I suppose the name for the tank right now is 'Concept' considering that I don't even know what the final shape will be!
I'm liking the fork on the bike but looks can be deceiving.
First off, I know from experience that extending the trail this dramatically will make riding it very wonky. Like many custom bikes, it will
not be a 'go to' bike for any normal riding.
The other thing is the fork itself. If any of you are familiar with this type of springer, you will notice that the spring alignment is vey mucked up.
Just look a the picture below and you'll clearly see the problem. The black dotted line shows the design failure. The top of the fork should have been longer so that the pivot bolts would line up with the center line of the spring bolt. Look how badly the rubber bushing is distorted after forcing the parts together on the bike.
I wondered about this photo from the feEbay listing before I bought it. Look how low the spring bracket is on the steer tube! I just assumed that the steer tube was extra long for whatever reason and would have to be cut off.
I'm guessing that all of these Chinese springers are this way. Now I have another project ahead of me; fixing the crappy design on a brand new fork!
And in case you are wondering, it has nothing to do with this being a 20" girls bike. I double checked the head tube measurement against a 26" Schwinn mens bike and they are exactly the same.
Hmm. Maybe that's the problem now that I'm thinking about it. Is it possible that Schwinn head tubes for 26" bikes are longer than normal?
Hopefully someone who has had success using these forks can chime in!