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Street Thrasher: The XT 600 gets the supermoto treatment

The Yamaha XT 600 gets the supermoto treatment from Bad Winners
No list of retro enduros is complete without the noble Yamaha XT 600. Manufactured for almost two decades until 2003, it ticks all the important boxes: basic, versatile and reliable.

But what if you’re not looking for a trail weapon per se? The XT 600 makes a pretty rad supermoto too, if executed just right. And Walid, from Parisian shop Bad Winners, sure knows how to design a motorcycle.

The Yamaha XT 600 gets the supermoto treatment from Bad Winners
He didn’t set out to customize an XT 600. “The XT picked me,” he tells us. “I had it in the workshop for three years—I got it from a client who had to leave town for a job in Australia.”

“But I didn’t want to ride it as it was. I had this clear idea for an air-cooled supermoto—an old-school supermoto from the 90s.”

The Yamaha XT 600 gets the supermoto treatment from Bad Winners
The Yamaha in question was a 1991-model XT 600 E with a mere 13,000 km on the dial. And since it belonged to a client, Walid had previously serviced it—so he knew it was in good nick. With no fix-ups needed, he could move right on to the fun stuff.

But first, he had to take the XT’s stance from trail bike to street thrasher. On went a set of 17” Excel hoops, laced up to the original Yamaha hubs, and now wrapped in Dunlop’s Sportmax Mutant supermoto tires.

The Yamaha XT 600 gets the supermoto treatment from Bad Winners
The Yamaha’s OEM Nissin brakes were deemed good enough, so they were simply upgraded with stainless steel lines.

Moving to the suspension, Walid trimmed 80 mm off the front forks, and equipped them with stiffer springs. The rear was upgraded with a new YSS shock, also with a harder-than-stock spring. “I didn’t want to have a smooth trail bike,” was Walid’s reasoning.

The Yamaha XT 600 gets the supermoto treatment from Bad Winners
Even though the motor’s internals were left alone, it was treated to a new coat of black. Two Keihin CR35 carbs were installed, along with open filters to replace the old air box.

The exhaust headers were custom built in stainless steel, and terminate in a TEC muffler. (Yes, they’re wrapped, but Walid says it’s because they generate too much heat.)

The Yamaha XT 600 gets the supermoto treatment from Bad Winners
Cosmetically, the XT 600 shed all of its stock bodywork. Walid retrofitted the fuel tank from a Yamaha RD250, and fabricated a set of ‘shoulders’ to drastically alter its shape.

“The inspiration is from the Husqvarna 701 Supermoto,” he explains. “When you look at it from behind, the lines are like a bodybuilder’s shoulders: massive. I wanted that same shape for the XT.”

The Yamaha XT 600 gets the supermoto treatment from Bad Winners
They’re functional too; each side is covered with a mesh screen in front, with stealthy LED headlights and turn signals hiding inside. The fuel tank’s capped off with a Yamaha XJR1300 gas cap.

The XT’s tail section received an equally radical reworking. Rather than a simple cut-n-loop job, Walid ditched the entire subframe and started from scratch.

The Yamaha XT 600 gets the supermoto treatment from Bad Winners
The new arrangement cuts a much more aggressive contour, with side panels and abrupt rear fender that are welded on rather than bolted on. It’s a curious move, but Walid tells us he simply wanted as few bolts visible as possible.

There’s a new leather-covered seat up top, and a neat compartment underneath for electronics. In there, you’ll find a small Lithium-ion battery, and a new loom built around a Motogadget m.unit control box.

The Yamaha XT 600 gets the supermoto treatment from Bad Winners
The cockpit features Renthal bars and grips, Motone switches, and a teeny tiny Motogadget speedo mounted up on the bars. The front’s finished off with a custom-made number board and fender combo.

No supermotard is complete without some bright coloring—and no Bad Winners bike is complete without a sharp livery. Walid originally wanted to use a similar design to one of his previous builds, but when he couldn’t make it fit the tank contours, he started playing around with it.

The Yamaha XT 600 gets the supermoto treatment from Bad Winners
Once he’d settled on the dazzling scheme you see here, he handed the tank over to Aerografik to lay it down. The rest of the XT’s parts were finished in either blue or black.

This former trailie now looks fun, aggressive and ready to eat the streets. But even though Walid built it to his taste, he won’t be enjoying it for long. As is the curse with building custom bikes for a living, it’s already for sale.

Somebody please buy it before we do.

Bad Winners | Facebook | Instagram | Photos by Guillaume Petranto

The Yamaha XT 600 gets the supermoto treatment from Bad Winners

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Bad Winners BikeExif Custom Motorcycles Ducati Ducati Scrambler Other Motorcycle Blogs Trackers

How to turn the Ducati Scrambler into a tracker

Bad Winners reveals a brace of Ducati Scrambler flat trackers
The Ducati Scrambler is an obvious fit for ‘casual’ flat track racing. Ducati even made a ‘Flat Track Pro’ limited edition in 2016, which was essentially a new version of the Full Throttle with wide bars, a bunch of minor trim changes and a Temignoni muffler.

It looks like Ducati is now digging deeper into flat track territory: it’s commissioned a pair of flat track-style Scramblers from one of our favorite French builders, Bad Winners.

Bad Winners Ducati Scrambler 800 flat tracker
In his Paris workshop, Bad Winners’ head honcho Walid created two bikes—a race machine based on the original Scrambler Ducati sans front brake, and a road-friendly version based on the beefier new 1100.

At the Wheels & Waves festival earlier this month, the bikes pulled in the crowds and took pole position on Ducati’s ‘Land Of Joy’ stand. We’re not surprised: we reckon the stock Scramblers are good-looking bikes, but Walid has lifted them to a whole new level.

Bad Winners Ducati Scrambler 800 flat tracker
First, the 800. This is a bona fide flat tracker, with the front brake removed and a set of Excel 19-inch rims installed—shod with Dunlop DT3 rubber, of course. All the usual road-legal ancillary items are gone, and there’s a minimal new wiring loom that covers just the basics.

The suspension is stock, however—but should work reasonably well on the track. Most Scrambler owners would call the ride ‘firm’ anyway, and find it more comfortable when carrying a pillion.

Bad Winners Ducati Scrambler 800 flat tracker
Ergos are taken care of with grippy Ducabike foot pegs, and Gilles Tooling risers to lift and rotate the bars a little closer to the rider.

The engine internals are standard, but K&N filters now handle the intake side and there’s a Termignoni racing exhaust on the other end. A remapped ECU takes advantage of the improved breathing, and the bike now records 83 hp on the dyno—up ten horses on the original. A Scrambler 1100 swingarm now helps get the power down smoothly.

Bad Winners Ducati Scrambler 800 flat tracker
The new bodywork is carbon fiber, and dare we say, is a huge improvement on the typical, more retro flat track style. Especially the delicate, waspish tail.

“The idea was to use the line of the Scrambler’s tiny frame,” Walid says. “The bike is ‘tight’ and I didn’t want the usual flat track design. I wanted a twist of MotoGP style—and that’s how I arrived at the tail design.”

Bad Winners Ducati Scrambler 800 flat tracker
Walid started with sketches, then moved to 3D modeling. After printing out the shapes in hard paper, he cut foam to perfect the lines. The molds were made from the foam, and the results are sublime.

It’s almost too pretty to race. But race it did: at the Wheels & Waves festival earlier this month, Zoe David of Atelier Chatokhine gunned the 800 off the start line in the El Rollo series and qualified third. Unfortunately the race itself was red flagged, but the bike showed promise—enough for there to be talk of developing it for a full series of flat track racing in 2019.

Bad Winners Ducati Scrambler 800 flat tracker
Bad Winners’ Scrambler 1100 (below) shares the same crisp yellow-and-white livery as its smaller sibling, but is a completely different machine.

This one’s road legal, with the front brake intact. “The idea for this one was to show what we can do with the Scrambler 1100 without doing a big build, and just using plug-and-play parts,” says Walid.

Bad Winners Ducati Scrambler 1100 flat tracker kit
The new fiberglass seat unit transforms the looks, swapping the stock 1100’s long perch for a perky leather-clad solo unit that lightens the looks of the 1100 considerably.

The huge stock muffler is gone, replaced by a short and sweet silencer, hooked up to a custom stainless steel pipe that hugs the line of the rear subframe.

Bad Winners Ducati Scrambler 1100 flat tracker kit
The stock intake system has again been replaced by K&N filters. And there are Excel rims on this machine too, along with Ducabike pegs. It’s just enough to give the big 1100 a sportier vibe without compromising the functionality—unless you like to carry una bella ragazza on the back.

The best news of all? Bad Winners will be releasing kits in October this year, so Scrambler owners can give their bikes a dash of flat track style. There’ll be road legal kits for both the 800 and 1100 Ducatis, and a race kit for the 800 only.

Bad Winners Ducati Scrambler 1100 flat tracker kit
If you’re in Europe, you can see Walid’s work up close at World Ducati Week, which will be held at the Misano circuit from 20 to July. The rest of us will just have to be content with these rather tempting images—while keeping an eye on the Bad Winners website for news of availability.

Bad Winners | Facebook | Instagram

Bad Winners reveals a brace of Ducati Scrambler flat trackers

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Bad Winners BikeExif cafe racer Custom Motorcycles Other Motorcycle Blogs Yamaha motorcycles

Major Fazer: Bad Winners amps up the Yamaha FZS600

Major Fazer: Bad Winners amps up the Yamaha FZS600
Apparently, the hipsters are ruining motorcycles. At least that’s the mantra of the old guard, bemoaning every trend from tire choices to velocity stacks.

Meanwhile, the rest of us are happy to enjoy bikes for what they are: sometimes impractical; always fun. So join us in giving Walid from Bad Winners a high five, as he flips the establishment the bird with ‘The Apex.’

Major Fazer: Bad Winners amps up the Yamaha FZS600
It’s a 2000 Yamaha FZS600 Fazer—and while it has fenders and no pipe wrap, it’s neither street legal nor particularly sensible. So it bucks most current trends, while still giving the haters plenty to write about. But oh boy do we want to ride it.

Walid tells us he drew inspiration from multiple sources… “I chose this bike because I wanted something away from the actual custom scene,” he says. “I have always been into racing bikes—that’s where I come from.”

Major Fazer: Bad Winners amps up the Yamaha FZS600
“I know on this project that I’m at the limit of bad taste—it’s a mix of cultures between a cafe racer, a stunt bike and a supermoto. With the aggressiveness of a MotoGP bike, all combined into one.”

Walid envisioned the perfect blend of performance and looks. The theory was to strip off as much as possible, and add in just the right amount of upgrades. But it turned out to be a tricky affair in practice.

Major Fazer: Bad Winners amps up the Yamaha FZS600
First on the list was a switch to the full running gear from a 2012-model Yamaha R6. Walid installed the front forks, wheels and brakes—but hit a snag with the swing arm.

“Putting an R6 swing arm on a Fazer frame is a good idea,” he says, “but it took me couple of nights thinking of how I could do it.” Eventually he put the frame on the bench, clamped it, and redesigned the rear end to make everything fit.

Major Fazer: Bad Winners amps up the Yamaha FZS600
The process included widening the frame at the right spots, and reworking the suspension mounting points to optimize the balance between the new ride height and the geometry.

The Fazer is no slouch, so Walid had no need to mess with the engine. Instead, he worked around it to squeeze out a little more performance—starting with a custom-made CDI that allows him to tune the ignition to his heart’s desire.

Major Fazer: Bad Winners amps up the Yamaha FZS600
The rest of the wiring’s been simplified, and now runs off a Motogadget m-Unit controller. And there’s a weight-saving Lithium-ion battery tucked away in the seat hump.

The original airbox is gone, but rather than just snap on a set of pod filters, Walid’s taken the trouble to build a proper filter box, calculating the optimal volume for the carbs. It’s matched up to a hand-made, stainless steel four-into-one exhaust system.

Major Fazer: Bad Winners amps up the Yamaha FZS600
There’s even a custom-made water cooler. “I’ve taken a karting grid and then rebuilt the box around it,” Walid tells us. “It allows me to reduce the dimensions and the volume, while improving the cooling system at the same time.” It’s capped off with a small LED gauge, poking out to the left of the fuel tank.

Off-the-shelf bits include switches and a tiny LED speedo from Motogadget, Renthal street bars, Domino racing grips and LSL foot pegs. Illumination comes from a pair of 1600 lumen LED fog lights, mounted on either side of the engine. Metzeler race slicks round things out.

Major Fazer: Bad Winners amps up the Yamaha FZS600
The bodywork is all custom, and dressed in a re-interpretation of Yamaha’s classic black, white and yellow racing palette.

On paper, a stock Fazer weighs 416 pounds dry, and makes 95hp. Walid has weighed ‘The Apex’: It’s just 271 pounds dry (123 kilos), and punches out 107hp. And with those waspish looks and the sharp paint, it’s a very attractive package indeed.

Considering it’s only January, here’s to another twelve months of ruining motorcycles.

Bad Winners | Facebook | Instagram | Photos by Guillaume Petranto

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Bad Winners BikeExif Custom Motorcycles Other Motorcycle Blogs Triumph motorcycles Triumph Thruxton

Zero Gravity: Bad Winners’ lightweight Thruxton cafe

Zero Gravity: A lightweight Triumph Thruxton café racer by Bad Winners
Triumph’s new Thruxton R is a knockout. Buy one, and you’re getting a drop-dead-gorgeous modern classic with the go to match the show.

Unfortunately, yours won’t be the only Thruxton R in town: The bike is selling like the proverbial hotcakes. If you want something that will stand out, you should give Paris-based Bad Winners a call.

Zero Gravity: A lightweight Triumph Thruxton café racer by Bad Winners
Shop owner Walid Ben Lamine has opened up the order book for a limited series of five truly special Triumphs, based on the previous generation Thruxton. This is the prototype, and it’s packed with enough upgrades to give the current ‘R’ a run for its money.

“Creating a clean and simple bike is not an easy thing,” says Walid. “What I like doing the most is improving the bikes—finding the perfect geometry, the perfect setting of performance and style.”

Zero Gravity: A lightweight Triumph Thruxton café racer by Bad Winners
The most obvious change is the new bodywork: Walid’s ditched the Thruxton’s bulbous tank for a custom-made steel unit, modeled on the Yamaha SR400. It’s matched to a hand-made tail section, capped off with a leather seat and sitting on a trimmed subframe.

But this cafe racer’s new clothes only tell half the story. Look closely, and you’ll notice that the normally fuel-injected Thruxton is now rocking a pair of Keihin CR35 carbs. Go even deeper, and you’ll find a homemade CDI controlling everything—giving Walid complete control over the tune.

Zero Gravity: A lightweight Triumph Thruxton café racer by Bad Winners
There’s also a set of Arrow two-into-one exhaust headers, terminating in a Spark muffler. We haven’t seen any dyno figures, but Walid describes the output as “insane.”

The Thruxton is a whole lot lighter now too, mostly thanks to a set of 17-inch carbon fiber wheels from Dymag, wrapped in Michelin Power Cup Evo tires.

Zero Gravity: A lightweight Triumph Thruxton café racer by Bad Winners
“I don’t want to talk about the lightness of the wheels,” says Walid unconvincingly, “but the feeling is so ‘reactive’ I’ve called the bike ‘Zero Gravity’.”

Suspension upgrades include a set of Bitubo rear shocks, and the upside down forks off a Triumph Daytona 675. The Daytona’s triple clamps were adapted to fit the Thruxton, and the front brake swapped out for a dual-disc Beringer setup.

Zero Gravity: A lightweight Triumph Thruxton café racer by Bad Winners
Working under the hood, Walid rewired the whole bike around a Motogadget m-Unit controller. The bar-end flashers, a speedo and handlebar switches are also from Motogadget, while the clip-ons and grips are from Renthal.

There’s a lot to ogle—like the carbon fiber front mudguard, and the stainless steel brake lines.

Zero Gravity: A lightweight Triumph Thruxton café racer by Bad Winners
“This Thruxton 900 is probably one of the most efficient bikes I’ve done,” says Walid. “From the Keihin CR35s, to the carbon fiber wheels and the racing style lines, this bike is all about the racing track.”

If this ‘Stage 2’ Thruxton is too rich for you, you could commission Walid to build you a ‘Stage 1’ variant—with all the style, but more affordable brakes, suspension and wheels.

Zero Gravity: A lightweight Triumph Thruxton café racer by Bad Winners
Our Christmas budget is all spent though, so we’ll be over here with our hands in our pockets, and our jaws on the floor.

Bad Winners | Facebook | Instagram | Photos by Guillaume Petranto

Zero Gravity: A lightweight Triumph Thruxton café racer by Bad Winners