From the Fall 2010 issue of Street Chopper Magazine
Editor's Note:
Kayelynn Johnson, Chopper Jim, and their families are from Kingman, Arizona, and are as American as the Route 66 Highway in which they live on. They are also responsible for making sure many pieces of Denver Mullins' life's work are well preserved. Denver, who built some of the wildest motorcycles to hit the streets, was the cornerstone of the burgeoning chopper scene in San Bernardino, California, in the '70s until his untimely death in the early '90s.
In our 40th anniversary issue we showed you a few of the Kingman clan's restored Denver's choppers, and we are back to show more of their two-wheeled time machines. This time we met up with Kayelynn at his Arizona residence, and we let the man behind the resurrections do the talking while we snapped some shots of this beautiful blue Honda.
And Then There Were Five
After meeting Butch Araiza, who worked for Denver for years at the 2004 Laughlin River Run, my partner Chopper Jim and I were introduced to Mel Scaggs, who told us he had an original Denver's bike. We asked the one question we are famous for when one of Denver Mullins' creations comes into play. Is it for sale? His answer was no. We met up with Butch and Mel the next year at the run, and after asking yet again, we got the same answer. Then five months later out of the blue I received a call from Mel. He was interested in selling the bike and would like to send me some pictures if we were still interested, which we were. After looking at the pictures Chopper Jim and I headed for SoCal the next weekend to pick it up.
We met up with Mel at his house and looked over the bike. We gladly paid his asking price and loaded it up. Then Mel had us load two more Honda 750 engines, a box of miscellaneous parts, and another of Denver's springer frontends. We were then headed back home to let the magic begin.
The Teardown
We already had Jim's "My Dream" (STC, Fall 2009) all apart for a complete restoration and were starting to pull our friend Kenny's chopper apart for a repaint and repairs after a mishap on the way back from a show. What's another bike coming apart, right? There's not much to them, and we had some empty shelves to hang the parts on.
After looking over the new bike we decided to go for a total rebuild. The molding on the tank and frame was in excellent condition, so it would need little to no bodywork. Previous to us owning the bike, the engine was freshened up, and most of the chrome was still in good shape. This was going to be a fairly easy task.
Once it was down to a bare frame we started sanding off the black paint it currently wore to find the beautiful original blue candy lacquer paint and pinstriping that Lil Louie from San Bernardino, California, did over 34 years ago.
We gave Louie a call and consulted him regarding the original paint. He remembers doing three blue bikes with the half-moon kicks in the silver stripe, two Hondas and one Harley.
The Paint
After sanding all the black off the frame, tank, and fender, we found that the candy blue started out darker at the neck, faded to a lighter blue and then darkened again at the axle plates. The tank was stripped to bare metal at one time, so we had no design reference to what was on the tank originally. Clueless, Jim and I turned to my many old STREET CHOPPER issues for some paint ideas, and we came up with a reversed-faded set of panels that fit the design to a tee. After a couple coats of clear lacquer over the new blue paint, it was off to Lil Louie to reproduce his pinstriping.
Seeing that the engine was fresh, all we did was repaint it, then we rechromed all the normal parts that Denver would have done and assembled it with a chrome bolt kit to dress it up a bit.
The Rebuild
After picking the frame up from Lil Louie's, we cleared and polished the paint, and then the fun of assembly started. Even though the bike is 30 years old Denver and the crew built a quality bike for its time. Everything was fit very well when the bike was initially built, so the bike came back together very easily.
The only other things we did to the bike was replacing all the wiring, adding new petcocks, grips, a new mirror, a set of original-style tires, and exchanging the aftermarket seat that was added sometime in the '90s with an original one.
Still Counting
We are steadfastly preserving pieces of history for both enthusiasts and the public to enjoy and understand. This bike was our fifth out of the seven we now own, and we're not close to being done yet. If there's a Denver's-built bike out there, we want to save it!