Cafe Racer Magazine

Low Bars...High Performance!

 

Home

Magazine Subscriptions

Back Issues

Bike Shows

Special Offers

Cafe Society Documentary

Custom Bike Projects

Gallery I

Gallery II

Gallery III

Gallery IV

Gallery V

Gallery VI

Gallery VII

Gallery VIII

Gallery IX

Gallery X

Gallery XI

Gallery XII

gallery XIII

Gallery XIV

gallery XV

T-Shirts!

Links

feedback

Ken Hurley's fine Thruxton caff racer sports alloy, old-school fenders, Lyta tank with side-panel graphics and upswept reverse megas. Mega, indeed!
From Swede Kent Fingal comes this way-fast Rickman street racer, replete with early Lockheed disc brakes, Kawasaki green colors and Com-Star rims. Meatball holder is cleverly hidden...
Home-brew builder Jason Kern is understandably proud of his low-buck, high-lustre Honda CB 750.
If you ever think you've got problems finding cafe racer parts, consider Mr. Lim of Butterworth, Maylasia who keeps his daily-runner Norton Atlas on the road.
Brit bike fan Harry Capper sent us this tasty Triton made from a '61 Wideline featherbed chassis and a '59 Thunderbird mill with 750cc Morgo kit. Lovely!
Philadelphia's Adam Cramer sent in this cool little BSA single off-roader transformed into a cafe racer. Great detail work!
We're very much impressed with the work of John Garcia at Denver's Love and Polish who creates bitchin' custom streetbikes like this Honda CB 400T.
Japanese cafe customs are rare in tradition-bound England which is why Andy Harrison's Honda stands out even at the Ace!
Russ Parker's XS 650 Yammie looks as British as beans on toast, thanks to some inventive custom work.
Own a cafe racer or spotted one you think should be on display on our Website? Send us an e-mail (jpegs only and no smaller than 1 MB each) to rockersrule@caferacermag.com and we'll check it out. All images are sole property of caferacermag.com except in cases where  we stole them from someone else. Reproduce them and we will ride noisy motorcycles to your home and drink all your beer. Hic. Burp!