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Sunday, February 25, 2018

Rocker on A BSA Engined Norton Café Racer Stock Photo, Royalty ...
src: c8.alamy.com

A café racer ( KAF ray-s?r, or more commonly KAF-ay ray-s?r) is a lightweight, lightly powered motorcycle optimized for speed and handling rather than comfort - and for quick rides over short distances.With bodywork and control layout recalling early-1960s Grand Prix road racing motorcycles, café racers are noted for their visual minimalism, featuring low-mounted handlebars, prominent seat cowling and elongated fuel tank - and frequently knee-grips indented in the fuel tank.



Video Café racer



Café racer origins

The term developed among British motorcycle enthusiasts of the early 1960s from Watford, and London, specifically the Rocker or "Ton-Up Boys" subculture, where the bikes were used for short, quick rides between cafés, in Watford at the Busy Bee café and the Ace Café in London. In post-war Britain, car ownership was still uncommon, but by the late 1950s the average Briton could now afford a car; so by the early 1960s the café racer's significance was that a bike had come to represent speed, status and rebellion, rather than mere inability to afford a car.

In 2014, journalist Ben Stewart described the café racer as a "look made popular when European kids stripped down their small-displacement bikes to zip from one café hangout to another." In 1973, American freelance writer Wallace Wyss, contributing to Popular Mechanics magazine, wrote that the term café racer was originally used derogatorily in Europe to describe a "motorcyclist who played at being an Isle of Man road racer" and was, in fact, "someone who owned a racy machine but merely parked it near his table at the local outdoor cafe."


Maps Café racer



Configuration

In addition to light weight, a tuned engine and minimalist bodywork, the café racer typically features distinctive ergonomics. Dropped bars that are low, narrow handlebars (called "clip-ons") - enabled the rider to "tuck in", reducing wind resistance and improving control. Along with the rearward located seat, the posture often required rearsets, or rear-set footrests and foot controls, again typical of racing motorcycles of the era. Distinctive half or full race-style fairings were sometimes mounted to the forks or frame.

Mick Walker declared that the typical specification of an early café racer would be: swept-back pipes, low-mounted clip-on handlebars or 'Ace' bars, reverse cone megaphone mufflers, TT100 Dunlop tires, rear sets, and larger carburetors (often with inlet trumpet rather than air filters)..

The bikes featured minimalist styling, engines tuned for speed and responsive handling. A typical example was the "Triton", a homemade combination of a Triumph Bonneville engine in a Norton Featherbed frame. A less common hybrid was the "Tribsa" which had a Triumph engine in a BSA duplex frame. Other hybrids café racers included the "NorVin" (a Vincent V-Twin engine in a Featherbed frame), and bikes with racing frames by Rickman or Seeley.


10 Ktm 990 Super Duke Cafe Racer, Ktm 690 Duke Rocketgarage Cafe ...
src: www.srpskafabrikastakla.com


Evolution

Café racer styling evolved throughout the time of their popularity. By the mid-1970s, Japanese bikes had overtaken British bikes in the marketplace, and the look of real Grand Prix racing bikes had changed. The hand-made, frequently unpainted aluminium racing fuel tanks of the 1960s had evolved into square, narrow, fibreglass tanks. Increasingly, three-cylinder Kawasaki two-strokes, four-cylinder four-stroke Kawasaki Z1, and four-cylinder Honda engines were the basis for café racer conversions. By 1977, a number of manufacturers had taken notice of the café racer boom and were producing factory café racers, such as the well-received Moto Guzzi Le Mans and the Harley-Davidson XLCR. A special version of the Honda XBR thumper with wire-spoked wheels, the Honda GB500 TT, sought to emulate BSA and Norton café racers of the 1960s.

In the mid-1970s, riders continued to modify standard production motorcycles into so-called "café racers" by simply equipping them with clubman bars and a small fairing around the headlight. A number of European manufacturers, including Benelli, BMW, Bultaco and Derbi produced factory "café" variants of their standard motorcycles in this manner, without any modifications made to make them faster or more powerful, a trend that continues today.


124 best Yamaha fazer Café Racer images on Pinterest | Yamaha ...
src: s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com


Modern café racers

Manufacturers have noticed that there is a lot of recent consumer in café racers. While the original concept of a café racer was that they were owner-modified or "custom build", manufacturers realised the market appeal of the type, and produced ready-to-ride café racers. In 2004, Triumph produceed a turn-key retro motorcycle with their Thruxton. Another notable modern cafe racer is the Ducati SportClassic, made from 2006 till 2009.

Current stock café racers from motorcycle factories include:

  • BMW R nineT Racer
  • Ducati Scrambler Café Racer
  • Harley-Davidson XL1200CX Roadster,
  • Kawasaki Z900 RS Cafe
  • Métisse Mk5
  • Moto Guzzi V7 Racer
  • Norton Commando 961 Café Racer
  • Royal Enfield Continental GT
  • SYM Motors Wolf Classic 150
  • Triumph Thruxton
  • Triumph Street Cup
  • Yamaha XSR900 Abarth

16 Custom Ducati Diavel S, A Brutal Ducati Diavel Custom By ...
src: www.altontobey.org


Subculture

Rockers were a young and rebellious rock and roll subculture who wanted a fast, personalised and distinctive bike to travel between transport cafés along the newly built arterial motorways in and around British towns and cities. Biker lore has it that the goal of many was to be able to reach 100 miles per hour (160 km/h)--called simply "the ton"--along such a route where the rider would leave from a café, race to a predetermined point and back to the café before a single song could play on the jukebox, called record-racing. However, author Mike Seate contends that record-racing is a myth, the story having originated in an episode of the BBC Dixon of Dock Green television show. Café racers are remembered as being especially fond of rockabilly music and their image is now embedded in today's rockabilly culture.

The Café Racer sub-culture has created a separate look and identity with modern café racers taking style elements from American Greasers, British Rockers, 70s bikers, and modern motorcycle riders to create a global style of their own.


40 Aprilia Tuono Cafe Racer, Aprilia Rsv 1000 Caf Racer Project ...
src: www.daviessaudubon.org


See also

  • 59 Club
  • Ace Cafe London
  • Outline of motorcycles and motorcycling

Triton Café racer motorcycle. Triumph/Norton motorbike. Classic ...
src: c8.alamy.com


References


triumph speed triple cafe racer - Google Search | triumph ...
src: s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com


Further reading


1963 Manx Norton Café racer motorcycle with a Triumph T150 engine ...
src: c8.alamy.com


External links

  • Café racer at the Open Directory Project
  • Classic Motorcycles at Curlie (based on DMOZ)
  • Benedict Campbell film on making US version of a Cafe Racer, 10 min.

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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