Not that all this wouldn’t have been enough to have a great time, but
there was one last ingredient and that was the Saturday afternoon racing
right beside the loading docks. Sponsored by RSD and Indian Motorcycles,
there were four classes including the ever so popular Super Hooligans, an
air-cooled vintage class, the GNC Pro Twins with a purse of $5000 as well
as a costumed Run What You Brung class. Super fun and super exciting!
So, what about the bikes? Well, with the organisers’ devotion to
craftsmanship, ingenuity and creativity, they are open to bikes from
all pedigrees. BMW was there as a major sponsor, and also there for
the unveiling of a new bike from Alan Stulberg and his crew at Revival
Cycles, the second ground up custom (Custom Works Zon unveiled
the first one at Mooneyes in Japan just a few months ago) made from a
prototype huge boxer R1800 engine. The Birdcage, as it is known, achieved
exactly what Revival set out to do, which was ‘to appear as if it would not
function and to have an unencumbered view of the engine and drivetrain.’
Here is another example of BMW’s commitment to the custom world that
goes back to 2013 and its collaboration with Roland Sands on the RnineT
and many other custom builds since.
Of course there was plenty for the V-twin
enthusiasts with Harleys like Cristian Sosa’s bare
metal 1950 Panhead that shows off his amazing
shaping skills; a split-rocker turbo Shovelhead from
Christian Newman; Matt Jackson’s 1952 Panhead
chopper; Tim Scates’ Root 66 1952 Pan chopper;
Josh Allison's Cry Baby Cycles’ King Nothing 1945
Knuckle; Mark Shell of Bonneville Customs’ El
Scorchio Shovelhead; an Evel Knievel-inspired Street
750 by Colin Cornberg of Montana; Bryce Schmidt’s
great turbo scrambler Sportster 1200; Cabana Dan
Rognsvoog’s 1928 Harley hillclimb peashooter... The
list of custom Harley-Davidsons goes on and on.
Then there were other customs, antiques and
unique bikes that would interest anyone. Indians,
Triumphs, an American-made Simplex, concept
bikes, incredibly shaped bikes and a number of
very cool funky bikes like Jay Shia’s custom 1957
Royal Enfield Indian bobber (from back when Royal
Enfields were imported and rebadged as Indians
after the Springfield factory closed in 1953.)
Almost like a show within a show, there was an
extraordinary display of five bikes from the Haas
Moto Museum, a museum in Dallas that opened
less than two years ago but which has assembled a
collection of more than 200 motorcycles spanning
twelve decades. Despite not kick starting his first
motorcycle until he was 64, Robert B ‘Bobby’
Haas, one of the world’s most celebrated aerial
photographers, set about amassing a remarkable
array of bikes. You might wonder how he could
afford to do this on a photographer’s salary. Well,
Bobby, now 71, also heads up his own private
investment firm and made his name in the business
world by purchasing 7Up and Dr Pepper and turning
EVENT FEATURE THE HANDBUILT MOTORCYCLE SHOW
Romanian Alex Maslin built Franken Blast, his Buell Blast, in his
tiny apartment in Chicago over 11 months. It only took him so
long, he says, because he had to hide it from his landlord.
Cristian Sosa’s reworking of a BMW RnineT.
Some of the builders at the Q&A session. L-R:
Bryan Fuller (Fuller Moto), Don Cronin (Medaza
Cycles), Alan Stulberg (Revival Cycles).
Chris Newman’s turbocharged Harley Shovelhead.
Dustin Kott made his name building Honda CB café racers, but Exodus,
this 1978 BMW R80, represents a dramatic departure from his usual style.
102 | 100% Biker | issue 250 | http://www.100-biker.co.uk