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Kevin B

Bicycle Demolitionist
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Lehigh Acres, (Fort Myers) Florida
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This build has to start with a story . . .

In 1968 at age ten I attended my first auto race. It was at Golden Gate Speedway, a third of a mile pavement oval on what were then outskirts of Tampa, FL. That night I was smitten. I sat in the covered, wooden bleacher section just below the press box. Gordon Soley announced the race from the press box. Starter Johnny Hicks was in the flag stand just in front of me.

By ’68 you didn’t see many 1930s cars on the street. I was immediately captivated by the steel body coupes and sedan modifieds. The grandstands shook every time the pack went by; the covered grandstand accentuated the roar of the cars. The smell of burning rubber and alcohol fuel fumes permeated the air. I’d found gear head utopia. I became a life long gearhead after this night of racing.

The top class for the night were the modifieds. The modified feature was won handily by Dave Scarborough. He was known as “The Largo Flash,” (a town near Tampa) and later they called him the “Little General.” About the size of a jockey, he commanded respect being the modified champ in ’65, ’68, the sprint car champ and late model champ in ’70, He won the “Little 500” in Anderson Indiana (at the time the premier pavement sprint car race) in 1985 and placed high there several time. He was Late Model champ at Inverness in 1986 and also 1988, 1989, and 1990. Sprint car champ at Desoto in ’86.

People like this didn’t race for millions of dollars; they raced with heart for a few hundred dollars and the love of the sport.

After all of his daring on the track he died of cancer at age 74 in 2011.

Along the way, as I started slot car racing at large commercial tracks at Hobby Shops or home tracks with the smaller scales, I would run an orange colored #96 like the first car I saw Scarborough win in that night. I even painted my 20” muscle bike orange eventually.

Since I was recently gifted a good but faded Murray Westport I thought why not make one more orange #96.

Here are all the pictures I can find of the original car.
96 win.jpg

1968 cropped.jpg


Modifieds circa 1966 - Jim Riddle _75 races Les Goudy as _96 Dave Scarbrough watches___.jpg


1968 - Dave Scarborough was driving the Glazer-Campbell Modified and got a big hit this night ...jpg

This is my project bike, a gifted USA Murray Westport
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After conditioning the wheels and mounting new rubber and testing I discovered the fork was tweaked and set the wheel to a non-drive side lean. I could over come it with washers but I had another fork from a cheap Roadmaster Mtb.
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I tore the frame down completely and stripped it to bare metal. There were three colors on what was originally a maroon frame. The most recent color was silver.
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I'll post some more later today.
 
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love a good story behind a build and can see you are passionate about this, which makes this a story within a story, personally I don't get into tribute style builds but on the rare occasion my interest is peaked and this is one of them because I can see its personal to you about a sport and a person you have spent years from childhood watching and loving, good luck with your build
 
Continuation . . .

The bike had been hauled behind a diesel RV for a few seasons and was covered in soot. You could barely tell the wheels were chrome. I used diesel to wash all that off and then the wheels came back to nearly new.

I thought the Person seat looked 60's but it had a spring mount problem. It was opened up, repaired and painted. Now it looks great.

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The headtube had to be cut about 3/8" before I was happy with enough of the threads revealed on the replacement fork's steerer. For the job I used a belt sander and file. Just worked slowly and took a little off both ends.
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After two coats of flat white primer the bike received two coats of gloss orange and two coats of high gloss clear.
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I hope I haven't overhyped this bike. Basically, I made it a bare bones, low gear, short trip bike that probably will never be finished.

I went with Scarborough's nickname "Little General," because it seemed best. "The Largo Flash" was geographically limited and I didn't want to use his name. Found a couple of the small flags like those given to racers for feature wins. I retained the original chain guard because the rounded shape hints at the rounded coupe panels.
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One simple thing I liked so much I think it will become a trademark to my builds was the rear chain guard mount. I put a 1/4-20 SS bolt through the dropout from the inside and followed that with a thin "lock" nut. This gave me a stud to hang the guard on when mounting it. I find it very secure and it holds it while you line up the front. I used an SS acorn nut and washer for the guard attachment. Murray pulled it to the drop out from the outside and it bent the guard from the factory. I straightened it and the stud method eliminates the bending.
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The seat mount used a 5/16" shoulder bolt which seems much better than the seat bolts with a single spline. I upgraded this and all hardware I could to SS.
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The knobbies (above) were the only non whitewall tires I had. Eventually I will put some type of pavement tires on it. Probably a Duro semi-slick.

To be continued . . .
 
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love a good story behind a build and can see you are passionate about this, which makes this a story within a story, personally I don't get into tribute style builds but on the rare occasion my interest is peaked and this is one of them because I can see its personal to you about a sport and a person you have spent years from childhood watching and loving, good luck with your build
Thanks. There is so much more to this story (The racing part), I'm really trying to be brief.
 
The original bars were flaking badly. The best cruiser bars I had were 7/8. The only 7/8 stem I had was this one. It was blue and later black. I stripped it to bare metal and polished it. Not sure if it is pot metal or aluminum. It polished up nice.
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I wanted something on the headtube. After a lot of thought I ordered silver vinyl reading "MODIFIED." Murray painted those headset cups with the frame. Not having any chrome ones, I stripped these and clear coated them.

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Here is the progress overall so far. New tire, new seat post, SS hardware, complete rebuild. Took it on its' maiden voyage with a riding buddy last evening. It is smooth and nimble even on the knobbies.
Main.jpg

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Factory gearing was 19x46. I have a 20T rear cog I think I'll put on it. I'm going for quick not cruise here.

With the 1969 season the track was transitioning from modifieds to sprints. Scarborough's car owner started campaigning the #11 sprint car with Dave at the wheel. A few years later as a teenager I told someone in the Campbell family (owner) that I really missed the #96 coupe. They told me #11 was basically the same car. If you look carefully you can see these were not beefed up frame jalopys. The photo in my initial post with body damage reveals a Frankland quick change rear end (same as sprint cars). You also can see it has a tubular frame, fuel cell and in the cockpit there is an engine turned sprint car shaped dash with what appears to be a sprint car wind screen.

The switch to sprint cars let you observe the drivers manipulating the weight jack control, engaging the in and out box (no tranny) at the push off (no starter, no battery, just a magneto) and working the wheel. The sprint car drivers usually wore face protection like a leather stone guard or bandana. You can see a stone guard on the driver on the inside in my first post. Scarborough usually wore a red bandana with his open faced helmet until they switched to full face helmets.

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Matti gave me an idea for another connection to Scarborough. In one of Matti's posts he had a bandana tied around his stem. I'm investigating ways to tie a bandana as if it were in "bandit" shape.

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This is the beginning of what I planned to be a clean simple build. I have some mini apes I may try. I'd love to engine turn the clamp of the stem.

The graphics are not there yet.
1. Not real happy with "Little General." May go with "Old 96" later, I get my chain guard graphics for $4.95 shipped.
2. Also, I may try to do a 1/8" white pinstripe around the chain guard taking a que from the original #96.
3. This is an inspection sticker the cars had to have. I'd like to reduce it to 1 1/2" square and have it made in vinyl. It would go on the seat tube.
Tampa FL Golden Gate Speedway.jpg


Something tells me #96 will never be completed, that's the fun of it.
 
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Tried a Bontrager seat I picked up on a bike I scrapped or something. This type of seat is not for me. Back to the Persons but with a stainless steel replacement clamp bolt and etc.

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Little details, painted this enormous kickstand clamp to match the frame and it made for a much cleaner appearance. The old cadmium plating or what ever it was made it really stick out. Also replaced the odd Wald original Murray BB cones with Sun BB cones as shown. Old Cones

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After a post Wildcat started I made some temporary hub shiners to get the hubs in order. He was right (As per usual) about making them wider than the weight. Wildcat's post
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Finally on this update. There was a newer 20T KT rear cog in my parts. Tried fitting it but it wobbled under the O- ring too much. I would want to shim it or something before I used it. I doubt going from 19 to 20 would make a huge difference.
 
I like your build, but the story was good to read as I know someone from Largo that was into racing down here then also. Good ol dude had great stories of Tampa and Bradenton.
 
I like your build, but the story was good to read as I know someone from Largo that was into racing down here then also. Good ol dude had great stories of Tampa and Bradenton.
There are some really good web sites that chronicle Florida motorsports. I'm glad you like the history. I realise this build is mostly important to me but I had to share it.

My dad was a Hillsborough co.detective but he worked security at the races on the weekends. It paid better than police pay at the time and I got free admission too. Sometimes he would work the Golden Gate oval track Friday and Saturday. Then he would work the drag races after church on Sunday. I guess I was destined to be a race fan. I sure am glad.
 
I'm going to try these mini apes for a while. I think they balance out the height of the seat when the bike is fit for me. They give me more cockpit room too and also seem o make it steer with a quicker feel. That is the original stem and it has a 1" clamp.

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Regardless of which bars I eventually go with I will use these grips. Not sure where I got them but I like the look and feel of them.

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the bike looks great ATM, the story was cool too.
Have you considered a fatter rear tyre and a smaller profiled skinny tyre in the front! to try for the muscle styled speedway look! and maybe even a low slung set of bars to add to the speedy look! just a thought! you did say built for speed and not cruiser.
Great direction with this one though!
 
Yes, in the future the plan is to do just that with the tires. It was just I had these black wall knobbies to get it rolling.

I may flip some cruiser bars and try it. Normally I like to be vertical, but as you pointed out this is for quick runs.
 
maybe even a low slung set of bars to add to the speedy look! just a thought! you did say built for speed and not cruiser.
I tried flipping the bars and putting a seat way down. The look is great but it was super uncomfortable to ride. To do this I would have to be like Harry Campbell who owned and wrenched on #96 and find a small guy like Scarborough to ride it.:)
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Cropped.jpg

Resized.jpg
 
The knobbies were always going to be temporary, they were only black wall tires I had in 26" .559. I ordered a smaller (1.75) street tread front and semi slick Duro (2.125) rear.
I like this, it even makes the stance seems better.
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I thought about a GT 2.5 slick rear but this 2.125 really fills up the frame.
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Also, DEAL ALERT on the front tire. It is a 26: x 1.75

Kujo One0One Urban/Commuter Wire Bead Tire $11.75​

I got it at Amazon for just $11.75. I think a pair of these on a cruiser would really reduce rolling resistance.

6144LFfRN3L._AC_SX679_.jpg
 
Also, DEAL ALERT on the front tire. It is a 26: x 1.75

Kujo One0One Urban/Commuter Wire Bead Tire $11.75​

I got it at Amazon for just $11.75. I think a pair of these on a cruiser would really reduce rolling resistance.

View attachment 226489
Good deal 👍

They have a 20" comp III copy that is also only $11. Ordered 4 just to have
 
Lol, I bought a pair of 26 tires like that years ago because this price was so good. I still haven't put them on anything, I can't bring myself to run something that skinny! Maybe Duck Norris will get the speedster treatment
 

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