Monday 23 May 2011

Five years in the making



I see in nearly five years the sign has changed as well!

And a few headaches along the way!

2006, it was cold, I was wet, 200 miles covered on a bike that I later found out shouldn't have made it out of Devon, let alone get back to Surrey, and then to East London for a service! Those good old days! When I was daft, slightly slimmer, slightly more in control of my sanity and just about had some hair! The Monster was bought with one aim in mind; "get me to the Isle of Wight for a holiday and last the two weeks I'm there for!" It was a strange idea, one born out of madness probably! I owned a 1997 Alfa Romeo GTV at the time and working out the cost of getting the car over to the island nearly scared me, so I decided to buy a bike! Save on the ferry crossing, and try to have some fun!

Looking back at that idea now... God what was I thinking! To save about £100 on a ferry crossing, I spent out (in the first few months) £1300 for the bike, then another £2000 on getting it repaired!! I must have been working for a bank at this time!! Would I go back in time and change that idea? No!

As the magazines are having an Il Mostro revival (The Monster for those not knowing Italian speak), and especially when you think the Ducati Monster has now been around for 18 years! Nearly as long as the Fireblade! Nowhere near as long as the Gixer, but the Monster invented a whole new style of motorcycle.

A parts bin special, the Monster was bit from bits of Supersports, Superlights and any other bits and pieces in boxes at Borgo Panigale. 18 years on, it is still Ducatis best selling bike! Back to my old, and not forgetting original Monster.

I've now owned her for nearly five years. Yes five years of riding, abusing, blowing it up, rebuilding, and more abusing! In the five years, I've done about 20,000 miles on her, and apart from breaking two of the four rear cylinder studs, and a few other temperamental Ducati problems, she has been fun! A bike that in five years, still is a pleasure to ride. Still feels like part of me, still puts a big grin on my face and not forgetting, sounds like the Apocalypse is arriving into a town near you, just on tickover!

Now I've spent over £7500 on her, and she is slowly becoming the Monster I want. There are some more jobs on the horizon, getting a full respray for the tank and seat hump, wheels to be finished off, a bit of tidying up on the wiring, new seat cover and then she'll be close to completion!

Would I sell her? No! She is part of me, she is too precious to sell now! A 1993 904cc Monster, a classic, the best of the Monsters as she is the original that sparked the rest of the "Il Mostro" clan!

Don't forget, they also saved Ducati!


What ever happened to this bike?


Well, she changed a bit in five years!


Taken December 2006


Taken July 2011

Just a small amount of changes in five years!

Thursday 5 May 2011

Daftness and gadgets

After the Bank Holiday weekends fun I decided to go shopping.



The 'Tunnel Monsters' in London

A few fellow Ducati owners decided on a Tunnel Run, and apart from a bit of bad timing for the run, it was a good crack to get out, ride through some tunnels with 20 plus other Ducatis! It all finished up with (soft) drinks at a café in Soho.

So, back to my spending spree. As I used to dabble in a bit of photography, I decided, well, I decided years ago to buy one but just never got round to finally taking the plunge! I bought myself a Dogcam Bullet HD camera.



It's a teeny weeny thing, and fits nicely onto the Monsters trellis frame.







Armed on a mission this evening to catch up with a trailer at South Mimms truck stop, I decided tonight was a good night to try out the camera. Well, after a f**k up on my part as I couldn't remember if I turned it on so I ended up with 20 minutes of footage from a petrol station, whilst I was filling up the bike, 10 minutes of sitting at a roundabout whilst I was on the phone to a customer and 5 minutes of sitting in the truck stop.

Finally I worked out what I was doing and got 20 minutes of my ride back to the secret West London workshop!



Apart from a few problems, myself being the main one! The camera is good. Easy to use, quality is good, sound is ok as well bearing in mind my bike is a quiet thing! Now, as summer has near disappeared, the camera will no doubt not pop out much. Once I get the hang of the editing lark, all will be fine!!