The circle is now complete. When I left you, I was but the learner. Now I am the master.” Darth Vader, Star Wars: A New Hope
Since they’ve both procreated, I’m going to go out on a limb here and guess that neither Arlen nor Cory Ness are big enough Star Wars geeks to have duked it out with toy light sabers in costume. Cory’s clean purple rigid here represents a return to the Ness family roots, though. It’s a digger with his distinct take on that historic style.
Hop in the Way Back Machine with me for a minute and you’ll understand. In the late ’60s and early ’70s, Arlen and Jim Davis collaborated on a new style of custom chassis rooted in Jim’s motorcycle drag racing background. It was a longer, spindly skeleton with thin (7/8-inch) chromoly tubing for bones. That frame is the heart and soul of the digger style. This was among the first things Arlen did with the frames. Keep in mind that this was back when sometimes Arlen laid a stock frame on the ground on its side like in a crime scene and used chalk to trace and plan bringing out the neck. Digger bikes were also very narrow in comparison to most stock cruisers. Some had rocket or diamond gas tanks, too. Arlen won many an award with the digger style but eventually customer tastes gravitated towards frames made from fat tubing and the digger style went into hibernation.
Until recently. The fall of the modern chopper craze, coupled with the economic downturn we’ve all come to know and love, steered consumers away from creating ground-up customs and towards customizing stock rides. Against this backdrop, the Nesses created a few modern diggers. According to Cory, “Small tubing was where our heart was so we did a couple of diggers and got many good responses. We liked it and got a lot of good feedback.” That led the Nesses toward making digger frames available for purchase for relatively cheap.
-

Cory and Jim Jennings created the one-off handlebars that are incorporated into the top of the neck and frontend.

Cory and Jim Jennings created the one-off handlebars that are incorporated into the top of
-
-

An archive picture of Arlen laying paint on one of his early digger frames.
Both of the digger’s Ness rims measure a tall 23 inches. Their spindly look is a great match to the chassis upon which this ...
Bringing back the digger frame kindled the creative flame. Cory stoked the fire, though. “I hadn’t made a bike for myself with a digger chassis yet and Sturgis wasn’t too far around the corner,” he says. It was the first ground-up project he’d created in a while. “It was a lot of fun to build and ride.” With not too many ground-ups being built nowadays, a frame like this lets home builders create one without spending a ton of dough, using the digger chassis and a used, inexpensive motor such as the Evo Softail engine Cory tapped for his project.
“Basket case” might be a better descriptor for the motor and transmission in this digger than “used,” however. At least, that’s how Cory characterized it when we talked about the project. What’s great about basket cases is that they’re the desperate criminals of the motor world—their old lives are over and they have the equally desperate freedom of those with nothing to lose. Restoring their old lives as stockers is just as difficult as keeping the good and tossing the bad, if not more so. That being the case, there’s no reason not to take some wild new direction with a semi-dead motor when rebuilding it. For Cory, that meant using a Magnuson Supercharger. When asked why the blower, he responded, “Why not? We happened to have one sitting around for a couple of years and it made sense. For blowers, it’s a nice, compact one. Even though this is a narrow bike, the blower doesn’t overpower anything aesthetically. Blower bikes are so much fun! We modified the stock CV carburetor and it runs dynamite. You don’t even have to hit the throttle when you fire up the bike. It usually takes a lot of time dialing in a blower but with the carb changes we made, it’s a lot easier. I haven’t even had to change a set of plugs.” Cory and Jim Jennings also created the short-but-sweet 2-into-1 exhaust for the digger. Its compact length gives onlookers an unobstructed view of the 23-inch rear wheel.