With more than 30 years of experience, Kirk VanScoten has had his hands in just about every facet of the motorcycle industry. From working as a freelance editor for HOT BIKE in his early days, as well as building bikes that have graced the pages and cover of HOT BIKE, to manufacturing and supplying fenders, saddlebags, spark plug wires, battery cables, and industry-leading powdercoating services all through his company, Sumax, Kirk has seen more and done more in this industry than most people will ever imagine. In fact, it was a stint in the motorcycle frame business with a friend back in the '90s that helped the purple powdercoated beauty before you come to be, albeit it took more than a decade for the bike to hit the streets.
“Back in the early ’90s I sold frames made by a friend named Kevin Starke. He made and we sold Softail, swingarm, and Pro Street FXR-style frames,” Kirk tells us. “One evening we sat down and discussed the idea of mating an FXR with an FXST hopefully resulting in the ultimate frame/ride. I set a design to create a chopper featuring a whishbone-style front section, Softail style swingarm, and rubber-mount drivetrain setup.” To also add a little different mix to the bike and make people take second notice, Scott and Kevin decided to use old rigid-style axle adjusters on the swingarm. “It was just one of the fun little things we added to get guys to scratch their heads while they admired the bike and tried to figure out everything we did,” Kirk comments.
Unfortunately, Kevin passed away in 1995 and with his passing the frame business dissolved. Kirk still had the FXR-FXST frame and swingarm, however, and stored them away on a shelf in the corner. Fast-forward more than 10 years later, while Kirk was working on a bagger project with his friend, Kevin Boyle, owner of Motorcycle Medic in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, Kevin saw the frame and swingarm and asked Kirk about it. When Kirk told Kevin about the old frame business and the story behind that particular frame, Kevin’s eyes lit up, and he insisted it was time to knock the dust off and put the frame to good use. Kirk agreed that the frame and swingarm had aged long enough up on the shelf and that they should build the ultimate FXR-FXST bike.
One evening we sat down and discussed the idea of mating an FXR with a FXST hopefully resulting in the ultimate frame/ride.
Comprised of 4 inches of stretch in the downtubes, 6 inches of stretch in the backbone, and 38 degrees of rake, Kirk decided to complement the somewhat long and stretched look of the frame by adding a Paughco 6-inch-over Springer frontend with a Fournales air shock. A pair of Works Performance shocks were installed between the underside of the frame and swingarm to handle the bumps in the rear. Once a pair of laced wheels, a 21-inch front and 16-inch rear, were bolted in place, the bike really started to come to life. When it came to adding more defining lines to the bike, Kirk and Kevin felt that running without a front fender would give the bike a somewhat chopper-esqu attitude. Over the backbone, however, a smoothly stretched and tapered steel gas tank from Fat Katz was used, while to cover the rear tire, Kirk utilized one of his Sumax composite glass rear fenders.