Categories
Choppers

SYWTBAC Week 4: Setting Up Your Space (Even If It’s Just a Carport)

So, you’ve got a bike frame—or at least a dream—and now you’re looking around wondering where the hell you’re supposed to build a whole chopper. Newsflash: it doesn’t have to be a full-blown shop with a lift and Snap-On tool chests. Most of us start out in driveways, carports, or borrowed corners of someone’s garage. The key is setting it up with intention—and getting real about what you actually need to make it work.

The Tools You Actually Need (To Start)

This list could get overwhelming real quick, so let’s keep it honest. Here’s what you’ll want to have access to during your early phases—mockup, teardown, measuring, maybe even some light cutting and welding if you’re ambitious:

  • Basic socket set (standard + metric—you never know what your bike or parts will throw at you)
  • Wrenches & screwdrivers (again, both sizes)
  • Allen/hex keys
  • Torque wrench (eventually, yes—don’t skip it when things get serious)
  • Rubber mallet (you’ll use this more than you think)
  • Jack or lift (a basic motorcycle lift stand is gold, but a car jack + some wood blocks can be your budget best friend)
  • Grinder with cutoff wheel & flap disc (if you’re modifying anything at all)
  • Drill + bits
  • Measuring tape, calipers, and sharpies
  • Shop rags, WD-40, and patience. So much patience.

You’ll collect more tools over time, and that’s okay. You don’t need a perfect setup to get started—you need enough to keep moving forward.

How to Set Up Your Build Zone

Whether it’s a carport, a single bay in your dad’s garage, or the alley behind your apartment, it just needs to be workable. Here are some real-world tips from someone who’s built greasy projects in less-than-pretty spaces:

  • Level surface is king. If your floor’s not level, shim your lift or work area so the bike doesn’t rock. You’ll want stability when lining things up.
  • Cover the ground. Even just a $5 tarp from Harbor Freight or an old carpet square will save your knees and help you find that rogue bolt you dropped.
  • Create sections. A table for tools, a spot for mockup parts, a bin for bolts. Trust me, labeling ziplocks will save your soul.
  • Vertical storage. Milk crates, pegboards, even hanging stuff from rafters. You’re making a workshop, not an Instagram set.

This isn’t about making it pretty—it’s about making it functional. If it feels too chaotic to focus, organize it until it doesn’t.

Time, Weather, Lighting, Extension Cords — The Real Stuff

Let’s talk about the actual obstacles that hit when your shop is exposed to the elements.

  • Time: Build a schedule that fits your life. Even 2 hours a week consistently will move the needle.
  • Weather: Tarps, pop-up tents, or even parking the bike under a roofed porch can get you through rainy days. (Also: buy cheap moving blankets to toss over the frame—keeps the dust and water off.)
  • Lighting: You will absolutely need better lighting than you think. Clamp lights, headlamps, shop lights. Whatever it takes.
  • Extension cords: Invest in a heavy-duty outdoor one with a surge protector. You don’t want to blow a fuse in the middle of cutting a bracket.
  • Noise: Be a good neighbor, or at least plan around quiet hours if you’re grinding and wrenching in a shared space.

This is the part where a lot of people get discouraged. They think they need to wait until they have a “real” shop to start. But you don’t. You just need to commit to showing up for the space you’ve got. And make it work like hell.


Next Week: Wiring Without Crying — A Beginner’s Guide to the Basics (and When to Ask for Help)

If you’re digging the series, don’t forget to sign up for my weekly newsletter for sneak peeks, bonus photos, and behind-the-scenes chaos. And if you’ve been wrenching in a carport or building bikes out of your kitchen, drop a comment—I want to hear your setups.

Stay greasy, stay scrappy.
—Montana / Cult Bohème

Categories
Choppers

SYWTBAC Week 3: Budgeting; What It Actually Cost to Build My Chopper

Welcome back to So You Want to Build a Chopper (When You’re Broke and Half Clueless), the blog series where I walk you through exactly how I built my first chopper without losing my mind (or my savings… mostly).

This week we’re diving into the big question:
How much does it actually cost to build a chopper from scratch?

Let’s rip the Band-Aid off,  mine ran me close to $10,000.

Now before you throw your phone across the garage, hear me out.


Why It Cost That Much

No, I didn’t splurge on high-end boutique parts. And no, I’m not made of money.

It cost what it did because:

  • I didn’t already have a garage full of parts
  • I had to buy a few tools along the way (which adds up fast)
  • I didn’t have time to spend months hunting at swap meets or playing the eBay waiting game
  • And I made the strategic choice to order most of my parts from Lowbrow Customs and TC Bros

Could I have done it cheaper? Probably.
But for a first build, I wanted to get my feet wet without getting completely buried. I didn’t want to be stalled for six months trying to save $40 on a part or deal with mystery eBay sellers when I wasn’t confident yet in what I was doing.

This was about learning the ropes, not building the cheapest chop possible.


What I Spent

Here’s how it broke down:

Category Cost
Donor Bike $2,500
Parts (main build) $6,100
Misc. + Paint $500–$1,000
Total $9,100–$9,600

I started with a 1992 stock Sportster 883 for $2,500 — clean title, running motor, solid foundation.
Then I dropped just over $6K in parts, not including all the little stuff that creeps up: paint, hardware, wiring, random last-minute things I forgot I needed until I didn’t have them.


What That Doesn’t Include

I’m not even counting the hours I spent:

  • Staring at parts diagrams and YouTube tutorials
  • Screwing things up and fixing them
  • Calling my friends and asking dumb questions

Because this wasn’t just a money investment — it was a life investment. I was buying experience.


What About the Parts List?

If you’re wondering exactly what I bought — don’t worry, I’ll be sharing that soon. I’m planning a full breakdown of my parts list (what I loved, what I’d skip next time, and where I sourced everything) in a future blog.

For now, just know: this wasn’t some ultra-budget junkyard build. It was a beginner-friendly, no-frills, let’s-just-get-this-done kind of chopper.

🛠️ No shame in paying a little more for convenience and peace of mind, especially when you’re still figuring things out.


TL;DR: The Money Adds Up Fast — But It’s Worth It

Building this bike taught me more than any manual could. It gave me confidence, clarity, and a machine that actually reflects me.

If you’re thinking about your first build, don’t obsess over doing it for $1,000. Be realistic. Be patient. And know that even if you don’t have all the tools, parts, or knowledge yet — you can still make it happen.

Next week, we’re talking about how to set up a home garage space for chopper-building, even if all you’ve got is a carport and a Bluetooth speaker. (Ask me how I know.)

‘Til then,
Stay greasy, stay scrappy, and stay stoked!

Angel Claw

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