Hello! I'm completely inspired by what I've seen here but I need some guidance (brief personal history below). Basically what I'm looking for are the unwritten rules within the Rat Rod bike culture. CLEARLY there are no actual rules. But I'm guessing there are some boundaries way out on the edges. Sort of... "That looks cool but it's generally not done that way."
To be clear I'm not talking about the Build Off. Those rules are pretty straight forward. But within the RR culture, is there anything that's kinda frowned upon?
For example:
If I find a 1950's classic that's intact but really beat up, in general, would I attempt to rebuild it to its original specs, or harvest its parts for other projects? I'm a guitar guy. If I found a 1958 Fender Stratocaster I would restore it and never use it for parts.
Or...
If I find a new model beater and completely redo it: new paint, fenders, add a tank, cover it in fur. Would that be like taking a 2002 Corolla and adding hydraulics, undercarriage lights and spinner rims? Interesting but, why?
I'm not sure if I'm asking my question right.
About me. Born in '68. Escaped Hollywood after 20+ years with my soul intact (barely). Now I'm a video technician to pay the bills and a Rockabilly Guitar player still chasing the Rock and Roll dream. I'm a DYI'er and I've done everything from repair the dishwasher and washing machine to replace a broken floor tile in the bathroom and done repairs on my guitars. I have an ever growing set of tools and rarely get a project done with fewer than three trips to Home Depot.
Thanks!
To be clear I'm not talking about the Build Off. Those rules are pretty straight forward. But within the RR culture, is there anything that's kinda frowned upon?
For example:
If I find a 1950's classic that's intact but really beat up, in general, would I attempt to rebuild it to its original specs, or harvest its parts for other projects? I'm a guitar guy. If I found a 1958 Fender Stratocaster I would restore it and never use it for parts.
Or...
If I find a new model beater and completely redo it: new paint, fenders, add a tank, cover it in fur. Would that be like taking a 2002 Corolla and adding hydraulics, undercarriage lights and spinner rims? Interesting but, why?
I'm not sure if I'm asking my question right.
About me. Born in '68. Escaped Hollywood after 20+ years with my soul intact (barely). Now I'm a video technician to pay the bills and a Rockabilly Guitar player still chasing the Rock and Roll dream. I'm a DYI'er and I've done everything from repair the dishwasher and washing machine to replace a broken floor tile in the bathroom and done repairs on my guitars. I have an ever growing set of tools and rarely get a project done with fewer than three trips to Home Depot.
Thanks!