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Dakar style: A Yamaha Super Ténéré restomod from Italy

A Yamaha Super Ténéré restomod from North East Custom
This Sunday, the Dakar Rally kicks off again. If you suffer from rally fever but don’t have the stones to actually race through Peruvian deserts, let this Yamaha Super Ténéré be your medicine.

First produced in 1989, the twin cylinder XTZ 750 Super Ténéré was the big brother of the XTZ 660 Ténéré. Both bikes were named after a notoriously difficult, sandstorm-prone section of the Sahara desert, which featured on the Paris-Dakar route in the 1980s.

A Yamaha Super Ténéré restomod from North East Custom
This 1992-model XTZ has been reworked by North East Custom, a shop in Padua run by brothers Diego and Riccardo Coppiello. They’re not twins, but it’s impossible to tell the two bearded Italians apart—and they both like anything with knobbly tires.

So although they don’t exclusively focus on off-roaders, they have a real affinity for the genre. (Their stunning Yamaha XT500 restomod was a showstopper at our Wildays stand last year.)

A Yamaha Super Ténéré restomod from North East Custom
Here, they took everything good about their customer’s Super Ténéré, and amplified it. “The idea was to bring to life the ‘desert spirit’,” explains Diego, “while adding a fresh touch, to make it more modern and slender.”

The most obvious change is up front. North East have binned the Yamaha’s original fairing in favor of something more svelte, and more akin to modern rally bike designs. The new unit was hand-built using fiberglass, and designed to incorporate the original instruments and headlights, with a new acrylic glass cover to protect the beams.

A Yamaha Super Ténéré restomod from North East Custom
Even though it doesn’t look like it, the Super Ténéré’s practical 26-liter fuel tank is still in play. And Diego and Riccardo designed their new fairing to attach via OEM mounting points, so that they could attach it to any XTZ 750 without any hacking.

All the bodywork further back is custom. North East built new side covers, and a sharp new rear fender. Then they matched it up to a custom saddle—shaped like a modern enduro bike seat and covered in vinyl.

A Yamaha Super Ténéré restomod from North East Custom
It’s a super-neat arrangement, capped off at the end by a slim LED taillight, and a license plate bracket that also carries a pair of LED turn signals.

Take a look at the space between the side panels and rear fender, and you’ll spot a pair of red plates. Remove those, and you’ll find an array of mounting points that the brothers have welded to the frame, designed to carry a variety of luggage accessories. Clever stuff.

A Yamaha Super Ténéré restomod from North East Custom
As for the rest of the Super Ténéré, North East have upgraded all the right bits—and left alone the bits that work.

There’s a new Bitubo shock out back, with Bitubo springs giving the front end a boost. The wheels are stock, but wrapped in new Continental TKC80 rubber. And the brakes have been treated to new discs, and a Brembo master cylinder up front.

A Yamaha Super Ténéré restomod from North East Custom
The motor is stock, but North East put it through some routine maintenance. They also upgraded the air filter to one from K&N, and re-jetted the carbs with a Dynojet kit. The exhaust is a mash-up of Arrow headers and a modified Virex silencer.

North East have taken care of the smaller details too. A pair of spotlights is mounted low down for maximum nighttime visibility, and there’s a single mirror that can fold away when you venture off-road. And since the bike’s not meant for professional rally racing, there’s a Givi phone case and mount where you’d normally find a road book.

A Yamaha Super Ténéré restomod from North East Custom
As for the livery, Diego and Riccardo shunned the Super Ténéré’s original 90s vibe for a contemporary mix of gloss white and matte black. Custom ‘Super Ténéré’ decals and sponsor logos add a hint of red—and a little extra race flair.

We’re not sure we’d survive even one grueling day of the Dakar. But for regular dual-sport riding with a little retro rally flavor, this Super Ténéré is just the ticket.

North East Custom | Facebook | Instagram | Images by Filippo Molena

A Yamaha Super Ténéré restomod from North East Custom

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BikeExif Custom Motorcycles Dakar Rally Other Motorcycle Blogs Yamaha motorcycles

Dakar Redux: Iron Cobras’ 2017 Yamaha WR450F

Dakar Redux: A 2017 Yamaha WR450F given the retro treatment by Iron Cobras
If you’re fan of blasting big trail bikes down forest roads, the Yamaha WR450F is probably on your shopping list. And if you also love the brutal beauty of the early Paris-Dakar bikes, Evan Scott has built a machine just for you.

The man behind Iron Cobras has hooked up with Answer Racing to build a custom WR450F that amps up the retro rally raid vibe without sacrificing performance.

Dakar Redux: A 2017 Yamaha WR450F given the retro treatment by Iron Cobras

Despite his reputation, Evan hasn’t been a lifelong biker: he only got into riding about 17 years ago, and after a misguided obsession with modern sportbikes, he got into dirt riding and never looked back.

He now builds custom motorcycles and exhaust systems, with a growing sideline in metal fabrication, and caught the attention of the motocross gear maker Answer Racing.

Dakar Redux: A 2017 Yamaha WR450F given the retro treatment by Iron Cobras
“Answer contacted me about eight months ago,” Evan recalls. “I met with creative director Scott Sagud, and we came up with concepts for two Dakar-inspired bikes: one modern-style rally bike, and one retro bike.”

Evan and Scott worked together on concept drawings, blending the ideas each wanted to see in the builds. “Our focus was not only on making sure the bikes looked good, but also making sure they performed like the Dakar racers we were using for inspiration.”

Dakar Redux: A 2017 Yamaha WR450F given the retro treatment by Iron Cobras
The 2017 Yamaha WR450F is a good platform for a high-performance build. It’s a big trails bike with a punchy ‘reverse-slant’ engine—the same four-valve single used by its stablemate, the YZ racer. You also get fuel injection and electric start.

This WR450F is called ’81,’ and the name is a clue to where Evan and Scott got their ideas from. “The 1981 Yamaha XT500 Paris-Dakar bike [below] has been on my inspiration board for a very long time,” says Evan.

The 1981 Yamaha XT500 Paris-Dakar bike
“To me it’s one of the most classic racing bikes of all time. The huge desert tank, the gold rims, and the livery are just amazing.”

“I wanted to take a lot of those aspects and use them in our build. So we handmade the six-plus gallon tank out of aluminum, and incorporated the factory fuel injection.”

Dakar Redux: A 2017 Yamaha WR450F given the retro treatment by Iron Cobras
“The tank was one of the key aspects of the build for me: I wanted to showcase what I can do with metal shaping. It was a monster of a gas tank build, and took about a week and a half to complete.”

That beautiful tank, it’s worth noting, has no body filler on it. Evan painted it himself, right down to the classic Yamaha graphic.

Dakar Redux: A 2017 Yamaha WR450F given the retro treatment by Iron Cobras
The headlight on the original XT500 Dakar bike was tiny, but Evan wanted a big rally-style lamp. So he’s installed a Hella seven-inch LED and wrapped it with a vintage-look cowl.

At first glance, the big fenders look vintage too—but they’re actually new, and made from practical plastic.

Dakar Redux: A 2017 Yamaha WR450F given the retro treatment by Iron Cobras
“The seat is a custom unit we made in the spirit of any early 80s enduro bike: big, boxy and comfortable!” says Evan. “Then we rounded off the build with the item that Iron Cobras is best known for—a stainless steel exhaust system.”

It’s TIG-welded and sporting a custom heat shield and an internal spark arrester.

Dakar Redux: A 2017 Yamaha WR450F given the retro treatment by Iron Cobras
“The best part of the WR450F build was seeing everything come together,” says Evan. “And seeing the reaction from everyone at our partners Answer and WLF Enduro. That’s what kept me going.”

As is often the way, the worst part was the time pressure. “In the end, I wound up building both of the bikes in less than two months. I was literally putting the finishing touches to the WR450F six hours before I took off for The One Moto Show in Portland.”

Dakar Redux: A 2017 Yamaha WR450F given the retro treatment by Iron Cobras
Most show bikes get trailered to the venue, or ridden very carefully and polished thoroughly afterwards. The two Iron Cobras bikes, on the other hand, got thrashed. The journey from SoCal to Portland took a week, and here are the photos to prove it.

“It was difficult for me to see the bikes that I just finished building being ridden hard off road,” Evan admits. “It was a conflict between wanting to push them, but also see them make it to the show in one piece—which they did!”

Dakar Redux: A 2017 Yamaha WR450F given the retro treatment by Iron Cobras
“We wound up displaying the bikes just as they came from the trail—covered in dirt.”

We love glossy paint and gleaming chrome as much as anyone. But when bikes still look good after being used and abused, you know they’re something special. Nice work, Evan and Scott.

Iron Cobras | Facebook | Instagram | Images by Drew Ruiz | With thanks to Sean MacDonald

Dakar Redux: A 2017 Yamaha WR450F given the retro treatment by Iron Cobras
Specifications
Hand-shaped aluminum gas tank incorporating factory fuel injection and aircraft style gas filler
Hand-shaped aluminum headlight cowl with a Hella rally headlight
Custom seat pan and foam with red stitched upholstery by Revs Customs
Custom rear rack
Vintage enduro rear fender with Maier taillight
Custom aluminum skid plate with Answer logo cutout
Gold Excel Takasago rims, Dunlop D606 tires, Nitro mousse tire inserts
Custom aluminum side number plate
Custom stainless steel slip on exhaust using modified Cone Engineering muffler and FMF spark arrester
ProTaper X-ring chain, clutch and brake levers, foot pegs and YZ bend handlebars
Sunstar rear sprocket
TM Design works chain guide
MSR billet rear rotor guard
Renthal grips
Ico Rally Max and Rally Max G computers with custom mountings
Acerbis front fender and hand guards
Relocated all electrical components