Happy Monday, Here’s some cool Video’s

Wow- Monday already and I guess it was a hard start for you lot today as it was for me too, and I think today I shall continue with a few more videos to try and help your workday fly by, or at least give you something different to look at on your lunch break etc.

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Below is a video from back in the day about road safety, always fun to watch as our machines have changed a lot , as well as the traffic speeds too.

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It is from Los Angeles in the 1960’s and boy, to see no traffic in the towns is weird these days, it also makes me laugh when the public service film and the AMA both tell you to. “Dress Neatly” as they want you to give a good impression to your neighbors. ha ha ha

 

And how about this, some rare footage called “Rode Safely” This was filmed back in 1955 in Liverpool, and its some cool footage to watch on a Monday and shows how things were so much different back then, compared to today’s traffic and Laws etc.

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I had to laugh at the “staged crashes” and the Old style of hand signals that have changed in the highway Code back home. This is as funny as hell to watch and I am certain that these 13 minutes will have you cracking up.

Onto part 2 now of “Rode Safely”

16 minutes of awesome footage, and for me this was thoroughly entertaining, showing me what Back home like in 1955, when there was only half a million Motorcycles being ridden on the British roads.

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Enjoy

Be safe out there but you don’t have to dress neatly OK? LOL.

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Flash Back Friday

Just a quick old Video when I had a Bigger shop that did Cafe Racers and Hot Rods, but am so much happier doing MY own stuff and not relying of other people, so have a great weekend.

 

Hybrid Cafe ” The Tracy Special”

 

The Tracy Special was a Motorcycle I created for fun, and to use all the parts I had laying about in my garage at home, and she turned out to be a really cool little bike.

I used a set of Original Raider rims that I have had for many many moons and powder coated them an Aztec Gold color to give it some contrast as I hadn’t seen any Gold rims over here then.

I loved the rims and they were heavy made and sturdy as hell, so had them all ready to go but i wanted something right out of the Custom scene of the 70’s this time and there it was, an old Tracy body that I picked up at a swap meet.

I also hand drilled the front Rotor on a cheap harbor freight drill press and am glad how she came out.

Its an early model too and I went about cleaning it up and getting the bodywork all prepped and then had to decide on a color that would suit this, I then decided that if I used the original Candy Apple red, that would accentuate the gold really well, and so, the concept was born and off i went on a crazy tangent of odds and sods until I had what I needed.

The bodywork came out so well and then one night about 10pm I get a call from a guy in Guatemala, he asked about the Tracy body and that the one I had was a very early one that he made many years ago in the 1970’s, I said oh yeah really?

He said yeah, turned out to be Mr Tracy himself and he was glad that someone had made a bike using the body and raised me on my effort, that was so cool, so I had to finish the bike now.

There were many produced over the years but you don’t see too many on the tarmac as a lot of people have them on the wall but they tend to twist out of shape from the heat and then will not go back to their original form after that, so you usually see them hanging up on walls in shops but they do look cool.  ( I took the two pictures above from the internet on Google, so shows there are still some out there.)

The motor I had was a Late 1978 set up and I wanted to use every year of the SOHC on this Hybrid just to see how she turned out to be honest.

I wanted the exhaust system to be wilder than I first designed, so this time I had my Buddy Eric come over and we pieced together this crazy Spaghetti style header set up and I just loved it, so we tig welded it and then chromed it, I should of numbered the elbows as it took me 2 hours to figure out what went where that day.

 

The design was good but, your leg on the right hand side got bloody hot for a long length of time, but overall I liked the bike, I dug the headers, but wished I had re-routed the 12 bore side winders to go under the bike, but that’s bike building and I was building TWO bikes for the Pomona show that time.

 

The Gas tank was sealed and once the Candy Apple went on it looked amazing in the sun, also the early bodies have the hold in the tank for a bolt, that’s the way it secures to the frame, so to make at least something appealing than just a mount hole, I incorporated an oil pressure light in there and it worked out very well indeed, banged on a few pin lines with the triple O dagger brush and she was awesome.

I loved the way the bike came out in such a short amount of time and using just spare parts that I had been leaving in the garage to trip over from time to time and the proof of the pudding is in the eating and I ate well that week.  I built the carbs and they purred like a kitty when the motor first fired up, no leaks and no misfire, something that is quite unusual to be honest as they are more than likely out of sincronisation, I just got lucky on this one though.

The seat base was something I hoped to make as I didn’t have one at all, my buddy rang me to say he had some Original 1970’s metal flake Gold and I said that’s just what I need and we made up some cool Diamond stitching pattern and the end result was just the cherry on top of the cake for me.

Next up was what the hell was I going to do about the Grips on the handle bars, as Black was just the wrong choice, but then I found some Original New Old Stock Red metal flake Grips from a friend of mine in Belgium and the deal was done, he shipped them out to me and they were just what I needed and was stoked at the condition of these.

 

 I entered the bike in the 60th grand National Roadster show and placed 2nd, i was stoked as first place went to me for my other Black cafe.

 

 

I love to create and this has been a fun journey and continues to be, I see so many cool bikes being built and I hope that just a little bit of the stuff I have done has steered people towards having fun in the garage.

My old Garage back in Orange where it all started here in the States in Feb 2000.

 

 

I will always be building motorcycles and cars, its just something that I grew up with.

El Frijolito The little Bean Cafe Racer

                                                                           EL FRIJOLITO CAFE RACER 1975 CB750 F SUPER SPORT

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I was fortunate to get this motorcycle from the Original owner, its a good and bad thing as the poor guy did a lot of work to the machine back in the day, but unfortunatly, the drink got the better of him and some 30 years later he is still battling a drinking problem.

 

I named the bike ” The Little Bean ” as it was in a Deep part of Santa Ana of which is a predominately Latin area of California.

 

I changed her around a little bit by polishing the upper triple tree and making anew gauge face, as this bike was just something I could not take all apart, it ran well and boy is a cool ride, so I removed the stock tank and fitted my Glass S.S. Race tank, then removed the old tatty stock seat and fitted my Razor back model.

 

 

 

I replaced the old worn out headlight with one of my Tri-bar set ups and chromed the old gauge cups.

 

 

 

The New gas tank and I wanted to have some old style GOLD Racing strips on this machine and they needed to follow the tank and seat for that 70’s race look.

 

 

In the end I ended up changing a lot on this bike as I had Hershey Chocolate call me and the owner wanted it for his son, so I changed a few things and used some cool rims that I powder coated black gloss, then polished the hubs and used stainless spokes, fitted with the good Old Bridgestone tires and then I drilled the rear rotor with 140 holes and that was on the drill press.

Whilst I was there I removed the old caliper and took the black corroded paint off it and polished it to a chrome like finish and rebuilt the inside. And now stops on a dime.

 

Fitted new fender and polished the speedometer drive and fitted Stainless Allen head bolts through out this machine, as well as polishing the forks and adding my own polished fork brace to stiffen the front end up.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Alloy gas cap is a Monza style and new turn signals fitted to make sure people can see where you are going is a must around these parts.

 

 Polished the engine covers and then I drilled the sprocket carrier and polished for that Race track look, then fitted a new 530 Gold chain.

 

Drilled the front caliper and took the Original YOSHIMURA pipe off and ceramic coated it and put back on.

 

 Upholstered the razorback seat with Tuck n Roll and snaps round the side give this a timeless era.

 That Yoshi barks like a angry hound and hard to find series 2 versions these days. This is going to a good home as well as I doubt I will find another Original Yoshimura like this again and I wanted it to stay on the bike as its been on it for over 30 years.

 New rear shock and a full service and this is now ready to head to Hershey Pennsylvania and take the twisty lanes on the east side.

 

 

 

 

 I should of took more photos but to be honest, this was just going to be a small clean up but I got a little carried away, personally I like to take the motorcycle right down to the frame and begin again fresh- and then go through everything, but El Frijolito turned out pretty darned good and I hope that have fun up there in Chocolate County with her.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

MY exhaust, kicks ass at Barber Race Track.

Hey Gang

It is always good to hear from Customers and their stories of how they enjoy our parts here at Carpy;s Cafe Racers, none less than this fella, William Lundy.

He purchased one of our performance 4 into 1 exhaust systems and simply jetted and off he went, he raced his little 550 with some of the big boys.
So- I thought I would share with you, some of the email that he sent to me today, I am so stoked that he likes what we sell here at the shop and I knew he would be happy.
Enjoy:
Peace and Grease
 
CARPY

 

 

Hello Carpy,

So to start the exhaust really does rule. It all started when I got this quite large package at my door step and unboxed the glory that is the Carpy Exhaust. I immediately went about coating it with black ceramic spray from my local auto parts store. not the best option I know but I was under a tight budget. After the coating dried I began to fit the new exhaust. I was immediately impressed with good the welds were and the one piece design. once I got the old pipes off(4into2 no baffling) I slid the new part into place with ease. everything fit extremely well and I had the exhaust on and ready to go in a matter of about 15 minutes. So i started my bike up and immediately noticed all four pipes were leaking. Stupid me forgot to throw in new exhaust gaskets. So off came the pipes and around another 20 minutes later i had a monster exhaust setup. 
 
Then came the tuning.
my bike…the be completely honest is a real snotter. It looks like a turd and is beat up as anything. But…beneath the rugged exterior lies the monster. I am running a completely stock engine minus the cam chain tensioner and complete lack of electric or kick start. Also running stock carbs. With my carbs I had to play a little with the jetting. I found that for the bike and fuel that I use (sunoco 110-the purple stuff) i was running a little higher jetting than most and with a stock airbox. Not because I chose to keep it but because of budget. It is thrift shop racing team after all. The bike runs just a bit rich with normal pump gas but with the racing fuel it is spot on. 
 
once I had the jetting right for my setup it came to the choice of to keep the baffling or to not. i had already noticed an increase in my bottom end due to now having some back pressure on the motor and was really torn on what to do with the baffling. so what i did was simple. went to the local back road and broke it loose. I could scream at top end with the baffle out but i lacked the power to launch out of the corner. most likely due to my stock airbox. but with the baffle in I had the bottom end I was looking for and a pretty tip top upper end. I wasn’t so worried about top speed in reality though due to most of the track around here not having enough room to really get the bike all the way through the gears. 
 
So once I had it all sorted I fit my belly pan around the exhaust, safety wired the bits and was off to the first race of my career and best track on the east Barber Motorsports Park with the WERA sportsman series. 
 
Being as this was my first race i was forced to attend race school which was extremely informative and helpful. After some simple instruction we were set to hit the track for a practice run. I donned my suit and lined up ready to go. As I screamed through the first couple of corners it was apparent that the old bird still had some fight. I was ahead of a 1999 gsxr-750 and pulling into the corner. After exiting the museum corner and heading onto the back straight disaster struck and I had smoke and small flames coming from my ignition switch. a wire had come down and hit my motor exposing the metal inside and shorting out my system,popping the fuse and sent me back to the pits on the crash truck. 
 
Thankfully my great pit crew consisting of David Hurst and Charles Gault both riding RD yamaha’s got me fixed up while I was in class and had me ready for the next practice. The rest of the day went great and I was dropping seconds like crazy on my lap times. 
 
The next day was race day. I was set to compete in the clubman class due to it being a non vintage race day and that being the only class I would fit in without getting destroyed by modern bikes. As I pulled up for practice I see my competition. A bunch of 250 ninjas and cbr’s that I knew were brand new and highly tuned. my only chance was to hang back and see what lines these guys were running. 
 
After practice I was pretty certain that my only chance to get these guys was my ability to blast out of a corner and pull them on a straight. so when it came time to race I had two goals, Don’t be last, and try to run up front through the first couple corners.  I was gridded dead last due to points and was ready to go. the flag went up and I shot off the line like a bat outta hell leaving a thin black line and my tire about three inches off the ground nearly all the way into turn one. Ahead of everyone. As i was breaking into turn five i didnt’t see anyone near me and I went about my business, looking through the fence upon exit to see that the pack was just now making it into five. the rest is history. I twisted it up and never let up leading the races to a win by 8 seconds. 
 
The bike had seen better days and there wasn’t an engine part of foot peg that wasn’t ground to a powder or throwing sparks. But the exhaust is what really shined. the crowd from the paddock said you could hear me coming through the trees at turn 17 a thundering roar followed by a modest hum of the competitors as The bike meandered sideways onto the straight away. 
 
After each of my practice runs and races I was sure to get a few guys either modern bike riders or vintage fellows scooting over to my pit on their pit bikes to see just what was so darn awesome about the ride. I heard nothing but great remarks about the sound and performance. I was told the exhaust sounded like “the hounds of hell screaming in your ear waiting for you to mess up” from a guy I was “hounding through a few corners before a pass. Everyone got a napkin with the site…. carpyscaferacers.com -carpy exhaust, written on it. 
 
I hope you enjoyed the tale of the race and i will attach some photos and give you updates as the season progresses. now it’s time to find new pegs and a charger cover for a replacement! 
 
-Will Lundy

 

 

 

DIAMOND IN THE ROUGH ARRIVES AT SHOP

Sometimes, finding bikes can be rewarding, remember, I look at more snot than a Doctor does in winter and yesterday a fella came by with a photo of his old Cafe bike they he built over 20 years ago and it is in his old storage yard in Anaheim.

So, over I go and check it out, the tires are flat, the brakes are seized, but a deal was done and after some huffing and puffing, trying to move the bike, we managed to get it into the back of my van.

This old Bird is a 1975/76  HONDA CB750 Super Sport of which has sat for many moons but lucky for me, in an old storage container.

This is a great old piece of history and was glad to be able to get this machine and hopefully soon get the bike back on the road, albeit with my signature style parts.

Yes, if you look, this has some great ” original aftermarket” hop up parts. Boranni Alloy rims that were anodized back in the day and of course, the good old ” Cheese Cutter” front rotor, with the Vintage Road master Dunlop tires.

And yes, you are indeed correct, that sure is an Original series 1 YOSHIMURA 4 into 1 Exhaust system you are having a peek at.

This has a rear disc brake set up that’s stock but again, the good old Cheese cutter drilled holes just shows its cool old age of Cafe Racer days.

 

I have not got the keys for this yet and have tried the 60 or so spare old ones I have, but cannot get the seat undone, hopefully the old guy will pop by and drop them off before I go to such measures as drilling the tumbler out of the seat lock.

The seat is a period Custom touch with white paneling that really was a cool set up in them days, must of turned plenty of heads in California?

 

Plus another dead give away on this machine is the paint work, as if you look close enough, this has Gold Leaf marbling that was all the rage back then and only Just coming back into its own 30 years later.

Amazed it has lasted this long, but keeping it in a storage shed for many moons helps big to me in California. But fun to see and will have to keep them parts up in the back of the shop somewhere.

The bike sits well and has quite a few cool parts from back in the day and I am definitely  going to turn this into a full blown Cafe for someone out there to buy from us.

So I shall start work on this next week as I have other projects to finish before I even attempt to tackle this old girl. But it will be fun that’s for sure.

This bike has the old Lowering blocks on the arse end too and a Big low geared rear sprocket to be able to get up and go at the lights.

This also has a set of air adjustable nozzles on top of the fork tubes, I remember MCP selling them in the late 1970’s.

 

 

This also has one of the Original Lock-hart oil Coolers fitted, so this would of been a great little tarmac eating monster when she was last on the road.

Loved the double pancakes that the carbs have on, they date it right away.

So, stay tuned for more updates on this cool Old School Motorcycle.