Period-Correct Goodness: 1970 Yamaha XS650 “Bugsy”

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Period-Correct Goodness: 1970 Yamaha XS650 “Bugsy”

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

James “The Eggman” Eckman recreates the bike he sold 50 years ago…

Motocross arrived on American shores quite a bit later than some folks realize. Though the first European FIM championship was held in 1952, it wasn’t until the 1960s that figures like Edison Dye, Torsten Hallman, and Roger DeCoster brought the sport to the United States, and the first AMA Motocross Championship was held in 1972.

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

Recently we heard from Pennsylvania’s James “The Eggman” Eckman, a long-time racer who was there for the early days of the sport. In 1969, at the age of 14, he talked his parents into letting him buy an ancient BSA Bantam — and the rest was history:

“Soon, I was working at the Kawasaki Penton Husqvarna shop for $1.25 an hour and racing motocross in the very earliest days of the sport in America. Then I was a local champion for a couple years until a TM400 ate my knees and racing career.”

James The Eggman Eckman

At that same shop, a couple of the mechanics had built their Triumphs and BSA’s into early versions of what we now call street trackers:

“Before street trackers were a thing, occasionally us old guys would put a headlight and taillight on a scrambler or TT racer and skirt the law for a bit. It was great fun.”

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

James had to have one for himself, so he picked up a wrecked Yamaha XS650 and built himself one. He rode that bike until his body was healed up enough to go racing, and that XS650 scrambler / street tracker became a pure dirt tracker:

“I bought a Champion frame from Gary Nixon and built the Yamaha into a storming 750 and went dirt track racing until more crashes made that not so much fun anymore.”

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

He sold the bike when he was 17, and he’s regretted it ever since:

“I thought about that street bike for 50 years, wishing I had kept it.”

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

So last year he picked up a $200 1970 XS650 basket case and got to work recreating the 650 scrambler / tracker of his youth, tracking down hard-to-find items like original Ceriani GP forks, Bates solo seat, Bates dirt track pegs, a Trackmaster-style tank, and more:

“I was shooting for 1970 period-correct vintage authentic goodness and the best fit and finish that I could accomplish myself.”

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

The result is the gorgeous XS650 you see here, nicknamed “Bugsy” after James’s late, great Basset Hound, whose memory rides with him (check the handlebar sticker). James says riding the bike is like turning back the clock to a different era:

“It was made for me to keep and cruise my back roads and just remember when I was young and fearless. It is a very analog experience with a hard clutch pull and the drum brakes. A step back in time, but it is comfortable and agile. A little loud. But that is what we used to get away with.”

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

While the bike may look like a street tracker to some of us, James says it’s from a time before the term was in common parlance. Instead, they called these bikes scramblers after the off-road racing of the era:

“I call this bike a Scrambler. It has 18″ raised edge rims front and back and the TT pipes etc. In the old days before Motocross, the off-road closed course races were Scrambles.”

All in all, The Eggman’s XS650 scrambler is a stunning example of a bygone era, and one of our favorite stories we’ve ever featured. Hopefully it will inspire a few of the old-timers to recreate the machines of their youth, and our younger readers to lean into their own builds. Below, The Eggman himself gives us the full background of the build.

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler: In the Builder’s Words​

The History…​


I talked my parents into letting me buy an ancient 175 BSA Bantam two-stroke in 1969 when I was 14 years old. Soon, I was working at the Kawasaki Penton Husqvarna shop for $1.25 an hour and racing motocross in the very earliest days of the sport in America. Then I was a local champion for a couple years until a TM400 ate my knees and racing career.

James The Eggman Eckman

At the Suzuki shop — all the way up to $1.75 an hour — the service manager had a Triumph and another mechanic had a BSA, both built into the earliest versions of what would eventually be called Street Trackers. I thought they were the coolest thing ever, so I found a freshly wrecked Yamaha XS650 and built my own.



It was great fun and a nice bike but soon enough I was healed up enough to want to go racing again. So I bought a Champion frame from Gary Nixon and built the Yamaha into a storming 750 and went dirt track racing until more crashes made that not so much fun anymore.

The Build…​


So — I thought about that street bike for 50 years, wishing I had kept it. Last year I found a basket case pile of scrap for $200 and began the long process of finding the vintage things I knew I would need. I was shooting for 1970 period-correct vintage authentic goodness and the best fit and finish that I could accomplish myself. Great pains to find an ancient Bates solo seat and the Ceriani GP forks and such.

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

I carefully massaged the frame and found a Trackmaster type tank. The tank took a ton of work to put the old fashioned “Rib” down the middle and then carefully make it fit to the frame perfectly.

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

I grafted the old Bates dirt track pegs to the stock mounts, polished and nickel-plated all the controls with vintage rubber covers.

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

Found the old Donkey (dong) grips and Magura levers etc.

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

The motor was rebuilt and every piece of aluminum was massaged and polished. It made no sense to me to build a monster motor because I have no intention of storming around on this thing. It was made for me to keep and cruise my back roads and just remember when I was young and fearless.

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

It is a very analog experience with a hard clutch pull and the drum brakes. A step back in time, but it is comfortable and agile. A little loud. But that is what we used to get away with.

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

I want to mention the yellow stitching on the upholstery and carefully hidden wiring and electrics and no visible zip ties as some of the subtle details — the things that are not seen are important too.

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

I’m really happy with this build. Every nut and bolt, every detail, every styling cue and decision. I did everything myself except spray the paint and the nickel-plating. I’m pretty sure it is the last big build for me. It was a long time coming but very satisfying.

The Nickname…​


Bugsy is my old Basset Hound whose memory rides with me via a sticker on the handlebars. He was low and surprisingly agile and named after Dick Mann.

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

.

The Eggman…​


Back at the Suzuki shop, the guys with the cool British builds — everybody really — always had trouble with my last name: Eckman. If you recall, in the early 70’s, the Beatles were pretty big, so they labeled me Jimmy Eggman. And it certainly stuck like glue. To this day whenever I see the old timers, it’s “Hey Eggman!”

I call this bike a Scrambler. It has 18″ raised edge rims front and back and the TT pipes etc. In the old days before Motocross, the off-road closed course races were Scrambles. Nowadays Scramblers seem to be some kind of dual purpose street / farm road bikes. That’s not what I am talking about. (I also have a pet peeve with folks that put a fiberglass seat pan on these bikes and call it a street tracker, but I keep that to myself!)

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

So I mashed up The Eggman and the Scramblers and came up with my little shop logo and gave T-shirts to all my old buddies — to great delight!

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

The Inspiration…​


I’ve also included a photo of a very young Kenny Roberts on his Junior bike. This was an inspiration for sure. He absolutely put these bikes on the map. In my youth, he was certainly a hero figure.



Thanks very much for your time and interest.
The Eggman

Continue reading...
 
well slap my ass

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shows what i know about japanese motorcycles.
 
Period-Correct Goodness: 1970 Yamaha XS650 “Bugsy”

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

James “The Eggman” Eckman recreates the bike he sold 50 years ago…

Motocross arrived on American shores quite a bit later than some folks realize. Though the first European FIM championship was held in 1952, it wasn’t until the 1960s that figures like Edison Dye, Torsten Hallman, and Roger DeCoster brought the sport to the United States, and the first AMA Motocross Championship was held in 1972.

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

Recently we heard from Pennsylvania’s James “The Eggman” Eckman, a long-time racer who was there for the early days of the sport. In 1969, at the age of 14, he talked his parents into letting him buy an ancient BSA Bantam — and the rest was history:



James The Eggman Eckman

At that same shop, a couple of the mechanics had built their Triumphs and BSA’s into early versions of what we now call street trackers:



Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

James had to have one for himself, so he picked up a wrecked Yamaha XS650 and built himself one. He rode that bike until his body was healed up enough to go racing, and that XS650 scrambler / street tracker became a pure dirt tracker:



Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

He sold the bike when he was 17, and he’s regretted it ever since:



Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

So last year he picked up a $200 1970 XS650 basket case and got to work recreating the 650 scrambler / tracker of his youth, tracking down hard-to-find items like original Ceriani GP forks, Bates solo seat, Bates dirt track pegs, a Trackmaster-style tank, and more:



Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

The result is the gorgeous XS650 you see here, nicknamed “Bugsy” after James’s late, great Basset Hound, whose memory rides with him (check the handlebar sticker). James says riding the bike is like turning back the clock to a different era:



Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

While the bike may look like a street tracker to some of us, James says it’s from a time before the term was in common parlance. Instead, they called these bikes scramblers after the off-road racing of the era:



All in all, The Eggman’s XS650 scrambler is a stunning example of a bygone era, and one of our favorite stories we’ve ever featured. Hopefully it will inspire a few of the old-timers to recreate the machines of their youth, and our younger readers to lean into their own builds. Below, The Eggman himself gives us the full background of the build.

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler: In the Builder’s Words​

The History…​


I talked my parents into letting me buy an ancient 175 BSA Bantam two-stroke in 1969 when I was 14 years old. Soon, I was working at the Kawasaki Penton Husqvarna shop for $1.25 an hour and racing motocross in the very earliest days of the sport in America. Then I was a local champion for a couple years until a TM400 ate my knees and racing career.

James The Eggman Eckman

At the Suzuki shop — all the way up to $1.75 an hour — the service manager had a Triumph and another mechanic had a BSA, both built into the earliest versions of what would eventually be called Street Trackers. I thought they were the coolest thing ever, so I found a freshly wrecked Yamaha XS650 and built my own.



It was great fun and a nice bike but soon enough I was healed up enough to want to go racing again. So I bought a Champion frame from Gary Nixon and built the Yamaha into a storming 750 and went dirt track racing until more crashes made that not so much fun anymore.

The Build…​


So — I thought about that street bike for 50 years, wishing I had kept it. Last year I found a basket case pile of scrap for $200 and began the long process of finding the vintage things I knew I would need. I was shooting for 1970 period-correct vintage authentic goodness and the best fit and finish that I could accomplish myself. Great pains to find an ancient Bates solo seat and the Ceriani GP forks and such.

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

I carefully massaged the frame and found a Trackmaster type tank. The tank took a ton of work to put the old fashioned “Rib” down the middle and then carefully make it fit to the frame perfectly.

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

I grafted the old Bates dirt track pegs to the stock mounts, polished and nickel-plated all the controls with vintage rubber covers.

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

Found the old Donkey (dong) grips and Magura levers etc.

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

The motor was rebuilt and every piece of aluminum was massaged and polished. It made no sense to me to build a monster motor because I have no intention of storming around on this thing. It was made for me to keep and cruise my back roads and just remember when I was young and fearless.

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

It is a very analog experience with a hard clutch pull and the drum brakes. A step back in time, but it is comfortable and agile. A little loud. But that is what we used to get away with.

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

I want to mention the yellow stitching on the upholstery and carefully hidden wiring and electrics and no visible zip ties as some of the subtle details — the things that are not seen are important too.

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

I’m really happy with this build. Every nut and bolt, every detail, every styling cue and decision. I did everything myself except spray the paint and the nickel-plating. I’m pretty sure it is the last big build for me. It was a long time coming but very satisfying.

The Nickname…​


Bugsy is my old Basset Hound whose memory rides with me via a sticker on the handlebars. He was low and surprisingly agile and named after Dick Mann.

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

.

The Eggman…​


Back at the Suzuki shop, the guys with the cool British builds — everybody really — always had trouble with my last name: Eckman. If you recall, in the early 70’s, the Beatles were pretty big, so they labeled me Jimmy Eggman. And it certainly stuck like glue. To this day whenever I see the old timers, it’s “Hey Eggman!”

I call this bike a Scrambler. It has 18″ raised edge rims front and back and the TT pipes etc. In the old days before Motocross, the off-road closed course races were Scrambles. Nowadays Scramblers seem to be some kind of dual purpose street / farm road bikes. That’s not what I am talking about. (I also have a pet peeve with folks that put a fiberglass seat pan on these bikes and call it a street tracker, but I keep that to myself!)

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

So I mashed up The Eggman and the Scramblers and came up with my little shop logo and gave T-shirts to all my old buddies — to great delight!

Yamaha XS650 Scrambler

The Inspiration…​


I’ve also included a photo of a very young Kenny Roberts on his Junior bike. This was an inspiration for sure. He absolutely put these bikes on the map. In my youth, he was certainly a hero figure.



Thanks very much for your time and interest.
The Eggman

Continue reading...
Very nice looking 650! I come from a long history of class "C" myself, even though I have more experience with class "A" Speedway racing, it all stems from flat track. When I was in my 20's I met Frank Gillespie, who was National #22, then #76 during his years aboard a factory backed XR-750 until getting put into the fence at San Jose, causing him to loose his factory ride because of a broken femur. Before then he rode mostly Triumph's but did have a factory backed Norton for a while and he raced a few Yamaha twins, his most recent one was a C&J framed 750 that was raced by Dave Aldana before Frank got it, one of only two C&J framed Yamaha's ever built. Both were Aldana's if I'm not mistaken. Frank had a vision of me on that 750 to the point of having me on the bike while it was on the center stand, as he sat back in a lawn chair with his hand under his chin & saying; "perfect man, perfect! He was very into geometry and frame set up meant everything! Fortunately for the both of us, me especially, the dream of his protege that popped up out of nowhere, never went any farther, I'd have been killed I'm sure of, back then I was in a toxic relationship with a girlfriend that only would've gotten worse had I been going on tour racing motorcycles! I have been working on my own "street tracker" so to say for a few years now myself, using a 1972 TR6R Triumph 650 as the starting point. I prefer 19" over 18" on the front mostly because I am a couple years younger than "Eggman" so it's only natural for the time period, all flat tracker's we're using 19's by the late 70's with 18" rears. Just as I have going, the only thing not going is the bike itself, all due to a time out from cancer ( in remission now as far as I know) and my purchase of. 1974 T140V Bonniville 750, that was very close to a complete bike so I pointed my attention to it above the 650 build, winter is on me once again & not having the luxury of a garage, everything is covered up again outside, but given what I do know I'm confident that my late entry into "street tracker's" won't be a copy cat of anything else but the real deal, as I'm not as late in the game as it will appear to younger enthusiastic kids at least. I only hope it turns out even close to this beautiful machine, these are just a few photos.
 

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