Is it just me or do these photos disturb anyone else?
Jesus Kenneth, that's a bit harsh isn't it? If you took the time to delve into our sports beginnings you'd find that there was a time when the production motocross bike didn't exist. You couldn't walk into a mega store and buy a bike made specifically to race motocross off the shop floor...you had to build your own. Scrambles bikes were constructed from road bikes using your engine of choice in the lightest and best handling frame using the best available suspension components. The most popular of those 'specials' was the TriBSA which consisted of a Triumph Twin engine fitted to a BSA frame. There were many other variations of the hybrid special and as the sport progressed, more and more innovation came into being.
Above and below, two great examples of the TriBSA concept.These people should be shot, messing with these classics they way they have
Harsh again Ken, I've built a number of engine swap specials over the years
(XL350 Honda powered CZ, XL350 powered Montesa King Scorpion, Triumph T100 500 powered Bultaco M11 "Metisse", XR500 powered CR250 RZ and more) and have never "messed with a classic" at all. Each one of the donor frames was saved from the scrap yard or had been rooted to within a skerrick of its usable life by its previous owner. I'm pretty sure I speak for most special builders when I say that I'd never chop up a complete, restorable bike to build a hot rod.
Sure some engine swaps don't make a lot of sense to anybody but their builder but I think that's overridden by the originality and interesting engineering they add to the mix. Without the low volume bikes
(CCM, Cheney, Rickman, ATK etc) and home made specials our sport could run the risk of becoming a sea of dull same old, same old plastic covered clone bikes. Don't get me wrong, there's nothing at all wrong with well restored stock bikes, they're the foundation of what our movement's about but one blokes standard resto is little different to another blokes standard resto. I believe that the hot rod special injects a bit of much needed colour and individuality into the mix.
From the special
builders perspective it gives us a chance to use our imagination, show off our engineering skills and inject a bit of artistic flair into our creation. The special gives those among us who 'march to the beat of a different drummer' a chance to express ourselves by competing on something we've created ourselves.