If you need to discover ways to weld, fabricate components, or rebuild an engine, there’s no scarcity of sources on the market. But good design can’t be taught. You both have impeccable style and a pointy eye—otherwise you don’t.
For Yusaku Sato at Satomari Motorcycle in Hiroshima, Japan, good design is instinctual. The Harley choppers that roll out of his workshop simply look ‘right,’ usually with a easy class that belies the quantity of engineering that goes into them.
This beautiful 1981 Harley-Davidson FXR proves our level with ease. It’s loosely primarily based on an earlier Satomari Shovelhead {that a} buyer noticed on the Mooneyes present. Before lengthy, he had reached out to Sato-san and requested a {custom} Harley in the identical vein—albeit with a number of key variations.
One of the consumer’s requests was that the bike ought to have a springer fork. With that in thoughts, Yusaku tore the bike down and started bringing his imaginative and prescient to life. “My approach is to take the image that pops into my head and shape it as I want,” he says, “so it feels like I’m coming up with a design idea in real-time.”
Yusaku began by fabricating an all-new body and swingarm, retaining solely the donor bike’s steering neck and motor mounts. The gorgeous twin down tube design rises to fulfill the custom-built springer fork, with a 2” stretch and a 2” rise within the neck. But, extra importantly, the springer fork has been made slim in a bid to maintain the general construct impossibly skinny.
The rear finish appears inflexible from afar, however there’s a shock lurking beneath there. Yusaku hasn’t given us a peek at it, however he describes it as a “cantilever mono-cross” system.
This Shovelhead rolls on a 23” entrance wheel and an 18” rear wheel, laced as much as two very totally different types of drum brake hub. Yusaku modified a mini drum brake unit to run up entrance, then pieced collectively a hydraulic drum brake system for the rear, utilizing salvaged Harley components. The tires are surprisingly fashionable Metzeler objects.
A 23F/18R wheelset sounds wild on paper, nevertheless it works right here. And that’s largely right down to the truth that Yusaku has tailor-made each final piece on this bike to accommodate the subsequent.
Like the chassis, this Shovelhead’s bodywork is all handmade. Yusaku formed the gas tank and rear fender out of metal and the aspect covers out of aluminum. A deeply sculpted seat sits perched within the center.
There’s loads to digest across the engine bay too. The Shovel powerplant inhales by way of an S&S Cycle carb and exhales by way of an unapologetic twin exhaust system with turned-out finish caps. And the nearer you get, the extra copper and brass bits you’ll spot.
The left-hand aspect of the bike is dominated by an electric-start main drive from BDL. It’s an imposing piece of equipment that requires a fairly sized battery—which is presently hiding beneath the seat, competing with the rear suspension for actual property.
The cockpit is a tidy affair, consisting of a slim set of {custom} drag bars fitted with wrapped grips from Kuryakyn. If you’re on the lookout for the speedo, you’ll discover it on high of the tank, embedded in a dashboard that echoes traditional Dyna designs. The classically styled Motogadget unit is accompanied by a knurled gasoline cap and a keyless ignition module.
The Shovelhead is completed in a deep gunmetal flake, punctuated by intricate silver-leaf work that provides an expensive contact to this near-flawless machine. It’s only a pity that it’s already spoken for.
Satomari Motorcycle | Facebook | Instagram | Images by, and with honest due to, Kazuo Matsumoto
Source: www.bikeexif.com