Decisions, decisions.
What colour should I make the tank? Or should the tank be bare metal? How do
you coat bare metal so it doesn't rust? What tires should I choose? Should I
choose the same front and back tires or should they be different? How low
should it be? If I lower it, will it change the handling? What rims should I
use? Should I keep the standard headlight? Do I use pipewrap or not? Do I need
fenders? Will the bike attract the cops? Should it be clean or ratty? Will it
look weird or will it look cool? Customising a bike involves so many questions.
All of them seem insurmountable, yet you somehow know that what makes a great
bike is just the final sum of all these tiny little decisions. Hold back on
them and you'll get a bike that blends into the background like a turd at a
chocolate festival. Go overboard and you'll spend your weekends ignoring the
chuckles and the rolled eyeballs as you arrive at your local hang. But get it right...
“Hello, my name is Josh Mott. I’m 22 years old
and owner of JMR Customs in Boise, Idaho. I’m a 3rd
generation mechanic, racer, and bike builder. I’ve been racing for 10 years in
many disciplines such as: flat track, arenacross, endurocross, and desert
racing. Currently I’ve been racing the National Hare & Hound series.
From a very early age
I’ve helped my dad (Randy Mott) repair, service, and build custom motorcycles.
Notable achievements include building a 1200 Sportster that ran an 11 second
quarter mile and restoring a 1964 Greeves Challenger. I find a great deal of
influence from custom styles: café, street trackers, bobbers, and basically any
one-off custom motorcycle.”
“This 1982 CB 450
Honda Nighthawk was originally picked up to part out and sell on eBay. It was
roached beyond belief. It had bent forks, a wiring harness that was stripped,
and a missing fuel tank. Out of curiosity I thought I’d check the compression
and spark to see if it had some sort of working order. It had 175 psi in both
cylinders and had spark. I decided to clean the carbs and it fired right up.
I had an idea that I wanted to put a motocross front end, lowered down, on
a café style build. I had a 2006 YZ250 Yamaha front end sitting at the shop
waiting for a project at the time, it was perfect. I ended up lowering the
forks 7 inches to get the right height. As I finished this portion of the
build, I then had the idea to mount a mono shock. I used a 2005 TT-R 250 Yamaha
shock because it fit really well in the small space I had to work with.”
“The fabrication work
included many modifications. I cut the whole back half of the frame clean
off to begin the custom portion. I had the older Champion flat track frames in
mind where the frame was exposed right below the rear fender. I wanted the seat
portion to sit within the frame.
The overall bike
length looked shorter than I preferred so I cut the frame by the headset and
raked it from the stock 28 degrees to a custom 34 degrees. I center
mounted the fuel tank which involved cutting the top of the tank out. While I
had the top of the tank out, I mounted a sleek, flush mount gas cap. Custom exhaust
pipes were made to fit some after market Ducati mufflers I had, making the bike
sound like an older Triumph. The wiring harness was custom made before I installed the motor. I have a
key switch flush mounted on the right side of the frame and a start button on
the left. There’s a little switch dashboard mounted under the coil and tank.
There’s a high/low beam and a switch that turns on all the lights. I made a box
that’s mounted underneath the motor - it holds the battery, starter solenoid,
fuse box, and regulator rectifier.
”I pulled the motor
all the way down to replace the cam chain, rings and gaskets. While I was in
there I cleaned up the intake and exhaust ports in the head. A Magura
hydraulic clutch for a KX 450 was installed to replace the stock
component. For a speedometer, I used a Trail Tech Vapor and made a mount
that was clean to hide all the wires.
I’m very stoked on how this bike came together. It’s very unique in the
sense that there’s really no name for what type of build it is. It has elements
of café, motocross, and street tracker all in rolled into one. Thanks for
looking.”
Awesome bike. Impressive ingenuity and engineering. Great, great job. I love it.
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