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| Agile Beast | ||
Gregg DesJardins’ life-long passion for the welder’s art was initially sparked out of frustration. As a 15-year-old boy building a hot rod with his father in the family’s garage, DesJardins’ vision for the project was thwarted by the duo’s lack of welding ability. That hindrance catalyzed within the teenager a profound determination to master the discipline. DesJardins received a wire-feed arc welder as his high school graduation present and embarked upon an autodidactic apprenticeship. In college, he graduated to the machine shop’s TIG welder and quickly became proficient in that complex process. Since then, DesJardins has been successfully executing his artistic vision under his billet aluminum shingle, Gregg’s Customs. His fusion of passion and technical acumen garnered acclaim for
DesJardins in 2006 when he debuted his first ground-up custom build, the Honda
RC51 based GC-1000 (RRMC, Feb/Mar 2007). Now, the talented
young multi-disciplinarian looks to raise eyebrows by transplanting the enlarged
heart of a cruiser into an aggressive, nimble sportbike chassis with his
sophomore effort, the genre-busting Gregg’s Customs Hellion. (Click image to enlarge)DesJardins had been immersing himself in books about the Can-Am racing cars of the late ’60s and early ’70s—with their big-block Chevy engines and huge tires—when the raw, muscular lines of the Hellion began to form in his imagination. He had fallen for Yamaha’s MT-01 concept bike when it was unveiled in 1999, making the 102 cu in Yamaha Road Star Warrior engine a natural choice to serve as the Hellion’s heart. A lifelong sportbike zealot, DesJardins was determined to keep the Hellion’s wheelbase short and its countenance narrow. That objective presented a host of packaging challenges, given his choice of powerplant; it also led him to some striking design innovations. DesJardins switched the Road Star’s traditional left-hand drive to the right side, an unusual configuration in the sportbike realm. He amputated the entire jackshaft assembly, which trimmed the engine by nearly 10 inches, addressing wheelbase concerns. It also allowed him to push the swingarm pivot as close to the engine as possible. The sinuous, tapered swingarm mounts onto the left side of the
bike and pivots directly on the frame, using a system of bearings. This feat of
engineering minimalism allowed DesJardins to discard many of the standard
components usually required to keep a swingarm in place. Viewing the Hellion
from the right side reveals the gorgeously trellised assembly. Noticeably
absent, however, is any device that might actually absorb shock. Walk around the
bike and you discover that DesJardins has ingeniously mounted the rear shock on
the left side, tucked in against the engine and extending the visual line of the
subframe. Side holstering the shock also contributed to the mission of
shortening the Hellion’s wheelbase to a crisp 57 inches. (Click image to enlarge)The chromoly frame is a masterstroke of functional design that produces the Hellion’s hunched, predatory stance. DesJardins eschewed the conventional twin-spar architecture for a more open setting that exposes the bike’s onyx V-twin gem. Lifting the frame rails up over the top of the cylinder heads also narrowed the Hellion’s wrathful visage. Seeking a raw, utilitarian finish, DesJardins employed Scotch-Brite and clear powdercoat, which had the unintended side effect of lending a handsome patina to his meticulous weld beads. While much attention is paid to the Hellion’s observable mechanical design, DesJardins also invested countless hours crafting details that are likely to go unnoticed without a spec sheet. That seems to be of little concern to DesJardins, who approached the Hellion’s design and build as though he were crafting a 1670cc Swiss watch. DesJardins converted the cable-actuated clutch to hydraulic,
fabricating his own slave cylinder. The swingarm’s main spar appears to be
machined from a solid piece, but is actually painstakingly fabricated from a
tube that was split and flared to achieve its tapered appearance. Nearly every
part of the bike that pivots, does so on bearings. To wit, the side stand
contains a ball bearing for thrust, while a needle bearing addresses axial load. |