Custom cruiser bars on the cheap!
I've always wanted to make my own bars, but didn't have a pipe-bender. I still don't, but I did pick up this nifty conduit bender offa a retired electrician for just a few bucks.
You can't bend too tight a curve, but it's fine for swoopy cruiser-bars. Actually these 30 degree bends on 1" stainless did dimple the pipe a tiny bit (shhh!). It's murder on the back too. You have to tuck the end of your piece in a longer pipe to get the leverage, put your foot on the rest, and then hang on the handle like an orangutan. These bends are all on the same plane, but I want the option to have a rise or drop without turning the bars upside-down. To accomplish this, I will employ the old-timey method using three-segments of pipe. The straight segments are attached to the main bar with two shaft-collars welded together.
I wanna use a bar-end lever, so I am closing one end of a straight segment and adding an adjuster-barrel. A better way to do this would be to find a tap that matches the barrel threads and tap a thicker cap/plug, but I just can't be bothered to hunt for it right now.
Mmm. Not bad. The wide-bars fit the bike, and the antiquey details of the drop-brackets and bar-end levers reference my favorite era. If you have a normal-size frame and a few more bucks, I'd consider investing in some Sportsman Flyer bars which are darned handsome and certainly have a better finish.
I've always wanted to make my own bars, but didn't have a pipe-bender. I still don't, but I did pick up this nifty conduit bender offa a retired electrician for just a few bucks.
You can't bend too tight a curve, but it's fine for swoopy cruiser-bars. Actually these 30 degree bends on 1" stainless did dimple the pipe a tiny bit (shhh!). It's murder on the back too. You have to tuck the end of your piece in a longer pipe to get the leverage, put your foot on the rest, and then hang on the handle like an orangutan. These bends are all on the same plane, but I want the option to have a rise or drop without turning the bars upside-down. To accomplish this, I will employ the old-timey method using three-segments of pipe. The straight segments are attached to the main bar with two shaft-collars welded together.
I wanna use a bar-end lever, so I am closing one end of a straight segment and adding an adjuster-barrel. A better way to do this would be to find a tap that matches the barrel threads and tap a thicker cap/plug, but I just can't be bothered to hunt for it right now.
Mmm. Not bad. The wide-bars fit the bike, and the antiquey details of the drop-brackets and bar-end levers reference my favorite era. If you have a normal-size frame and a few more bucks, I'd consider investing in some Sportsman Flyer bars which are darned handsome and certainly have a better finish.