It's easy to get pigeonholed in an industry where a distinct visual style is the only real way to set yourself apart from the crowd. You build a few bikes with a cohesive look and a few common aesthetic cues, and pretty soon people think they know what to expect out of you next. Donny Loos and Jeff Cochran, partners in Cincinnati, OH-based SuckerPunch Sallys (SPS), have built their successful brand on classy back-to-basics bobbers that are long on old-school cool and decidedly short on high-end billet bits and pieces. That's what makes the shined-up beauty seen here (dubbed "Donny's Dragbike") a little surprising at first.
"Everybody who has seen it loves the bike, but it's just not a typical SuckerPunch bike," Donny explained. "If anyone hasn't liked it, they haven't said so to my face."
No flat black, no brushed aluminum-just a tight list of top-shelf aftermarket parts mated to a brighter-than-usual collection of SuckerPunch's proprietary pieces in a forbidden affair that started with only a pair of Arlen Ness's speed-hole-riddled Battastini billet wheels.
"I really liked the wheels when I saw them," Donny said. "I really had no idea when I bought them what I was going to do with them. I bought them mainly because I wanted to get a set before they got discontinued or something, and I couldn't get them anymore."
While the wheels gathered dust for the better part of a year, Donny began drawing up plans for a bike decidedly outside of the old-school bobber mold, but with enough touches to assure people it was still a SuckerPunch Sallys motorcycle.
He started with a modified proprietary SuckerPunch rigid frame with 3 inches of stretch in the backbone and 40 degrees of rake. A set of Harley-Davidson Deuce fork tubes bolted into Accutronix triple-trees kept things bouncing along nicely up front.
The coveted Ness rims were strung with a set of fresh Metzeler tires. A narrow 80-series spins out front, while a relatively modest 180-series is parked in back. Matching Ness brake rotors running with Performance Machine brake calipers round out the rolling stock.
When it came time to choose an engine, Donny decided the everyday reliability and performance of a 96-inch S&S would fit the bill, and a SuckerPunch-modified Kraftech exhaust was fabricated to keep the spent gasses moving. Performance Machine again got the nod for its open-belt primary drive, which feeds into a Roadmax six-speed left-side-drive transmission.