Hari

Your cart

Price
SUBTOTAL:
Rp.0

1975 Honda Goldwing custom

img

1975 Honda Goldwing custom

At face value there’s nothing unusual about Paul Dutra’s taste in motorcycling. He owns a heavyweight tourer—a Goldwing natch—and he likes to make a big trip every year. But Dutra’s steed is not a 900 lb road sofa with a sound system sat-nav and heated seats. El Guapo (“The Handsome One”) is a rusty stripped-down custom Goldwing with hand-beaten bodywork and not a pannier in sight.

Dutra’s bike is a 1975 GL1000 with a flat-four 999 cc motor. It had been faithful to its former owner for 35 years and although it was time to move the bike on the original owner didn’t want to see it scrapped. He wanted it to go to someone who could completely transform the machine giving it a new and unexpected lease of life. That person ended up being Paul Dutra of Back Alley Motorcycles in Ontario Canada.

When Dutra arrived to collect the Goldwing it was sporting a Vetter fairing and a full set of Krauser luggage. “It was all decked out with fog lights and extra brake lights” Dutra recalls. “He had taken very good care of the bike and had spare oil filters and plugs. He even gave me a period-correct Honda sync gauge in its original box. I managed to take the bags and fairing off then lowered the forks through the trees and stuffed it all into a very short Dodge Caravan.”

Dutra put the Goldwing on the chopping block. With no budget for bling he decided to turn it into a “Rat Café”. The first problem was the tank which isn’t really a tank on a Wing: it’s an air box and glove box that leaves a gaping hole in the frame. The real tank is under the seat. “This made for a really interesting build as there are no tanks on the planet that would fit the Wing frame … I was trying to get rid of the tank under the seat because of the “Cafe Racer” look I was going for.” After fabricating a traditional backbone for the frame the only thing that would fit was a rusty old tank from a KZ550.

Dutra then chopped the rear frame and fitted different angles and bends until he had the right tail. “I wanted to lower the bike so I went with 11.5-inch shocks. That gave me the ride height I was looking for.” Dutra hammered and welded up a rear cowl out of 3/16” plate lowered the forks through the trees and mounted up Tomaselli clip-ons to the uppers. With help from a couple of friends—including Tim Aysan from Do The Ton—the wiring was finished and the bike was fired up for the first time.

After some final adjustments to the shocks Dutra took the Goldwing out for a shakedown ride. Then he immediately loaded up his backpack and rode out to L.A.—a round trip of over 5000 miles.

He made it there and back in nine days.

Images courtesy of m2020photo.

Source: Bike Exif

Special Ads
© Copyright 2024 - Modified Motorcycle Media
Added Successfully

Type above and press Enter to search.