You definitely used the correct methods for rebuilding this bike. Most professionally done and as a professional mechanic myself saw you using methods and skills that most people don't know about. Your dad a professional mechanic or wear did you learn so many correct ways to do things. Awesome Job
My dad has been working on bikes his entire life. I actually didn't start wrenching on things a lot until after college, but my dad is always available for a phone call when I have questions. Really I just taught myself by reading the manuals and watching videos. Appreciate your comment!
This is a great vid for the industry. All the companies you did business with are people just like us who followed their dreams to participate in free enterprise. We are the people under attack today. People don't understand much,----this is a vid of the hero's we should do business with. Beautiful man. I think I am going to cry. If you ever build a 1/5th scale gas powered RC car, boat or Go-Ped, I would be happy to do business with you and send you a ported engine/cylinder. Sorry man if my fist post bugged you, (I was just telling the truth, and I would like to see it back). I am not sued to seeing intelligent YT channels. this vid is worth more than people realize.
Thanks for the comment, glad you enjoyed! I always have to be the first person to lay my bike over before someone else rides it, and so far I'm 10 hours in with this bad girl rubber side down. We'll see when it happens, but I love your idea... Might need to get in touch with him after I lay her over haha!
We’ve all been that kid one time or another I can relate I had a yz125 1979 I made 1.90 hr pumping gas and bought the bike from my friend who bought it new the sam year only had it a few months and he bought a bigger Rm250. I think I paid about $800or $900 for the bike and had saved enough to pay half down and $25.00 a week, I didn’t have enough cash left over to race it that summer and by fall I nearly had it paid off when the transmission exploded . I was devastated I got a quote from the dealer and couldn’t afford it was more than I paid for the bike , then I heard there was a shop that CD could do it for less so I saved and went and talked to him dropped off the motor stopped by a month later and the shop was closed and my motor was long gone that was the last time I seen it , sold the frame for $150
@@critical that was a long time past and I’ve gotten over it , in fact that was about the time I was getting my driver license along with girlfriend what I don’t know at the time dirt bikes would’ve been soooo much cheaper and way less maintenance if you’ve invested your time and hard earned money the best bang for the buck ……. Goes to the dirt bike ! No pun intended 😂😇
You have enough skills and brains to open up a restoration shop, and it may become a full time thing as MX bikes become nostalgic, if some people still have enough money to bring some of their great past back to life. Still will never be a fan of the modern plastic, and to add to the post you deleted, even the rear fender pointing up in the air make the bike hard to get on. That is a sample of how abstract art can actually hurt the function---as well as have no meaning or purpose. You do great work young man. It was a pleasure watching your talent. You actually give mankind hope. Thanks. Doug from Michigan
I gotta admit that the blue hubs wasn’t my first choice , but once altogether it worked completely modern look . Your a builder well deserved credit . Great build !
Thanks so much! My whole vision for this bike kind of revolved around blue hubs with gold rims - I'm happy with how it came together. Most of the feedback in the Broke to Built contest was the wheels being too much, which is fair enough. But I do think it tied together nicely and am glad you think so too! If you were to change the wheels what would you do? I'd like to look at this bike with black rims and see what I think... I also initially planned less red, but the shock spring being red opened up a few doors as well. Red hubs might not look bad.
Wow you really know your stuff man. As a child my father sold ice cream at a dirt bike track so I all loved them but I never had one in my mind 40s I purchased a 1974 xr75 for $65 I put it in my basement for a winter and put tall forks but kept its original lock I got rid of it and I dread it now I'm 50 and I have a Chinese atv cuz that's what I can afford for now I have cancer and money is tight but I find my self watching videos of dirt bikes and atv I really enjoy them
One of the best rebuilds I have seen on RUclips. I normally find myself saying why did or why didn’t he do that. Not once did I say either on this one. Top quality work and the bike looks mint. Well done.
Anyone doing this type of work should build themselves an electrolysis tank. It's insanely easy and makes removing rust and grime so easy, you'll never go back. As a side benefit, once you have your electrolysis setup, you are 90% of the way to being able to nickel and chrome plate at home, which is the best for restoring old fasteners, pins, etc.
I hear ya! I wish my buffing wheel had an hour meter too! I also spend hours making parts better than new and also get my grinding pads from Pryme MX! Awesome build!
Wow this was the most impressive mechanical video I’ve ever seen. I was starting to think that his generation had no talent and were too lazy to use their talent even if they did, but this guy is clearly different. Fantastic.
I was 12, and we just moved to a rural area where all the kids were riding bikes like the Yamaha mini-enduro 60cc bike. It was my neighbor who bought a new 1976 RM125 that was the first real MX bike I ever saw, (then I started buying the mags and started buying my own dirt bikes.) I will never forget the first time I saw him riding it just across highway from our house. Great side shot of him going up and over the slightly bumpy hill,---coolest thing a kid could see for the first time still, in my mind. :) By 1977, there were 5 kids with new MX bikes riding around in my small 13 year old stomping grounds. Today, I hire a 12 year old kid for some work, (which he failed to do), and my garage has neat stuff in it, Gas RC cars, Go-Peds, CNC mill, manual lathe, my dirt bike, (he has one his parents bought), a water brake engine dyno,----and he asks no questions. I don't get it.
hey dude big fan but just a tip when putting grease on the bearings for the steering if put a chunk of crease on your hand and roll bearing back and forth the grease will get in there and it will last longer
Soooo sick! I loved your content and breakdown of everything you did, while pacing over some repetitive work. That music is on point your friend did a great job.
Nothin like a good ol freshly built, beautiful & crisp finning 2stroke! Always ran Suzuki’s in my racing days but a good buddy of mine (LMS motosports) out of Gastonia, N.C has multiple brand new sets of Gold excel wheels on hand at his shop an deff. priced better than a dealership would have them for!
Wicked vlog my guy! Yamaha has definitely outdone themselves with this one! Sick day, sick bike, and a rad crew !! Thanks for having me out bro you guys rock 🪨 😎 #letthegoodtimesroll
great build, man! I just bought an 01 o plan on rebuilding. if I can make a friendly suggestion... when masking off to paint 2 colors, if you make the first coat after taping your base coat color, then shoot your second color, it will leave you with much crisper tape and paint lines.
Some advise here. After powder coating, it is a good idea to remove the powder coating under the bolt heads, as it can compress and lose torque/bolt tension. But it might be best if you can clean up those areas, spray with a bit of rustolium paint, (or the such), and mask the area under the bolt heads before powder coating, (of which I would talk with the powder coater for the best method of masking.).
I found a good aluminum polishing product called "Wizards Metal Polish for Motorcycles". It comes in a rectangle can like the old band-aid cans, and looks like a dense cotton candy, (smells kinds sweet too). It does not take as much elbow grease as I thought it would, and it can get into crevices that a buffing wheel can not. I have had the can for 10 years now, and if wrapped up well in the plastic pouch, it has not dried up. If it does, it says a few drops of mineral spirits freshens it back up. That brake pedal for example, would shine like a mirror with 15 min of hand polishing.
It's funny, watching this triggered my anxiety from old rebuild PTSD, while you are having a good time lol.. Different strokes (excuse the pun) for different folks i guess!
Lacing up your own wheels too! (I was wondering if you were going to do that.). Not too many people know how to do that well. I learned with Mt. bicycle wheels in the mid 90's. 22:08. Awww, you scratched the new anodizing. I could only get screwdrivers to work as a kid changing tires,---before color anodizing showed the chicken scratches, (would always pinch a tube with spoons), so I gave up, and have a shop with a power tire changer do it. :)
I stopped freezing the bearings for installation. The amount the steel shrinks is tiny compared to how much the aluminum bore increases, (I stay under 350 def F. for ovens), and I have had problems of the cold bearing sucking the heat out of the cases, and shrinking on a slightly crooked bearing as I installed the bearing, before the bearing bottomed. I used to heat the cases, and was able to just drop the bearing in with my fingers, (if straight enough), and actually hear it hit bottom, (if it didn't, it tended to get stuck). But I was burning my fingers too often on the hot cases,--and went back to a arbor press and some lube.
Super sick! I know a absolutely nothing about dirt bikes but I watched that entire build video. Understood nothing but enjoyed every minute of it! Nicely done.
I don't understand a post like yours here. This is a good vid of a guy who knows how to restore a bike, (that much, I am sure you understood.). I am familiar with everything he did, , am about 30 years older than he is, and I even learned something from this, pretty much instructional vid. It is me, but I don't understand why you would enjoy every minute of it if you did not learn anything. Is that is what you get out of school today? Now I know we should respect our teachers, but what if we did not learn anything useful from them, (arts and crafts for everybody?), I sure would not have said what you said. But, I can tell you are a nice kid. Maybe too nice. :) But you are right even if you don't know why. It is an excellent vid.
@@EarthSurferUSA Buddy I'm 40 years old so definitely not a kid, and haven't been in school for a very long time. You clearly missed the context of my comment. It was to say that while I didn't understand or completely comprehend what he was doing at every moment, I enjoyed the video. This is to say I enjoyed the production, the way he laid it out and executed the video. You seem to imply that if I didn't learn anything from the video that I couldn't get anything from it. This is like saying you cant appreciate a piece of art without understand how the art was made which is entirely untrue. You also seemed to miss the shallow sarcasm, my comment is a little like the saying "No idea what you're talking about kid, but I loved every minute" I'm not really saying I didn't learn anything but then again the point of watching the video wasn't to learn about anything, it was to watch and enjoy the video. It's possible to to get something out of a video without learning from it. I suspect you ether missed the context completely (Maybe a joke that went over your head) or maybe you just don't consume content like I do. I learn a lot from watching RUclips videos but sometimes I stumble on a video (Like this one) that doesn't align with my hobbies or particular interests and I just go for it and give it a watch. It would seem you understand this stuff more then me and may be watching it to learn something while I am just here for a cool video.
Because instead of being taught that we can build things, we are now taught arts and crafts with a side of gender studies, and all the great opportunities you will have working for the state as they can't figure anything out. This is barbaric to them. But that is what their future will be with no industrial skills.
Work Of Art. Anyone watching this would kill to have it sitting in their garage 🤘.
Thanks Jourdon, glad you enjoyed the build!
How I wish
Garage you gotta be kidding me , the spare bike room , I’ll put a Murphy bed in the garage for my mother-in-law
@@KincadePavich aaajh7yyyyyhuuujuurieiedkdkiieoeedndrrddkdkm
Agreed. I do the same things as u but much slower and not nearly as nice. Awesome job!
Absolutely in love with the fact that all of these builds are one video, but still very concise and comprehensive.
You definitely used the correct methods for rebuilding this bike. Most professionally done and as a professional mechanic myself saw you using methods and skills that most people don't know about. Your dad a professional mechanic or wear did you learn so many correct ways to do things. Awesome Job
My dad has been working on bikes his entire life. I actually didn't start wrenching on things a lot until after college, but my dad is always available for a phone call when I have questions. Really I just taught myself by reading the manuals and watching videos. Appreciate your comment!
Love how you're So detailed on your restorations. Bikes absolutely beautiful
RM125 2-strokes were always rockets. Beautiful!
Suzuki is my last favorite bike but this is the best one I’ve seen!
This is a great vid for the industry. All the companies you did business with are people just like us who followed their dreams to participate in free enterprise. We are the people under attack today. People don't understand much,----this is a vid of the hero's we should do business with. Beautiful man. I think I am going to cry.
If you ever build a 1/5th scale gas powered RC car, boat or Go-Ped, I would be happy to do business with you and send you a ported engine/cylinder.
Sorry man if my fist post bugged you, (I was just telling the truth, and I would like to see it back). I am not sued to seeing intelligent YT channels. this vid is worth more than people realize.
Great work!! you should let the kid you bought it from ride it once
Thanks for the comment, glad you enjoyed! I always have to be the first person to lay my bike over before someone else rides it, and so far I'm 10 hours in with this bad girl rubber side down. We'll see when it happens, but I love your idea... Might need to get in touch with him after I lay her over haha!
@@KincadePavich Hahaha yes, it would be a cool clip I think! "here is what you missed out on" 😂
We’ve all been that kid one time or another I can relate I had a yz125 1979 I made 1.90 hr pumping gas and bought the bike from my friend who bought it new the sam year only had it a few months and he bought a bigger Rm250. I think I paid about $800or $900 for the bike and had saved enough to pay half down and $25.00 a week, I didn’t have enough cash left over to race it that summer and by fall I nearly had it paid off when the transmission exploded . I was devastated I got a quote from the dealer and couldn’t afford it was more than I paid for the bike , then I heard there was a shop that CD could do it for less so I saved and went and talked to him dropped off the motor stopped by a month later and the shop was closed and my motor was long gone that was the last time I seen it , sold the frame for $150
@@allensandven0 Damn, that's sad :(
@@critical that was a long time past and I’ve gotten over it , in fact that was about the time I was getting my driver license along with girlfriend what I don’t know at the time dirt bikes would’ve been soooo much cheaper and way less maintenance if you’ve invested your time and hard earned money the best bang for the buck ……. Goes to the dirt bike ! No pun intended 😂😇
I'm proud of you for fixing that Kickstarter arm. Most people would have gave up on that thing and bought a new one. Way to go my man!!!😉
You have enough skills and brains to open up a restoration shop, and it may become a full time thing as MX bikes become nostalgic, if some people still have enough money to bring some of their great past back to life. Still will never be a fan of the modern plastic, and to add to the post you deleted, even the rear fender pointing up in the air make the bike hard to get on. That is a sample of how abstract art can actually hurt the function---as well as have no meaning or purpose.
You do great work young man. It was a pleasure watching your talent. You actually give mankind hope. Thanks. Doug from Michigan
I gotta admit that the blue hubs wasn’t my first choice , but once altogether it worked completely modern look . Your a builder well deserved credit . Great build !
Thanks so much! My whole vision for this bike kind of revolved around blue hubs with gold rims - I'm happy with how it came together. Most of the feedback in the Broke to Built contest was the wheels being too much, which is fair enough. But I do think it tied together nicely and am glad you think so too! If you were to change the wheels what would you do? I'd like to look at this bike with black rims and see what I think... I also initially planned less red, but the shock spring being red opened up a few doors as well. Red hubs might not look bad.
This is so satisfying it's incredible I'm not even a dirt bike guy but this is inspiring
Wow you really know your stuff man. As a child my father sold ice cream at a dirt bike track so I all loved them but I never had one in my mind 40s I purchased a 1974 xr75 for $65 I put it in my basement for a winter and put tall forks but kept its original lock I got rid of it and I dread it now I'm 50 and I have a Chinese atv cuz that's what I can afford for now I have cancer and money is tight but I find my self watching videos of dirt bikes and atv I really enjoy them
That might be the best looking Suzuki I’ve ever seen
That bike is incredible looking one of the sickest builds I have ever seen on the tube here .
Engelbert Strauss has the best working-gear!!
Greetings from Austria🇦🇹
Thanks for watching!
One of the best rebuilds I have seen on RUclips. I normally find myself saying why did or why didn’t he do that. Not once did I say either on this one. Top quality work and the bike looks mint. Well done.
Thanks a ton, I really appreciate that and I'm glad you enjoyed the build!
Youre mechanic skills are impressive and so is the bike. The graphics to the whole thing u killed it
Much appreciated!!
your my inspiration to try rebuilding bikes I love your videos.
Anyone doing this type of work should build themselves an electrolysis tank. It's insanely easy and makes removing rust and grime so easy, you'll never go back. As a side benefit, once you have your electrolysis setup, you are 90% of the way to being able to nickel and chrome plate at home, which is the best for restoring old fasteners, pins, etc.
I hear ya! I wish my buffing wheel had an hour meter too! I also spend hours making parts better than new and also get my grinding pads from Pryme MX! Awesome build!
Awesome to hear! Thanks for watching!
Dude you have Mad Talent! Well Done!
Wow this was the most impressive mechanical video I’ve ever seen. I was starting to think that his generation had no talent and were too lazy to use their talent even if they did, but this guy is clearly different. Fantastic.
Love this bike I had 80 modell back in days❤❤
This is the best looking bike I’ve seen in a while great job!
that old clutch was YIKES, nice build man
Much appreciated!
easily cleanest 125 build i have ever seen
Thank you!
The bike looks amazing. You did a fantastic job on it.
Have always been an RM fan since 75'! Thank you for bringing back memories of my youth. BEAUTIFUL build...Great Job
Thanks so much for watching!
I was 12, and we just moved to a rural area where all the kids were riding bikes like the Yamaha mini-enduro 60cc bike. It was my neighbor who bought a new 1976 RM125 that was the first real MX bike I ever saw, (then I started buying the mags and started buying my own dirt bikes.)
I will never forget the first time I saw him riding it just across highway from our house. Great side shot of him going up and over the slightly bumpy hill,---coolest thing a kid could see for the first time still, in my mind. :) By 1977, there were 5 kids with new MX bikes riding around in my small 13 year old stomping grounds.
Today, I hire a 12 year old kid for some work, (which he failed to do), and my garage has neat stuff in it, Gas RC cars, Go-Peds, CNC mill, manual lathe, my dirt bike, (he has one his parents bought), a water brake engine dyno,----and he asks no questions. I don't get it.
Beautiful work
That’s one of the best bike builds I’ve seen on RUclips ever…. and one of the best RMs awesome job 🍀👍🙏
Thanks a ton
Dude that thing is incredible. Excellent work man.
Holly smocks ! Better that a new one !! Congratulations very very good job. Nice skills
Love it, you explain very nicely. Hoping to use this for my current project!
You have mad skills my friend. Beautiful bike.
This is a peace of....ART!!! Well done
Damn that looks awesome, the yellow and the black go so well with eachother, especially the gold rims
hey dude big fan but just a tip when putting grease on the bearings for the steering if put a chunk of crease on your hand and roll bearing back and forth the grease will get in there and it will last longer
Soooo sick! I loved your content and breakdown of everything you did, while pacing over some repetitive work. That music is on point your friend did a great job.
Glad you enjoyed it!!
Straight up Works Factory grade A-kit bike! Beautiful!
This is like watching an artist work.
That means a lot, thanks for the comment!
Yea, but he makes money doing something useful. Big difference. :)
Nothin like a good ol freshly built, beautiful & crisp finning 2stroke! Always ran Suzuki’s in my racing days but a good buddy of mine (LMS motosports) out of Gastonia, N.C has multiple brand new sets of Gold excel wheels on hand at his shop an deff. priced better than a dealership would have them for!
Wicked vlog my guy! Yamaha has definitely outdone themselves with this one! Sick day, sick bike, and a rad crew !! Thanks for having me out bro you guys rock 🪨 😎 #letthegoodtimesroll
great build, man! I just bought an 01 o plan on rebuilding. if I can make a friendly suggestion... when masking off to paint 2 colors, if you make the first coat after taping your base coat color, then shoot your second color, it will leave you with much crisper tape and paint lines.
There's something about pulling off old stickers on a bike, its like ripping its character away, glad it got a full on epic wrap🎉
Those red grips were a really good idea dude
Glad you like them!
wish I could have knowledge and dedication as you do to have fun and experiment on working on Motorcycles
Some advise here. After powder coating, it is a good idea to remove the powder coating under the bolt heads, as it can compress and lose torque/bolt tension. But it might be best if you can clean up those areas, spray with a bit of rustolium paint, (or the such), and mask the area under the bolt heads before powder coating, (of which I would talk with the powder coater for the best method of masking.).
The beats are crazy bro ur friend is a goat
nice work and build your knowledge and expertise is most appreciated
And most appreciated by anybody who does business with him. They will become friends. :)
the sticker installation editing was 🔥
Awesome! Love Suzuki dirtbikes. Can't beat em.
She's been sooo fun to ride!
Beautifully rebuilt. You are very patient.
Bike looks sick kid! Nice job
I found a good aluminum polishing product called "Wizards Metal Polish for Motorcycles". It comes in a rectangle can like the old band-aid cans, and looks like a dense cotton candy, (smells kinds sweet too). It does not take as much elbow grease as I thought it would, and it can get into crevices that a buffing wheel can not. I have had the can for 10 years now, and if wrapped up well in the plastic pouch, it has not dried up. If it does, it says a few drops of mineral spirits freshens it back up. That brake pedal for example, would shine like a mirror with 15 min of hand polishing.
truly amazing video. I wish that I had that kind of mechanical skill.
WOW! credit to you mate, 10/10 build!
Thank you!
That’s was impressive to watch man beautiful bike. 👍👍
You’re fuckin’ stoked man! You got this 125 2stroke rebuild thing locked in! I wanna see you rebuild a CR500 (between 86 and 94) or a KX500
I'm thinking about buying a RM125 but kinda put off my how soft the gearboxes were from memory of years ago. Rebuild looks amazing
It's funny, watching this triggered my anxiety from old rebuild PTSD, while you are having a good time lol.. Different strokes (excuse the pun) for different folks i guess!
Lacing up your own wheels too! (I was wondering if you were going to do that.). Not too many people know how to do that well. I learned with Mt. bicycle wheels in the mid 90's.
22:08. Awww, you scratched the new anodizing. I could only get screwdrivers to work as a kid changing tires,---before color anodizing showed the chicken scratches, (would always pinch a tube with spoons), so I gave up, and have a shop with a power tire changer do it. :)
What a labor of love, really impressive man!! Bravo!!
Thanks for watching!
sick build and these beats hit hard
Thanks a ton! My buddy Chandler crushed it on the beats!
I like this video every minute every second work of art amazing🎉 keep toing these things these so much funnnnn❤
Awesome rm build I had a few of these back in the 90s nothing as nice as this though 👍
bro that bike is 🔥🔥🔥
That shit is beautiful 🔥🔥🔥
that is one fantastic bike i hope one day i can do that.
Looks amazing bro good job man
I stopped freezing the bearings for installation. The amount the steel shrinks is tiny compared to how much the aluminum bore increases, (I stay under 350 def F. for ovens), and I have had problems of the cold bearing sucking the heat out of the cases, and shrinking on a slightly crooked bearing as I installed the bearing, before the bearing bottomed. I used to heat the cases, and was able to just drop the bearing in with my fingers, (if straight enough), and actually hear it hit bottom, (if it didn't, it tended to get stuck). But I was burning my fingers too often on the hot cases,--and went back to a arbor press and some lube.
Kick ass build man!!!
I got a 2003 rm 125 Suzuki too, it's Hella fun
i rode with you in pipestone on your first ride on that bike. clean build
Awesome job brother
Best built ever
Great build! Keep going bro!
You rocked that out. Just did one myself and man do I luv the Suzuki 2 stroke. Piece of art brother keep up the great amazing work 👍
Just found this channel thru MXA and subscribed. Great great work man.
Welcome to the channel! Did you find it through one of the weekly spotlights for the CR250 or YZ300?
Yes :)
man that bike is beautiful! thanks for the video as well! so stoked for you
Awesome build Kincade! Keep the vids coming!
Thank you!
Nice vid greetz from the netherlands!
Outstanding Work❤
Nice build dude.
Thank you!
Super sick! I know a absolutely nothing about dirt bikes but I watched that entire build video. Understood nothing but enjoyed every minute of it! Nicely done.
Really glad you enjoyed it! Thank you for watching!
I don't understand a post like yours here. This is a good vid of a guy who knows how to restore a bike, (that much, I am sure you understood.). I am familiar with everything he did, , am about 30 years older than he is, and I even learned something from this, pretty much instructional vid. It is me, but I don't understand why you would enjoy every minute of it if you did not learn anything. Is that is what you get out of school today? Now I know we should respect our teachers, but what if we did not learn anything useful from them, (arts and crafts for everybody?), I sure would not have said what you said. But, I can tell you are a nice kid. Maybe too nice. :)
But you are right even if you don't know why. It is an excellent vid.
@@EarthSurferUSA Buddy I'm 40 years old so definitely not a kid, and haven't been in school for a very long time. You clearly missed the context of my comment. It was to say that while I didn't understand or completely comprehend what he was doing at every moment, I enjoyed the video. This is to say I enjoyed the production, the way he laid it out and executed the video. You seem to imply that if I didn't learn anything from the video that I couldn't get anything from it. This is like saying you cant appreciate a piece of art without understand how the art was made which is entirely untrue.
You also seemed to miss the shallow sarcasm, my comment is a little like the saying "No idea what you're talking about kid, but I loved every minute" I'm not really saying I didn't learn anything but then again the point of watching the video wasn't to learn about anything, it was to watch and enjoy the video. It's possible to to get something out of a video without learning from it.
I suspect you ether missed the context completely (Maybe a joke that went over your head) or maybe you just don't consume content like I do. I learn a lot from watching RUclips videos but sometimes I stumble on a video (Like this one) that doesn't align with my hobbies or particular interests and I just go for it and give it a watch.
It would seem you understand this stuff more then me and may be watching it to learn something while I am just here for a cool video.
Wow, it's so nice one day I got this Dirk Bike
Anyone who's never had the chance to ride a good two stroke just can't know what they're missing! Torque Torque Torque!!
So much fun!
Love everything but that back fender 👍
Love the video! Great everything
gorgeous bike man I hope one day I'll have the same opportunity.
Thank you!
Amazing finished product. Choice of colors really make it look even better and the red grips Was a great idea.
Glad you liked the color decisions!
Wow that bike came out awesome Been watching your videos nice videos I have a small channel on my 2nd build love it but your videos are awesome 👍
That bike looks amazing mate, I dont know how this video doesnt have more likes
Because instead of being taught that we can build things, we are now taught arts and crafts with a side of gender studies, and all the great opportunities you will have working for the state as they can't figure anything out. This is barbaric to them. But that is what their future will be with no industrial skills.
Epic Build!!!
Appreciate it man!
An amazing build. Cheers
Thank you!
You did an amazing job ! Great video!
Thank you!
I have the same bike only stock. cool to se how far you can take it, Super clean build.
Great build guy, the bike is awesome.
Thank you!
Good job on the overhaul dude, done a few of these myself, so I know how much time and effort it takes.
Karcher dry ice system Co² power pressure cleaning.
Restoration to perfection