“Tyrant” Yamaha XSR700 by Hoo-Bue

Yamaha XSR700 Street Tracker

Back to the Dark Side…

The Yamaha XSR700 is a retro-inspired naked bike that incorporates styling cues from the classic Yamaha XS650 with the modern technology of the FZ-07/MT-07 — a perennial favorite among new and veteran riders alike. The liquid-cooled parallel-twin makes a solid 74 horsepower, while the irregular firing order of the 270° crankshaft helps harmonize the two cylinders, giving the engine a responsive, torquey feel. Says Revzilla:

“This is the story of a bike engineered to fan the flame of imagination that got us into motorcycling to begin with, in the hope that it can spark that same flame in some new riders.”

Yamaha XSR700 Street Tracker

Enter Taiwanese industrial designer Jurmol, founder of Hoo-Bue, who sought to combine his love of conceptual design and vintage flat track motorcycles in this 2016 XSR700. The idea was to build a street tracker for city use, using Yamaha’s MT series slogan for inspiration:

“Following the Yamaha MT series slogan, ‘Dark Side of Japan,’ the core of the XSR700 Tyrant design is ‘back to the dark side.'”

Yamaha XSR700 Street Tracker

Jurmol developed a line of carbon fiber body parts for the machine, including a headlight kit, finders, frame and radiator covers, and a complete tail unit — all of which are now for sale on the Hoo-Bue website. The result is one of the most stunning XSR builds we’ve seen — a dark, modern street tracker that signifies a new name in the Taiwanese custom scene. Below, we get more details from Jurmol about the project.

Yamaha XSR Street Tracker: Builder Interview

Yamaha XSR700 Street Tracker

• Please tell us a bit about yourself, your history with motorcycles, and your workshop.

I am an industrial designer living in Taiwan and have my own design company. I founded the brand “Hoobue” this year to develop the project that I’m passionate about.

Yamaha XSR700 Street Tracker

• What’s the make, model, and year of the bike?

YAMAHA XSR700, 2016.

Yamaha XSR700 Street Tracker

• Why was this bike built?

This is my first large-displacement motorcycle, and I love the design and custom bikes, so I started this project.

• What was the design concept and what influenced the build?

Vintage Flat Tracker is my favourite style bike, but I set a goal for myself to keep the vintage look but with conceptual design.

Following the Yamaha MT series slogan, “Dark Side of Japan,” the core of the XSR700 TYRANT design is based on “back to the dark side.”

XSR700 Street Tracker

Designed for city use, with the flat tracker style as the foundation, but I tried to make it look more conceptual, inspired by the Husqvarna 701.

Yamaha XSR700 Street Tracker

• What custom work was done to the bike?

Headlight / front fender / side covers / the whole tail unit.

XSR700 Street TrackerXSR700 Street TrackerXSR700 Street Tracker

• What’s the riding experience like on the finished bike?

I feel infinite satisfaction even if I look at it all afternoon in the garage.

XSR700 Street Tracker

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5 Comments

  1. Nice, distinctive build, but the only thing “tracker” about it is the side number plates. Tail/seat, tires, handlebars, and arguably even exhaust are not typical tracker style. My point is simply that there needs to be better categories, perhaps this one could be “neo standard,” or something like that.

    Ultimately, I think the categories are slightly problematic, because when I look at any of the particular categories many of the bikes are kind of cookie cutter in that segment.

    I just know that for this bike I don’t like calling it a “tracker.” It takes away from the bike calling it that.

    • Agreed. But we let the builder categorize the bike during the interview process, and if they see it as a “Tracker” or “Scrambler” in their own minds, we try to respect that since it’s their own vision and labor.

  2. i bought and paid 2 carbon kits on their website…
    no answer, no delivery details…i’ll open a paypal issue

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