Build A Kit Bike
Motorcycle chopper kits are a growth industry. But what does
that mean to you and me? Well one thing that we know is that
we will have more choppers to ogle at. There is not a single
day that goes by without more and more pictures of chopper
bikes that have just been finished showing up in all the
motorcycle magazines. Then at the weekends, when we are on
our hot rides,
we will see four or five show finish level bikes. There are
more choppers around now than there have been in the last
twenty five years.
Most of these choppers have
been built from motorcycle chopper kits, the "bike in a box"
approach. But hey, don’t knock it! Building your own chopper
has never been easier. There are rolling chassis kits,
complete bike kits, and frame manufacturers give you a
multitude of choice when it comes to take the plunge and buy
a motorcycle chopper kit.
Thirty years ago, the old
school chopper builders had to start with a stock bike
off-the-shelf and literally chop it to pieces. With the
modern chopper kits, there is a viable alternative to taking
the cutting torch to your favorite soft tail!
Nowadays, you have a cheap
and easier way to build the bike from the ground up. When
you take the cost of buying a new bike and the expense of
chopping it, it works out much cheaper to start from step
one, and your chopper kit. Instead of tossing away the parts
that you'll never use again, you can start
building
your own bike with the parts that you really need. All the
parts are included in the motorcycle chopper kit, along with
comprehensive instructions.
One of the first questions
that people ask when considering buying a kit is how will my
bike stand outs from all the other chopper kits? Well think
of it this way, you are going to buy a chopper kit. A pile
of unassembled raw metal. No paint, no real finish, just a
blank canvas. Is your taste in paint jobs likely to be the
same as the next guy, who buys the very same kit? I don't
think so. What about your taste in bolt-ons, seats,
exhausts? Just because you buy the kit doesn’t mean every
little thing has to be just so. That is the whole point
isn’t it? It's very easy in this way to build your own
custom chopper from a chopper kit.
Another big question is, How
long? The answer to that is as long as it takes. Even on the
kit bikes, which are supposed to be designed to fit together
like a glove, you are going to run into some snags. It can’t
be avoided!
If you want a more concrete
guide, try this. An experienced
kit builder (though not a professional) I spoke to reckons
it took 10 full days to build his last chopper from a kit.
For someone less experienced it could take a couple of days
longer. Twelve 9 hour days works out at 108 hours. Over
evenings and weekends, this could drag out to three or four
weeks of living in a pile of motorcycle parts! So be
prepared to literally live the experience if you are going
to take the plunge.
What about the practical
side? Well, there is no substitute for experience. The place
to start building up your experience with the mechanical
side of building to kit bike is with your current ride. Make
sure all you can do the basic maintenance on your
motorcycle, and then start to do some simple disassembling.
Take off the tires, take off the exhaust, real basic stuff;
all of this will help to build a new confidence in the shop
side of things. You can also get some great videos on
maintenance, and even on building the custom bike of your
dreams. Read the books, watch the videos, and buy the
t-shirt! Believe me, all the preparation you make will stand
you in good stead.
If you really are hopeless at
the mechanical side of things, why not pay someone else to
help you build it, or even get them to build the whole thing
for you? The cost of the kit plus labor could well work out
cheaper than buying a chopper "off the shelf".
And of course, when that
beautiful chopper is standing on your driveway, and your
friends are asking you "Was it worth it?", you can turn to
the chopper, drag your hand across the flames on the tank
and the polished chrome, turn back to them and say, "What do
you think?"
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