February 4, 2010

Fail

 

I was honored when offered the opportunity to write something for ________________. Motorcycle magazines are sacred pages of advertisements, information, and wisdom that rate highly on my obsession meter. A lot of times after dinner, I like riding my bike over to the local bookstore to scope out the new cycle mags that might of hit the shelves.  Once I stuff the bounty of colorful, glossy publications into my backpack, I find myself riding a little bit faster going home than I did taking the trip to the suburban book mart.  I look forward to the new projects people have labored and worked so hard upon, deemed worthy of getting published.  However, these jaunts to and from the store are more treacherous than ever.  Because of that, I require a bike with an emphasis on function over form. First make the bitch stop and go, and then make it sing. To me, that is the essence of today’s chopper - a tool to skirt death and blow minds. 

It seems as though every fat single mom in a SUV wants to kill me.  Crack heads run stop signs, dogs and deer spring to life, and finally, without fail, I always seem to attract the old man, crossing over five lanes to take me out. I have come to the slow realization that a target must hover over me like stink on dog.  When I build a bike, I keep my target in mind and remove everything except those items that help it stop and go. Chopping off superfluous fluff - that’s how I always interpreted the term “chopper.” Parts removed, with new parts forged and added, including brakes.  I always add to the brakes.  I know this does not sit well with the “period correct” folks, but I prefer modern brakes on my choppers. Show bikes can have shitty brakes, thats ok.

 “Period correct”’ is term heard often, and I respect history, but also realize that there is much to be learned from it that can be beneficial to moving forward and looking towards the future.  The past has produced some beautiful parts made by colorful people and I completely understand why certain individuals spend so much time at swap meets hunting those parts down, but that’s not my inclination. Inventive, forward-thinking builders should spend less time at that swap, and more time in the garage fabricating a part that others will seek out 20 years from now. Things are constantly changing.  Skateboards morphed in order to tackle pools, drag bikes go faster then ever, and today’s drivers are way more distracted than the drivers from the “period correct” days. Sure it is a lot cheaper, easier, and esthetically pleasing to run no front brake, but shouldn’t today’s choppers reflect today’s driving habits? Searching the past mags to copy a Panhead from Toronto, scouring swap meets on weekends, and endless web surfing for the most obscure part money can buy - all that can be put together with time, tools, and money. But I prefer making the parts and fitting death-dodger disks in order to survive today’s streets.

      I recently ran across a question on a bike forum from a guy planning a cross-country ride on his new copper he built. He asked, “Will I get hassled by the man if I don’t have a front brake?”  It’s crazy to me that this guy is more worried about getting stopped by the cops, than getting tagged by a truck. I guess some truly live by the mantra, “ride hard, die hard!”  That’s great - live it.  I, on the other hand am looking forward to building my next bike and taking some more cross-country rides.

       I was fortunate enough to log a lot of miles this past summer. Do I remember if my front brake made my trips to the bookstore any more fun?  Was I hung up on wondering whether my bike looked “pretty” or “period correct” to the old-schoolers rather than reveling in the ride?  Hell no, and I am still here to write about it.



26 comments:

Steady T said...

Sweet Wrighting...more, please.

rizky mandra said...

respect...

AnimalFriends said...

Max Schaaf's fan club is probably going to put a price on your head ;)

AnimalFriends said...

I have great interest in Fab Kevin's ZX10R parts, by the way. Either that or, y'know, hot-rodding a ZX10R in a non-idiotic way.

andy said...

i like the idea of classic stlying with modern performance. i dont think that there has to be any major sacrafices i think you just have to be clever and like jeff is saying you might have to pick up the tools to create the parts that fit the task. great article, i really digg it.

Unknown said...

Sage-like wisdom, Jeff.
Your writing would fit nicely with a collection of your pics in book form...

Neil said...

Well said.
I like brakes.
And I prefer making instead of shopping.
And your s&s build and white shovel are some of my favorite bikes.

Beaner said...

After living and riding choppers in various 2nd and 3rd world countries what you speak of is the truth. Because of the mayhem that traffic involves I truly believe that it's just as dangerous in the states because of the brain dead car hearders who would just as soon run your ass over than finish the text they were writing and eating the cheeseburger while hitting the next button on thier CD player.

spuddley said...

Go fast, stop fast.

Period.

End os story.

Daniel K said...

Just perfect...

cantstayjose said...

well put jeff, i had someone make a comment to me about the shovel i built. mind you this is my 20th year or so riding well back to the comment this guy said the bike looks killer but why pm brakes on the rear . i simply said to him i like to go fast and i like to stop i fucking go places not just stare at my bikes. this person who made this comment has had 2 spills and rides with mechanical brakes go figure.

motoguru. said...

I was beginning to think I was the only guy out there that thought this way. I just picked up a dual disk front end for my IH while everyone else is hunting down spoolies.

9half said...

Agree of course.. I know that those old guys would marvel at some of the stuff we "could" put on our bikes to make them stop better..and wouldn't think twice about what someone thinks..I remember when I worked at PM in HS.. all my Dad's friends, who rode pans and (crap) wanted PM disc brakes.. even though most of them paid less for there bikes than a PM set up..simply because they rode there shit everyday!! Not just around the hills of Oakland sliding out in dirt (lame)

STANDARDJOSH said...

great words...
but if it takes some fool to read this to understand it..
than this fool doesnt belong on 2 wheels
old style(i hate the words period correct) bikes are cool in there own way...but bikes you can put miles on without fail are far more superior.technology happens for a reason.
what good is going fast if you cant stop?

Tony d. said...

well put- couldn't agree more jeff

wickedblockhead said...

i just had this conversation yesterday. i TOTALLY AGREE! shit i think big dual front brakes actually look better!

Eric said...

I used to have a springer and a 21" spool (rhymes with "fool") and a jockey shift on my '71 T120 chop. Then, after several sphincter-tightening experiences, I got a nice modern FX front end with a single disc and the matching rear wheel and I ditched the hand shift. I am now 68.7% less cool, but I ride 42.9% faster. Comfy too. For a chopper.

drsprocket said...

Jeff, Love your work both in the shop and on your art board. I didn't want to add my comment on this subject but I will anyway. 45 years in the saddle on old and new. No matter how much brake you have it's only good enough to point of lockup. Loss of traction at skid (lockup)is sliding. I had triple disks on and old knuck of mine many years ago and a guy told me I had to much brake. I told him I didn't have to use all of it. I remember when juice brakes came out and we made the switch from mechanicals. Same when disks came out. What ever you use it will only save you if you use them properly and have enough distance between you and the object. My knuck w/ mechanicals sits next to my Sportster with disc which sits next to my early beemer with disk and mechanical. All have to be ridden differently. Just like a good helmet will only protect you up to a certain point. The neck being the weak point. Why does Max always get the axe. Plenty of guys around the world north and south east and west ride the same style machines. The lady who stopped suddenly the other day for no known reason almost took my life. The bemmer is ok, I'm ok, she's ok. Minor damage all around. Only good equipment, alot of seat time, alot of training ( used to be an instructor), and luck saved my life. Skided the front disk braked wheel 15 feet and still would have hit her square on if I hadn't swevered and just caught the outside of her bumper. Be careful, use your equipment and eyes wide open. Rich P.S. Hope to get 20 more.

John Copeland said...

amen.

Davecat said...

you're full of shit. brakes suck. it's just another way that the man is trying to keep me down.

heads said...

any man willing to risk is life on two wheels is a friend of mine, brakes or no brakes, ride what you got when you got it, i still prefer triple discs on london traffic. ride on, and choppers rule

Unknown said...

Wise! I´m going to have a Triumph 4-piston caliper up front on my -41 U. Brakes good, looks good.

Unknown said...

That's right, Jeff, the front brake lever is second only to throttle itself when contoling a motorcycle.
Listen to him kids, he's trying to help you out!

grant said...

The man doesn't have BRAKE tattooed on his right forearm for no reason, huh bro? love ya

Luke said...

i can't tell if that was intended to be a sarcastic satire on the attack choppers guy. Or mabey I just think phone captions are funny.

Jon said...

jock blog.