
Bill Mize, the owner of this "fine" early-style chopper is one of those guys who just has his finger on the pulse. You might not suspect this from a guy who calls Sioux City, Iowa, his home, it not being an epicenter for cutting-edge custom motorcycle culture, but Bill's always had a knack for knowing what's cool, usually long before the masses. Bill is a lifelong skateboarder, and in the '70s when most people were doing handstands to the Beach Boys, Bill was down with Dogtown-vibe Bert slides and Black Sabbath. He was punk rock before people had even heard the term. He's raced BMX bikes, held an AMA Expert road-racing license (and used it), been a competitive triathalete, raced road bikes (bicycles this time) in Europe and Mexico, and if that's not enough he somehow found the time to dial in a perfect '50s pad (as in house) and build an impressive stable of rides over the years, including a few trendsetting Sportsters and a couple of hot rods for good measure. All this by the age of 45.
Most people would rest on their laurels after all this activity and comfortably slide into old age, but Bill figured it would be a good time to start racing mountain bikes and to build another chopper - which brings us to the bike you see here. When it comes to bikes, Bill is quick to give styling credit to the early bikes of the local legends, the El Forasteros Motorcycle Club. In his words, "Their worst bikes were cooler than anything we'll ever build."

Bill started this project by purchasing a complete running '55 Panhead. The bike was clean and functionally sound, but in it's '80s-style guise complete with disc brake, Wide Glide, and Fat Bob-style tanks, not at all what Bill was looking for in his personal ride. The first order of the day was to strip everything down to the bare frame. The "save" pile consisted of the motor, transmission, and straight-leg frame, all of which showed to be '55 vintage, possibly that way since birth. The "sell" pile consisted of... well, everything else. A Harley VL springer with later-model front legs was modified with a 1-inch stem and mated to the '55 frame. Sun aluminum rims in 18-inch and 21-inch were laced via Buchanan's stainless steel spokes to an original star hub out back and a swap meet spool hub up front. The rims were shod with a vintage Pirelli 400x18 and a genuine Avon 2.75x21 rubber, respectively. Next, a new old stock Wassel accessory gas tank was mounted along with a new old stock English ribbed fender.
Tom Fugle handled the upholstery chores covering the original Bates solo seat in old-style leather and stitch as well as whipping up one of his custom, tiny pillion pads. Bill mounted passenger pegs made from cut-up Sportster pegs with ball bearings welded to the ends; after all, no self-respecting chopper pilot can own a bike that he can't put a chick on, in this case the chick being Bill's lovely wife, Mollie.

Exhaust chores are handled by vintage Superior pipes and mufflers. That's right: mufflers. You should try it sometime. Rounding out the accessory list is a set of Flanders bars mounted to risers of unknown origin; a Barnett throttle twists the wick. The sissy bar is a modified swap meet item and a homemade shift lever stirs the four-speed trans through the time-honored rachet lid top. As we stated before, the motor and transmission were basically stock and in good working order to begin with, so Bill left them alone except for the addition of solid lifters, a Roth carb cover to keep the birds out, and a 1-1/2-inch beltdrive behind a stock primary cover.