CrazyDan
Well-Known Member
I wanted to ride to the museum one day and pick his brain...
I love those GC engines, a lot easier to mount than making a vertical mount for for a GX engine. Start with the motor of your choice and draw/build around it. A big sheet of card or a piece of plywood to draw on, before you know it you're cutting tubes and putting a bike together.My preference for engine would be a Honda GC160 or 190.
I built two of them, both early Harleys.Hi all, so who's owned or built a BTR or Tribute bike with a Drop Loop Frame? How'd you go about it?
Bought frame? Made frame? Which forks did you use? Real Tank or a dummy with a plastic one inside?
Which engine? Which Drive set up?
Anyone racing these bikes outside Germany?
We might have some experts here!
Post your pics!
Really nice sweet beautiful bike!!! Would you mind sharing some info about the v-twin engine you built? What kinda money does it take to build a engine like that? What kinda camshaft would someone use on a build like that? You mentioned briggs pistons, do you by chance use a v-twin briggs camshaft. Sweet ride & execution!!! Thanks.I built two of them, both early Harleys.
The first was a replica of Serial Number One.
The second one, which I still have, is a 1908 chassis with a "prototype v-twin" for racing.
The frame is all fabricated from 11 gauge 1.25" tubing. The rear portion is 16 gauge .750 tubing. The head tube and fork are from an old bicycle. Real gas and oil tanks, battery box and coil box are all 16 gauge steel. Engine is my own design, 850 cc v-twin patterned after early Harley singles.
All fabricated from steel, and uses Briggs pistons.
Drive is leather belt.
I just finished a complete tear-down, re-paint and polish.
I don't have time to give you a real detailed explanation right now, but the cam is made from the large hub on the timing gear. I milled it into a cam lobe that opens both exhaust valves with roller followers. I need to find my drawings and post a pic. The intake valves are atmospheric, so no cam needed for them.Really nice sweet beautiful bike!!! Would you mind sharing some info about the v-twin engine you built? What kinda money does it take to build a engine like that? What kinda camshaft would someone use on a build like that? You mentioned briggs pistons, do you by chance use a v-twin briggs camshaft. Sweet ride & execution!!! Thanks.
I'll try to post pics in the next few days.I don't have time to give you a real detailed explanation right now, but the cam is made from the large hub on the timing gear. I milled it into a cam lobe that opens both exhaust valves with roller followers. I need to find my drawings and post a pic. The intake valves are atmospheric, so no cam needed for them.
Thanks no problems. Take your time, I'm just a old gearhead & love to here about engine builds like yours.I'll try to post pics in the next few days.
Beautiful job!I built two of them, both early Harleys.
The first was a replica of Serial Number One.
The second one, which I still have, is a 1908 chassis with a "prototype v-twin" for racing.
The frame is all fabricated from 11 gauge 1.25" tubing. The rear portion is 16 gauge .750 tubing. The head tube and fork are from an old bicycle. Real gas and oil tanks, battery box and coil box are all 16 gauge steel. Engine is my own design, 850 cc v-twin patterned after early Harley singles.
All fabricated from steel, and uses Briggs pistons.
Drive is leather belt.
I just finished a complete tear-down, re-paint and polish.