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Bikes Of The Week: Tokyo Motor Show Edition

The best motorcycles revealed at the 2017 Tokyo Motor Show
The Japanese put on a show of force at the Tokyo Motor Show. Honda tore the wraps off its new Monkey and ‘Neo’ cafe racer concepts. Yamaha revealed an oddball three-wheeler. Suzuki showed a tasty potential SV650 variant, and Kawasaki set the interwebs alight with the Z900RS. Which one would you pick?

2017 Honda Monkey 125 concept
Honda Monkey 125 concept Built around the same 125cc thumper found in the insanely fun Grom, the refreshed Monkey is a modern throwback to Honda’s mini-bikes of yore. And let’s be honest: it absolutely defines radness. The concept stays true to the original Z-series styling and promises to make riders look as ridiculous as ever, although it has been modernized a touch—with a hat tip towards the scrambler movement.

2017 Honda Monkey 125 concept
LED lighting, a digital gauge and disc brakes front and rear bring performance and amenities into the 21st century, but the chunky seat and chromed front fender scream mid-sixties sexiness. Considering that many of the parts used here can be plucked from the Grom bins, I can’t see any reason not to rekindle the Monkey movement. Come on Big Red, you know you wanna! [Honda Japan]

The new 2018 Kawasaki Z900RS
2018 Kawasaki Z900RS After teasing us with video snippets over the past few months, Kawasaki finally revealed the Z900RS in Tokyo. And mouths around here are watering. Harkening back to the mighty Z1, Team Green’s new retro ride is a UJM version of their Z900 streetfighter with squeaky clean lines and a honey of a power plant.

The new 2018 Kawasaki Z900RS
In RS guise the 948cc inline-4 has been remapped to deliver a beefier bottom end, which has trimmed peak horsepower to 111 (from 123) but keeps it competitive against the Yamaha XSR900. Other mechanical changes include a shorter first gear for extra squirt at the lights, and a longer final drive to quell buzziness on the interstate.

The trellis frame is new and the radial-mount binders up front are a welcome upgrade. Suspension is a carryover from the streetfighter platform, with full adjustability at front and rear.

The new 2018 Kawasaki Z900RS
The overall design looks incredible right out of the box, and we’re looking forward to telling you how it performs. Wes and I are in round 265 of our rock, paper, scissor fight to see who’ll ride it first, so watch this space. [More]

The 2018 Yamaha Niken 'Leaning Multi-Wheeler' motorcycle
Yamaha Niken When I think of a three-wheeler my mind immediately conjures up images of a sidecar rig. Sure, I’ll grant you that ‘trikes’ can and do exist, but a Ural or some other tasty combination just feels more ‘right.’

Yamaha obviously doesn’t feel the same way. Looking like a Piaggio MP3 with a steroid and amphetamine addiction, the Yamaha Niken is a ‘Leaning Multi-Wheeler’ that, believe it or not, is a production bike thing vehicle. Powered by the same sonorous triple found in the XSR900, the Niken is clearly pitched at performance-minded riders with a Michael Bay fetish who’d prefer not to grind a knee-puck. And they won’t have to, thanks to a front end that is both confusing and incredibly awesome.

The 2018 Yamaha Niken 'Leaning Multi-Wheeler' motorcycle
It consists of a pair of 15-inch articulating wheels that are suspended by a set of dual-tube, USD forks, each with a floating disc on their outer side. The width up front is 885mm, which should mean those hoops will probably track awkwardly on anything but silky smooth pavement, making it a bit of a workout to ride. Which I will gladly attempt, if Yamaha will have me. In the name of science, of course. [More]

Suzuki SV650X concept at the Tokyo Motor Show
Suzuki SV650X concept Not to be outdone by its countrymen and rivals, Suzuki is also looking to dip a toe in the retro waters with a cafe version of their SV650. The SV650X, as it’s called, is an evolution of last year’s Rally concept that got people talking about the little Suzi in a good way.

This time around, the concept loses the Rally’s 80’s nostalgia and instead captures the look of a slightly customized first-gen, naked SV. And that’s not a bad thing at all. There are clip-ons up front, and that tidy fairing looks as close to a factory product as I’ve ever seen. The tuck-rolled seat already exists in the Suzuki accessory catalogue so unless those mini fog lights are constructed from Unobtanium, I’m unsure as to why the concept tag is still being applied.

The hope is that this thing makes it out of the Tokyo Motor Show and onto showroom floors: it would be a perfect retro styled ride for beginners and those of us not looking to achieve warp speeds. The SV platform has always been a good one: it’s priced right, performs well and looks great with a bit of kit.

Honda Neo cafe racer concept
Honda Neo Sports Cafe concept Proving that the UJM bug is biting all brands, Honda also debuted its Neo Sports Cafe concept at the Tokyo Motor Show. The design is reminiscent of the CB4 Concept that dropped at EICMA back in 2015, but with a much stronger retro nod. And it’s easily Honda’s prettiest work of recent years.

Powering Big Red’s cafe racer is a re-tuned version of the 999cc engine that powered previous generation CBR1000RRs around the racetracks of the world. That means horsepower figures should slot into the 105-115 range—which is the sweet spot for the bikes of this ilk.

Honda Neo Sports Cafe concept
The selvedge denim and Red Wing crowd might find the design language a little too ‘Neo’ for their tastes, but I’m hoping Honda stays true to this iteration. The lines on the sculpted tank are gorgeous to my eyes, and the rear perch is picture-perfect.

As it’s only a motor show concept, tech details are a touch scant. But Honda can still crank out impressive bikes, so we’re hoping this gets the green light. The rumor is that a production version may make it to Italy in the coming weeks. [Via]

Honda Neo cafe racer concept

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CEO Matthew S. Levatich Sold 19,447 shares Of the Harley-Davison Stock

In a transaction that occurred on Wednesday, October 25th Harley-Davidson CEO Matthew S. Levatich sold 19,447 shares of the business stock HOG. The stock was sold at an average price of $48.36, for a total transaction of $940,456.92. Following the completion of the…

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Boo, Boo…

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Ride to Phil's Roadhouse

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Tagged with: Scenic, Twisty, Easy, Rural, Good visibility, Good surface

Length: 97.39km / 60.87mi

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Sprocket Brake Kits

A few models already on the market to help you clean the rear of your bike with the sprocket and rear brake on the same side. This model come with a billet polished aluminum or black anodized 2-piston caliper, a stainless steel bracket (available in polish), a 51 tooth…

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Joke Of The Week

Little Bruce and Jenny are only 10 years old, but they know they are in love. One day they decide that they want to get married, so Bruce goes to Jenny’s father to ask him for her hand. Bruce bravely walks up to him and says, “Mr. Smith, me and Jenny are in love…

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The New 2018 Z900RS Is Kawasaki's Answer To The Retro Standard

Kawasaki gets in on the stylish retro scene with a throwback to its ’70s standard

Kawasaki gets in on the stylish retro scene with a throwback to its ’70s standard.
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Gareth Roberts’ Ducati MH900e Superlite cafe racer

Ducati MH900e cafe racer by Stadafab and Red Max Speed Shop
We’re suckers for fast, classic Italian machinery, and it doesn’t get much better than this: a sleek Ducati MH900e worked on by the best names in the business. It belongs to London-based film director Gareth Roberts, who knows a thing or two about bikes.

Gareth was one of the founders of the Bike Shed Motorcycle Club, and he’s spent the past couple of years shooting the definitive record of the modern day custom scene, Oil In The Blood. (Keep an eye out for it in Spring 2018.)

Ducati MH900e cafe racer by Stadafab and Red Max Speed Shop
The build was three years in the making. It all started when Gareth spotted a lovely Pierre Terblanche-designed MH900e parked outside the Brooklyn invitational in 2014. “It was for sale,” Gareth recalls. “I enquired. The price tag was punchy and far more than I could afford at the time.”

“But I was also rapidly approaching the big 5-0, and wanted to give myself a special present. I decided to do a special build to celebrate 35 years of riding bikes.”

Ducati MH900e cafe racer by Stadafab and Red Max Speed Shop
“It had to echo the one bike I loved above all others, my 1998 Ducati 916 SPS—the reason I didn’t buy an MH900e when it was released. It also had to give a nod to my wholly unremarkable racing career on lightweight two-stroke GP bikes, and it needed to be a cafe racer of sorts.”

Gareth spent months combing eBay for parts, and then sourced a tidy very low mileage 900ss ie from Mint Customs, run by friend (and fellow ex-BSMC luminary) Ali Latimer.

Ducati MH900e cafe racer by Stadafab and Red Max Speed Shop
The build got serious when Gareth stumbled across Stradafab of Kansas, USA, on one of his many late night net searches. “I started talking to owner and titanium guru Randy Martin, and started scheming,” says Gareth.

“Randy agreed to build me a one-off frame and a complete race exhaust system, but he ended up fabricating a further load of lovely trick bits. We became great mates in the process.”

Ducati MH900e cafe racer by Stadafab and Red Max Speed Shop
The original plan was to modify a secondhand titanium SportClassic frame, but then Randy decided it’d be better to build a new frame from scratch—even though it involved extensive research and the building of a new jig.

“Randy is incredibly thorough in his research. He specializes in Ducati, and had a 900ss engine to hand. We had to make sure the triple trees fitted and also an S2R swingarm,” says Gareth. “It was all in the planning: The frame he made was perfect, and needed no retrospective adjustments.”

Ducati MH900e cafe racer by Stadafab and Red Max Speed Shop
The next port of call for the MH900e was Giles Harwood at HPS—based in Derbyshire, England and much closer to Gareth’s London home. “Giles helped me marry the Panigale 899 forks and the S2R trellis swinging arm with specially ordered Kineo wheels.”

The rear is suspended by an Öhlins DU106 piggyback shock, custom anodized black by Reactive Suspension. “I got it back two weeks before Öhlins announced they were going to make stock black shocks. I could have saved myself a fortune!”

Ducati MH900e cafe racer by Stadafab and Red Max Speed Shop
The wheels are 3.5×17 front and 6×17 rear, aluminum, and running Pirelli Phantom rubber. Performance Parts in Germany CNC’d a one-off set of yokes/triple trees to get the Showa big piston forks to fit, and HPS slotted in a set of their own carbon clip-ons, along with a Domino adjustable throttle mechanism.

Ducati MH900e cafe racer by Stadafab and Red Max Speed Shop
Stopping power comes from a raft of top-shelf Brembo components: A radial RCS front brake master cylinder and matching clutch master cylinder, monobloc M4 radial calipers and fully floating twin discs.

Ducati MH900e cafe racer by Stadafab and Red Max Speed Shop
Two years passed, as they do with complex builds. Gareth had now a mountain of bits in boxes in his garage, and he figured he was most of the way towards his MH900e. So he ferried everything down to Steve Hillary at the famous Red Max Speed Shop in picturesque Devon.

“Steve gutted the 900ss, leaving just the engine, which he stripped and rebuilt. The injection system is stock, but we liberated the air box—it was blasted and then stove enameled.” Before going back into the frame, the engine was fitted with a vented clutch cover from Ducabike, who also supplied high performance clutch pressure plates and springs.

Ducati MH900e cafe racer by Stadafab and Red Max Speed Shop
Motogadget’s finest handle the electronics: a tacho (customised by Buz Ras at Seattle Speedometer) with bespoke brackets, mini bar controls, a keyless ignition system, bar end indicators, and everything running into an m.unit control box.

Ducati MH900e cafe racer by Stadafab and Red Max Speed Shop
Carbon fiber replica bodywork captures the MH900e look at a fraction of the weight, coated with a delicious blue metallic applied by the Somerset firm Paint Monkey. It’s not your classic Ducati red, but that just makes this incredible machine stand out even more.

Ducati MH900e cafe racer by Stadafab and Red Max Speed Shop
As far as 50th birthday presents go, we’d take this Ducati over heli-skiing at Gstaad, a bottle of Ardbeg 1815 single malt, or a week at Chateau Marmont. Even though it’s probably more life-threatening than all of those combined.

What about you?

Oil In The Blood | Images by Ivo Ivanov

Gareth’s upcoming film ‘Oil In The Blood’ is a feature-length documentary that explores the growing subculture of custom bike building. It focuses on the people who drive custom culture—the builders, the riders, the artists, the photographers and the curators. Here’s a sneak, rough-cut preview ahead of the Spring 2018 global release.

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1959 Norton Norfield Cafe Racer

Noticed this for sale the other day and I don’t remember seeing one like it before, it’s a 1959 Norton Wide Line feather bed frame with a 1964 Royal Enfield 750 Interceptor vertical twin engine. Visually, it’s a stunner. It’s been sitting on display and never run, so it’s as built. The frame was powder […]

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Battle Of The Basic Big Twins 2000 Kawasaki Vulcans — From The Archives

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Kawasaki’s army that was assembled for the Basic Big Twin battle

Kawasaki’s army that barreled into battle include the Vulcan 1500 Classic, Vulcan 1500 Classic FI, and the Vulcan 1500 Drifter.