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AMD World Championship

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AMD World Championship Set for Record Bike Entries and Visitor Attendance in October?

With 17 weeks to go (at press time) until entries close for the AMD World Championship of Custom Bike Building (Cologne, Germany, October 3-7), the response to what will be the 13th ‘AMD’ has been universally positive. Entries are running way ahead at this stage in the planning cycle compared to prior years – either in Europe or in the USA – with over 80 bikes slated to compete already.


There is always ‘churn’, but the field is comfortably some 20 or 30 bikes ahead of the kind of pre-entry levels that would normally be expected at this stage and normally yields an eventual showing of some 70 to 75 or so bikes.
The primary reason appears to be the ongoing change and decline being seen in several of Europe’s historically strong custom shows and the increasingly widespread acceptance that INTERMOT ‘Customized’, where the AMD World Championship will be staged again (Hall 10 at INTERMOT/Cologne Exhibition Center, October), is now firmly established as the primary international custom motorcycle industry Expo in the world.



This year sees the Hall 10 footprint expanded as INTERMOT ‘Customized’ expands to occupy the whole of the lower level of what is the largest hall at the Cologne Expo Center, the only one of the original double-deck halls left, resulting in a satisfyingly retro and chic environment that works well for the custom motorcycle industry’s exhibition values.


the world’s largest custom industry expo


Hall 10 is located adjacent to the three primary public entrances to the Cologne Expo Center and in 2016 attracted some 150,000 visitors - this year the public days are expanded to five from four days.
With more than five prior World Champions already confirmed among the 2018 competitor community and bikes already slated to compete from some 26 countries worldwide, the Hall 10 attendance looks set to be another all-time record for a custom bike show at an international motorcycle industry expo.
In the interests of promoting craftsmanship and innovation, the AMD World Championship only features five classes, the most famous of which is the now almost universal Freestyle class concept first introduced to the motorcycle industry by AMD in 2004 - this is the class from which the competitors choose who will represent them as World Champion for the next 24 months. The other classes recognize the impacts that custom builders’ platform and design and engineering decisions have on custom outcomes to include the prestigious, immensely popular and highly influential Retro Mod class; Modified Harley-Davidson; Street Performance for cutting-edge high-performance engine and chassis work and a platform-diverse Cafe Racer showcase.
Most of Europe’s major V-twin industry parts and accessory distributors are already confirmed – Motorcycle Storehouse, Custom Chrome Europe and Zodiac International among them – with several of the major OEs again taking additional booths to showcase their customization programs.

Zodiac

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Zodiac additions

Bitubo WME22V2 Shocks

 
Designed and made in Italy, Bitubo WME series nitrogen filled hydraulic shocks are said to improve riding comfort and vehicle control, and are fully adjustable to riding style and load. Featuring adjustable spring preload and rebound. They are available for most Dyna and Sportster models and are TÜV/KBA approved. Chrome or black spring covers are available.

Brass Balls Moto Floor Boards

 
Inspired by Motocross and delivering the grip to prove it, the tapered perimeter edge of these light weight and strong floorboards is said to optimize lean angle. They are precision machined from aircraft grade 6061 T6 billet aluminum. Sold in sets for left and right including adjustable mounting hardware, they are available in natural, black or gold anodized.

TBR Slip-ons for XG500/750


These Two Brothers Racing Competition-S slip-on mufflers are said to be a handcrafted system that “delivers unparalleled sound and performance for the ultimate race experience.” They are available short or long, in black with carbon fiber end cap.

Paradox Turn Signals and TTB combo lights


 
These billet aluminum LED lights are only 2 cm in diameter and 3.7 cm wide and long. They are available as turn signals and turn/tail/brake (TTB) combination light. E approved, they are sold in sets of two with a choice of clear or smoke lens.

Texas Leather Softail Swingarm Bags

 
Zodiac says that “these stylish Softail swing arm bags have enough room for the essentials and eliminate the need to stuff your pockets or bungee a bag across the passenger pillion.” Straps are included; they are available for most Softail models, except those with cross-over exhausts.

Zodiac LED Light Bulbs 

 
These LED 4000 lumen light bulbs are said to reduce power consumption (25 watt) whilst giving more light than a classic halogen bulb. They feature built-in electronics that fit in any headlight shell that has a minimal 43 mm depth from the bulb base in the reflector.

PM Vintage Air Cleaners 

 
PM says its vintage air cleaner housing was “stylistically designed for a timeless look” with “smooth, machine-cut shapes that promote a nostalgic feeling” with a drag-race inspired induction opening to boost air-flow. Features include built-in breathers for a clean installation. They are available in finishes including chrome, contrast cut and ‘Black Ops’ for selected Sportsters Evo and Twin Cam Big Twins (cable and throttle by wire), Tourers, Trikes, Softails, Dynas, M-8s, and Indians.

Ironhead Sportster Exhaust Headers

These down pipe sets for Ironhead Sportster models allow the installation of most universal mufflers or “make a great base to build your own drag pipes.” Installation on ‘79-‘85 Ironheads requires cutting and welding. They are available in black or chrome.

ZODIAC INTERNATIONAL BV
www.zodiac.nl

NAMZ

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NAMZ CAN Bus Controller Touring Options

Oreland, Pennsylvania based NAMZ Custom Products owner, author and all-round electrics guru Jeff Zielinski says that “when wanting to change the stock handlebar switch controls on a 2011-up Softail, 2012-up Dyna, and all 2014 and up Bagger models, dealers have been finding out the hard way that it is nearly impossible to do it.

“The introduction of CAN Bus handlebar switch assemblies is just the latest in a long line of curve balls that the factory has thrown at owners and their dealers, but as ever, we here at NAMZ have stepped up to the plate with a solution.
“Our NAMZ CAN Bus controller (NCBC-N01 for Non-Baggers and NCBC-B01 for Baggers) simply plugs into the factory harness, so you can wire up any handlebar switch assembly you would like. It’s that simple.
Celebrating their 19th year in business, NAMZ sells fluid transfer lines, custom installation supplies and Badlands lighting modules. The full range of NAMZ/Badlands products is available through Drag Specialties, Parts Unlimited, Tucker Rocky, Mid USA, V-Twin, Parts Canada, Motovan, Les Importations Thibault, Parts Europe, Custom Chrome Europe, Motorcycle Storehouse, W&W, Zodiac, Rollies Speed Shop, Wildrider International Pty Ltd., or if out of stock, preferred distributor dealers can order direct from the NAMZ website.

NAMZ CUSTOM CYCLE PRODUCTS
www.namzccp.com

JIMS

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M-8 Cylinder Head Holder

The different spark plug threads in the M-8 heads call for a different head holder, and JIMS has adapted its proven system for anchoring the head in a vice specifically for the new engines with this versatile dual-platform design tool. It is two-sided, one side threaded for Twin Cam heads, and the other threaded for the new M-8.


Also seen here, JIMS’ left main seal installer makes sure that the left crankshaft seal gets a perfect install to prevent the risk of unwanted oil transfer between the engine and the primary drive. 


It not only assists with perfect installation (which includes bottoming out when the seal is properly installed), but it has the added advantage of allowing the alternator stator to remain in place during the operation.

JIMS
www.jimsusa.com

Metalsport Wheels

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The ‘Delusion’ is no Illusion

Southgate, California based Metalsport Wheels has added to its 2018 wheel design options again, with the ‘Delusion’, available from 16 to 32”.
Following on from the ‘Wedge’ and ‘Twisted’ 2D and 3D designs introduced earlier this year, the ‘Delusion’ is available in all chrome, all black, black with a second cut and chrome with custom paint accents on the face of each spoke.
Founded in 2007 by Ron Loynds, the family-owned and operated precision machining business offers over 30 forged and billet wheel designs in total over its 2D and 3D ranges, with front and rear fitments all the way from 16 x 3.5” up to 32 x 4”, all CNC-machined from 6061-T6 aerospace grade aluminum. It is housed in a 30,000 sq ft facility, employing 25 people.

METALSPORT WHEELS
www.metalsportwheels.com

Ultima Motorcycle Products

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Ultima Black Billet Aluminum Brake Calipers and Brackets

Pevely, Missouri based Ultima Motorcycle Products has added new 4-piston brake caliper designs in a wrinkle black finish that use standard stainless-steel pistons and anti-rattle springs for “increased performance and excellent wear resistance.”


The company says that “all Ultima calipers offer reliable stopping power with great looks at an unmatched price.”
Sold as kits, front brackets are available for ’84-‘99 Harleys with 11.5” rotors (except FXSTS); rear for Softails ’87-‘99 (will work with 3/4” or 1” axles) and left or right for stock or Paughco Springers; rebuild parts and replacement brake pads are available.

MIDWEST MOTORCYCLE SUPPLY
www.midwestmc.net
www.ultimaproducts.com

S&S Cycle

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Who Wants to Rumble at the S&S Ranch?

To celebrate its 60th anniversary, S&S Cycle is staging a ‘Rumble At The Ranch’ Hooligan Flat Track Race and Party on a new custom laid out track that is being prepared on property adjacent to its facility in Viola, Wisconsin, on September 23rd.



 

At the site of a former horse racing track that hasn’t been active since the 1930s, the single-day “celebration of internal combustion happiness” will take place on a track that is being prepared by seasoned professionals and featuring a class structure that only the Midwest can pull off (Hooligan Lawnmower Racing anyone?).
Pre-registration is required and in addition to the Hooligan Lawn Tractor class, there is a Hooligan Shootout for 1986 and newer stock framed Twins of at least 750 cc (no dirt bikes, no pros); Margie Smith Invitational/Women’s Race - riders must be 12 years or older but must be 14 or older to ride 450 cc – the bikes must be full framed and have brakes; the Boonie Bike Brawl/Pull Start for 18 year old plus racers of rigid rears with 12-inch wheels and removable or foldable footpegs; and the Pit Bike Pillage/100 cc for riders 14 years or older, racing stock framed 4-strokes up to 125 cc.



All riders must wear boots that at least cover the ankles, gloves, full face helmets, eye protection and long sleeves. No knobbies are allowed and all bikes must have a kill switch - front brake calipers and levers must be removed.
Watch out for more ‘Rumblings’ from the Official Wisconsin Petrol Heads Club soon and more news about other ways that S&S has devised to mark its 60th anniversary.
www.sscycle.com/rumble-at-the-ranch
www.speedranch.club

News Briefs

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B&B also reports the KBA data saying that as of 1 January 2018 there are 538,029 BMW motorcycles registered in Germany, followed by 519,215 Yamaha, 503,310 Suzuki, 427,352 Honda and 354,396 Kawasaki motorcycles.

CF Moto and KTM broke ground on the building of their new joint venture production facility in China in March. CF Moto GM Minjie Lai is quoted as saying the joint venture will bring CF Moto’s R&D and manufacturing capability “to a whole new level. CF Moto will benefit from KTM’s advanced technology and experience; KTM recognize how our manufacturing capacity, supply chain management and channel development could help them to implement their global strategy”.

iMotorsports recently announced the launch of Route 66 Indian Motorcycle. The addition of the Indian motorcycle line to iMotorsports’ Elmhurst, Illinois location follows the successful acquisition and operation of two authorized Indian dealerships in Florida - Indian Motorcycle of Orlando and St. Pete Powersports of St. Petersburg.

Fast Bike Industries of Hendersonville, North Carolina, U.S. importer for Italian suspension specialist Andreani Group, has also take on the British made Nitron range of shock absorbers and front suspension cartridge kits. The company says it currently sells to over 170 powersports industry dealers nationally.

Although the number of overall road deaths in Germany fell in 2017 (-0.9 percent, 3,206), motorcyclist deaths rose by +8.6 percent over 2016 (689).

BMW has been awarded the 2018 JEC Innovation Award in the Leisure and Sports category for the development and manufacture of a carbon fiber rear swingarm (as used on its HP4 race bike). Established in 1996, the JEC Group is described as “the world’s leading specialist organization for the development, manufacture and processing of composite materials”.

Following news that it had moved its U.S. headquarters to Plano, Texas, Canadian BRP, maker of Sea-Doo watercraft and Ski-Doo snowmobiles, is reported to be poised to spend some $385 million on acquisitions to expand its product line-up. Group sales in 2017 are reported at $3.4 bn, and CEO Jose Boisjoli is targeting growth to $4.6 bn by 2020.

The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission’s (CPSC) 2016 annual report of “ATV-Related Deaths and Injuries” (issued January 2018) once again affirms the decade-long downward trend in fatalities and injuries related to ATVs - down -29% for the period 2007 to 2013.

BRP has garnered six prestigious Red Dot product design awards for its Sea-Doo Spark Trixx PWC, Can-Am Maverick X3 and Trail SxS vehicles, Evinrude E-TEC 150-200hp G2 outboard engine, Ski-Doo snowmobile REV Gen4 platform and LinQ snowboard/ski rack for Ski-Doo snowmobiles.

As part of its Electro Mobility Strategy, BMW is investing € 200 m in a new “battery cell competence center” that will open in 2019 near its Munich headquarters in Germany. Among other objectives, the center will harness the group’s research so far into battery-cell development and production, and BMW is on record as saying that it plans to be using game-changing solid state battery technology in at least some of its vehicles by 2026. Where will Harley be building its 21st Century R&D campus, one wonders?

Custom Bike Show - Twin Club MC

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Custom Bike Show
Twin Club MC, Norrtälje, Sweden, June 2, 2018

One of, if not THE oldest custom bike show in the world, and the oldest (14th year) AMD World Championship of Custom Bike Building affiliate event, the annual Twin Club MC ‘Custom Bike Show’ took place in Sweden on the first weekend of June – Sweden’s national holiday weekend.

First staged in 1971 and a bellwether of custom design trends ever since (check out the awesome time capsule of photography from the show’s early years on the event website!), it is staged at the coastal former port town of Norrtälje about two hours north east of Stockholm, the Swedish capital.

Riding to Norrtälje on the first Saturday of June is a long and well-established tradition for custom bike riders from all over northern Europe (and further afield). For many it is the first big trip of the year.


Petri Ruusunen with ‘Velacimoteur’

The show is a one-day ride-in, staged in a remarkable and enduring collaboration between Twin Club and Norrtälje’s community and city council that speaks to the respect in which Twin Club is held (as organizers and ambassadors for motorcycling) and a healthy attitude towards two wheels as a leisure lifestyle and transport solution.
This year saw over 10,000 visitors to the downtown societetspark (city park) where the show is staged, with some 5,500 motorcycles turning the dockside venue in to a hard-miles, trailer-queen-free zone - some 240 of the bikes ridden there enter the custom show itself, of which nearly 70 entered the legendary H-D Chopper class, with over 50 in the mild-to-wild Custom class that has often yielded some of the most radical ground-up builds seen anywhere. 


Anders Lundgren and Lasse Sundberg (Roth Engineering)

To improve competitiveness, some classes were merged this year, so additional classes included Chopper (for non-Harley platform choppers), Racer, Classic, Modified Standard (a new class that expanded the traditional Modified Harley class to include multiple modified factory platforms, in keeping with an increasing trend being seen at shows in Europe), plus Best Paint and Custom Chrome Europe sponsored People’s Choice awards.
Claes Wärefors from Strängnäs, Sweden, won the H-D Chopper Class – a ‘Norrtälje’ regular and prior winner – who also won one of the jury prizes to compete to be this year’s AVON Tyres World Champion at the AMD World Championship at INTERMOT ‘Customized’ in Germany in October.





Winners of the jury prizes to compete in the AMD World Championship of Custom Bike Building at INTERMOT ‘Customized’ are:
1. Petri Ruusunen with ‘Velacimoteur’
2. Anders Lundgren and Lasse Sundberg (Roth Engineering)
3. Claes Wärefors from Strängnäs



The second and third places in the H-D Chopper class went to Finland’s Janne Antttila from Pythänskoski and Rezi from Oulu.
Anders Lundgren and Lasse Sundberg (Roth Engineering) won the Custom class with a customized Indian Super Scout, and also scooped one of the jury prizes to compete at ‘The AMD’ in October, with the jury’s number one choice for the AVON Tyres sponsored Freestyle class at the AMD World Championship going to Finland’s Petri Ruusunen, a well-known artist and silversmith with several previously successful builds to his name.
This year he returned with an updated version of his ‘Velacimoteur’ – a combination of 1910s ‘oldest of Old School’ mixed with a little steampunk and date-proof unbranded engine of ‘Hybrid’ origin.


Claes Wärefors from Strängnäs

Gerhard Remmert of Bike Farm Melle, Germany, fame took two showbikes to Norrtälje, two different Harleys in two different classes (Custom and Racer), and headed back to Germany with third place prizes in both classes.
The Racing class was won by another well-known builder, Pål Steenersen from Rulperts Hog in Norway, a prior Norrtälje Modified Harley winner. This year's new class, Modified Standard, was won by Marko Antila from Seinäjoki in Finland with a Panhead from 1956.
The Public Choice winner (and second in the Racer class) were Strul MMC from Enköping, Sweden, who came to Norrtälje with their club build - a rare and converted Maico Mobil from the 50s, an early touring motorcycle made in Germany by Maico between 1950 and 1958. Conceived and marketed as a “car on two wheels”, the Mobil had body panels that enclosed the drivetrain, protecting its riders from the elements, included an integral pair of panniers and a mount for a spare tire. They took home a RevTech transmission courtesy of Public Choice sponsor Custom Chrome Europe.
This year’s long-distance hero was Giordano Sforazzini who came all the way from Rome, Italy – his third and, finally, successful attempt to ‘Ride-In’ on ‘Biga Valerio’ – a motorcycle engined Roman Chariot no less!
Our thanks, as always, to Twin Club MC for their meticulous organization, Custom Chrome Europe, Motorcycle Storehouse and Zodiac International for their support of the event, and the City of Norrtällje authorities for their biker-friendly attitude and use of the central park for the event.
Save the date: ‘Custom Bike Show’ 2019, Norrtälje, Sweden - Saturday June 1.
www.custombikeshow.se


Comment by Editor-in-Chief, Robin Bradley

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Bring on the Middleweights

Although it is tempting to laud the increasing popularity of lightweights as showing the way forward for the motorcycle industry in the United States, don’t fall for thinking that the future of the performance, parts, accessory and riding gear markets lies at that end of the market.
Guess why people buy low-cost motorcycles? Because they don’t have the money for more expensive ones! Nobody is going to invest $1,000 in a filter, cam and exhaust upgrade on a bike whose power is anyway limited to the kind of grunt that can be gotten out of bikes in the Honda Grom through Ninja 400 territory.
Sure, there are people racing them (which is great, especially in Europe) and customizing them, but those who think they are a platform for aftermarket R&D investments and trade show booths need to think again. They are not. That is not where their value lies; that is not why we should nonetheless be pleased about their popularity.
Their value is in the pathway they provide for entry level, cost-conscious riders to gain the confidence that can keep them in the Powered Two-Wheel and wider powersports marketplace as their wallet books and waistline fatten.
Entry level bikes are just exactly that, an entry level, a price-point solution, a starting place - and for that we should sing a dozen hallelujahs, because right now we need all the starters, all the entrants and all the affordable riding opportunities we can lay our hands on.
However, rather like the (returning!) Honda monkey bike, that first moto-crosser, that old Triumph, BSA, Jawa, Norton or (as in my case) MZ ET175, they are transitional acquisitions, a means to get somewhere else in riding terms - and therein lies their good news for those who would want to be able to see ROI from R&D, G&A and S&M investments (Sales and Marketing, fool!).
Although the modern-day entry level equivalents are vastly superior to their historic equivalents and can, in truth, provide years of perfectly satisfactory urban transport for a population which (in the northern hemisphere) will be greater than 75 percent urban and suburban dwelling within forty years of now, it is the pathway that is the story, but at present a pathway to what?
It’s a generalization I know, but in real terms there is a void where the next level of price-point and power band options needs to be for generations of consumers whose ideas of what the riding and ownership experience should deliver couldn’t be more different to the Boomers.
A few years ago we were bemoaning the entry level to be the choke point – meaning we could be storing up real problems for the future as the number of riders available to migrate up the price and power tree diminished.
Well, regardless of whether or not the numbers stand scrutiny to those of past decades (and, sadly, at this stage, they still don’t, but are what they are, like it or not), if the new entry level models that the OEs have developed (conspicuously the Japanese, Asian and European OEs, not the American manufacturers) are going to save our asses, as an industry, then it would appear that it is those same manufacturers who are going to reap the benefit and be the ones to pathway their consumers onto the sunlit uplands of higher displacement, higher performance and higher collateral spend products.
The trend in new motorcycle pricing in the past 20 years (on both sides of the Atlantic) has been relentlessly up, way ahead of where low earners can engage. List prices and the real prices achieved for current production models have grown, indeed exploded, far ahead of inflation, as manufacturers seek to recoup losses and fund more expensive technologies, product standards and requirements.
Worse, the relative cost of entry-level machines has actually increased even more than for larger displacement models, which is why the current generations of Groms and Ninjas can be so superior as riding machinery to what went before. Curiously though, this is a good thing, this speaks to a healthy future – that attitude to the ownership and riding experience? It is one that requires quality and reliability, and the emerging generations of savvy, digital-age 21st century consumers that we need to be making ready to sell to know that quality costs.
It is projects such as the British/US derived and tuned but Asian made and owned Royal Enfields, Zongshen Nortons, Baja Triumphs and Mahindra built BSAs and Jawas that are set to shake up the price-points and speak convincingly to the Millennial and Centennial attitudes towards the (largely urban) ownership and riding requirements in a way that current pricing and production values are not calibrated to achieve.
Add into the equation the opportunity for “cost-effective, energy efficient, easy to use and comfortable ELVs” to take ownership of the urban riding landscape, then there clearly is a diverse portfolio of pathways for the industry’s future in-play, but regardless of the progress Harley maybe deluding themselves into thinking they’ll make by the end of 2019, even with the Alta deal, in Milwaukee terms it isn’t the Bar & Shield that looks set to benefit despite owning one of the most iconic of retro-intellectual properties there is.


Headline … large as pos, single deck …
Call-out … ‘list prices have exploded’

Harley-Davidson

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Harley to Absorb EU Tariff hit in the Short-Term; Seek Overseas Manufacturing Solution in the Long Term

In a Form 8-K filing to the United States Securities and Exchange Commission on June 25 (as required of public corporations in possession of news that can materially affect the interests of shareholders) Harley-Davidson stated that …
The European Union has enacted tariffs on various U.S.-manufactured products, including Harley-Davidson motorcycles. 



These tariffs, which became effective June 22, 2018, were imposed in response to the tariffs the U.S. imposed on steel and aluminum exported from the EU to the U.S.
Consequently, EU tariffs on Harley-Davidson motorcycles exported from the U.S. have increased from 6% to 31%. Harley-Davidson expects these tariffs will result in an incremental cost of approximately $2,200 per average motorcycle exported from the U.S. to the EU.
Harley-Davidson believes the tremendous cost increase, if passed onto its dealers and retail customers, would have an immediate and lasting detrimental impact to its business in the region, reducing customer access to Harley-Davidson products and negatively impacting the sustainability of its dealers’ businesses.
Therefore, Harley-Davidson will not raise its manufacturer’s suggested retail prices or wholesale prices to its dealers to cover the costs of the retaliatory tariffs. In the near-term, the company will bear the significant impact resulting from these tariffs, and the company estimates the incremental cost for the remainder of 2018 to be approximately $30 to $45 million. 

Harley CEO Matt Levatich is on record as stating that he believed that import tariffs on steel and aluminum would hurt Harley-Davidson and other U.S. manufacturers
On a full-year basis, the company estimates the aggregate annual impact due to the EU tariffs to be approximately $90 to $100 million.
To address the substantial cost of this tariff burden long-term, Harley-Davidson will be implementing a plan to shift production of motorcycles for EU destinations from the U.S. to its international facilities to avoid the tariff burden. Harley-Davidson expects ramping up production in international plants will require incremental investment and could take at least 9 to 18 months to be fully complete.
Harley-Davidson maintains a strong commitment to U.S.-based manufacturing which is valued by riders globally. Increasing international production to alleviate the EU tariff burden is not the company’s preference but represents the only sustainable option to make its motorcycles accessible to customers in the EU and maintain a viable business in Europe. Europe is a critical market for Harley-Davidson.
In 2017, nearly 40,000 riders bought new Harley-Davidson motorcycles in Europe, and the revenue generated from the EU countries is second only to the U.S.
Harley-Davidson’s purpose is to fulfill dreams of personal freedom for customers who live in the European Union and across the world, and the company remains fully engaged with government officials in both the U.S. and the EU helping to find sustainable solutions to trade issues and rescind all tariffs that restrict free and fair trade.
Harley-Davidson will provide more details of the financial implications and plans to mitigate the impact of retaliatory EU tariffs during the company’s second quarter earnings conference call on July 24, 2018, at 8:00AM CDT.

S&S Cycle

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Paint ‘em Black

S&S Cycle says that “carburetors are a bit magical” and of all companies, it should know! “They drink from a tank of volatile liquid, mix some air they found laying around and create a perfectly proportioned explosive mixture - yet allow you to control the delivery with a subtle twist of your wrist. Magic, indeed.”


S&S Cycle long ago sorted the wizardry of mixing air and fuel into a “joyous recipe for horsepower and happiness” and when not being all poetic about the dark arts they are being artistically dark!



Having previously only been produced in limited quantities and sizes, these new Blacked out versions of the legendary and highly tunable Super E and Super G carbs are now being offered as a permanent part of the armory S&S has available for dealers looking to elevate their customers’ Big Twins, FXRs or Sportsters.

S&S CYCLE INC.
www.sscycle.com

TecMate

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Updated OptiMate O-SAE connection system

First launched a decade ago, TecMate’s versatile OptiMate O-SAE connection system was modelled on, and is still able to connect with, the standard SAE 2-pin connection system used by many manufacturers.


The O-SAE’s interchangeable in-line and end cap seals allows the creation of a custom cable system from the various cables available in the range, with the important benefit of reliable and consistent protection against penetration by water, dust or grime.
The most important and most popular cable in the range, the O-01 weatherproof battery lead, sports an end cap sealing system that protects the connector when not in use, providing good sealing against any incoming O-SAE connector from an OptiMate battery charger or an OptiMate USB charger. The principle is simple - when the opposite O-SAE connector is plugged in, the connection is rendered weatherproof.
TecMate CEO Martin Human says that “it’s a great connection system, but as a motorcycle rider it has always bothered me that even our battery lead can flap about in the wind when riding, and at worst, maybe even catch in a moving part of the motorcycle. Fortunately, we figured out a solution.” 



Enter Version 2 of the O-SAE connector, with built in mounting slots that allow for quick and easy securement to a strut or other cable or tube on the motorcycle, using a Velcro strap or zip-tie.
The OptiMate Cable O-01 weatherproof battery cable is made with -40°C/°F rated 0.82 mm2 (18AWG) cable able to carry 7 amps of current and is protected by a 15 A fuse. The moulded M6 / 1/4” ringlets are perfectly sized for powersports batteries. This battery cable is available in consumer packaging as a single unit (O-01) or as a 4-pack (O-01x4). Trade / dealer options are available - a jar of O-01x20 and a box of O-01x100. Both trade / dealer options come with a ‘OptiMate READY’ hang tag that is clearly visible in a showroom, creating a visual value opportunity for the salesperson to equip the rider with an OptiMate battery charger that will guarantee that battery will work when it should.

TECMATE
www.tecmate.com
www.optimate1.com

Hawg Halters Inc.

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Hawg Halters Bolt-On Neck Cover Kits, Speed King Handlebars

Georgia based Hawg Halters, Inc. (HHI) is now offering these custom designed Neck Rake Cover Kits “to finish off your Hawg Halters Bolt-On Neck Rake Kit installation.” 

Designed specifically to fit and work with HHI X-26 and X-30 packages, these kits (seen here for the Road Glide) are described as a “classic finish to the neck rake upgrade.” Made from advanced grade polymer with a proper inspection port for the Vehicle Identification Number, they are an easy snap on and paintable installation with all necessary hardware included.
Hawg Halter’s newest development bike for new product R&D is the 2018 Softail Slim and seen here in gloss black are the company’s 9-inch Speed King handlebars.


Available in black or chrome, HHI Speed King handlebars can be ordered as a bare bar, or as a complete plug and play bolt-on assembly - complete with custom HHI hand controls.

HAWG HALTERS INC.
www.hawghalters.com

Jared Mees

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Mees Gets Redemption, Texter Makes History at Lima, Ohio Half Mile

Grand National Champion Jared Mees has racked up 18 Main Event victories during his historic run these past two American Flat Track seasons. 


Photo Credit: Scott Hunter/American Flat Track

Serving as the race promoter of his home race at the Allen County Fairgrounds, Mees put last year’s failure to qualify behind him (the only podium he missed in 2017) winning aboard his No. 1 Indian Motorcycle Rogers Racing SDI Scout FTR750 and leaving the pack to sort out the remainder of the positions in his roost around the pea-gravel cushion Half Mile.
Jeffrey Carver Jr. (No. 23 Roof-Systems of Dallas/Indian of Metro Milwaukee Scout FTR750) took second, Henry Wiles (No. 17 Bandit Industries/Wilco Racing/Willy Built Indian Scout FTR750) was third (his fourth podium and eighth top five so far this season), with 2017 Lima Half Mile winner Briar Bauman (No. 14 Zanotti Racing Indian Scout FTR750) fourth and Brad Baker (No. 6 Indian Motorcycle Racing backed by Allstate Scout FTR750) fifth.
In the AFT Singles, fan favorite Shayna Texter (No. 52 Husqvarna Motorcycles/JCS Racing FC 450) made history on Saturday night at the Indian Motorcycle Lima Half Mile by delivering Husqvarna’s first American Flat Track victory.
Texter, who holds the all-time win record for the AFT Singles class, had notched up four podiums aboard her rapidly developing Husqvarna FC 450 so far this season, including a pair of runner-up spots. She was the seventh different winner of the class in 10 races this season.
The 2016 AFT Singles Champ Ryan Wells (No. 94 RMR/Al Lamb’s Dallas Honda CRF450) finished second; current AFT Singles points leader Dan Bromley (No. 62 KTM North America/Bromley Motorsports 450 SX-F) was third - his eighth podium of 2018.
American Flat Track will be back in action next weekend for the Harley-Davidson New York Short Track at Weedsport Speedway, in Weedsport, N.Y., on Saturday, July 7. After which there is a four-week break during which Mees, Texter and several others of this year’s AFT racers will have the chance to enjoy all the English summer delights that the Goodwood Festival of Speed has to offer (July 12-15) before resuming competition in earnest at the Buffalo Chip TT (August 5) and the Harley-Davidson Black Hills Half Mile (Rapid City, August 7) during the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally.

Bike Shed

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Bike Shed IX - London, May 25-27

Billed again as “Europe’s best independent annual motorcycle show”, London’s Bike Shed Show (a “new wave motorcycle emporium”) is staged at the iconic 19th century Tobacco Dock, alongside the River Thames in London’s infamous but now achingly chic East End.
A spin-off from the equally chic City of London ‘Bike Shed’ moto store and urban riding club, this was the ninth show, staged at the historic and charismatic former Victorian warehouse venue for the fourth time, at the end of May.
Last year saw some 14,000 “New Core” visitors, with numbers growing to over 16,000 this year - a mighty crowd with a selection of 239 high-class custom bikes (up from 219 last year) for them to drool over.




As custom bike shows go, it is a world in which contemporary custom styling collides with artisan catering and a limited number of “curated” exhibitor opportunities. Masterminded by store and show owner Anthony ‘Dutch’ van Someren and a select investor cartel, the presentation values were as upscale as to be expected, the standard of the bikes invited was as high as ever, and with a growing number of bikes by established names and manufacturers starting to populate the displays and booths, the formula remains robust and is clearly in a safe pair of hands.
 

‘2018 numbers grew to over 16,000’


Indian Motorcycle were making a big splash again with streetable Scouts and FTR750s a-plenty; Royal Enfield’s new 650 (replete with S&S Cycle exhausts) was equally high profile, with other manufacturers in this largely Harley-free zone including Triumph, Indian, BMW, Yamaha, Ducati Scrambler and Fantic (Italian based small displacement Chinese engined off-roaders). 


The event sponsors were BMW Motorrad, Indian Motorcycle, Royal Enfield, Triumph, Yamaha Yard Built, Ducati Scrambler, and from the apparel industry, REV’IT! and Dainese ‘Settantadue’ - a sub-brand that marks the race suit manufacturer’s play for a stake in the millennial market. “Settantadue presents itself as a contemporary interpretation of iconic motorcycle clothing. The label features technical garments inspired by the extensive design legacy of Dainese and made specifically for cult followers of motorcycles,” says CEO and former Ducati executive Cristiano Silei.
 

“Europe’s best independent annual motorcycle show”

Dainese’s stated values for the brand encapsulate perfectly the market positioning sought by sponsors and organizers alike: “Settantadue is imbued with the gratification only exquisite craftsmanship can provide, made possible through advanced processing techniques and cutting-edge composition for maximum protection and a modern-day elegance.”


The formula is to mix the bikes with a weekend of “live music, live art, live pin-striping/screen-printing/ leatherwork, photography, food, coffee, bars, tattoos, barbershop and curated retail and brands,” and as such, with open-area booth style the preferred presentation, the show is a success.
Save the date: Bike Shed 2019, London, May 24,25,26.
www.thebikeshed.cc

Goodwood Festival of Speed

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AFT in England for 25th Goodwood 
Festival of Speed

The American Flat Track series is headed to the UK for a one-off demonstration and promotional visit at the 25th Anniversary of the internationally respected Goodwood Festival of Speed (July 12-15).




A 4-day-long “celebration of motorsports history, design and technical achievement, and perhaps the most glamorous and anticipated motoring event of the year,” the Goodwood Festival of Speed is staged on a 1.16 mile Hillclimb track created by the present (11th) Duke of Richmond in the grounds of Goodwood House, a classic English Country house with late sixteenth century origins - the center piece of the 5,000 acre Goodwood Estate near the medieval cathedral and ancient Roman port city of Chichester, West Sussex, in the South Downs National Park of southern England.
Described as motorsport's ultimate summer garden party, “it is an intoxicating celebration of the world's most glamorous sport. Nowhere else will you get so close to the cars and bikes as they blast up the Hillclimb track; nowhere else will you enjoy such unrestricted access to the machines and the drivers who made them famous.” Year round the track in fact forms part of the driveway that leads up to the Stately Home.
Seven American Flat Track competitors and their motorcycles will be there this July to greet the anticipated 100,000-plus fans and make the run up Goodwood’s wooded, hillside circuit: Indian Motorcycle factory team riders Brad Baker, Jared Mees and Bryan Smith along with their Scout FTR750s; Husqvarna-supported Shayna Texter and her FC 450; Stevie Bonsey and the Lloyd Bros. Ducati 821; Jeffrey Carver Jr. and four-time Daytona 200 winner Danny Eslick will both be aboard legendary Harley-Davidson XR750s.
Rider reaction to the invitation is understandably positive. “I’m stoked to be invited and have the opportunity to rub elbows with some of the world’s top racers and racing enthusiasts,” said Bryan Smith. “I’m really looking forward to the trip.”
“I’ve never been to the U.K.,” said Shayna Texter, “and I’m also a bit of a Harry Potter fan, so I’m excited about the trip and the Festival. It looks like a very cool event.”
“I’ve heard nothing but good things and how fun the event is,” said Brad Baker. “I’ve never seen an F1 car up close, so I’m looking forward to checking them out along with the rest of the exotic equipment.”



Gary Gray, Vice President - Racing, Service & Technology for Indian/Polaris (it is not known if GG is also a Harry Potter fan!), is similarly excited about the opportunity. “We are honored to have Indian Motorcycle and the Wrecking Crew of Jared Mees, Bryan Smith and Brad Baker invited to such a prestigious international event like the Goodwood Festival of Speed,” Gray said. “One of our goals was to help increase the global reach and appeal of the American Flat Track series. Being invited to an event that features the best of Formula 1 and MotoGP shows that we are definitely heading in the right direction under the guidance of Michael Lock and AFT.”
The American Flat Track contingent will have its own paddock area at Goodwood, which means fans and media will have amazing access to the AFT motorcycles and their riders. It’s just one more way Goodwood is taking the up-close-and-personal concept to a totally new level – and another reason the event is so beloved by motorsports fans worldwide.
“The Goodwood Festival of Speed is like the Oscars for racing motorcycles and cars, hosted at an amazing country estate in England and attended by motorsports royalty,” said Michael Lock, CEO of American Flat Track. “We are very excited to have been invited to introduce the athletes and bikes of American Flat Track to a new European fan base, who are starting to stream our sport in rapidly increasing numbers via Fanschoice.tv. This is the start of big things for AFT”!
www.goodwood.com
www.americanflattrack.com

Biltwell

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Biltwell Conquers Legendary NORRA Mexican 1000 Off-Road Race - with a Sportster!

The NORRA (National Off-Road Racing Association) Mexican 1000 all-terrain race in Ensenada, Mexico is not exactly what you’d term a V-Twin cruiser friendly undertaking - be it the versatile Sportster or any other kind of V-twin cruiser platform.
Run for the first time in 1967, the now legendary event pits men and their custom-built two- and four-wheeled race machines against some of the harshest terrain on earth. This year’s five-day stage race thundered past free-range cattle, over boulders, beaches, potholes and silt beds as it caromed down both coasts of the Baja peninsula before reaching the finish line 1,300 miles later in San Jose Del Cabo on April 27. 



For the first time in NORRA Mexican 1000 history, a Harley-Davidson Sportster 883 made it across the finish line, 1300 miles from Ensenada. The feat of derring do was the brainchild of Biltwell Inc. co-founder Bill Bryant along with co-riders Mike Deutsch, Erik Westergaard and Chris Moeller - with significant support from co-workers, friends and family.
To ensure their greatest chance of success, Biltwell enlisted the talents of an old friend, one-time Texas chopper builder and current surf bum “Rouser” Rob Galan to customize and service the Frijole 883 Harley-Davidson. Upgrades to the essentially stock MY 2000 Sportster included suspension modifications, the jettisoning of redundant onboard electrical systems, and ergonomically appropriate handlebars, hand controls and foot controls. 




Knobby tires with airless inner tubes on strong yet lightweight alloy wheels helped with the hostile terrain as efficiently as other machines in the race that weighed half as much and that were designed expressly for the task. Onboard equipment for bike maintenance and rider safety included a tool kit, reflective blanket, Lowrance satellite with iPad Google Earth backup, extra fuel, food, water and a wad of petty cash.
According to Bryant Team Biltwell’s race strategy for the five-day event called for two racers each day to alternate at mile marks that made sense for speedy gas stops and rider changes. Every evening, mechanic Rob Galan serviced the Frijole 883 by changing fluids and filters, tightening spokes, checking nuts and bolts, replacing worn parts if required, and sleeping next to the motorcycle on an army cot to help riders make the 6:00 a.m. check-in the following morning.



According to NORRA race results, 43 motorcycles started the 2018 edition of the Mexican 1000, with 32 finishing. The Frijole 883 was among 21 Modern Open bikes and finished 14th in class - overall standing was 27th out of 32 total finishers. None of the 13 Modern Open machines that finished ahead of the Frijole 883 started life as an American V-twin cruiser, and few if any weighed over 300 pounds.
In full race trim, the Biltwell Frijole 883 weighed 500 pounds, and could barely squeeze 70 miles per fill-up from its stock Sportster gas tank. Bryant says: “Wise men say you should bring a gun to a knife fight – we brought a WWII Sherman tank”!
www.biltwellinc.com

Custom Bike Show - Latvia

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Custom Bike Show - Latvia, July 21

The newest addition to the AMD World Championship Affiliate Custom Bike Show program will be the fourth annual Custom Bike Show being staged on July 21 at the same time as the annual town festival in the historic town of Cesis in Latvia.



The show is hosted by local club MC XIII and while the event is still new and the custom scene in Latvia (as in the other Baltic states) is small, the show is expected to attract around 50 bikes from Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia with the Best in Show winning expenses to compete at the AMD World Championship at INTERMOT Customized in Cologne, Germany (October 3-7) 2018.



The markets in countries like Latvia may be small, but they are growing. With new generations of custom bike enthusiasts who have only known the post-independence freedom starting to participate in the custom market, and a tradition of craftsmanship and creativity, the future looks bright for the custom bike lifestyle and market throughout Eastern Europe.
Classes will feature public picks, including best paint/finish and competitor/expert panel voting classes such as Best Custom and Best Old Timer. Cesis is one of the oldest towns in Latvia, famed for its ruined medieval castle, where the Custom Bike Show will take place.
www.mc13.lv
www.custombikeshow.lv

Indian Motorcycle

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Indian confirms FTR 1200 production plans

Indian Motorcycle used the annual Wheels & Waves festival at Biarritz, France (June 2018) to confirm what had, to that point, been somewhat of an open secret - namely that the company will put a 1200 cc race inspired street legal version of its all-conquering FTR Scout into production for the 2019 MY season.


The Scout FTR1200 Custom, unveiled at EICMA in 2017

 “When we unveiled the FTR 1200 Custom at EICMA, we said we’d listen to feedback from riders around the world,” said Steve Menneto, President, Indian Motorcycle. “Riders definitely have spoken and we will be putting the FTR 1200 into production.” The development of a one-off FTR1200 Custom fuelled the speculation and expectation.
The flat tracker style 1200 will be a new V-twin engine housed in a trellis frame and powered by a new V-twin engine.
Indian Motorcycle Senior Designer Rich Christoph, who was instrumental to the design of the FTR 1200, FTR1200 Custom, and FTR750 said that “We wanted to make sure that the FTR 1200 wasn’t merely a regurgitation of the FTR1200 Custom, but something uniquely ‘street,’ albeit flat track inspired,” said Christoph.  “We’re thrilled about the character this bike possesses, and its ability to take American V-twin motorcycles into new territory.” 
“From the very beginning, our intention was to develop Indian Motorcycle into a global brand,” said Michael Dougherty, President, International. “Armed with a strong foundation, it’s now time to break new ground for an American motorcycle manufacturer and the FTR 1200 is where that begins.”
The company is to run a sweepstakes where riders can enter to win one of the first bikes to come off the assembly line.
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