Friday, 1 June 2018

Mixology: A Honda cafe with two engines blended into one

A Honda cafe racer with the best of two engines blended into one
‘Perfectly insane about motorcycles’ is how friends and colleagues describe Nazar ‘Gazzz’ Poznyakovsky of Gazzz Garage in Kiev, Ukraine.

“I combine engineering and artistry,” says Nazar. “I work out everything from general plans to the smallest details from both engineering and artistic points of view.”

A Honda cafe racer with the best of two engines blended into one
With that much control over every step of the process, Nazar has a reputation as a detail-obsessed майстер на всі руки (Jack-of-all-trades). And he’ll stop at nothing to execute his vision for a project.

Case in point is his latest achievement, a beautifully remixed CB750 with class, artistry, detail, and power.

A Honda cafe racer with the best of two engines blended into one
“I wanted to make a cafe racer with a soul-stirring sound and head-turning looks,” Nazar says of his ‘CB815.’ That’s a tall order for a rather common platform, but Gazzz was up to the challenge. “In the tradition of Gazzz Garage, not much remained of the original bike.”

The front forks, the lower triple tree, the front of the frame and some engine parts are all that stayed from the donor.

A Honda cafe racer with the best of two engines blended into one
The engine is a masterful hybrid of the classic CB750 mill and its more powerful but problematic ancestor, the CBX750. “The CBX creates an additional 20hp and 9Nm at the crankshaft, but the oil system frequently caused rods to be thrown through the case,” says Nazar.

“This and other issues were completely solved in the CB750 engine, so I decided to take best of both engines”.

A Honda cafe racer with the best of two engines blended into one
By combining the two, Nazar wrought a new heart with a six-speed gearbox, a hydraulic drive clutch, a better crankshaft, case, and oil system, and a cylinder head with larger valves and performance cams.

But he didn’t stop there.

A Honda cafe racer with the best of two engines blended into one
“Big bore piston kits for the CBX750 do not exist, so I worked out my own solution,” he says. After some fettling, the cylinder barrels were bored 3mm over original and Nazar replaced the piston rods to hold compression as high as original. “I suppose I was first who performed it, and in this way I got an 815ccm engine with the best features of the CB and CBX engines!”

To finish off the performance mods, Nazar ported and polished the heads, and made a stainless steel intake system. Re-jetted carbs breathe through Kijima pod filters, and a 4-into-4 exhaust provides the “soul-catching” growl and bark.

A Honda cafe racer with the best of two engines blended into one
With the power plant settled, Nazar developed artfully engineered details that set this CB750 apart from its counterparts. “More power, less weight, perfectly working suspension and brakes, eye catching appearance: those were my goals.”

At the top, Nazar replaced the CB750 tank with one from its odd-duck cousin, the CX500. After treating the tank to custom paint, Nazar fitted a new cap with a modified lock and a Moto Guzzi fuel petcock.

A Honda cafe racer with the best of two engines blended into one
Moving forward, Nazar sourced an upper triple clamp from a 750 Nighthawk that was more suitable for clip-ons—while retaining the original 41mm fork tubes with preload adjusters.

“The Nighthawk has a two-holed mount for the handlebars, so I decided that I should use them. I machined them a bit and used the right hole to install a T&T analog clock and the left hole for a side stand indicator.”

A Honda cafe racer with the best of two engines blended into one
Completing the cockpit is a T&T ‘all-in-one’ dashboard and a T&T oil temperature gauge, sitting behind an 8-inch British style headlamp flanked by custom made LED turn signals.

Attached to the front forks is a custom front hub. It’s mated to a Warp9 17 x 2.5 rim with custom made spokes, with a Dunlop K375 tire sweetly hugged by a custom made steel mudguard.

A Honda cafe racer with the best of two engines blended into one
Front braking is provided by twin 300mm discs with Nissin dual piston calipers attached to a Kawasaki Vulcan 1500 master cylinder, by way of Hel braided brake lines.

The rider now sits on a custom seat (and aluminum pan) fabricated by Nazar. Underneath is an aluminum swingarm from a Kawasaki Zephyr 750, and between the rails is a Honda Translap 650 rear hub.

A Honda cafe racer with the best of two engines blended into one
This time, the Warp9 wheel is 17 x 4.25 and shod with a chunky 160/70-17 Bridgestone G528 tire. Keeping everything in place are Kayaba fully adjustable rear shocks with custom made adjusters.

This CB750 is a good 20 kilos lighter than the source bike, and details are plentiful—right down to the custom footpegs and chain guard.

A Honda cafe racer with the best of two engines blended into one
As a one-man shop, Nazar is undaunted by the unknown. And he’s brought to life a beautiful vision, despite living in a part of the world where parts availability is, at best, challenging.

Astounding work from the madman in Kiev.

Gazzz Garage | Images by Nazar Poznyakovsky

A Honda cafe racer with the best of two engines blended into one



from Bike EXIF https://ift.tt/2LRoWqr

No comments:

Post a Comment