You all know about my boardtrack / custom bike project for this past winter, but what will I do next winter?
This is something like what I might think about doing.
To set the stage, I've always been a big Art Deco fan and have always liked the unusual odd type vehicles. At one time I owned three Isettas. To carry that just a bit further, at one time I had either running or in line for a restro project, the following. I had the three Isettas (2 300's and 1 600), Lambretta 150, Vespa 100 Sport, '77 Triumph T-140 750cc twin, '65 Cushman Silver Eagle restored (last year of production), '65 Silver Eagle electric start perfect unrestored (for the wife), '77 GL-1000 Gold Wing excellent unrestored 20k miles, '41 Mercury convertible running to retro-rod, '33 Dodge 4dr sedan chopped 2" late Mopar running gear modified original frame. I don't think I missed anything in that list. I've had lots of other odd ball vehicles over my many years of driving etc, but these were all in my possesion at the same time. At that time we were going to street rod shows and I was truly in love with building my dream car, a '40 Willys couple with a blown 392 hemi. My wife told me to sell all my chit and build what I wanted. What a wife, huh? Well I built it, see my Picture Trail albums for photos, and then sold it two years later. My wife is still VERY pissed at me for selling her favorite car.
Oh well, I digress as usual...
So anyway, making something like the pictures below could be a big time fun project.




The above pictures are from Craig Vetter's website. I think he used parts from a HD and then supplied his own main frame. I can do all that here at work and make a jig for squareness. I'd still need a donor bike, but I do have the take off wheels from my '76 FLH, 15 spoke cast wheels. They might actually look pretty good on something like this.
I was thinking that an early "B" motor for smoothness and then a snowmobile drive clutch and torque converter would transfer the power without any issues. My nephew has a snowmobile salvage in Michigan and I can get all the drive components I need for dirt cheap. That's what Craig Vetter used for a transmission.
My wife would really like to ride by hereself, but she is a wussy. She will admit it freely to anyone that might ask why she doesn't ride herself. But I'm thinking this might be an option for her.
This would be an automatic trans and I would couple the front and rear brakes with a proportioning valve, like half of a car system. Then my wife would only need to twist the throttle and press a pedal to stop. All she needs to do is balance the scooter and twist the throttle. It would be a Harley of sorts which would keep her happy.
Can you imagine one of these deep pounding thumping scooters pulling into the the local watering hole? Like Craig said, he gets mobbed every place he went with this. I can definitely make the frame and if I start with a donor bike, I can get all the front and rear suspension and then make all the interconnecting frame work to keep it a step through design.
I was thinking about adding some cooling last night. Some of the centrifugal clutch systems that snowmobiles use have a starter ring gear on the back side. I think something like that would be just right to start the motor. At about the same point, or even on the outboard side of the clutch, I could mount a pulley and have a short belt running upward to a stationary fan assembly. I'm envisioning something like a Type 1 VW. I would build light sheetmetal duct work around the cylinders and heads for cooling. The fan would run full time and all I would need is a couple louvers on the outside of the body to let the air in and out. I would not use aluminum like the build project in the article on Craig's site, but I would build a mock up out of foam and then glass the outside and then cut away the inside foam. This is how a lot of experimental airplanes are built when built from scratch.
Here's a link to Craig's original Defiant Scooter website. There are links there to other sites on sheetmetal hand fabbing of the Art Deco body shown above.
http://www.defiantscooter.com/default.aspI think it would be a somewhat quick project to do, easily one winter would do it.
This is just food for thought right now, but hey, what a project......
