The winner, it turns out, was Richie’s TDR – voted for by three out of the four judges. It’s a subtle bike, and perhaps one that may not, to those not in the know, be immediately obvious as to why it won. I mean, it’s just a painted trailie with a few nice bits, isn’t it? Err, no, it isn’t – it really, really isn’t.
When Yamaha launched the TDR250 in 1988, it was a bike before its time, predating the craze for supermoto bikes that didn’t really get going until the mid-1990s. Yamaha’ve never been afraid to push the boundaries of biking (witness their hubcentre-steered GTS1000, and the current three-wheeled Niken), and while the TDR was, really, never a particularly strong seller (no one’d really asked for a kind o’ roadgoing trailie with a stupidly quick two-stroke engine), it later became a cult bike in its own right. Back in my days of being a spotty yoof, I had the ‘proper’ version, the TZR250, and one day, while my bike was being serviced, I was given a TDR as a loaner. At first glance, as a confirmed speed freak, I wasn’t impressed, but by the end of the first street that’d changed as the TDR’s front wheel’d gone involuntarily skyward away from every junction – something my TZR never did unless you made it do it. By the end of the day I didn’t want to give it back, and it took me another 25 years to get one of my own, and it’s a bike that, to this day, I regret selling.
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THE SLED
IâM A SEMI-PRO SHED BUILDER, WHO BUILDS UNDER THE NAME DIRTY DICKâS⊠I SAY âSEMIPROâ BECAUSE IâVE ONLY, AT THE TIME OF WRITING, SOLD TWO BIKES (AND, USUALLY, I GET PAID IN BEER FOR ANY OTHER WORK I DO).
THE CHIEF
I BOUGHT MY ENFIELD, A 2001 350 BULLET, IN SHROPSHIRE IN JUNE 2019, WITH JUST 11,000 MILES ON THE CLOCK. IT WAS IN TRIALS TRIM, BUT I ALREADY HAD IN MY HEAD WHAT I WANTED TO DO WITH IT â MAKE IT INTO A â50S-STYLE CUSTOM, BASED LOOSELY AROUND AN INDIAN SCOUT THAT IâD SEEN PICTURES OF.
MADE O'GUBBINS
OVER THE LAST YEAR OR SO, MANY OF USâVE HAD TO FOREGO THE JOY OF SEARCHING FOR PARTS AT AUTO-JUMBLES, SHOWS AND BREAKERâS YARDS, RELYING ON EITHER THE HIT-AND-MISS OF INTERNET AUCTION SITES, OR TURNING TO OUR OWN STOCK OF PARTS, WHEN LOOKING AT BUILDING OR MODIFYING A BIKE.
BUDGET BOBBER
PEOPLE ALWAYS SAY CUSTOM BIKESâRE EXPENSIVE, THAT ONLY THE RICH CAN HAVE âEM, BUT IF YOU REALLY WANT ONE THEREâS ALWAYS A WAYâŠ
LEAF IT OUT
THE SUZUKI LS650 IS PERHAPS BEST KNOWN FOR HAVING ONE OF THE LEAST SUITED AND MOST RANDOM MODEL NAMES IN MOTORCYCLING HISTORY â THE SAVAGE.
SIZE O
I DECIDED I NEEDED A BIKE FOR MYSELF AS A KEEPER (RATHER THAN THE USUAL BUILD IT, SELL IT, FUND THE NEXT ONE), BUT TIME AND FUNDS WERE GOING TO GET TIGHT. I WANTED A â60S/â70S-STYLE HARDTAIL WITH A DECENT-SIZED MOTOR, SINGLE OR TWIN, AND SOMETHING I DIDNâT HAVE TO DO ANY FRAME MODIFICATIONS TO.
LITTLE VICTORIES
SOME FOLK SAY WORKâS A NECESSARY EVIL, OTHERS MAKE THE MOST OF THEIR SITUATION. A GOOD FRIEND ONCE SAID TO ME THAT ITâS THE LITTLE VICTORIES THAT COUNT WHEN AT WORK, USING THEIR MACHINERY TO MAKE BIKE PARTS, BLAGGING FREE STATIONARY, OR JUST HAVING A POO ON THEIR TIMEâŠ
BACK TO THE EIGHTIES!
AFTER THE STYLISTIC EXCESSES OF THE 1970S, THE 1980S SAW A KIND OF DIRECTION CHANGE IN CUSTOM BIKE BUILDING â ONE WHICH RESULTED IN NO SMALL PART FROM THE ABUNDANCE OF FAST, RELIABLE FOUR-CYLINDER MOTORCYCLES FROM THE LAND OF THE RISING SUN.
APPLE
MY GOAL WAS TO CREATE A CAFÃ RACER WITH STYLING FROM THE FIFTIES â ROUND CURVES THATâD MAKE IT POP.
3 DIRT DIGGERS
OVER THE LAST FEW YEARS DIRT DIGGERS, HELD AT THE EDDIE WRIGHT SPEEDWAY STADIUM IN SCUNTHORPE, HAS BECOME THE NUMBER ONE, ALL-COMERS-WELCOME BIKE RACE IN THE UK.