Where Will You Find Out What You Need To Learn To Build Choppers At Home From Tennessee Custom Motorsports |
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| By Erik Parker |
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| What you need to learn to build choppers is every single
detail about what it is made of and how it is put together.
If you mainly want to save money, you'll need only enough
know how to enable you to follow directions if you buy a
kit. For a unique look that is a personal work of art,
you'll need to learn many skills that may be new to you. It will help to be a skillful motorcycle rider, because a chopper is harder to handle than a regular bike. The longer frame and close to the ground stance makes cornering more difficult, and being more than a beginner may help you survive the transition. Next, you need a basic understanding of the whole: electronics - headlights, ignition, gauges, taillights, turn signals, and all the interconnections; brakes; the engine; the exhaust system; the gas and oil tanks; the foot pedals; the drive train; the frame; the sheet metal making up fenders and engine covers; the shocks and suspension; the seats; the tires. Knowing how all these things work is important even in using a kit, but essential when thinking of customizing your bike by leaving out many non-essentials. Now you can decide that you want to build your bike from the ground up, or that you want the support of a kit, with directions and all the components. One way to have it both ways is to get a simple kit and customize the basic bike you end up with after assembly. There are books on the subject, online, for sale, and in the library. There are magazines, DVDs, and newsletters. You can find informal motorcycle gatherings in a shopping center lot near by, where you can talk to bike owners. Watch the 1969 hit movie 'Easy Rider'. Visit a cycle shop showroom and look at all the component parts of a chopper; you will either feel overwhelmed or challenged to do it better yourself. Another alternative is go to school, to get hands on experience with an adviser looking over your shoulder. There are also how-to videos, that show you step by step. You can join a club or form a club for mutual support. Maybe there is a bored biker in the area who will agree to be your mentor. Of course, you can always just go right ahead and buy the parts, hoping to figure it out as you go along. What you need to learn to build choppers is a lot. How you learn it is up to you. |
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| About The Author For additional information or questions in regards to Tennessee Custom Motorsports please see the Tennessee Custom Motorsports group at www.tennesseecustommotorsports.com |
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