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Church Of Choppers FTR 1200 S


After showing the Church Of Choppers Custom FTR 1200 S via our instagram channel now Jeff Wright makes his public appearance at the One Motorcycle Show


Making its first public appearance at The One Motorcycle Show in Portland, Oregon, a custom FTR 1200 S by Jeff Wright, the owner of Church of Choppers, made a striking impact among the 200+ other unique bikes on display. And as one of the most influential custom bike builders today, when Jeff displays his latest creation, people take notice.


In recent years we have shown you many of his works, because they have a very particular style, with a strong visual impact, but they are also functional motorcycles, no mannequins to show off, built to have fun on the street.


The director of industrial design at Indian Motorcycle, Ola Stenegärd also has immense esteem for Jeff and how influential he is on the scene.


“When you look at movements and trends on customs and choppers, you can usually find it on a Church build five to 10 years prior. He is just way ahead of his time. But he is also a trained artist not just a fabricator and bike builder. Most don’t even know that he does the artwork for his T-shirts himself. He is an amazingly talented illustrator! To me that explained a lot of his disruptive thinking in custom bike building too: he can visualise stuff before he builds them. It allows him to throw the ball further than most. He sets trends, never follows. That’s pretty cool, and he holds the highest rank in my book,” said Stenegärd.


To anyone who had been following the build on The Church of Choppers social channels, it was already clear that Jeff was again taking his own path with a unique twist on the FTR 1200 S.


“I picked up an FTR 1200 S from Indian Motorcycle's factory in Spirit Lake, Iowa. Because of uncertain times, I wanted to make a statement with my hands rather than my wallet. I went to work on a plan and immediately took the bike apart and started cutting. Knowing the bike was for me only (no passenger) I topped the frame off with a new subframe and shock mounts. Spent late nights building the new swingarm to resemble the stock swingarm, but only upside down. Cleaned up the wiring, hand-formed the fiberglass body pieces, welded up a new gas tank, shaved all the tabs, and lowered the bars. Paint, seat, and finishing touches all wrapped up by the time The One Motorcycle Show started in Portland. People loved it, and now it's time to ride it,” said Wright.


With the new swingarm fabricated after many hard hours, the frame and swing arm were powdered coated by Traxx Performance Powdercoating in contrasting red and black. Part of the swingarm build was also to convert the FTR from a monoshock to a pair of fully-adjustable Öhlins piggy-back shocks complemented with matching Öhlins front forks that retain the Brembo callipers but with red brake lines to echo the swingarm.


The high spec parts continue with Gilles reasets, clip-on handlebars, Domino grips and a titanium Racefit “Longhorn” Growler exhaust.


The high spec parts continue with Gilles reasets, clip-on handlebars, Domino grips and a titanium Racefit “Longhorn” Growler exhaust.


For finishing touches a new black leather seat with red stitching was provided by Rich Phillips, Jeff polished the radiator guards and fitted two large Indian Motorcycle headlights to really switch up the front aspect of the FTR. And, of course, the incredible paintwork by Jeff and Dana Harrison.


The result is an eye-catching FTR like no other with a tighter, race bike aesthetic. 


Stenegärd concludes, “Jeff is like that musician or artist...the guy who is driven by his vision and passion and not the end game (because fame and fortune don’t drive him) but he is THE guy that we all refer to, that we look up too. Ask Roland Sands, ask any top builder in Europe or Japan. They will say his name.”


Jeff Wright and The Church of Choppers can be followed at on social media at 

facebook.com/chvrch and instagram.com/chvrch/


Indian Motorcycle 

1 comment

  1. Che scempio. perchè prendere una moto dal design bellissimo e impegnarsi cosi tanto per snaturarla e rovinarla? Passi la vernice che può piacere a qualcuno, ma il resto sembra fatto in casa da due ragazzini alle prime armi. non basta mettere due pezzi di carbonio per dare valore...

    ReplyDelete

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