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XV650
Dragstar
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Barry
Dubber's epic tale |
Who's the bloke with the stupid grin!
My story begins in early 1981 when I left the navy riding a clapped out
GT250 I had been riding round for a year or so after buying it from a small
dealer and learning to ride it round the back of the shop before taking to
the busy streets of Plymouth. Leaving the dockyard for the last time I had
a pocket full of savings and one mission in mind, the Yamaha 250 custom had
come onto the market and I was going to get one or so I thought. Within the
week I got to the dealer only to find he had none in stock, but he did have
a bloody gorgeous looking Kawasaki Z400 custom and I knew it was mine as
soon as I saw it. It went through my mind that I hadn't passed a test so
wouldn't be able to insure it or tax it but trivial things like that meant
nothing to me at that time and ten minutes later I was riding it home. I
rode that bike around for months with no problem at all, regularly riding
between Plymouth and Portsmouth and I felt as one with the bike. Then came
the night I decided to blow away the cobwebs and headed onto the dual
carriageway to open her up a bit, I admit I had had a few drinks but felt
perfectly all right (thinking back now I must have been quite a way over
the limit). After riding about twenty miles I passed a car and looked down at my speedo (just under a ton), then
looked in my mirror for the car I had just passed, then looked up just a
split second before wrapping myself and my bike around one of those chevron
signs that indicate sharp corners.
When I woke I had both arms lying side by side next to my face, it looked
odd but I couldn't figure out why and my right leg was tucked under my chin,
then the pain hit. The one thing that still makes me smile about that night
was that the car I had just passed luckily saw what happened and stopped but
the first thing the bloke said to me was "Could you keep your language down
as my wife is in the car!" it just about did the trick and stunned me to
silence.
After days of X rays and scans I found out I was lucky enough to only have
broken my leg in four places, my right arm was broken in quite a few places,
elbow smashed and to top it off I had something called a complete brachial
plexus. I say lucky because I do count myself lucky and know it could have
been a lot worse. I had no idea then how that one injury would affect the
rest of my life.
I spent six months in hospital learning how to do everything with my left
hand, I think in a way it proved to me that we are all ambidextrous and just
need a reason to put it to use. I thought that was it, I would never be
able to ride a bike again and so I gave up even thinking about it. My right
arm was left hanging for a year before I asked for it to be taken off. I
suppose I accepted losing it a lot better that way.
A few years later I glanced through an Easyrider magazine and was amazed to
see a bloke riding a chopper with a false right arm. It lit the flame again
and I can still see that picture clear as day now. Although I never did
anything about it straight away that image gnawed at me until in '95 I
wandered into the biggest bike dealer around here and just looked at the
bikes wondering what would be involved. I had never heard of NABD and I
asked if the workshop at this dealership would be able to help me out by
adapting a bike, they looked at me like I was mad then told me it couldn't
be done. Luckily one of the salesmen overheard and gave me the address of a
bloke in Newton Abbot who might be able to help and suggested a combo
(wasn't sure I'd have the balance), he also told me of this organisation
called NABD and said they may be some help. Within an hour I was talking to
the Newton Abbot bloke who said it should be no problem as long as I could
get the bike to him. Well that was it the fuse was well and truly alight I
scanned all the papers and bike mags till I found a Neval combo in
Scunthorpe.
Next day I hired a trailer and drove up to get it, it wasn't my ideal bike
but it would get me back on the road, by the time I got back to Devon it was too late to drive the bike to the engineer
and I couldn't afford the trailer for another day so I off loaded it at home and returned the trailer. All that night I
worked in my garage coming up with a makeshift throttle (made out of an old
bit of copper tube) just to enable me to make that one journey of around 25
miles. The throttle worked pretty well though I could see it bending, and I
got to Newton Abbot without a problem apart from nearly tailgating a police
car when I found the rear brake wasn't enough to stop quickly. I rode
straight round to the engineers secure in the knowledge that I wouldn't have
to ride the bike back home in the same state only to be met at the door by
his girlfriend who told me that the man I was relying on had been sent down
for 6 months the day before. She told me that there was another
bloke who might be able to help me and steered me in the direction of John
T, at Newton Motorcycles. John had been building bikes and trikes for years
and as I told him my problem his eyes lit up, he wanted the challenge so I
left the bike with him and arranged to pick it up a few days later. I left
all the adaption ideas to him and he came up trumps. He moved the throttle
down to be operated by my right heel and the front brake down to my left
heel, it wasn't pretty and it took some getting used to but it did the
business. I had joined NABD by now and was surprised
to find that my problem was pretty minor really and more ambitious adaptions were happening right
across the country.
I started to get quite fond of the Neval, I loved its simplicity and the
fact that I could load up the sidecar with logs and get up the steep hills around my home with no problem. After a few
months I got lazy and didn't clean it so often and crap started accumulating
in all the nooks and crannys, including the cable for the throttle by my
heel. Exiting a roundabout one day quite fast the throttle stuck open and I
panicked, instead of using the gears or braking I opened it up more to try
to release it, I hit the crash barrier head on and because I was attached to
the handle bar by my artificial arm I just got flipped straight over after
breaking my pubic bone (balls like ripe plums) and smashed into the other
side of the barrier breaking my pelvis. Again I consider myself very lucky,
at one point I thought I might have broken my back. I had bent the forks on
the bike but John T. picked it up and fixed it while I was in hospital and
before I could even walk properly I was back in the saddle. I never really
trusted the foot throttle again so in a way I was quite glad when after
another year the camshaft bent (apparently a common thing on these Russian
bikes). I couldn't afford to fix it so I just sold it on and took to a car
again. I just wasn't happy I needed to ride, I could see all the good work
NABD was doing getting people back on the road but I still didn't want to
ask so I struggled until early '99 till I could afford a small scooter (I
needed to see if I had the balance to go solo) and could get it adapted with
a hand throttle, I didn't really want to travel down to Newton Abbot again
so I looked closer to home and found a small shop MET Customs,
that specialised in custom work (suprise). After a chat with Phil (owner)
and Steve (miracle worker) I arranged for the scooter to be sent direct to
them. I made it clear that this was just a trial bike but needed to know if
an adaption could be done so that it didn't stand out like a sore thumb.
When I got the scooter back the only difference I could see was the right
brake lever was missing everything else was hidden away. Six months later
my mind was made up, I had found my engineer and found the bike (a beautiful
XVS650 dragstar) I just needed to get the money to get them together. I was
in a catch 22 situation I had to use the scooter part exchange but had to
have it put back stock first. So I could afford the bike and put the
scooter back to stock, or I could afford the bike and a good chunk of
adapting it but not both. I was stuck and I needed help and that's where
the NABD came in, I applied for a grant to help put me on my dream machine,
I had some money to put toward it but just couldn't get enough. The price
of the bike was going up so the longer I left it the worse off I'd be so I
had to buy the bike even before I heard from NABD or lose it, knowing that
it could sit unused in my garage for years till I could afford to get it
done myself. I waited patiently for any news from NABD then I waited
impatiently, I was starting to think that I would have to dig out the push
bike then one morning it was there, I had the go ahead. I think Phil was a
bit surprised to see me outside his shop at eight in the morning waiting for
him to arrive to tell him I had the job number and he could start work, I
was a bit fed up that he sat and had a cup of tea first but I had waited a
long time for this and as far as he could see a few minutes more wouldn't
hurt. Inside I was screaming at him to get on with it and I have never
known a bloke drink a cup of tea so slowly.
Because they had the bike stored in a corner of the workshop for a while and
they knew what I wanted they already had a few ideas. My main request was
that the adaptions were carried out sympathetically to the character of the
bike so nothing stood out as not belonging and as you can see from the
pictures the boys at MET did a fine job.
The throttle has been moved to the left hand but they had to use a different
assembly to get the throttle operating in the normal way. The brakes are
linked so they are both operated by using the rear brake pedal but they can
still be used independently if needed (as is required by the MOT). They
also fitted a kind of hand brake so that if I stall on a hill or something I
can lock the brakes on while disengaging the gears to restart, it's then a
simple case of knocking it back into first and a tap of the foot knocks the
brakes off. I was a bit worried how this would look but as you can see it's
not bad at all, the choke knob on the bars is the handbrake. All work was
either made from stainless steel or painted to match and as you can see by
my face I'm bloody well chuffed with it.
Thankyou NARD and in particular Vic for putting up with me pestering him, to
all the lads at MET customs, to John T. and a special thanks to that
salesman Earl Richmond because if he hadn't stepped in when he did I might
have given up again. I look forward to meeting a lot of you at future
events/rallies, any excuse to ride, I'll be the one picking the flies out
of his teeth because of this silly grin I seem to have when I'm in the
saddle.
Ride safe but have fun
1. New throttle assembly and hand brake (choke knob).
2. Ain't she lovely, he's not bad either.
3. Black cylinder is operational part of handbrake, pull on to lock foot
lever down, springs back when lever tapped with foot. Also shown is linkage
to front brake lever.
4. Shows other end of front brake link.
This
NABD Grant was sponsored by donations in memory
of Ian Hiller
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