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| This is where we lay... | 
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| My friend Bill Vanhousen.....owner of Van's Motorsports...setting up his pipe bender. | 
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| I didn't want a flat hoop for this seat.....I want what they call a "kick up"...so I put the hoop in a vise and pulled on it until I reached the desired "kick up" angle. | 
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| make sense??? | 
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| you understand??? | 
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| In order for the hooped pipe to be attached to the original frame a "slug" is used. The slug fits inside both the frame and new hoop...the slug is a solid piece of metal. | 
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| the slug is spot welded into the frame... | 
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| top view of the slug..... | 
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| I had to cut the hoop in half because Bill's pipe bender's die bended 180 degree at a 10" radius....my frame is a 9" width. So I had to cut 1" out of the angle. | 
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| I put a slug in the 180 degree angle and spot welded it.... | 
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| a look at my weld on the pipe.....I'm definitely an amateur, but I'm not complaining about this weld... | 
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| I ground down my weld so it looks like I never modified the frame at all......after a powder coat paint you'll never be able to tell... | 
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| yours truly hard at work... | 
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| after the hoop was in place I designed a seat pan....i start with cardboard first... | 
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| then i take it to small gauge metal... | 
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| kinda resembles a skate board... | 
 
Impressive, per usual, Mister Tucker!! :)
ReplyDeleteWCT, That is an excellent looking weld! And I think this bike seat is going to turn out really nice. You are putting a lot of thought into this bike and seat. Makes me think you will be keeping this one in the stable?
ReplyDelete