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1 minute read
GO-FAST BAGGER
SPADY’S IS DOING WHAT IT DOES BEST THANKS TO A 23-YEAR-OLD BUILDER
WORDS: JON LANGSTON PHOTOS: MARK V PHOTOGRAPHY hat gives? How will this all shake out? Who knows— but it sure is fun to watch.
Take Spady’s Speed Shop. The Boston-area custom shop opened about 15 years ago as Spadafora Choppers, building high-end custom motorcycles. About seven years ago, its proprietor, Ray Willis, decided to give a local kid a part-time job. His goal was just to help the kid out; he ended up with a partner who’s introducing Spady’s to that next generation of custom-motorcycle enthusiasts.
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At 16, Matt Centore started out sweeping floors, taking out the trash, and basically being Ray’s shop rat. “He didn’t even know what a ratchet was,” Ray says.
The kid was sharp, though, and it wasn’t long before he was holding the droplight, handing Ray tools, that sort of thing. From there, he started changing tires and plugs, and assisting on more involved projects.
After high school, Matt left Spadafora to study engineering at one of Boston’s storied institutions of higher learning. But by then, it was too late. He’d caught the cycle bug bad, and after a semester of cutting class to go work at the shop—“I wanted to build bikes, not spreadsheets!”—Matt was told to either drop the course or get flunked. The choice was easy.
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Today, Spadafora Choppers is also known as Spady’s Speed Shop, and Matt, now 23, is designing and building performance baggers for one of New England’s hottest custom shops. Matt has helmed several projects already. But this white 2018 Road Glide Special is his baby, and perfectly exemplifies the direction in which Spady’s is headed.
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Knowing he wanted to use Öhlins forks, Matt first took the FLTRXS down to the frame and had it powdercoated gold. Then, he shaved off 140 pounds, utilizing carbon-fiber bodywork, fenders, saddlebags, and wheels. Combine all that saved weight with a turbocharged Milwaukee-Eight 108, and this monster bagger makes a knuckle-popping 150 hp.
Matt then went to work on the fuel tank, carving knee cutouts for comfort and installing three vertical gauges on the right side. He put still more gauging in the fairing to complement the factory dials, then hooked up Spady’s POV Twisted Tee-Bars, plus a digital gauge on top to monitor the turbocharger. To protect the hand controls, Matt then cleverly doctored a set of PowerMadd ATV hand guards to house built-in LED turn signals.
So what’s up with all those gauges? Matt laughs: “My dad was a commercial airline pilot, and as a kid, I remember being just fascinated by the cockpit, all those dials and gauges. That stuck with me.” Clearly. “But I guarantee you, from the seat, every gauge is right there,” he says. “And if something starts acting up, I can see what it is almost instantly.”