Thursday, 12 September 2013

1969 Triumph Bonneville

Triumph Bonneville bobber
I find low-key, vintage bobbers irresistible, and this 1969 Triumph Bonneville from Johannesburg is a classic in more ways than one. It belongs to Justin Steyn, who started the project way back in 2009.
The style is utterly timeless, and like many of the best bikes, deceptively simple. The build process was anything but, though. It started when Justin bought a basket case oil-in-frame Triumph 650 from a friend: “I had two wheels, a frame and an engine—and little idea where to start,” he admits. He eventually found a old-school Triumph specialist, Peter Moody, who completely overhauled the engine.
Triumph Bonneville bobber
Then things got tough. “There were no hardtails available for the oil-in-frame models,” says Justin, “so I couldn’t get the basic rolling chassis going. Then Peter found a complete 1969 Bonneville, minus its engine.” The build started to come together, literally.
Tiago from local workshop OneOne Customs stripped and prepped the tank. And Justin discovered a whole new world of fellow bobber aficionados. “A few of us would meet at OneOne a few times a week to work on our bobbers, using Tiago’s equipment and bugging him for advice … As each mate made progress and another bike was fired up, we would cheer in excitement and each have a ride on the brakeless deathtrap late at night. Good times!”
Triumph Bonneville bobber
From the USA came a bolt-on hardtail from Choppahead—with a 4” stretch and a 2” drop—plus a handmade oil tank, a Vincent taillight and a Biltwell seat. “Once the parts were in my hands, things started to get moving, Tiago taught me how to weld, and I got cracking on the seat, chain tensioner and oil tank mounts.”
Drawing inspiration from the web, Justin decided on Ferrari blue, red and brass for his classic color scheme. Spokes were ordered from the UK, and Justin was lucky enough to secure a batch of untreated brass spoke nipples too. “Henry Kinnear built the wheels and did the spray job on the rims, and when I saw the end result I asked him to help out with the spray work on the frame, fender and tank.”
Triumph Bonneville bobber
“Henry and I worked on getting the bike together, bit by bit, taking parts off for brass or paint and then re-fitting.” And although the Bonneville wasn’t fully finished, with exposed wiring and no leatherwork, Justin decided to enter it into a local bike show. He took second place in his class.
After blowing up a battery on the ride to the show, he got a leather battery box made (and the seat done) by Dion of Leatherman D in Pretoria. Peter Moody finished the wiring, fitted new Amal carbs and tuned the engine.
And now she’s done. Beautiful, wouldn’t you say?
Triumph Bonneville bobber

BMW R45 cafe racer

BMW R45
There’s something about the compact, muscular stance of 70s-vintage BMWs that makes them prime candidates for customization. This cafe racer comes from leading glass artist Francesco Pagnin of Treviso in Italy, who calls his motorcycle workshop ‘Franz Garage’. It’s based on a BMW R45, the 473cc boxer-engined middleweight built throughout the late 70s and early 80s. After a complete mechanical and electrical overhaul, Francesco built a seat and tail unit and modified the rear frame to suit, using 8mm tubing. There are neat touches throughout, with minimal instrumentation and a new headlight assembly and rearsets. The tank is from an R100, the bars are adjustable Tommaselli items and the mirrors are from Rizoma. Completing the radical transformation of this unassuming R45 is a delicious white, black and gold paintjob from Patron Racing, and stubby custom mufflers built by Francesco himself. Molto bella. [Thanks to Michiel of BMW Cafe. If you like this, check out the BMW R100/7 Scrambler we ran a year ago.]
BMW R45
BMW R45
BMW R45