Antonio's DR650 Tracker
By Ross Sharp - 15 Nov 14
The oh so familiar story, a perfectly usable motorcycle left to oxidise in a dusty corner of someones garage. A cousin in Porto turned out to have such a bounty lurking and didn't need too much fiscal persuasion to part with it. António always dreamed of building a café racer but the DR is fairly lofty steed and dictated the route towards a tracker. With a design mapped out a search for parts could begin.
Plastic might be a revolutionary material but it rarely justifies a place on a shed-built motorcycle. Despite gaping gaps left behind, mass produced plakky panels and body work are perhaps the easiest part of a bike to remove in a quest to add a personalised touch to a build. So, António removed all the extraneous parts and stripped the bike to the frame, causing chaos in his workshop. We've all been there, planning and method replaced by enthusiasm and a complete haystack of redundant, mass produced crap.
Once the frame was free from clutter and blessed with a fresh coat of paint reassembly could begin. A Suzuki GT250 fuel tank was sourced from a breakers and united with some fresh paint, and the all important logo. Another breakers yard yielded the muffler, it's from a Honda but answers on a postcard as to which one.
Luckily craftsman are still plentiful in Faro so António fabricated a seat base and took it to a local outfit to be upholstered. It's good to see comfort finally making a more frequent appearance on the subframes of customs in recent months.
A mini speedo and similarly diminutive indicators ensure some legal requirements are met whilst a generic chrome lamp differentiates the front end from the DR's original angular unit.
The forks were refreshed with new oil and seals, gaitors suggesting a degree of off road desire, even if the trimmed down front mudguard hints otherwise.
Tarmac biased rubber is a rare feature on street trackers these days but I'm sure António has a blast drifting the tail out on Faro's cobbled thoroughfares.
If you want to see more photos from the build process click here otherwise António's Facebook page is a resource for Faro residents to get together and talk bikes, maybe over a few bottles of Sagres.