We blasted back into Southern California ready to work toward our first attempt to go fast on the Bonneville Salt Flats since 1990, and I was on the ER Streamliner team. We set the World Land Speed Record for Motorcycles, 321 mph.
The run home wasn’t without a Wyoming ticket for highbars, and meeting old Stage Coach Bob in a bar on the edge of Utah.
We rolled into LA and jumped off the freeway in Compton, Califa, a strange industrial ghetto next to downtown Los Angeles. At a stoplight a naked young black man stepped into the street wearing only tennis shoes and socks. He walked across the street as if he was walking from his home to the corner to buy a pack of gum. Dale looked at me as if he expected abhorrent behavior from LA, and he finally found it. He’s from Cape Cod, Mass, way back east.
We had less than ten miles to rumble through before our journey was over, but Nyla met us with her son who was anxious to ride the ’07 King. Kyle jumped aboard the King and sped off. We arrived home safely and unloaded, but Kyle didn’t show. He decided to show off the flashy King to his uncle in San Pedro.
On the way up a winding accent into a residential community a woman in a van slowed in front of Kyle and swung to the right as if to park. Then she abruptly turned left into Kyle’s path. He slammed into her front fender and flew over the hood onto the pavement. The King was severely damaged and Kyle met with his first case of road rash.
So ended Sturgis 2006. Helluva ride on two Kings, with a good brother and the Hamsters. Sturgis rocked and Bikernet was everywhere. Unfortunately the San Pedro PD found Kyle at fault. Michael Hupy is investigating the accident, and goddamnit, we’re going to appeal the ruling.
September 25, 2006
By Bandit |
THE AIM/NCOM MOTORCYCLE E-NEWS SERVICE is brought to you by Aid to Injured Motorcyclists (A.I.M.) and the National Coalition of Motorcyclists (NCOM), and is sponsored by the Law Offices of Richard M. Lester. For more information, call us at 1-(800) ON-A-BIKE or visit us on our website at http://www.ON-A-BIKE.com.
COAST TO COAST BIKER NEWS
Compiled & Edited by Bill Bish,
National Coalition of Motorcyclists
FALLEN FREEDOM FIGHTER It is with deepest regret that we report the death of Marty Schultz, ABATE of Maryland state director, who was riding home on the morning of August 30th after picking up his bike at a shop when he was struck and killed by the driver of a Jeep Liberty who ran a stop sign, violating the 44-year old rider?s right-of-way.
?Since that time there has been considerable speculation in print and heard over the airwaves about whether or not he was wearing a helmet,? said ABATE of Maryland in a prepared statement. ?Yes, in fact he was wearing a helmet that came off during the collision or its devastating aftermath. The focus should not be on the helmet, which in many cases provides little or no protection. A helmet can become dislodged or come off during a collision; which is precisely what happened in the collision that took Marty’s life. Instead, shift the focus to what happens before an accident occurs and strive for accident prevention.
Legislation advocated by ABATE of Maryland, Inc. during the 2006 session of the Maryland General Assembly sought to increase the penalties for right-of-way violations that result in serious injury or a fatality.
The National Coalition of Motorcyclists and the motorcyclists rights community extend our sincerest sympathies to the officers and members of ABATE of Maryland and the family and friends of Marty Schultz for their tragic loss.
?Another Freedom Fighter falls in the line of duty, thanks to one of the many irresponsible motorists out there,? said Tiger Mike Revere, ABATE of Oklahoma state director and member of the NCOM Board of Directors, who further expressed a sentiment shared by our entire board; “I’m sick and tired of burying my Brothers and Sisters for America’s right to drive stupidly!”
NHTSA REPORTS RISE IN MOTORCYCLE AND PEDESTRIAN DEATHS An increase in motorcycle and pedestrian deaths contributed to an overall rise in highway fatalities in 2005, reports the U.S. Department of Transportation?s National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). According to the federal agency, the total number of fatalities rose 1.4 percent from 42,836 in 2004 to 43,443 in 2005.
Acting Secretary of Transportation Maria Cino noted that a 13 percent increase in rider fatalities from 4,028 in 2004 to 4,553 in 2005 and an increase in pedestrian fatalities from 4,675 to 4,881 offset an overall decline in highway deaths.
In 2005, new motorcycle and scooter sales topped the one-million level for the third straight year, according to the Motorcycle Industry Council, and increased from 1,063,00 in 2004 to 1,116,000 in 2005, marking 13 straight years of increased sales.
Cino added that the number of people injured in motor vehicle crashes declined 3.2 percent from 2.8 million in 2004 to 2.7 million in 2005. Passenger vehicle occupant fatalities also dropped by 451, from 31,866 in 2004 to 31,415 in 2005, the lowest level since 1994.
MORE MOTORCYCLES, MORE NOVICE RIDERS Not everybody is screaming bloody murder over rising gasoline prices, reports ConsumerAffairs.com — motorcycle manufacturers are ecstatic.
According to the Motorcycle Safety Foundation, more than 350,000 people will take its new-rider course in 2006 — a 10 per cent increase over the year before. So many people want to ride that there’s a waiting list for spots in the class. The wait can sometimes take months.
The Motorcycle Industry Council, also based in California, knows the number of riders is rising rapidly. Sales of motorcycles and scooters climbed 8 per cent in the first quarter of 2006, compared to the same period of last year, and is expected to continue its upward spiral.
Because of rising fuel prices, there are a lot more novices on motorcycles. In fact, the American Motorcyclist Association reports that 35 per cent of motorcycle owners plan to be on their bikes more as a direct result of pumped-up prices at the pump. The typical motorcycle gets 50 miles per gallon of gas, while the average passenger car gets less than half of that — 22.4 miles.
PRESIDENT IMPRESSED WITH HARLEY-DAVIDSON President George W. Bush became the third American president to visit Harley-Davidson when he toured the York, Pennsylvania plant on Wednesday, August 16, but told reporters ?I?m just looking so far.?
Cheers and applause erupted inside the Harley-Davidson Inc. vehicle operations plant when Bush straddled a blue and white Softail and revved its engine again and again.
After meeting employees, the president shouted, “I’m impressed with the quality of the product here,” over the sounds of the assembly line. “I’m impressed by the fact that these people really enjoy what they’re doing,” Bush told national and local media.
Later, following an economic sit-down discussion with company workers and management, Bush vowed to make the quality American product he’d seen firsthand open to more international markets. “There’s a direct correlation between exports and jobs,” Bush said. “The more Harleys that are sold in places like Vietnam, China and India, the more likely someone is going to be able to find work.”
Harley-Davidson’s worldwide dealer network sold more than 125,000 motorcycles in the second quarter of the year, a 10 percent increase from the prior year. International retail motorcycle sales grew by 17.3 percent. The motorcycle maker also set a milestone this year when it opened its first dealership in China, a large new market for the company.
Bush also promised to help make permanent business tax credits for research and development, citing the company as a model for, as the president put it, “one of America’s finest products.”
WHO WANTS HELMETS The World Health Organization (WHO), a specialized health agency of the United Nations with 191 member states, is stressing the need for mandatory helmet laws worldwide and has published a road safety manual giving technical advice to governments on how to assess current helmet use and design programs to increase helmet wearing.
According to their estimates, motorcyclists account for more than 50 percent of the 1.2 million killed in road crashes every year, adding that the majority of those who die or are disabled in motorcycle accidents are from low and middle income nations, which is why the WHO is intensifying efforts to support governments to increase helmet use through their new publication ? ?Helmets: a road safety manual for decision-makers and practitioners.?
The manual is a follow-up to the World Report on road traffic injury prevention, published in 2004 by WHO and the World Bank, which provided evidence that establishing and enforcing mandatory helmet use is an effective intervention for reducing injuries and fatalities among two-wheeler users. The manual has been produced under the auspices of the UN road safety collaboration, in collaboration with the Global Road Safety Partnership, the FIA Foundation for the Automobile and Society, and the World Bank, as one of a series of documents that aim to provide practical advice on implementing the recommendations of the World Report.
“We want to make helmet use a high priority for national public health systems,” says Dr. Anders Nordstr?m, Acting Director-General of WHO. “We need to stress not only the effectiveness of helmets in saving lives, but the fact that helmet programs are good value for money. Countries will recoup their investment in these programs many times over through savings to their health care systems, as well as savings to other sectors.”
Many countries have succeeded in raising rates of helmet use through adopting laws that make helmet use compulsory, enforcing these laws, and raising public awareness about the laws, as well as the benefits of helmet use.
?The importance of increasing helmet use follows dramatic growth in motorization around the world, largely from increasing use of motorized two-wheelers, particularly in Asian countries. In China, for example, motorcycle ownership over the last ten years has increased rapidly. In 2004 it was estimated that more than 67 million motorcycles were registered in the country, and approximately 25% of all road traffic deaths were among motorcyclists and their passengers,? reports the WHO.
The manual will be implemented in a number of countries over the next two years, starting in the ASEAN region through the Global Road Safety Partnership’s GRSI initiative, but extending to cover countries from Africa, Latin America and the Middle East.
In addition to the publication of this manual, WHO has also established a network of experts working to increase helmet use, and supports helmet programs directly in its country work on road safety.
CANADIAN CITY INSTITUTES ?NO COLORS? POLICY ?Wearing colors of known criminal biker gangs is now officially unwelcome on city property,? reported the Alberta Daily Herald Tribune, as Grande Prairie Mayor Wayne Ayling put up the first no-gang-colors policy sign on the front doors of City Hall to officially start the city’s public campaign against criminal biker gangs.
“We believe it is inappropriate for people to advertise that they belong to a criminal gang on city property,” said Ayling. He said although Grande Prairie is the first city in Western Canada to have such a program in place, three other major cities in Ontario – Barrie, Durham, and Toronto – already have similar programs.
Ayling said the goal now is to get local businesses to put up no-gang-colors signs on their premises, though he admitted that may be a hard sell for some local businesses that regularly have motorcyclists as customers.
Quality Hotel, for example, is involved in the Canadian Championship of Bike Building in Wembley and was involved with the Western Canadian Bike Builders Showcase last year. The hotel’s general manager, Felix Seiler, said volunteering to support such a policy would put staff into the role of enforcers, something many are not qualified to do or should not be asked to do.
Mark Rodacker is manager of Countryside Motor Sports Inc., which deals with many clients that are into motorcycles. He felt the policy was “ridiculous” therefore his business wouldn’t be involved with the program. “They seem to label anyone who owns a motorcycle as a biker and that being part of a biker club means they’re going to be bad. They’re stereotyping all bikers,” he said.
The National Coalition of Motorcyclists (NCOM) has long fought against discriminatory legislation and opposes dress codes in public accommodations that unfairly discriminate against bikers. NCOM supports anti-discrimination laws that prevent establishments from discriminating against motorcyclists based on style of dress or mode of transportation.
WEIRD NEWS: NEW STAMP ISSUE MISSPELLS ?MOTORCYLE? The Postal Service recently, with great fanfare, issued a new set of stamps depicting motorcycles. Collectors who buy copies issued on the first day the stamps are available can get them with a special commemorative postmark. Unfortunately, the colorful postmark issued during the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally in South Dakota misspells it “motorcyle.”
Having discovered this, the post office announced Friday that new orders for first-day envelopes will have a corrected postmark. Unless the buyer wants it spelled wrong. In that case they can still order the version with the incorrect postmark. Just include a note asking for the incorrect version.
Any collectors who already have misspelled versions can trade them for the corrected version by sending them to INFORMATION FULFILLMENT, DEPT 6270, US POSTAL SERVICE, PO BOX 219424, KANSAS CITY, MO, 64121-9424.
QUOTABLE QUOTE: ?To believe is very dull. To doubt is intensely engrossing. To be on the alert is to live. To be lulled into security is to die.?
Oscar Wilde (1854 – 1900) Anglo-Irish poet/playwright
August 24, 2006 Part 4
By Bandit |
Continued From Page 3
HANG ON FOR THIS ONE–Big Brother will be watching you for sure by 2008 — the year a proposed requirement that Event Data Recorders (EDRs) become mandatory standard equipment in all new cars and trucks will become law unless public outrage puts the kibosh on it somehow.
EDRs are “black boxes” — just like airplanes have. They can record a wide variety of things — including how fast you drive and whether you “buckle-up for safety.” The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) wants EDRs to be installed in every new vehicle beginning with model year 2008 — on the theory that the information will help crash investigators more accurately determine the hows and whys of accidents.
But EDRs could — and likely will be — used for other purposes as well.
Tied into GPS navigation computers, EDRs could give interested parties — your local cash-hungry sheriff, for example — the ability to take automated ticketing to the next level. Since the data recorders can continuously monitor most of the operating parameters of a vehicle as it travels — and the GPS unit can precisely locate the vehicle in “real time,” wherever it happens to be at any given moment — any and all incidents of “speeding” could be immediately detected and a piece of paying paper issued to the offender faster than he could tap the brake. That’s even if he knew he was in the crosshairs, which of course he wouldn’t. Probably they’ll just erect an electronic debiting system of some sort that ties directly into your checking account — since the paperwork could not keep up with the massive uptick in fines that would be generated.
Already, 15-20 percent of all the cars and trucks in service have EDRs; most of these are General Motors vehicles. GM has been installing “black boxes” in its new cars and trucks since about 1996 as part of the Supplemental Restraint (air bag) system. Within a few years, as many as 90 percent of all new motor vehicles will be equipped with EDRs, according to government estimates — whether the requirement NHTSA is pushing actually becomes law or not.
The automakers are just as eager to keep tabs on us as the government — in part to keep the shyster lawyers who have been so successfully digging into their deep pockets at bay. EDRs would provide irrefutable evidence of high-speed driving, for example — or make it impossible for a person injured in a crash to deny he wasn’t wearing a seat belt.
Insurance companies will launch “safety” campaigns urging that “we use available technology” to identify “unsafe” drivers — and who will be able to argue against that? Everyone knows that speeding is against the law — and if you aren’t breaking the law, what have you got to worry about?
But if you get edgy thinking about the government — and our friends in corporate America — being able to monitor where we go and how we go whenever they feel like checking in on us, take the time to write a “Thanks, but no thanks” letter to NHTSA at
–from Rogue
www.samdixon.com
WISCONSIN SENATOR DAVE ZIEN NEEDS YOUR HELP!– Wisconsin State Senator Dave Zien has always been a steadfast advocate for motorcyclist’s rights, beginning when he returned from service as a United States Marine in Vietnam to help repeal Wisconsin’s mandatory helmet law in 1977, and continues to this day as a member of the State Legislature.
But Senator Zien is facing a tough re-election this fall and needs our help to continue serving the bikers of America. He has been targeted for defeat by ultraliberals who plan to spend hundreds of thousand of dollars to remove him from office. As freedom-loving motorcyclists, we cannot afford to let this happen!
Since being elected, Zien has been instrumental in passing numerous pieces of pro-motorcycling legislation, including Wisconsin Act 148 in 2003 that was enacted in response to the Wisconsin Supreme Court ruling in Stehlik v. Rhoads that ruled not wearing a helmet could be considered negligence by the biker in a civil case. In essence, the ruling was as de-facto mandatory helmet law. The result of Dave’s bill was that if a motorcyclist is not wearing a helmet, he or she can not have that fact used against him or her when a court is awarding damages.
Earlier this year, Zien authored the “Roadway Users Responsibility Act” that improves highway safety for all roadway users. This act increases penalties for right-of-way violators that cause bodily harm to motorcyclists. The new law also requires driver education courses to include motorcycle safety in order to make all drivers aware of the rules of the road and how motorcycles and cars can safely share the road. Another provision allows bikers to proceed with caution after waiting 45 seconds at a stoplight.
Zien is not just a legislator who rides; he was one of the first bikers ever elected to political office, and was inducted into the National Motorcycle Hall of Fame in Sturgis, South Dakota in 2000, and has received the National Coalition of Motorcyclists Lifetime Achievement Award. As a member of the NCOM Legislative Task Force, he has worked tirelessly to protect the rights of motorcyclists across the country by lobbying their state legislatures. He is a World-Record holding motorcyclist with 858,000+ on his 1991 FXRT Harley-Davidson as of August 15, 2006. He holds the record for most miles on a Harley ever in 11 consecutive days (11,225 miles), and Dave’s ride of 31,111 miles in 31 days has been submitted for official recognition.
We need to keep Wisconsin’s biker Senator in office, and your contribution to his campaign will keep him in Madison, looking out for the interest of the motorcyclists.
Please send what you can to keep Dave fighting for us. The maximum amount an individual can contribute is $1,000. Contributions should be made to “Friends of Dave Zien”, P.O. Box 1858, Eau Claire, WI 54702. If you have any questions about other ways you can help Dave Zien, call (715) 723-1694.
NEW HARLEY-DAVIDSON ROAD TECH QUEST NAVIGATION SYSTEM–MILWAUKEE (August 21, 2006) – The new Road Tech Quest Navigation System (P/N 92313-06, $599.95) from Harley-Davidson Genuine Motor Accessories is a rugged, waterproof, portable GPS receiver designed specifically for motorcycle use.
The compact Road Tech Quest unit is loaded with 115 megabytes of internal memory for powerful mapping capabilities, and includes fully unlocked MapSource City Select CDs with mapping coverage of the entire United States, Canada and Puerto Rico. A built-in USB data connection port allows fast downloads of MapSource information.
The high-speed internal processor provides fast automatic off-route and detour recalibration. The detailed street maps are displayed on a bright, LED backlit color screen that readable in sunlight, and the large control buttons can be activated while wearing gloves.
$$79.95) is hard-wired to the motorcycle electrical system and automatically powers the Quest unit and recharges the internal lithium-ion battery, which provides up to 20 hours of off-bike use. The entire unit is easily removed from the mount when parked, and can be used as a portable navigation tool.
Road Tech Quest fits most 1996-Later Harley-Davidson models, except VRSCR.For additional information on Harley-Davidson Genuine Motor Accessories, see your local Harley-Davidson dealer or visit the Harley-Davidson Web site at www.harley-davidson.com. To find a dealer near you, call toll free 1-800-443-2153 in the U.S.A. or Canada.
BIG TWIN CUSTOMS INVITATIONAL ANNOUNCES CALL FOR ENTRIES– Santa Ana, California ? August 21, 2006 Big Twin Customs Invitational is catching the industry’s attention! Due to the overwhelming response from builders, the deadline for bike submissions has been extended to October 6, 2006.
“We’re more than pleased at the interest being generated in this. Launching a new custom bike showcase in an industry that has its share of prestigious bike contests, we’re thrilled that builders recognize the distinctiveness of a showcase that celebrates excellence in design and the individual talents of all the builders involved,” said Dave Scott, Show Manager for Big Twin West.
A call for entries was extended to all custom bike builders in July. Big Twin Customs Invitational is open to all builders of custom American or Metric Big Twin motorcycles. Variations on the Big Twin theme are allowed, including trikes, 4-cylinder, 8-cylinder and single cylinder variations.
A celebration of design excellence, this premier invitation-only event will feature 100 bikes from around the world and will be showcased at Big Twin West 2006, a trade and enthusiast event for the American and Metric Big Twin markets. With over 7,500 buyers and spectators expected to walk the show floor over the course of the weekend, Big Twin West provides the ultimate platform for custom bike building anywhere in the world.
While Big Twin Customs Invitational is a showcase, and not a contest, we will be honoring builders with best of honors in six categories: best paint, best fabrication, excellence in engineering, best old school, exhibitors? choice and excellence in design.
Big Twin Customs Invitational will take place December 1 – 3, 2006 during Big Twin West, at the Mandalay Bay Convention Center in Las Vegas, NV.
For more information or to download an entry form, visit www.bigtwinwest.com and click on the Big Twin Customs menu button. “
MASSIVE BIKER MURDER CASE FORGING AHEAD–Edmonton Sun, Canada – LONDON, Ont. — A preliminary hearing into the deaths of eight Bandidos bikers – one of the worst mass slayings in Ontario’s history – may start as early as January.
That appears to be the plan after yesterday’s brief court video appearances – the first in London – by seven of the eight people charged after eight men were found shot to death and stuffed into vehicles April 8 near Shedden, Ont.Wayne Kellestine, 57, and Frank Mather, 32, both of Dutton-Dunwich, Brett Gardiner, 22, of no fixed address, and Michael Sandham, 35, Marcelo Aravena, 30, and Dwight Mushey, 38, all of Winnipeg, are facing eight counts of first-degree murder.
Eric Niessen, 45, of Dutton-Dunwich is charged with accessory after the fact.All of them were ordered to return to court Sept. 8 to set the January hearing date, including the eighth person, Kerry Morris, 46, of the Moncton area, who is also charged with being an accessory and is out on bail. She wasn’t required to attend yesterday’s proceedings.
The dead men were all associated with the Bandidos motorcycle club.George (Crash) Kriarakis, 28, John (Boxer) Muscedere, 48, Luis Manny (Porkchop) Raposo, 41, Frank (Bam Bam) Salerno, 43, Paul Sinopoli, 30, and George (Pony) Jesso, 52, were full-patch gang members. Jamie (Rogue) Flanz, 37, and Mike Trotta, 31, were associate members.
The case has moved from St. Thomas to London to take advantage of a high-security courtroom refitted three years ago for another lengthy biker-related case. That case, involving members of the Outlaws, has not been completed.While the expected January preliminary hearing date seems earlier than expected given the nature of the case, Kellestine lawyer Clay Powell said, “It’s doable.”
“It’s going to be a bit of a crush, and they have to make sure the courtroom is made available,” he said.During the brief court appearances yesterday, there were several key developments:
– Eight charges of accessory after the fact faced by Niessen and Morris have been reduced to only one charge each.
– Senior Crown attorney David Arntfield said more case disclosure will be given to the defense before the next court appearance.
– Anthony Bryant, who acted for notorious schoolgirl murderer Paul Bernardo, has taken over Aravena’s defense from Toronto lawyer Daniel Brodsky.
– Powell said in court he was planning to apply to the court for the information to obtain search warrants and the affidavits in support of extensive wiretaps.
–from Rogue
New artwork from Chris Kallas. Coming soon the The Gulch!
PRESIDENT VISITS HARLEY FACTORY– A White House official waved at President George W. Bush as he exited his Marine One helicopter at Harley-Davidson, then gestured as though turning the throttle on a motorcycle.That brought a brief smile to the president’s face yesterday before a limousine whisked him off to the Springettsbury Township plant around 3 p.m., where workers were busily assembling a mix of Softail motorcycles.
After 15 minutes of meeting and greeting with employees, the president shouted, “I’m impressed with the quality of the product here,” over the sounds of a conveyer belt running overhead and motorcycles slowly moving along an assembly track.
Later, following an economic sit-down discussion with company workers and management, Bush vowed to make the quality American product he’d seen firsthand open to more international markets.
With a backdrop of a dozen Harley employees and several motorcycles — including a purple Screamin’ Eagle Ultra Classic Electra Glide that momentarily got nearly as much attention as the president — Bush also promised to help make permanent business tax credits for research and development.
Bush is the third president to visit the Harley-Davidson plant, using the company as a model for,as the president put it, “one of America’s finest products.”
“I’m impressed by the fact that these people really enjoy what they’re doing,” Bush told national and local media in a 21/2-minute statement.
The president spent less than two hours at the plant before jumping back into his helicopter, Marine One, around 4:30 p.m., and heading to Lancaster for a fund-raising reception for Republican gubernatorial candidate Lynn Swann.
Roundtable with workers: Eight Harley-Davidson employees — from company CEO Jim Ziemer to assembly line worker Ryan Britton — sat down with the president.
The president said he assured the company he agrees there is a need to open more markets for American products such as motorcycles made by Harley-Davidson.
“There’s a direct correlation between exports and jobs,” Bush said. “The more Harleys that are sold in places like Vietnam, China and India, the more likely someone is going to be able to find work.”
Harley-Davidson’s worldwide dealer network sold more than 125,000 motorcycles in the second quarter of the year, a 10 percent increase from the prior year. International retail motorcycle sales grew by 17.3 percent.
The motorcycle maker also set a milestone this year when it opened its first dealership in China, a large new market for the company.
Discussions: Fred Gates, general manager of Harley-Davidson’s York operations, said opening foreign markets to the company was the crux of the meeting.
“We tried to make sure we were up front about the things we’d like to see in the government to help us sell more motorcycles in foreign markets,” Gates said. “I think we got our point across on things we need his help on.”
Harley employees also asked the president about health benefits for single mothers, worker retraining programs and making business tax credits for research and development permanent, Gates said.
Bush addressed the latter concern with the media after the roundtable discussion.
“And I assured them that when I said I’m for it being permanent, I meant I was for it being permanent,” Bush said. “And we hope Congress makes the research and development tax credit a permanent part of the tax code.”
Before the president left for Lancaster, Harley-Davidson presented him with a special plaque with a gas tank attached and a nylon jacket with the Harley-Davidson, York Operations logo on the back. Bush already received the iconic Harley leather jacket when he visited the company’s headquarter and operations in Milwaukee in 2001.
Gates said the president had shown interest in owning a Harley, but it’s unlikely he’ll get the opportunity.
“He said he liked our motorcycles,” Gates said. “But he wasn’t sure the Secret Service would let him ride one.”
— CHARLES SCHILLINGER The York Dispatch
–from Rogue
LONGER DAYTONA BIKE WEEK DISCUSSED–Are you ready for a longer Bike Week?Biker events could start a week earlier for some businesses under a plan being proposed by a pair of biker event committees.
Longer Bike Week?
Arguing that many bikers arrive early, a chamber of commerce proposal would allow Daytona Beach businesses to sell merchandise outside their shops as many as seven days before the official start of biker events. Critics fear the proposal would extend the length of time residents have to put up with extra traffic and noise. Upcoming dates for the events:
? Biketoberfest: Oct. 19-22
? Bike Week: March 2-11
The Bike Week Festival Task Force and the Biketoberfest Development Committee last week recommended giving local merchants up to seven days before the official start to sell merchandise outside of their stores, hoping it would give them a leg up against neighboring cities that already can sell days earlier.
But the idea has caused a fury with some beachside residents who worry it will stretch out the party — and the crowds, traffic and noise they have been fighting to restrain.”We were starting to make headway,” said Pam Woods, a beachside resident who helped draft limits on biker events several years ago. “Things were getting so much better. We don’t want to take a step backward.”
Kevin Kilian, vice president of events for The Chamber, Daytona Beach/Halifax Area, said the week-early start would have restrictions and shouldn’t make a major impact.For starters, it won’t be advertised and would be optional only to businesses that operate year-round, he said. Businesses could sell only the merchandise they normally carry, like a “sidewalk sale,” and can’t create any additional sound. In other words, no concerts on stages until the actual start day.
The plan, which must be introduced to the City Commission by October for it to go into effect in time for Bike Week in March, also won’t permit out-of-town vendors to get started early — only locals, Kilian said.
It should help Daytona Beach business owners compete with their neighbors in unincorporated Volusia County, where they can start selling goodies at least four days before the official start of Bike Week and Biketoberfest.”The intent is to give local businesses the opportunity to capture some business when the stragglers come early,” Kilian said.
That may be the intent, but Paul Politis, owner of Gator Sports on Atlantic Avenue, which competes with itinerant T-shirt vendors, said it won’t stop out-of-towners from selling early because they know it would be hard for city officials to enforce.
“This could open up a can of worms,” Politis said. “We’re going to end up with a bike month.”
Tom Guest, owner of Choppers World on Main Street and chairman of the Biketoberfest Development Committee, said the plan would help businesses that have struggled, including his. He hopes to make some extra cash during Bike Week by selling leather goods and other items outside his store the weekend before.
“We did this after the hurricanes and it didn’t attract that many more people,” he said. “This is not going to be a real big deal.”
— Daytona Beach News-Journal, FL – DAYTONA BEACH —
–from Rogue
GRAB THE WRENCHES AND RUN–Back to the shop. I need to hit the local fastener store for supplies and find a oil pressure switch for the 120-Pan. I’m sure I have one in the shop. I will install the BDL primary drive, the Compu-Fire regulator, a coil, the LA Chop Rods Shifter, the Terry Components battery cables, oil lines, Gas line, etc. and fire this puppy to life. Wil Phillips from True-Track is making my steering dampner set-up and I’ll be inspected by an SCTA official tomorrow.
Hang on for the Sunday News. Let’s hope it’s all good. Once I have a few miles on her, I will work with Berry Wardlaw and D&D on a set of exhaust specifically designed for the Salt. We will hand make these puppies right here in the Bikernet Headquarters. Next week we roll out Wendover, Nevada and set up for racing.
I’m still going to shoot for finishing my Sturgis Twin Kings run article. We have a couple of Girls of Bikernet about to run in the Cantina and a tech for the Tech Department.
I want to thank everyone for joining the Cantina. Hope you enjoy it. More and more hot material slips into the Cantina for the members. I’m posting a new “Chance” book and more girls? contantly. It’s a blast, and we appreciate your support.
Ride Forever,
–Bandit
August 24, 2006 Part 3
By Bandit |
Continued From Page 2
BIKER BEAUTIES COVER TEST–Livia and I are just about ready to send the first issue of Biker Beauties to the printers for its Sept 14th debut at DelMarVa Bike Week in Ocean City, MD. We’re still a couple advertisers shy of our goal for the first issue so if anyone reading this wants to get something in the first issue give me a call as soon as possible. 68 pages for our first issue is going to be impressive. We’re sure to run out by Oct 7th. We’re doing an event with the Detroit Bros. in Virginia then that is expected to draw about 5,000 people.
We’re undecided on what to use for our first cover so we were hoping to get some input from the readers of Bikernet. We wanted to be sure to keep Mt. Rushmore in the cover shot and we wanted to make sure Chopper City USA’s custom harley got good placement. Let me know what you think. Comments can be sent to orlandoglamour@aol.com
–Sam and Livia
www.samdixon.com
(phone # listed on my portfolio for anyone who wants to call about advertising)
BIKERNET NOISE STUDY RESPONSE–I just received a forward from Rogue about the situation with the potential “ban” on loud pipes… thought I would let you know that I agree with you that pipes really do save lives. I read the article he attached and although I do not “yet” ride a Harley-Davidson, I do ride a Suzuki Boulevard 06, and had some double D pipes put on for the very reason you are speaking about. The stock pipes were just not loud enough and people never really knew I was there.
I ride responsibly and try and remain in site of everyone, avoiding as many “blind” spots as possible.. however… I do ride to work everyday in rush hour traffic… to save money on gas, and I love to ride, but I see people watching the news on their dash board televisions, talking on cell phones constantly, applying make-up and eating what sometimes appears to be 3 and 4 course meals on the front seat of their cars… all while maneuvering in and out of traffic. It really scares me, and believe me, my pipes really do give me peace of mind (no pun intended LOL).
Let me know what I can do to help you… let me know how to make sure my rights are not violated anymore. I really believe we are no longer the land of the free. I see nothing to promote freedom anymore. Press one for English…
If there is anything I can do to help you, please let me know. riding is my love and my life, maintaining my rights is ultimately my goal.
–Sarah Davidson
ENTER D&D PERFORMANCE EXHAUST BIKINI CONTEST–John Harsh is this week’s D&D Bikini Contest Winner! He receives a D&D Performance Exhaust T-Shirt. He sent in this pic of his bike and gal pal.
To enter the contest send in a picture of your bike with your favorite bikini honey to dd@horsepowermarkeing.com. . Each week we pull the best picture and award a D&D Performance Exhaust t-shirt. Then we pull them all together, vote on the best picture and the winner receives a set of D&D Performance Exhausts.
Include in your email your Name, Motorcycle, Year, Model, Email, Bikini model name, and Telephone number. The contest runs from August 17th through September 28th.
BIKERNET RADIO INTERVIEWS PLAYBOY PLAYMATE AND WRESTLER– What do you have when you combine a Playboy Playmate with a Perfect Angel and a TNA Wrestler? The perfect Bikernet Radio show. You do not want to miss this Playgirl.We caught up with Christy Hemme at the La Calendar Show. Thunder Bob of Metric Thunder interviewed Christy, Russell Mitchell of Exile, Chris Maida of American Iron and a host of others. Click here to hear Christy and see the pics from the bikini contest..
AVON TECH ANSWER OF THE WEEK–Riders often try to put wider tires on their bike to achieve a fatter “look” or fill in the fender. Some things to watch out for:
Too wide of a tire on a wheel causes the tire to be deformed and actually triangulate resulting in stress to the sidewalls, premature wear, and less contact patch unless at a lean.
Too narrow of a tire on a wheel causes the tire to stretch to fit the wheel and gives a flat profile which gives a bigger contact patch when upright but does not make for a smooth transition when leaning. (note the tire has a flattened profile in this picture)
Pay attention to the rim ranges posted by manufacturers for their tires on their websites.
e.g. MT90-16 (13) tires usually fits 2.50 to 3.50.
–Sukoshi Fahey (Ms.)
Sales Manager, North America
www.avonmotorcycle.com
ADVANCED TATTOO ART-HOW TO–The art of the tattoo has emerged from the garage to the parlor, from the local bar to the board room. With interest in tattoos at a high point, the time is right for a detailed look at the art, and the artists, who create the elaborate designs.
Wolfgang Publications and Doug Mitchel take the reader inside the shops of ten well-known and very experienced artists spread across the country. Both a how-to book and a photo-intense look the world or tattoos, Advanced Tattoo Art includes interviews with the artists that explain not only how they do what they do, but their personal preference for materials and methods.
Detailed photo sequences follow each artist through a tattoo project, from the customer’s concept, through the sketch and outline, to the finished and colorful design. The chapters document not only the techniques, but also the inks and tools used during each step of the process. Whether you’re learning or just fascinated by the world of Tattoos, This 144 page, illustrated with over 400 color images, is sure to provide a wealth of information for anyone fascinated by Tattoo Art.
Advanced Tattoo Art is available from Wolfgang Publications, 217 N. Second St, Stillwater, MN 55082 for $24.95 + $5.50 S&H. Order by phone at 651 275 9411 or on the web at www.wolfpub.com.
–Jacki Mitchell
Wolfgang Publications
651.275.9394
Fax: 651.275.9330
24 hr. order line: 651.275.9411
www.wolfpub.com
PERFORMANCE MACHINE CONTOUR DEL REY WHEELS FOR 2006–Performance Machine builds two unique lines of wheels, the first is the stuff we normally see, wild designs and unique looks are the norm, but like PM has done for years, they can never leave good enough alone. The second wheel collection is a result of that “we can do more” style of thinking and they call it the Contour line.
The wheels are so complex that PM only releases a few new ones per year and for 2006 the Del Rey is the one! Sweeping spokes emerge from the hub, flow in a perfect arc and blend seamlessly into the rim. The PM Contour style wheel allows them to take the shape all the way to the edge of the rim, ensuring no other wheel will look like the Del Rey (or any of the five wheel designs that comprise the Contour line)! Limited availability, contact Performance Machine or your local PM dealer for more information.
For more information, call or write to:Performance Machine, Inc.
6892 Marlin Circle,
La Palma, CA 90623
714-523-3000
www.performancemachine.com
PROGRESSIVE SUSPENSION DYNA FORK LOWERING KIT–June 1, 2006 Hesperia, CA Progressive Suspension, Inc. announces the perfect combination of our progressive rate fork spring and a reduced ride height for the new model Dyna’s. The Progressive Suspension’s fork lowering kit is designed to drop the front end of the 2006 and newer FXD 1″ or 2″ (depending on which of the supplied springs are used). Spring rates have been chosen to reduce front end “dive” under braking, yet still provide excellent ride comfort. A Progressive Rate Spring has the advantage of a rising rate resistance to compression.
For example, a 15lb – 25lb Progressive Rate Spring will take 15lbs to compress it the first inch, then 17lbs the next inch, and so on, until the end of the travel. It will take an additional 25lbs to compress it the last inch. The benefit of this is that the spring can be soft enough at the start of the travel to offer a “plush” ride yet be firm enough at the end of the travel to soak up the big bumps. This is especially important for a lowered motorcycle where the suspension travel has been reduced.
Application:2006 and newer HD Dyna FXDBI/LI, FXDI/CI/35 part # 10-1566 MSRP $102.95
Progressive Suspension
11129 G Avenue
Hesperia, CA 92345 USA
877.690.7411
info@progressivesuspension.com
www.progressivesuspension.com
www.samdixon.com
BIKERTOBERFEST COMING–Now is the time to be thinking about Octoberfest 2006 in Daytona Beach Fl. Check out our website then call Paul at 386-649-6867. You owe it to yourself to at least check out the hottest and newest locations in the area.
–Theresa proctor
pfab1063@earthlink.net
BEWARE RIDING IN OKLAHOMA–I just received this information from Larry Miers, our Rogers County Chapter President, and am forwarding it to you to emphasize being aware when riding in Northeast Oklahoma around the Claremore area, north of Tulsa. This might be the outgrowth of a situation where we have had specific members of the Law Enforcement Community up there, a very few, who are vehemently Anti-Motorcycling and have been giving motorcyclists a hard time, including out-of-state visitors.
There are some uniformed officials in our environment who may not know the law, but they know what they like, and motorcycles aren’t on the list! I’ll include a couple of reminders: you MUST have an “M” endorsement on your Driver’s License to legally operate a motorcycle in Oklahoma, and you MUST be wearing approved Safety Goggles if your bike is not equipped with a windshield (sunglasses WILL NOT satisfy the requirement).
The Osage County Sheriff’s Dept. stakes out the big May and Sept. biker rallies in Pawhuska, and regularly hands out $100 tickets to generate revenue from this infraction. Other information relative to motorcycle equipment in Oklahoma is governed by Title 47 of Oklahoma Statutes. The handlebar height restriction has been liberalized to allow up to eye height, but the statute requires exhaust systems to have baffles–you’re going to be ticketed if you’re running drag pipes.
I don’t know if the Claremore officials have sprung for decibel meters to measure exhaust noise, so if you get a Loud Pipe ticket without the noise level being measured, take it to court and fight it! Regarding running extra lights (not being able to run with more than two head/spotlights on a bike, and classifying spotlights as headlights), first, I thought we had ironed this Title 47 issue out but obviously we haven’t, and secondly, I find it ironic that motorcyclists get hassled for running extra lights in the interest of PROMOTING their Margin of Safety by increasing their illumination and awareness for surrounding motorists. This, in my mind, once again reinforces that not all measures like this are about Safety–they’re about Politics, Money and Control!
We’re definitely going to address these issues during our State Board Meetings in the Fall, as we prepare for the 2007 Legislative Session. This is also something I’d like to talk about at the OK Confederation of Clubs Meeting in Tulsa on Sept. 9. Thanks for listening, take care of each other, Ride Free and Safely (in Claremore and elsewhere), and I’ll see you on the Road.
Yours in Freedom,
–Tiger Mike Revere
State Coordinator, ABATE of Oklahoma
Liaison, OK Confederation of Clubs
–from Rogue
BIKER ART ON THE QUEEN MARY–I’ll be out at the Queen Mary in Long Beach this weekend for this art event if you can make it. They have assembled a great group of motorcycle artists to hang there work for just two days. If you feel like taking a ride to Long Beach to look at motorcycle art, it should be fun. A band is scheduled for Saturday night so it should be a party.
Michael
–Michael Lichter
Boulder, CO
303 449-3906
Continued On Page 4
August 24, 2006 Part 2
By Bandit |
Continued From Page 1
TEXAS NATIONAL BIKE SHOW SPONSORED BY BIKERNET.COM COMING–Howdy All,
Well, my minions finally finished their job!!! Here is the final proof for the Texas National Bike Show poster, and isn’t she a beauty.
We are very excited to finish up the printing and get these out to the masses. So look for them in your local ice house, and custom shops.
Come out and support your local builders and shops at the Texas National Bike Show sponsored by “The Famous Bikernet”November 3rd and 4th in beautiful Galveston Texas.
Registration is now open for the custom bike show, and vendor registration at the fabulous price of $1.50 a sq ft. Registration is at www.texasnationalbikeshow.com.
See you at the show,
–Mrs. Devil, aka Holly
AMERICAN CLASSIC STRAIGHTS–American Classic Straights performance exhaust pipes are outstanding in quality and design. Hard Krome American Classic Straights turn the sound and look of your bike into a custom motorcycle!
The 2.5″ American Classic Straights feature new straight cut ‘Hard-Tips’, billet end caps as standard equipment. Optional slash-cut and tapered end caps are sold separately. And at $439.95 the price cannot be beat. That’s $60 off!
These are exclusive pipes made from a world-class manufacturer, Hard Krome, and you are assured that not everyone in your club will be sporting these chrome performance pipes.
For: Harley FLST Softail ’84-’04
From: Metric Thunder
Who: Thunder Bob
Details: Click Here for 2 into 2 American Classic Straights
Pricing: Thunder Bob is taking $60 off retail
Details: The 2.5″ American Classic Straights are a mid- length design allows you to show off your custom wheels or tricked-out swing arm.
CUSTOM CHROME BUYS BILLY’S BREAKFAST–Billy Lane’s efforts to raise money for kids during the Sturgis Rally & Races got an extra serving of help from Custom Chrome. The distributor picked up the tab for Billy Lane’s Builders Breakfast, sponsored by Bikernet.com, served August 8 at the world famous Broken Spoke Saloon in Sturgis.
Custom Chrome chose to participate in Billy’s event to help kids and to continue to be a charitable leader in the motorcycle industry. “We think this is a great opportunity to do something positive for kids and promote good will for the motorcycle community,” says Global Motorsports Group CEO John Lott. “We are proud to team up with Billy and the other sponsors of this event. We believe it will make a difference and wanted to help Billy get it done. We are taking a whole new approach to how and what we do at events and look forward to doing more with the builder community.”
Billy adds, “CCI picking up the tab for food costs, helping to serve everyone and the other things they are doing is a huge help overall. Their participation allows us to give everything we raise through ticket sales to the kids,” claims Lane. “That’s why we are all doing it in the first place – for the kids.”
–from Rogue
TRUE-TRACK TO THE RESCUE–Returning from Sturgis, I lost my helmet in Utah, at the Chevron in Nevada. I meet a guy named Jay, He loaned me his helmet. Jay is the American side of a Japan Mag version of Chopper Mag. Jay was sharing with me a information on Speed wobble on Big bikes and that a Traction bar or Stabilizer from True-Track does the trick. Jay, told me this mounted to the trans.
Usually stabilizers go to the frame to lower triple tree. What do you know about these. I ride fast and would like to make my scoot as firm as possible.
Steve O’Neal
True-Track is the answer and hundreds were installed on touring bikes in the Badlands and Black Hills Harley-Davidson. We rode two Road Kings to Sturgis from the West Coast, one with a True-Track one without. It’s night and day. –Bandit
ANOTHER BRIEF STURGIS REPORT–What a ride and kick ass trip. 7 brothers, no obligations, 10 days and 4,300 miles of laughs from Jacksonville Florida to Sturgis SD and back. Hope everyone had as great a week as we did and made it home safe. Big shout out to everyone we met on our journey, all of ya’ll rock!
Ride Hard,
–Whiplash Biker Photog
mailto:soffordphotos@comcast.net
RECORD H-D EARNINGS–Harley-Davidson, Inc. reported record revenue and earnings per share for its second quarter, which ended June 25. Revenue for the quarter was $1.38 billion compared to $1.33 billion in the same quarter last year, a 3.3% increase. Net income for Q2 was $243.4 million compared to $237.4 million, an increase of 2.5% compared to the second quarter of 2005. Second quarter diluted earnings per share (EPS) were $0.91, an 8.3% increase compared to last year’s $0.84.
Harley-Davidson’s worldwide dealer network sold more than 125,000 motorcycles during the second quarter, an increase of 10% over the prior year. Harley’s U.S. retail motorcycle sales for the second quarter grew by 8.1% while international sales increased by 17.3%.
“I am very pleased with our retail performance during the quarter,” says Harley president and chief executive officer, Jim Ziemer. “Looking back over the past 12 months, worldwide retail sales of our motorcycles have grown 8.6%. This momentum demonstrates the continued strong appeal of our products and the Harley-Davidson experience. I am equally pleased with our prospects for the future, given the exciting new products and services we are bringing to market. (Read all about Harley’s 2007 model lineup and The Motor Company’s new powerplant on page 82.) “Looking ahead to the remainder of 2006, the company’s wholesale shipment target for the calendar year remains between 348,000 and 352,000 Harley-Davidson motorcycles.” Looking further into the future, he adds, “The company believes that worldwide retail sales of Harley-Davidson motorcycles will support a wholesale unit growth rate in the range of 5% to 9% annually and an annual EPS growth rate of 11% to 17%,” concludes Ziemer.
–Motorcycle Product News
–from Rogue
CANADIAN ALL MAKE MOTORYCLE SHOW N SHINE– Date: Saturday, August 26th
Time: Noon – 5pm
Location: Mission Springs Brewing Company (7160 Oliver Street in Mission)
For info call Chris Craig at (604) 820-1009
Classes include:
Best Drag Bike “Fuel,” Best Drag Bike “Gas,” Best Paint, Best Touring, BestVintage, Best Sportbike, Best Radical “street legal,”
Managers choice,
Servers choice
It’s always a great time, so make sure you stop by and check it out! Thefood is fabulous, they have their own micro brewery, outdoor volleyballcourts and more. Check them out at www.missionspringsbrewingcompany.com
So far the forecast for Mission on Saturday is sunny to partly cloudy andnice and a high of 23 degrees.
Please note that the event will be cancelled if it rains.
ANOTHER MAJOR VICTORY FOR QUIGLEY IN CALIFORNIA-NINE CASES DISMISSED–Richard Quigley won a major decision in Superior Court in and for the County of Santa Cruz, California. The judge found the helmet law, as enforced, unconstitutional, and dismissed nine helmet tickets that Quigley received for wearing a BOLT, baseball style headgear, with DOT embroidered on the back (see http://www.hupy.com, current news for bikers for article and picture of Quigley).
The language in the “Order after Hearing and Facts of Law” are of most importance in this issue. Please refer to www.usff.com/print and look for the “order” document dated August 16, 2006. It affirms that the CHP was beyond their jurisdiction, mislead officers in training memos and concluded that there is no such thing as a “DOT” approved helmet. The old BOLT slogan, copied by some, “No List, No Law” has prevailed.
The question remains, where are the state MRO’s and national organizations in their support of Quigley’s attempts to rid California of the mandatory helmet law?
As founder of ABATE of Wisconsin, and BOLT, I’m proud that our law firm has supported Richard Quigley since 1992.
–Tony “Pan” Sanfelipo
Investigator
Hupy and Abraham, S.C.
BULLETPRUF TURNS UP THE HEAT WITH EXCLUSIVE FLAMED FORWARD CONTROLS–While flamethrowers are not the average gangsters’ weapon, a new set ofFlamed Forward Controls from the Bulletpruf Gang will have the coldestsouls running in fear. Made from chromed billet aluminum, they fit ’84-’99Softails? and are available with matching grips. As always, these parts willmeet all of your needs without breaking the bank. See your local MCAdvantages dealer today!
MC Advantages is a distributor of high-performance V-Twin parts based inGrimes, Iowa, serving dealers in the U.S. and abroad. MC Advantagesdistributes many brands including: S&S? Cycle, Martin Bros.?, Spyke?,Stampede, Prowler?, Bulletpruf, D&M Custom Cycle, Rivera Engineering?,Platinum Air Suspension, Tauer Machine?, Hooker? and many more.
–MC Advantages
1-800-726-9620
http://www.MCAdvantages.com
BIG TWIN WEST-MORE THAN JUST ANOTHER TRADESHOW–For those of you, who have just made it home from Sturgis, make sure that you make plans to attend Big Twin West and experience three days of Big Twin products, Big Twin exhibitors and Big Twin trends. Big Twin West is not just another tradeshow; it’s a celebration of the Big Twin lifestyle.
At Big Twin West 2006 you’ll have a chance to :
SEE new products before anyone else does!
IDENTIFY next season’s trends!
ATTEND live product demonstrations
TEST & COMPARE price points, product durability, competing product lines
Get a jumpstart on your competition by stocking your shelves with 2007’s accessories and merchandise! All of the products your customers want to put on their bikes are here in Las Vegas, together under one roof ? its one stop shopping for the Big Twin industry.
THUNDER ROAD WAS THE CUSTOM CAPITOL OF STURGIS-HUGE SUCCESS–Sturgis, S.D.- For the fourth year, during Sturgis Bike Week 2006, ThunderRoad was again the custom capital of Sturgis, with the best bike shows,babes, beer, and vendors. The 40,000 square foot Thunderdome, home to RickFairless?s Strokers Sturgis, was also host to Michael Lichter?s exhibit, School’s Out; Old Skool, New School, All(s) Kool, a huge successdrawing big crowds every day and giving the public a glimpse at some reallycool bikes and art, showing them that really, All’s Kool in custommotorcycles. Over the years Michael Lichter’s exhibits have become animportant part of the Sturgis experience, chronicling the Sturgis experienceand the motorcycle industry as a whole. This year was no different.
The AMD World Championship Of Custom Bike Building, which also took place inthe Thunderdome, was an outstanding addition to Sturgis Bike Week. œTheWorld Championship is an international competition, drawing builders from allover the world; it?s the only one of its caliber, and this year was a hugesuccess. The show was the largest collection of the highest quality custommotorcycles anywhere.
The Thunderdome was graced by the presence of three Penthouse pets for theever- popular Biker/Penthouse build-off. Stevenson?s Cycle, of Wayne,Mich., won the build-off with their awesome BFB bobber. TheBiker/Penthouse bike show, which ran in conjunction with the build off, drewa huge crowd and cemented its place in the Sturgis Bike Week landscape as themid-week bike show to attend.
The fourth annual Metzler bike show inside the Thunderdome also exceededexpectations.œBringing the show up from Rapid City showed an increase incompetitors as well as consumers, we couldn?t be happier with theparticipation and quality of bikes that showed up, said a Metzelerspokesperson.
New this year to the Thunderdome was a perennial favorite, The Rat?s HoleShow. Promoter Ted Smith pointed out that it was one of the largest eventsever in Sturgis. The team of eight international judges were kept busy allday Friday with a wide range of custom builds, from the extreme to the exoticto the street bike next door.
Hell, even Bikernet.com was on hand in the Thunderdome as a major sponsor. Vendors out at Thunder Road were pleased with the traffic and sales. “Itwas my first time vending in Sturgis and we saw a great return on ourinvestment in terms of PR and sales,” said Pat Patterson of Led SledCustoms of Dayton, Ohio. Sturgis veteran Mercedes Ross of Redhill MotorcycleWerx in Lyons, Colo. also said that sales at her Thunder Road booth weregreat this year and she looks forward to coming back next year.
Thunder Road has proven after four years that it is around for the long hauland has become the place to see the widest variety of custom motorcycles inSturgis. Thunder Road is looking forward to next year, and to continuing toserve Sturgis visitors and vendors in any capacity they can, hosting moregreat events, being the place to go in Sturgis, and retaining their title asThe Custom Capital Of Sturgis.
STEALTH SHOP INVESTIGATION–Man the summer is flying by too quick! It is time to get those rides in and to start thinking about upcoming projects. Here at STEALTH BIKE WORKS we are starting our rigid restoration project. Around here all the “Bike Nights” are going strong with the parking lots full of bikes, so the urge to ride is still strong around Charlotte.
Man, what a difference a week makes. Last week I was singing the praises of the Discovery Bike-Build Off as being one of the best of all time and this week I have to say this one was the worst of all time, hands down! Who’s idea was this one anyway? How many of us who watch the build-off’s really care about dirt bikes? Come on let’s get real. I respect what these guys do and the talent it takes but us who watch just are not interested. With all the bike builders out there who would give anything for a shot at one of the Bike-Build Off’s, they do one on dirt bikes? I am confused! Oh well there is always next week!
Congratulations to my buddy Ben Jordan for winning awards for his shovel head while he was in Sturgis. Ben’s bike can be seen in Johnny’s Sturgis report. It is the gold metalflake Shovel.
I don’t know if all of you saw the Sunday Post but there is a picture of our “Dicey” shifter rod. I am sending another shot of it this week so all of you can take a look. I think it is pretty cool. If you like what you see give us a call at ATEALTH BIKE WORKS, 704-882-0889.
Until next week, RIDE!
–STEALTHMAN
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