|
Nico Bakker Suzuki GT 750

A couple of months ago I Ray Brown decided he was bored with his JGS1000. Not
a bad bike but a trifle bland, he concluded. Just another Universal Japanese
Motorcycle when what he wanted was something different, something with a bit
more originality.
They don't come much more different than the Nico Bakker framed Suzuki GT750
that Ray swapped the GS for shortly afterwards. Big, swoopy red and gold race
fairing with frog-eye lights up front, angular twin-cap tank, single seat and
that distinctively finless watercooled three-cylinder stroker engine held in a
grip of iron by an expertly hand-crafted monoshock trellis. Different is hardly
the word, for this is possibly the only example in the country.
You've heard of Nico Bakker, the secretive Dutchman who's been building race
frames since 1970 for a huge variety of engines. No ordinary frames either
Bakker's are constructed from chrome-molybdenum aircraft tubing, stronger than
Reynolds and extremely expensive. They are also extremely good: his list of
top-notch customers stretches from Wil Hartog to Takazumi Katayama and the name
Bakker still crops up frequently in race reports for example our Le Mans story
only last month.
Relatively few ofNico's frames were built for the road and fewer still made
it across the North Sea so Ray Brown was naturally intrigued when, only a week
after acquiring the bike and knowing little about it, he stumbled across the
story of how it came to be straightening the highways of Britain. 7 was up in
London shopping for bike spares and went into a little accessory place called
Fastpart Motorcycles that's just opened in the Commercial Road. Just by chance
there was a picture behind the counter of a bike looking just like mine so I
asked about it and the guy said it was a Sanders & Lewis framed GT750 that he'd
built a few years ago.'
Ray went round to Sanders & Lewis'place in Kilburn the same day. Peter
Hendry, the sales manager there, remembered the red and gold bike as belonging
to a customer of theirs and said it was definitely a Nico Bakker not one of
the similar cafe racers S&L used to sell which were built around Bakker-lookalike
frames made by Saxon, a nearby firm who've since gone bust. Sanders sold quite a
few GT750-based bikes but Peter couldn't recall seeing another genuine Bakker.
He did know where Ray's bike had been bought from before and put him on to Ian
Johnson, boss of Ride On Motorcycles in Acton, west London.
It was Ian who was responsible for getting the Suzuki to the condition it's
in now. He thinks the original owner bought a new GT750 and went over to Holland
to have Nico build a bike round the engine. Most of the work was completed but
the guy then lost interest in the bike and chopped it in for a car at a dealers
down the road from Ride On. The car dealer hardly knew an expensive hand-built
special from an FS1E but he got in touch with Ian who was heavily into exotica
until car tax killed the profits, assembling early Bimotas and selling one of
the first Harris Magnums to be made.
The Bakker bike was three-quarters finished but tatty when Ian took charge of
it. He tidied it up, sorted out the electrics, re-upholstered the seat, fitted
new tyres and enlisted the services of Dream Mac.iine in Nottingham for the
paintwork, which still looks good some five years and several owners later. The
frame's a bit chipped now Ray plans to get it restoved or powder coated in the
near future but it's still an impressive piece of tubery. Lots of strength
round the head and carefully-crafted lines running down to the box-section
cantilever swing arm and the horizontal de Carbon shock which is offset an inch
or so to the left.
Yokes and forks are original GT750; fork sliders are reversed and anodised
black and the rear-facing, Aeroquip-hosed calipers bite on drilled standard
discs which are bolted to a gold cast wheel of indeterminate make. Original
Suzuki instruments, with gear indicator and centrally-mounted temperature gauge,
sit above handlebar clamps made vacant by the Grab-On equipped clip-on bars. The
headlamps are spots: one for main beam, one for dip.
The big fuel tank contains a partition for two-stroke oil, topped up via the
right-hand cap, and is secured in racer style by rubber straps. The seat unit
bolts straight in to the tapped ends of the rear subframe; rearset mounts are
Bakker originals and are also neat and tidy. The rear wheel's another cast six-spoker
but the big drum brake is standard down to the empty spoke mounting holes
running round its edge.
A fat, chromed Piper three-into-one exhaust leads up to the 738cc engine. The
motor is stock 'cept for a crank with straight-cut primary gears which was
borrowed from a GT-engined racing sidecar after the last owner ran a big-end.
The radiator cap has been lopped off and rewelded to one side to clear the new
tank, and ignition is by Lucas Rita but the bulbous jacketed powerplant itself
is otherwise exactly as Suzuki built it.
That means the bike's not hugely fast, though its light weight and slightly
lowered gearing make it agreeably quick off the mark as I found when Ray let me
out for a brief blast down the roads round his place in St Albans. Being tall I
couldn't get my legs inside the fairing lowers and the clocks were obscured by
the swept-back screen but the riding position seemed surprisingly comfortable
and the bike fits Ray perfectly. The lack of bulk is immediately obvious and
although it's easy to throw around and change direction the GT holds a line in
corners like the thoroughbred racer it resembles. Even the Suzuki front end
seemed well-controlled.
Not that I was pushing things, mind you. I left the cornering antics to Ray
and contented myself with a quick burst in a straight line, the Piper's crackle
turning to a high-pitched howl as I whacked the throttle open and the bike shot
forwards. The motor seemed pretty tractable and the initial acceleration good
but it runs out of steam at around I Wrnph not really enough for a bike that
looks like it's been hiding in a dark corner of some continental racetrack since
the late '70s.
With this fact in mind Ray has already contacted tuner Terry Beckett for a
quote to provide Bakker frames rely on thick tubing and lots of straight lines
classic some additional horses. That shouldn't be too much to ask for in
standard form the triple is reckoned to give a mere 67bhp but as early as 1972
the GT-based TR750 roadracers being ridden by the likes of Paul Smart were
putting out more than 100bhp and being timed at over I70mph at Daytona.
The problem with those bikes wasn't lack of horsepower but handling. The
TR750s weaved and wobbled so alarmingly when they came over to Britain for the
Match Races later that year that they were almost unrideable and soon picked up
the nickname 'Flexy Fliers'. It could have been so different. All Suzuki needed
to do was go and see Nico Bakker.
Source Nico Bakker.
|