I am starting my bobber project. Brand new to the biker community. Never, ever ridden one (teaching myself around the neighborhood, right now). Buying my kits from Blue Collar Bobber, they are amazing! I am dealing with Lance, and he is very caring about his customers. He is the old school type, where helping people came before profit (eventually the profit follows). I am gladly spending the money on his kits, rather then going with Amazon and those headaches. I give BCB 5 stars! PS, your bike is a very nice. I, too, will be doing this myself. LOVE IT!
Best bike I ever had was my V Star 1100 custom. I sold it 2 years ago with 185,000 km on it and I still see it riding around the last two summers. Can't kill these bikes. Almost idiot proof.
I built the Kawasaki 800 Vulcan classic blue collar bobber. Every time I ride it, I get thumbs-up, people yelling they like my bike, like my whitewalls. I also own a 2020 Triumph Rocket 3R. I only have had about 5 people ask about it. I have had about 60 people tell me they love my bobber. They are quality kits, I will probably build another one later on. I enjoyed the project.
I totally get it. The bike gets a ton of attention. No one ever guesses Yamaha for our bike, probably never guess Kawasaki for you either. Yet we get the look and feel of custom, and reliability of Japanese engineering. Thanks for watching
@@brett328 your right, I have people walking up and asking me if it was a new Indian. I had it at the local Indian bike shop for a tune up. They parked it out front and had to move it back inside the shop as it was drawing more attention then the Indians and other bikes they were trying to sell. They said people were pulling onto the parking lot and staring at it and sitting on it. The shop owner got upset at the attention it was getting over his bikes.
Great looking bike and great video! I just bought a 2005 v Star Custom 1100. I also bought the blue collar bobber kit as well. I'm working on it slowly, but I am loving the results so far. They are great products!
When painting don’t try to cover the entire surface all at once. Do several passes with a 5-10 minute wait period in between them slowly and gradually cover all surfaces. It’s not a race!
Great build. Personally I would do away with the floorboards and get some pegs. But that's just me. Blue Collar Bobbers has some images of a stunning, black and white Vstar 1100. Looks so much better with the pegs. Nice job! Thanks for the video
Congrats on a successful build. I agree that Blue Collar Bobbers is worth recommending. I bought a BCB kit for my VTX 1300 in April 2019 for a fun project. It went together so easily and quick, it was over in just a weekend. But I cheated by starting with a black bike that needed no painting. And it already had aftermarket pipes. So it was a just a matter of removing parts, cutting the frame, and bolting everything on. That was day one. Second day was wiring and installing new lights. Love the result. Blue Collar Bobbers really is a class operation.
Thats cool, my son ended up buying this bike from me. And lately, I've been obsessing with the idea of getting a VTX 1300 for my own BCB build bike. Those bikes are a lot harder to find, and a little more expensive. But, man, do I love the results we got on the VStar! Gets looks literally everywhere it goes.
@@brett328 d starting with the VTX1300C will save you time. Don’t have to replace the front fender or handlebars. If you choose a black bike, you don’t have to paint either. The kit comes on gloss black. And so many bikes already have aftermarket pipes. My bike is on the BCB gallery if you want to see it.
@@gtobruin I've looked at them all, so I have probably seen it already lol. Painting actually turned out to be a positive and rewarding experience for me.
@@brett328 Your skills are way above mine. The fact my bike turned out as well as it did really a tribute to the quality of the kit versus my limited ability. I hope you find a good bike for your next project.
Just watched your video. Absolutely first class renovation. You started with a great motorcycle and used quality part's, with that it's down to you. Excellent build. Well done. It looked like you enjoyed doing it to. Now you have something special to hold onto for those moments when you need some quality alone time. Again, well done and thank you very much for sharing this with us all.
A lot of people are intimidated to do their own work for fear of messing up. The biggest way you can screw yourself over is by telling yourself that you can't do something. Research, read forums, check out other builds, see what works for you and what doesn't. Then, make a plan. What is your budget? how much time are you willing to dedicate towards this project? Do you have the tools to do the job or know someone who does? All of these are factors that a lot of people don't consider when taking on a big project. Unfortunately a lot of motorcycles go by way of rust because someone is too stubborn to let go of a project they'll never finish. Bottom line, you are only limited by the amount you are willing to learn.
@@noneyabidniss4763 So true. We were doubting our ability to pull it off as well. But, youtube is such an unbelievably valuable tool for anyone thats willing to try something new. For this project, we couldn't have done it without the excellent products Blue Collar Bobber makes, and of course their thorough video tutorials on every single part of the build. We were especially doubtful of our ability to pull off a garage-paint-job and have it look respectable. Again, youtube gave us the courage and info we needed to give it a go. There are 2 things that people comment on all the time. The seat, and the paint job. Who knew!
Great build! Love the look. I've been kicking around the idea of doing this myself as well with a $2500-$3000 bike. Probably gonna wait til November to really start shopping. I'm in NJ too...about 15 minutes from Philly.
Go for it. I forgot to mention that I sold all the parts that came off the bike on Facebook marketplace. Fenders, old exhaust, seat, sissy bar, handlebars, everything. Got about $900 for everything. So it can be done very reasonably. Buying the new exhaust and intake was really an unnecessary splurge. Good luck.
Yeah, lol. Kinda felt the same, but after watching the video on Blue Collar Bobber's website, it looked simple enough and it was. Took less than 5 minutes with a sawzaw
Do you by chance have any info about the 2up seat that was on there from the beginning of the video? Enjoyed the build, nice to see a BCB kit in action
It was a Saddleman Explorer seat. Very nice seat. Retails around 400. Sold all the parts I took off the bike on Facebook marketplace. Got about $1000 in total back. I should've included that in the cost breakdown.
Nice work. I'd love a project like that. Were the drag bars included in the BCB kits? If not, How much for them? Also how much for the paint and gun? I'd have to put heat in my garage - big expense. I'm getting too old to be riding anyway. But your bike looks really good!
Drag bars are from blue collar bobbers. Mirrors and grips I got elsewhere, but BCB offers some too. The paint was around $50 for a quart I think. The harbor freight paint gun was $20 bucks. You'll need a compressor though. Link's in the description for the paint, and I think most of the credit goes to the paint as far as paint job. Worth the money. Wait till spring, can't ride anyways. Never too old friend.
I did something similar to my "02 1100 a few years ago. I am curious about the handlebar kit you bought. I'm 57, 5'10", was curious your height and age, and how comfortable the bike is to ride with the new bars since it puts you further forward, and more pressure on your shoulders, back and wrists? What's the riser height? Any cable rerouting needed? 32" or 35" bars?
I'm 60, 5'8", they are 35" bars, and definitely get you piking forward a bit. This bike isn't for long rides, you'd get uncomfortable in less than an hour. It's all about attitude for this bike, and it's fun as hell bombing around town.
@@DavidScanlonMusic Blue collar bobbers provided the setup. They are 4" risers, no cable rerouting necessary. There are literally thousands of different combinations you could piece together to alter the riding position, as you certainly don't have to go with this particular setup. Adding some pullback type risers would definitely make it less piked. But, you're gonna have to do the research. Good luck.
I've probably watched 100 videos on Vstar 1100 chops and I think your's is my favorite. I just picked up a 1100 Classic for $2k here in San Marcos Tx with 11k miles on it. I bobbed a Honda Shadow 600 a few years ago using BCB stuff and I love those guys. It's cool how the guy on the videos answers the phone when you call. Lol. I'm only worried about the painting. I plan on painting it the same blue as my 2003 Ford Ranger so we'll see how that goes. The air cleaner situation isn't decided yet either but I am going with Cobra Dragsters because they are pretty close to the Vance& Hines Straight Shots which are my favorites but V&C doesn't make them for metrics. Thanks again.
Was a super fun and rewarding project, have fun man. I was mostly worried about botching the paint job too, I honestly have never tried anything like that. Watch the video I linked for that, great overview. Unbelievably, most compliments we get are for the paint job. Hilarious.
I love the Harley badge too, but there's no way HD compares to either yamaha or honda from a reliability standpoint. Besides, if you're buying an HD for 5k, its either been down, its old or there's 150k miles on it.
I am starting my bobber project. Brand new to the biker community. Never, ever ridden one (teaching myself around the neighborhood, right now). Buying my kits from Blue Collar Bobber, they are amazing! I am dealing with Lance, and he is very caring about his customers. He is the old school type, where helping people came before profit (eventually the profit follows). I am gladly spending the money on his kits, rather then going with Amazon and those headaches. I give BCB 5 stars!
PS, your bike is a very nice. I, too, will be doing this myself. LOVE IT!
Awesome, good luck. I think you'll love the results too.
THIS THING LOOKS AMAZING. I want to do it so bad to my 03 xvs1100. Excellent job, it's beautiful.
Sir Caleb. ... it's time, do it now and you know that there's plenty of videos on YT to keep you inspired..
Best bike I ever had was my V Star 1100 custom. I sold it 2 years ago with 185,000 km on it and I still see it riding around the last two summers. Can't kill these bikes. Almost idiot proof.
I built the Kawasaki 800 Vulcan classic blue collar bobber. Every time I ride it, I get thumbs-up, people yelling they like my bike, like my whitewalls. I also own a 2020 Triumph Rocket 3R. I only have had about 5 people ask about it. I have had about 60 people tell me they love my bobber. They are quality kits, I will probably build another one later on. I enjoyed the project.
I totally get it. The bike gets a ton of attention. No one ever guesses Yamaha for our bike, probably never guess Kawasaki for you either. Yet we get the look and feel of custom, and reliability of Japanese engineering. Thanks for watching
@@brett328 your right, I have people walking up and asking me if it was a new Indian. I had it at the local Indian bike shop for a tune up. They parked it out front and had to move it back inside the shop as it was drawing more attention then the Indians and other bikes they were trying to sell. They said people were pulling onto the parking lot and staring at it and sitting on it. The shop owner got upset at the attention it was getting over his bikes.
I've got a 1100, been thinking about a similar build.
Awesome. I want to do a Vstar Bobber
Great job, great look.
Great looking bike and great video! I just bought a 2005 v Star Custom 1100. I also bought the blue collar bobber kit as well. I'm working on it slowly, but I am loving the results so far. They are great products!
That's awesome. Good luck, enjoy the process. You'll love the results
@@brett328 are there installation directions that come with the rear fender? I have a 2005 v star but I have no idea how to install it if I got this
Beautiful and inspiring work. Congratulations on the motorcycle. I love the way it came out !!!
When painting don’t try to cover the entire surface all at once. Do several passes with a 5-10 minute wait period in between them slowly and gradually cover all surfaces. It’s not a race!
Great build. Personally I would do away with the floorboards and get some pegs. But that's just me. Blue Collar Bobbers has some images of a stunning, black and white Vstar 1100. Looks so much better with the pegs.
Nice job! Thanks for the video
Congrats on a successful build. I agree that Blue Collar Bobbers is worth recommending. I bought a BCB kit for my VTX 1300 in April 2019 for a fun project. It went together so easily and quick, it was over in just a weekend. But I cheated by starting with a black bike that needed no painting. And it already had aftermarket pipes. So it was a just a matter of removing parts, cutting the frame, and bolting everything on. That was day one. Second day was wiring and installing new lights. Love the result. Blue Collar Bobbers really is a class operation.
Thats cool, my son ended up buying this bike from me. And lately, I've been obsessing with the idea of getting a VTX 1300 for my own BCB build bike. Those bikes are a lot harder to find, and a little more expensive. But, man, do I love the results we got on the VStar! Gets looks literally everywhere it goes.
@@brett328 d starting with the VTX1300C will save you time. Don’t have to replace the front fender or handlebars. If you choose a black bike, you don’t have to paint either. The kit comes on gloss black. And so many bikes already have aftermarket pipes. My bike is on the BCB gallery if you want to see it.
@@gtobruin I've looked at them all, so I have probably seen it already lol. Painting actually turned out to be a positive and rewarding experience for me.
@@brett328 Your skills are way above mine. The fact my bike turned out as well as it did really a tribute to the quality of the kit versus my limited ability. I hope you find a good bike for your next project.
Nicely done. Now go out and Enjoy! Be Safe!
Just watched your video. Absolutely first class renovation. You started with a great motorcycle and used quality part's, with that it's down to you. Excellent build. Well done. It looked like you enjoyed doing it to. Now you have something special to hold onto for those moments when you need some quality alone time. Again, well done and thank you very much for sharing this with us all.
Hey I'm from nj too an got the handlebars risers an mirrors but I'm too scared to do it myself bcb r such nice people
Damn that looks sick
Nice mix of chrome and flat
That was sick! Insane how anyone can do that with some time and patience. Very Impressive work!
A lot of people are intimidated to do their own work for fear of messing up. The biggest way you can screw yourself over is by telling yourself that you can't do something. Research, read forums, check out other builds, see what works for you and what doesn't. Then, make a plan.
What is your budget? how much time are you willing to dedicate towards this project? Do you have the tools to do the job or know someone who does?
All of these are factors that a lot of people don't consider when taking on a big project. Unfortunately a lot of motorcycles go by way of rust because someone is too stubborn to let go of a project they'll never finish.
Bottom line, you are only limited by the amount you are willing to learn.
@@noneyabidniss4763 So true. We were doubting our ability to pull it off as well. But, youtube is such an unbelievably valuable tool for anyone thats willing to try something new. For this project, we couldn't have done it without the excellent products Blue Collar Bobber makes, and of course their thorough video tutorials on every single part of the build. We were especially doubtful of our ability to pull off a garage-paint-job and have it look respectable. Again, youtube gave us the courage and info we needed to give it a go. There are 2 things that people comment on all the time. The seat, and the paint job. Who knew!
@@brett328 hell yeah! Hard work always pays off in the end.
Great build! Love the look. I've been kicking around the idea of doing this myself as well with a $2500-$3000 bike. Probably gonna wait til November to really start shopping. I'm in NJ too...about 15 minutes from Philly.
Go for it. I forgot to mention that I sold all the parts that came off the bike on Facebook marketplace. Fenders, old exhaust, seat, sissy bar, handlebars, everything. Got about $900 for everything. So it can be done very reasonably. Buying the new exhaust and intake was really an unnecessary splurge. Good luck.
Amazing so sweet 100 thumbs up😅
Good job!!
awesome built
nice bike
Thanks for sharing cool 😎
Good Job Bro 👍🇮🇩🇮🇩🇮🇩👍
I’ll be honest... I love the ability of what you did but man I loved how the bike looked before .. just my 2 cents!
Everyone has their own style. I get it.
The whole point of a motorcycle is to make it your own .. Great Job on the conversion ..
Cutting the frame just terrifies me. I don’t want to mess up and all of a sudden the bike is in half. Nice build looks great.
Yeah, lol. Kinda felt the same, but after watching the video on Blue Collar Bobber's website, it looked simple enough and it was. Took less than 5 minutes with a sawzaw
Outstanding!!!
Thanks
I just did the same to a Honda VTX.
How do you like it. I have a VTX now, my son has the bobber
Nice is that a 1100
How did you remove the front fender? Removed the front tire?
You do not have to remove the tire to remove the fender.
Whose a pretty girl then. Excellent job mate!!
Thanks friend
What type of headlight did you install on this one?
i suppose this is the custom model?
That is the stock headlight bucket. It was a vstar 1100 classic. The internal was swapped out for an LED replacement.
Do you by chance have any info about the 2up seat that was on there from the beginning of the video? Enjoyed the build, nice to see a BCB kit in action
It was a Saddleman Explorer seat. Very nice seat. Retails around 400. Sold all the parts I took off the bike on Facebook marketplace. Got about $1000 in total back. I should've included that in the cost breakdown.
Looks lean n mean my friend, now lets cut those pipes😁
Lol, I'm afraid that's a bridge too far for me 😅
What are you doing with the old seat?
Sold every part. Made back $900
Hey! Is this the 11" or the 13" kit?
Pretty sure I went with the 13" seat. No regrets
Nice work. I'd love a project like that. Were the drag bars included in the BCB kits? If not, How much for them? Also how much for the paint and gun? I'd have to put heat in my garage - big expense. I'm getting too old to be riding anyway. But your bike looks really good!
Drag bars are from blue collar bobbers. Mirrors and grips I got elsewhere, but BCB offers some too. The paint was around $50 for a quart I think. The harbor freight paint gun was $20 bucks. You'll need a compressor though. Link's in the description for the paint, and I think most of the credit goes to the paint as far as paint job. Worth the money. Wait till spring, can't ride anyways. Never too old friend.
I did something similar to my "02 1100 a few years ago. I am curious about the handlebar kit you bought. I'm 57, 5'10", was curious your height and age, and how comfortable the bike is to ride with the new bars since it puts you further forward, and more pressure on your shoulders, back and wrists? What's the riser height? Any cable rerouting needed? 32" or 35" bars?
I'm 60, 5'8", they are 35" bars, and definitely get you piking forward a bit. This bike isn't for long rides, you'd get uncomfortable in less than an hour. It's all about attitude for this bike, and it's fun as hell bombing around town.
@@brett328 Thank you! Any info on the riser height and cable rerouting would be appreciated.
@@DavidScanlonMusic Blue collar bobbers provided the setup. They are 4" risers, no cable rerouting necessary. There are literally thousands of different combinations you could piece together to alter the riding position, as you certainly don't have to go with this particular setup. Adding some pullback type risers would definitely make it less piked. But, you're gonna have to do the research. Good luck.
I've probably watched 100 videos on Vstar 1100 chops and I think your's is my favorite. I just picked up a 1100 Classic for $2k here in San Marcos Tx with 11k miles on it. I bobbed a Honda Shadow 600 a few years ago using BCB stuff and I love those guys. It's cool how the guy on the videos answers the phone when you call. Lol. I'm only worried about the painting. I plan on painting it the same blue as my 2003 Ford Ranger so we'll see how that goes. The air cleaner situation isn't decided yet either but I am going with Cobra Dragsters because they are pretty close to the Vance& Hines Straight Shots which are my favorites but V&C doesn't make them for metrics. Thanks again.
Was a super fun and rewarding project, have fun man. I was mostly worried about botching the paint job too, I honestly have never tried anything like that. Watch the video I linked for that, great overview. Unbelievably, most compliments we get are for the paint job. Hilarious.
y de una mujer que me puedes decir
You forgot to film what your doing.
expensive built when upay 1000 or less for teh bike then its worth it after that it gets pricy might as well get a vrod or a 883
Nobody wants a Harley dude.
But I didn't want an overpriced, underperforming, slow HD that a million other people have.
I love the Harley badge too, but there's no way HD compares to either yamaha or honda from a reliability standpoint. Besides, if you're buying an HD for 5k, its either been down, its old or there's 150k miles on it.
Заче изуродовал мотоцикл!?,руки ломать надо!
Their kits are sooo ugly dang
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