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 <title>new products</title>
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 <title>Progress and new products</title>
 <link>http://www.wolfpub.com/articles/blog/progress-and-new-products-0757</link>
 <description>&lt;strong&gt;A Day Late and a Dollar Short&lt;/strong&gt;
&lt;span class=&quot;inline left&quot;&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;http://www.wolfpub.com/articles/files/images/AdvTattoosmall.jpg&quot; alt=&quot;Tatoo Book&quot; title=&quot;Tatoo Book&quot; class=&quot;image preview&quot; height=&quot;302&quot; width=&quot;226&quot;&gt;&lt;/span&gt;Shame on me, I&#039;m at least 4 weeks late with this blog, but I have good excuses.
Excuse #1 - We&#039;ve overhauled the web site.
Though it may look much the same, the web site contains new features and is very different under the surface. The software used to create our old site was out of date, so Steve created what you see here, complete with a tech section, a clip from our first DVD (How to Build a Bobber) and a shopping cart for ordering. The new software makes it easier for us to make changes in-house, without the need to send all the information and photos to the web master. Speaking of web masters, I have to thank Steve Delmont for all his work creating a new site that looks at first much like our old site.

&lt;strong&gt;Excuse #2 the New Tattoo book&lt;/strong&gt;
We have just finished our first Tattoo book: Advanced Tattoo Art. Based on our &quot;art of&quot; format, the new book, written and photographed by Doug Mitchel, follows ten tattoo artists as they work through the process, from the concept to the finished tattoo. As always, each chapter includes an interview with the tattoo artist so you can find out what makes his or her work special, how they became a tattoo artist and what kind of tools and techniques they prefer. The format makes for a very colorful book, with well over 500 color images spread across 144 pages. The design works both to teach in a how-to fashion, and entertain. Advanced Tattoo Art is in stock and sells for $24.95 + S&amp;H.

&lt;strong&gt;Excuse #3 the New Pinstripe book&lt;/strong&gt;
The format we used for the Tattoo book is the same one we used for the new Pinstripe book, which goes to the printer shortly. The book includes work of well-known masters like Jon Kosmoski and Steve Wizard, as well as some undiscovered artists like Mark Peters. The book will be available later this fall, look for more information in  the next blog.

Both books utilize over 500 color images that show each operation from the first sketch to the finished art work, whether the art work  is done on human skin or a steel motorcycle tank.

&lt;strong&gt;Road Trips&lt;/strong&gt;
My favorite road trip of the year is the one that takes me roughly 700 miles west to the little city &lt;span class=&quot;inline right&quot;&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;http://www.wolfpub.com/articles/files/images/sturgisbestsmall.jpg&quot; alt=&quot;&quot; title=&quot;&quot; class=&quot;image preview&quot; height=&quot;179&quot; width=&quot;240&quot;&gt;&lt;/span&gt;of Sturgis, South Dakota. For me it&#039;s ten or eleven hours in my truck with the trailer behind. My  excuse for not riding is the camera equipment and the books I take for various vendors, and the fact that the calendar shoots we do (more later) often require trailering the long Perewitz-built customs up to the top of some small mountain so we can park the bike in front of the perfect Black Hills vista.

This year we discovered some new vistas and backgrounds on the ranch owned by Kim Kling. The Kling family runs the Stone House Saloon on Highway 34 west of Belle Fourche. Years ago we used the stone house as a backdrop for the calendar and over the years we&#039;ve become friends. Kim, Chris and crew always give us the run of the Saloon and, this year, the ranch nearby.

So at sunrise on Wednesday of Rally week, I hooked up with David and Scott, two hard-working Cycle Fab employees. We spent the next five hours moving four motorcycles into various positions on Kim&#039;s ranch. Grunting heavy motorcycles across the prairie and up and down rock formation, all the while wondering if there were any rattle snakes nearby. For lunch we had bottled water from the cooler and peanut and jelly sandwiches. It turned out to be worth it in the end. Usually we only get one or two photo shoots done per day, so to get four done &quot;at once&quot; was a great leap forward. As always, I&#039;m grateful to the crew from the Stone House Saloon for all their help.

By the end of the week we&#039;d managed to shoot &lt;span class=&quot;inline right&quot;&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;http://www.wolfpub.com/articles/files/images/triumph2007sm.jpg&quot; alt=&quot;&quot; title=&quot;&quot; class=&quot;image preview&quot; height=&quot;178&quot; width=&quot;240&quot;&gt;&lt;/span&gt;nine Perewitz creations for the 2007 Sturgis Best Calendar which is available on our web site for the first time. We are also making our Triumph Calendar available for sale direct from the web site for the first time. Both calendars are currently in stock.

&lt;strong&gt;Personal Projects&lt;/strong&gt;
It could only happen to me. What I really needed to finish the engine assembly for the old Henry J was an oil pan. So I brought one home earlier in the year, had it repaired and painted—and found out it didn&#039;t fit. At this point I don&#039;t know if I somehow picked up a DeSoto oil pan or just what the hell happened. Maybe I can have it pinstriped and hang it on the wall.

Anyway, Neal Letouneau is fabricating me an oil pan from pieces as I write this, so with any luck I can finish assembling the engine and get it back in the chassis. Which will free up some garage space so I can park inside this winter (what a concept).

In the meantime we are trying to get in a few late season rides. Like yesterday when Mary and I took the 250 soft-tail up to Osceola,  Wisconsin for the one-day car and bike show hosted by Motorbooks, the  company that distributes our books to the big chain stores. After looking over everything from a 1924 Royal Enfield to a 2006 Lamborghini we said goodbye to friends and made our way down a series of winding two-lanes to Prescott, Wisconsin and one of our favorite watering holes. Muddy Waters has a huge deck on the backside, overlooking the St. Croix River where it meets the Mississippi.  Before long we were having a nice conversation with Mike and Terry, a local couple and owners of a late-model Fat Boy. All too soon it was time to be responsible and head for home along the Minnesota side of the St. Croix, on one of my favorite pieces of asphalt. It doesn&#039;t get much better than rolling past the wallowing four wheelers, listening to the bark of the pipes. Those speed limit signs are just a suggestion anyway.

Rides like this bring an extra level of enjoyment because those of us who live in the great white north know that before long our bikes  will be hidden away in garages and shops, waiting for the return of  warm weather.






</description>
 <category domain="http://www.wolfpub.com/articles/taxonomy/term/12">new products</category>
 <category domain="http://www.wolfpub.com/articles/taxonomy/term/13">progress</category>
 <category domain="http://www.wolfpub.com/articles/taxonomy/term/17">road trip</category>
 <pubDate>Mon, 09 Oct 2006 15:29:49 -0700</pubDate>
 <dc:creator>Tim</dc:creator>
 <guid isPermaLink="false">57 at http://www.wolfpub.com/articles</guid>
</item>
<item>
 <title>Progress and New Products</title>
 <link>http://www.wolfpub.com/articles/blog/progress-and-new-products-0722</link>
 <description>&lt;span class=&quot;inline left&quot;&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;/articles/files/images/oldskool_lg_0.jpg&quot; alt=&quot;oldschoolbobbercropped&quot; title=&quot;oldschoolbobbercropped&quot; class=&quot;image preview&quot; height=&quot;302&quot; width=&quot;226&quot;&gt;&lt;/span&gt;The good news: The How to Build a Bobber book is finally at the printer,and we should have finished copies ready to ship by July 5th. Like allour books, this one was a long hard pull, but we can finally put itbehind us. In addition to three assembly sequences that author Kevin Baas did with his high school shop class, there are chapters on things like Frames, Engines and Choosing the Best Primary, 144 pages of Bobber-Building advice from Kevin Baas.

Kevin is hard-core old skool, so the book is mostly Pans and Shovels,with a few Knuckles (and Evos) thrown in for good measure. Once again,it&#039;s amazing what people are manufacturing so that the rest of us canbuild some really cool old two-wheeled hot rods. Things like a 120-inchKnucklehead. An old design with a modern left side case and sprocket shaft, which makes it easy to mate the oversized motor with a modern primary, clutch and transmission.

Of course, if what you want is a genuine Panhead with a real four-speed,there are plenty of ways to do that as well. The aftermarket makes wish-bone and straight leg frames with narrow back ends and conservative dimensions. And eBay has plenty of listings for genuine old H-D parts, though experts in the field tell me prices are definitely on the rise.
If an old-skool Bobber is like an itch that just won&#039;t go away, this book will definitely help you scratch that itch.

&lt;strong&gt;The TV deal&lt;/strong&gt;
We were on TV again recently. Specifically, on Speed TV during Mike Corbin&#039;s Ride-On show, May 16th. Being somewhat shy by nature, it&#039;s hard to watch myself on TV. The reviews, from friends at least, are good. So this is a good thing, right? Looking back at my sometimes miss-spentyouth, I gotta say: &quot;who would&#039;ve thunk it?&quot; Back in the day when I was putting ball joints in a Chevy or a clutch in a Saab, I sure wasn&#039;t thinking about publishing books or promoting those books on TV. More likely I was thinking about the women walking through the shop, or how long until I could get a tall cool one at the local watering hole. Perhaps what&#039;s most interesting about my publishing venture is not the publishing itself but all the places it&#039;s taken me.

And one of those places is into new relationships. In this case it&#039;s a relationship with a man I&#039;ve known for years, Keith Ball from Bikernet.com. We&#039;ve agreed to become a sponsor on Bikernet, which means Keith will display our logo and provide a link with our web page. Bikernet will also provide information on Wolfgang Publications and Wolfgang products. Keith will also display a monthly tech article that we provide.

&lt;strong&gt;Projects&lt;/strong&gt;
For summer entertainment I have the blue 250 soft-tail bike. In fact, I was entertaining myself, and anyone else nearby, the other day and had a little mishap. Seems the starter button stuck, but as the engine caught I was too busy ripping out of the parking lot to notice. &lt;span class=&quot;inline right&quot;&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;/articles/files/images/primary_0.jpg&quot; alt=&quot;chain with border&quot; title=&quot;chain with border&quot; class=&quot;image preview&quot; height=&quot;167&quot; width=&quot;208&quot;&gt;&lt;/span&gt;I did notice when the motor went &quot;CLUNK&quot; and quit. If you haven&#039;t had a starter drive assembly out lately, the drive is supported by a larger bushing in the inner primary. In my case the drive was supported in this fashion for a couple of blocks. Long enough that the spinning drive spun the bushing out of the bore in the inner primary (where it belongs) and into a tight spot between the clutch hub and the inner primary (where it doesn&#039;t). The bad news includes the embarrassing call to Mary to come and pick me up, and the fear that I&#039;d done something really BAD and really EXPENSIVE. The story does include good news, however. First, a couple of bikers stopped to see if they could help. Second, I didn&#039;t break anything expensive. After a complete disassembly I cleaned everything up, installed a new bushing in the inner primary (with green Loctite), some new seals and reassembled the whole shebang. No new starter or drive assembly and no new transmission shaft or clutch hub. What&#039;s that old line: it&#039;s better to be lucky than good?</description>
 <category domain="http://www.wolfpub.com/articles/taxonomy/term/12">new products</category>
 <category domain="http://www.wolfpub.com/articles/taxonomy/term/13">progress</category>
 <pubDate>Tue, 20 Jun 2006 22:00:00 -0700</pubDate>
 <dc:creator>Tim</dc:creator>
 <guid isPermaLink="false">22 at http://www.wolfpub.com/articles</guid>
</item>
<item>
 <title>New Products: A New Book From Vince Goodeve</title>
 <link>http://www.wolfpub.com/articles/blog/new-products-new-book-vince-goodeve-0738</link>
 <description>&lt;span class=&quot;inline left&quot;&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;/articles/files/images/airbrushtech_lg_0.jpg&quot; alt=&quot;airbrush&quot; title=&quot;airbrush&quot; class=&quot;image preview&quot; height=&quot;302&quot; width=&quot;226&quot;&gt;&lt;/span&gt;I first met Vince Goodeve on a photo shoot for American Iron Magazine some six or seven years ago. Vince, Bob McKay and I rode from Spearfish, South Dakota, to the neat little town of Rochford twenty miles off Highway 385 between Deadwood/Lead and Cheyenne Crossing. We spent the morning shooting two of Bob&#039;s bikes, both decorated with phenomenal Vince Goodeve graphics. The little town, population 26, provides a wealth of photo opportunities, as well as cold beer from the General Store when you&#039;re done. Between then and now, Vince and I became friends and collaborators. Vince contributed to our earlier Airbrush book: Airbrush Art, How to Secrets From the Masters. Based on that association we decided to do Vince&#039;s own book. Thus I&#039;m pleased to announce the release of Professional Airbrush Techniques, the Work of Vince Goodeve. This new book is based on a series of start-to-finish airbrush projects shot in Vince&#039;s shop with help from his wife Lisa. Professional Airbrush Techniques is Vince&#039;s personal spin on airbrushing and color theory. In putting the book together we tried hard to retain all the little &quot;Vince-isms&quot; so it would retain his personal touch, and more important, his huge enthusiasm for anything having to do with paint. The book is coming off press now and will be available by the time you read this.


&lt;strong&gt;Travel&lt;/strong&gt;
As a young motorcycle enthusiast, there were only three motorcycle events: Sturgis, Daytona and Laconia. So far I&#039;ve been to Sturgis almost twenty times and Daytona fifteen. Other than a couple of trips to Laughlin I&#039;ve haven&#039;t tried out many of the newer events, until last week that is. For years now, people advised us to skip Daytona and go to Myrtle Beach instead. Their reasoning ranged from better weather to nicer cops, cheaper hotels, better riding and nicer locals. Now that we&#039;ve spent the last week along the beach of South Carolina, I&#039;d have to agree on at least two counts. We did have rain, but mostly at night after we&#039;d returned to the hotel. As for the cops, I&#039;ve apparently reached that age where I don&#039;t have much trouble with the cops. Geeze, it&#039;s been three years since I had a speeding ticket. More significantly, we did not hear the horror stories about overzealous cops that are so common in Daytona. And while not exactly cheap, our hotel was slightly less expensive than the hotels in Daytona. The riding is nicer, if you take the time to get away from Myrtle Beach proper and check out the countryside. As promised, the locals are friendly, though as the Myrtle Beach event grows and grows some of their enthusiasm for bikers may be worn away by the crowds, the traffic, and the noise. Speaking of noise, I spent parts of two evenings sitting out in front of our motel, along Ocean Boulevard (which could be called motel row), watching the parade of bikes going by. As I sat there talking with friends, three things came to mind: First, there are more and more young riders, many on Busas and Ninjas, at what we often think of as &quot;Harley&quot; events. Second, the neon light thing is in full bloom, on bikes of all makes and even some four-wheelers. Third, the bikes, primarily the V-twins, are louder than they ever were. Before you accuse me of getting older (an undeniable fact) consider: there are more bikes on the road than ever before, the motors are bigger, the compression is higher and the pipes are straighter. My own bikes are not exactly quiet. I&#039;m simply suggesting that the issue has reached some kind of threshold where if we don&#039;t deal with the problem ourselves someone else will. Knowledgeable people in the aftermarket industry have even suggested that the proposed EPA rules regarding home-built bikes were initiated, at least in part, by people in power getting pissed off by the VERY LOUD motorcycles passing them on the highway and roaring past their houses and vacation homes. It reminds me of the shirt my friend Mikey had made, it reads: Loud Pipes Cause Helmet Laws.

&lt;strong&gt;Projects chain&lt;/strong&gt;
Projects like hot rods and motorcycles, and worries about pending legislation, have taken a back seat to work lately. Spring is often busy at Wolfgang, but it&#039;s especially frantic this year as we struggle to produce more than double our standard quota of new books. &lt;span class=&quot;inline right&quot;&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;/articles/files/images/chaintodesk.jpg&quot; alt=&quot;chaintodesk&quot; title=&quot;chaintodesk&quot; class=&quot;image preview&quot; height=&quot;167&quot; width=&quot;208&quot;&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/span&gt;Which means I&#039;ve spent most of my weekends chained to the computer desk and haven&#039;t done a hell of a lot of work on the old J bird, or the bikes or anything else for that matter. I did get the new/used oil pan for the old Hemi motor repaired and off to the sandblaster, soon to be painted. Next I hope to pull the motor and tranny back out, install the oil pan and other necessary bits and pieces and get the engine set back into the chassis. Who knows, someday it might actually run.</description>
 <category domain="http://www.wolfpub.com/articles/taxonomy/term/14">book</category>
 <category domain="http://www.wolfpub.com/articles/taxonomy/term/12">new products</category>
 <category domain="http://www.wolfpub.com/articles/taxonomy/term/15">vince goodeve</category>
 <pubDate>Tue, 23 May 2006 22:00:00 -0700</pubDate>
 <dc:creator>Tim</dc:creator>
 <guid isPermaLink="false">38 at http://www.wolfpub.com/articles</guid>
</item>
<item>
 <title>A Truly new product: Projects</title>
 <link>http://www.wolfpub.com/articles/blog/truly-new-product-projects-0741</link>
 <description>Not everyone is a book person. And for all those individuals who would rather learn in a TV format than the traditional book, we offer you our first DVD: How to Build a New School Bobber. As mentioned in an earlier Blog, this DVD includes nearly three hours of material covering the construction of a Bobber kit at Redneck Engineering, and the conversion of a late-model Softail into a believable Bobber at the Brian Klock facility.&lt;span class=&quot;inline right&quot;&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;/articles/files/images/bobber.jpg&quot; alt=&quot;&quot; title=&quot;&quot; class=&quot;image preview&quot; height=&quot;302&quot; width=&quot;226&quot;&gt;&lt;/span&gt;

Both are new-school bobbers with modern drivetrains and modern dependability. Producing a DVD turns out to be more work than building a motorcycle. First you pay the videographer and sound-person, then you pay a company to convert the material from analog to digital, next, you throw away most of what you paid people to photograph. With the wonders of modern computer software, we&#039;ve been able to do most of the initial editing in-house. Still to come is the work being done by an outside vendor who promises to take all the herky-jerky out of our transitions from one sequence to the next. By the time this Blog hits the website we should be only days away from finished DVDs.

Be sure to order one of our new DVDs because: A: They&#039;re really very good, and B: I&#039;ve got this stack of bills from various production companies and photographers that would choke a horse. You can order the DVD now and the item will ship as soon as it comes in. With combination orders, &lt;span class=&quot;inline left&quot;&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;/articles/files/images/blog6.preview.jpg&quot; alt=&quot;work&quot; title=&quot;work&quot; class=&quot;image preview&quot; height=&quot;183&quot; width=&quot;270&quot;&gt;&lt;/span&gt;in-stock items ship immediately, while anything that&#039;s not in stock will ship as soon as possible, with no extra shipping cost.


&lt;strong&gt;Off the Press&lt;/strong&gt;
We are making progress on the spring rush of new products. The Spanish-language book is finished and ready to ship. As is the How To Wire Your Hot Rod book by Dennis Overholser.

&lt;strong&gt;Not Quite Off the Press&lt;/strong&gt;
Still in the works is Vince Goodeve&#039;s Pro Airbrush Techniques, due to ship May 22nd. How To Build an Old Skool Bobber and Advanced Custom Motorcycle Assembly and Fabrication will ship early in June. Bear with us. We&#039;re making the transition from a very small publishing company to a somewhat larger publication company. And even small steps take time.

&lt;strong&gt;Projects&lt;/strong&gt;
The weather is warming here in Minnesooota (how natives pronounce the word) which means I can leave the shop door open and go back to painting the new floor in the Henry J. And there&#039;s an engine in need of an oil pan and a list with a thousand other to-do items. The warm weather means I can ride the Bagger down to the Joint Bar or Whiskey Junction, legendary Twin-Cities waterin holes, and hang out with other two-wheeled enthusiasts.
</description>
 <category domain="http://www.wolfpub.com/articles/taxonomy/term/16">bobber</category>
 <category domain="http://www.wolfpub.com/articles/taxonomy/term/12">new products</category>
 <pubDate>Wed, 26 Apr 2006 22:00:00 -0700</pubDate>
 <dc:creator>Tim</dc:creator>
 <guid isPermaLink="false">41 at http://www.wolfpub.com/articles</guid>
</item>
<item>
 <title>New Products and the road trip</title>
 <link>http://www.wolfpub.com/articles/blog/new-products-and-road-trip-0745</link>
 <description>&lt;span class=&quot;inline right&quot;&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;http://wolfpub.com/articles/files/images/wire.jpg&quot; alt=&quot;&quot; title=&quot;&quot; class=&quot;image preview&quot; height=&quot;302&quot; width=&quot;226&quot;&gt;&lt;/span&gt;Here at Wolfgang we&#039;re jamming along trying to get all of our new  products finished for the Spring of 2006 (note the release dates posted to the right). The Spanish-Language edition of Advanced Custom Painting Techniques is at the printer and we hope to have finished copies available by mid-April. And one of our hot rod books, How to Wire Your Hot Rod, by Dennis Overholser, ships to the printer any day now and should be off the press some time in late April. Similar to a book Dennis and I did about eight years ago, this new book is all color, includes a variety of wiring schematics, and covers everything from the ins and outs of a typical starter circuit, to the installation of a complete wiring harness. Of all the jobs that are required in building a hot rod, wiring is often the most intimidating. Our new book is designed to eliminate that fear-factor so you can tackle the wiring with the same confidence you display while working on the more typically &quot;mechanical&quot; parts of the building process.

&lt;strong&gt;Road Trip, Part Two&lt;/strong&gt;
Regular readers will recall the trip I made to Cincinnati for the V- Twin Expo, and that the route took me through Iowa on my way from Minnesota to Ohio. Part of the reason for driving instead of flying involved two stops I planned along the way.&lt;span class=&quot;inline left&quot;&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;http://wolfpub.com/articles/files/images/cummins.jpg&quot; alt=&quot;cummins&quot; title=&quot;cummins&quot; class=&quot;image preview&quot; height=&quot;200&quot; width=&quot;254&quot;&gt;&lt;/span&gt;

The first stop, in Anamosa to see J&amp;P Cycles, is already part of an earlier Blog. Near Anamosa is another little city, West Branch, home to Chassis Engineering. Chassis Engineering is a street rod company that manufactures and sells some very interesting and unique products to a certain group of four-wheel motor-heads. Their extensive line of high quality parts come from a physical plant that seems at first far too small. The proof, however, is in the pudding, or the chassis parts in this case. Not only do they manufacture and sell a large line of street rod parts, the facility also houses Roy&#039;s private shop. Roy Lewis, the man who started the company, is now retired which means he can spend a portion of each day working away on The World&#039;s Fastest Diesel. This long, bullet of a vehicle is powered by a 5.9 liter Cummins diesel, essentially the same engine found in Dodge diesel pick up trucks.

The difference, though, between Roy&#039;s diesel and the one in your Ram truck comes down to boost. The streamliner uses a hundred pounds of oomph to obtain a speed of 282 miles per hour, fast enough for the title World&#039;s fastest Diesel. The liner works fine (obviously) but of &lt;span class=&quot;inline right&quot;&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;http://wolfpub.com/articles/files/images/bonneville.preview.jpg&quot; alt=&quot;bonneville&quot; title=&quot;bonneville&quot; class=&quot;image preview&quot; height=&quot;174&quot; width=&quot;270&quot;&gt;&lt;/span&gt;course Roy wants more speed, which means more boost. More boost means more heat, which tends to shorten the life of certain components like pistons and valves. During my visit Roy was working on water injection as a way to cool the beast and extend the life of those essential engine parts.

When asked &quot;who drives it?&quot; Roy answers simply, &quot;I do.&quot; Which means Burt Munro isn&#039;t the only older gentleman to enjoy an obsession for speed. When I could finally pull myself away from Roy and his streamliner (and an substantial supply of old Chrysler Hemis) it was time to talk with old-friend Eric Aurand, and Roy&#039;s daughter Jean Donovan and her husband Jim, about some future collaborative projects between Chassis Engineering and Wolfgang Publications.

Before leaving I was even able to talk Roy out of a necessary part I need for a certain old Hemi in a certain old Henry J. Thus the road trip succeeded not only as an excuse to see old friends but also as a way to make some new ones. And no matter how many projects I find in shops and garages across the land, I never cease to be amazed at the creative power of the typical American motor-head.

Life on the road. Sometimes lonely but never dull. </description>
 <category domain="http://www.wolfpub.com/articles/taxonomy/term/12">new products</category>
 <category domain="http://www.wolfpub.com/articles/taxonomy/term/17">road trip</category>
 <pubDate>Sun, 26 Mar 2006 23:00:00 -0700</pubDate>
 <dc:creator>Tim</dc:creator>
 <guid isPermaLink="false">45 at http://www.wolfpub.com/articles</guid>
</item>
<item>
 <title>Some new products and a road trip</title>
 <link>http://www.wolfpub.com/articles/blog/some-new-products-and-road-trip-0748</link>
 <description>&lt;span class=&quot;inline right&quot;&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;/articles/files/images/custom_lg.jpg&quot; alt=&quot;custom&quot; title=&quot;custom&quot; class=&quot;image preview&quot; height=&quot;302&quot; width=&quot;226&quot;&gt;&lt;/span&gt;New Products:
One of the books responsible for making Wolfgang Publications a  success is Ultimate V-Twin Motorcycle. Part catalog and part assembly manual, the book I published in 1995 is still selling in modest  numbers more than ten years later--with three or four revisions along the way.

We are currently planning to bring out a totally overhauled version  of the Ultimate V-Twin book titled: Advanced Custom Motorcycle  ASSEMBLY &amp; FABRICATION. Like the earlier book, this one is part catalog and part assembly manual; and like that earlier book this one is all about helping people build a bike of their own from scratch.  Unlike that earlier book, which follows and explains the assembly of bikes that seem conservative today, the new ASSEMBLY &amp; FABRICATION  book documents the assembly of very modern bikes. Bikes like the  long, hand-fabricated 300 tire custom from the Donnie Smith shop and the Bobber from the shop of Dave Perewitz. Not only does the bike  document the assembly, in the case of the Donnie Smith bike the book  also shows each step in the fabrication of the one-off gas tank created by master tin-man Rob-Roehl.

The early chapters of the new book discuss topics like Motorcycle  Design, Frames, Suspension Components, Sheet Metal and Wiring. The  front of the book is meant to help builders make good decisions from  the vast array of parts available from the V-Twin aftermarket. The  back of the book, containing the assembly chapters, is meant to help those same builders assemble that huge pile of parts into a very cool custom motorcycle.

&lt;strong&gt;Road Trip&lt;/strong&gt;
As noted in an earlier blog, I attended the V-Twin Show in Cincinnati in early February. Though it doesn&#039;t make much sense to drive to Cincinnati, Ohio from Stillwater, Minnesota, I did it that way  because of two planned stops in Iowa. On Monday preceding the show I  stopped to see John Parham of J&amp;P Cycles in Anamosa, Iowa, &lt;span class=&quot;inline right&quot;&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;/articles/files/images/3007.jpg&quot; alt=&quot;3007&quot; title=&quot;3007&quot; class=&quot;image preview&quot; height=&quot;144&quot; width=&quot;216&quot;&gt;&lt;/span&gt;which is near Cedar Rapids. If you haven&#039;t seen the J&amp;P retail store, and more  important, the motorcycle museum housed in a building in downtown  Anamosa, you need to stop by. Though most of us think of J&amp;P as a  mail order company, their retail store is big, well lit and stocked with an amazing variety of parts. Variety is likewise the best word I can use to describe the bikes in  the museum. Other adjectives might include amazing, high quality and awesome. Occupying two floors, the bikes include Harleys from 1908 and board track racers by Indian, Harley and Merkel from the teens. The bikes range from very early Harleys, Indians and Hendersons to the board track racers already mentioned, to European bikes like Vincent (three examples when I was there), Brough Superior and Moto  Guzzi. For those of us who grew up on Japanese bikes there&#039;s a full compliment of Hondas, Kawis and Yamahas starting in the 1960s.

In addition to the bikes there&#039;s a huge display of memorabilia, toys and artwork. Sculptures in Bronze put the board track racers in another perspective, while the toy collections makes me wish I&#039;d kept  some of those old tin toys from days gone by. Of course, the walls are filled with fine art paintings and a big collection of posters.  There&#039;s a sign advertising a desert race on one wall and another  announcing a certain very important movie from the late 1960s.

I know it&#039;s a cliche but if you don&#039;t find a whole lot of machines in John&#039;s museum that put a huge smile on your face you&#039;ve got no business riding on two wheels.</description>
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 <category domain="http://www.wolfpub.com/articles/taxonomy/term/17">road trip</category>
 <pubDate>Wed, 01 Mar 2006 23:00:00 -0700</pubDate>
 <dc:creator>Tim</dc:creator>
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