The custom bars were kept...
The custom bars were kept as clean as possible by running an internal throttle, front and rear brakes actuated by the foot brake, and the clutch lever mounted to the jockey shifter.
This past February, while cruising the mass array of new parts on display at the V-Twin Expo, we came across this crazy-ass bike in the Wilwood Brakes booth that stopped us dead in our tracks. But we weren't the only ones standing around slack-jawed, trying to figure out what we were looking at. There were other heavy hitters in the industry on their hands and knees crawling all around, trying to get a peek at all the intricacies of this wild bike.
At first we didn't realize-with the sport bike-ish rear section, Springer frontend, and suicide shifter-that this was/is/whatever a Dyna Street Bob. And within the first minute of speaking with the bike's builder Dave Neu of ASI Customs, we realized Dave is a man of few words, and likes to let his work speak for itself. But being the inquisitive journalists we are, we were able to get Dave to open up a bit about his background and the bike.
Hot Bike: How did you get into bikes?
Dave: It just evolved from what I was doing with hot rods and muscle cars.
Have you built a lot of hot rods?
Yeah, fabrication, chassis work, racecars, street rods, you know, it's the same thing-just one-fourth the parts. It's been my job for 20 years.
What does ASI stand for?
Applied Speed Innovations.
Dave machined custom hub adapters...
Dave machined custom hub adapters to run the vintage hot rod style American Racing Torque Thrust wheels.
Do you just do Harley conversions, or do you do ground-up stuff as well?
Mostly Harley conversions. I think it's more of a pure thing with the pedigree being a Harley.
With this bike you started with a stock Street Bob?
Yeah, it was brand new when I got it. I like that chassis; it's classic muscle car thinking. It's a big motor in a smaller chassis, versus a Softail, which is a big motor in a bigger chassis.
What was your vision?
I wanted to build the anti-chopper, put a fat tire up front, keep the rake tight, stretch the swingarm, put in a rear suspension, keep a belt final drive, use as many car parts as possible, and best of all, start with a brand new fuel-injected Harley. I thought it would be cool to incorporate the hot rod car parts I use everyday into a bike. I like old-school traditions with modern input.
Two Porsche velocity stacks...
Two Porsche velocity stacks were mitered then welded together to create a one-piece dual runner stack.
What about the decision to put a Springer frontend? Most people wouldn't associate a Springer with performance.
I used that for the mechanics of it. There are a lot of little moving parts.
The bike is very mechanical. So you've got a couple different themes going on here. It's kind of old school meets muscle car meets mechanical/industrial.
Right, it's just a working man's bike. Nothing to polish, no chrome to get rusty.
From its stock setup, what were the steps you took to get it to this point?
I stripped off all the parts I wasn't going to use: wheels, frontend, swingarm, suspension, etc., and then pretty much mocked it up from there. I set it at the ride height I wanted, then laid the wheels out where I wanted them to be. I cut the frame fabricated the tubes for the seat area and the suspension, and then made the swingarm.
Speaking of suspension, can you explain what you've got going on under the seat area?
It's a dogbone linkage suspension with a double adjustable shock, and a car-rated spring for the weight of the bike. It's all a ratio of-I think-four-to-one, where the spring has to be four times the rate of a stock spring because of the length of the swingarm. But it rides nice, like a Caddy.
That's a pretty beefy spring around that shock.
It looks beefy, but there's about four inches of travel in there. Because of the extended length of the swingarm and the shock is so far away from the axle, it has to be a heavy spring to compensate for all that weight hanging out there and the leverage disadvantages.