Saturday, May 17, 2025

Spring Fever: Amazon Diesel-Powered Mini Bike Pt. 2


Spring Fever: Amazon Diesel-Powered Mini Bike Pt. 2

Amazon Diesel Engine Powered Mini Bike
They say you have to break a few eggs to make an omelet, and if you tuned in for Part 1 of our Diesel Mini Bike Build, you saw us hack a vintage mini bike in two, take a file to a spinning crankshaft and run up a wicked cart on Amazon.com. All in a day’s work around here, but even with just a few big pieces coming together, this project was shaping up to be more than just a ridiculous idea.

That being said, all we really had was a roller with a dirt-cheap diesel engine from Amazon shoehorned into it, and it would take some real work to make the thing rideable. With our collective investment in the project growing, we got serious and cooked up some trick hardware that I think you’re going to dig, so let’s get to it.

Amazon Diesel Engine Powered Mini Bike
Don’t Call it a Gas Tank Housing the fossil sauce to keep you in motion, and adorned with cherished trademarks, stripes and scallops, a motorcycle’s fuel tank is a defining piece of its character. If you’re building a custom bike, it’s one of those things you really can’t afford to screw up, and somehow, the stakes are bigger on a mini bike.

You’d assume any old fuel tank would fit the bill, maybe something from your personal stash, but I’ll tell you there’s no fitting an OE fuel tank to this mini bike frame without a ton of fabrication. It’s the triangular backbone of the bike that causes all the problems, but we took that as an opportunity to kick things up a notch.

  • Amazon Diesel Engine Powered Mini Bike

The design started with some simple CAD (Cardboard-Aided Design) before we dared to slice up our last decent piece of 14-gauge 4340 aluminum. The first piece of the puzzle is the pan, with a pair of mounting tabs on the bottom to secure it to the frame. The pan is sized a little wider than it needs to be, which gives us an inside corner to weld instead of an outside corner. While it’s all personal preference, the inside corner approach gives you more meat to work with when you’re welding and grinding the corners smooth.

The shape we went with is fairly basic, but we knew it would all come together in the finishing details. Most of the tank is made from a single piece, meaning we could use the brake to define the top and sides instead of welding them. From there, the front and back were capped with pieces bent over a knee.

  • Amazon Diesel Engine Powered Mini Bike

At that point, you have a really nice sheet metal box, but it takes a few more pieces to feed your organized leak. The filler is a 2-inch aluminum deal, a bargain on Amazon at just $13.08, and a pair of 1/2-inch weld-in bungs handle the feed and return.

It’s all pretty straightforward, but remember this trick next time you’re welding in a filler neck. Measure where you want the neck to meet the tank and place several tack welds at that depth. That way, the filler neck will drop into the tank and stop at your designated depth, leaving you with two free hands to weld and a perfectly perpendicular fuel filler.

Amazon Diesel Engine Powered Mini Bike
Double-Sprung Saddle Our mini bike needed a seat, but much like the challenges we faced with the fuel tank, the shape of the frame did not lend itself to the kind of junk you’d have lying around. While I’d love to tell you that we bent up a pan, shaved the foam and busted out our sewing kit for custom upholstery, it just didn’t fit the budget or time frame you’d devote to a plaything.

In the end, we opted for a basic sprung solo-seat because it was cheap ($30 on Amazon) and installation couldn’t be easier. And yeah, save the chime-ins, as our sales associate Tom G. already grilled us for putting a sprung saddle on a swingarm bike—hardtail guys will be hardtail guys.

  • Amazon Diesel Engine Powered Mini Bike

With the seat and rear fender mounted, the back of the bike was starting to take shape, but it still needed a little something. Mini bikes need a grab bar, and we had some 1-inch stainless tubing on hand, salvaged from the railing of a 14-foot Boston Whaler. While we had to fudge the bends slightly, I couldn’t be happier with the looks and utility of the grab bar. It sorta has an old-school Cushman vibe, and I can dig that.

Amazon Diesel Engine Powered Mini Bike
One Step Forward, Two Steps Back At this point, I need to jump ahead several steps to address the first major hiccup we encountered, interrupting our otherwise blissful hackery. We had completed the initial assembly of our diesel mini bike, and pushed it outside to bask in the glory and take a few test laps around the parking lot.

With the afternoon sun glimmering on all the polished metal surfaces, we looked at all we had created, and it was good, but would it work? Would it be fast? The only way to know was to activate the decompression lever and pull our Amazonian oil burner to life, and it belched a righteous cloud of smoke into the air.

Amazon Diesel Engine Powered Mini Bike
I threw a leg over the saddle, ready to relive every mini-bike experience of my life, but better, and grabbed a handful of throttle. The diesel clattered up to operating RPM, the drive clutch started spinning and the bike began to move—backwards.

Yup, turns out it was all wrong, and we’d failed to take note of the CVT’s rotation when we tested it on the bench. Everything just seemed to fit so naturally in the frame that we were oblivious, and the following crowd-sourcing session of possible fixes was decidedly uninspired.

Amazon Go Kart Reverse Gearbox
Flip-flopping the engine wasn’t an option. It didn’t fit well, and worse yet, it looked dumb, so we needed a creative workaround to reverse the rotation from the driven clutch. With morale low and enthusiasm from management dwindling, we gambled the last cent of our mini bike budget on a go-kart reverse gearbox from maXspeedingrods. They’ve become a household name for making the cheapest turbochargers money can buy, so you know we’re in good hands.

  • Amazon Diesel Engine Powered Mini Bike

Our Vevor driven clutch would mount directly to the gearbox, and the box would be mounted in the bike with supplied bracketry. A 10-tooth sprocket comes off the gearbox, so we’d shift the box into reverse and throw the shifter in the trash—problem solved. Except it didn’t exactly fit.

The driven clutch interfered with the frame, and there wasn’t really a good way to move it. So we moved the frame. We axed the rear leg off with an angle grinder and shaped a new one out of some 1-inch tubing. Yeah, it’s 1/8-inch off from the tubing used on the rest of the frame, but you’ll never see it, and everything fell right back into place.

Amazon Diesel Engine Powered Mini Bike
Scatter Shield I don’t foresee us running the diesel mini bike hard, but if you’ve never witnessed a belt failure on CVT, take my word that it can be quite violent. So, in the spirit of not getting peppered in the nether regions with belt parts, a custom clutch guard was in order.

The guard is made from the same bits of 14-gauge 4340, and we did all of our welding with 5356 rod. It’s nowhere near as complicated a project as the fuel tank, and you could build the same thing at home with basic tools.

  • Amazon Diesel Engine Powered Mini Bike

The most entertaining parts of this guard are the two domed pieces that cover the clutch bolts. We scrounged some waste material from a bench press in the shop (a machine that can be used to press holes, louvers, etc.) and brought it over to the hydraulic press. We placed the scrap pieces in the press between a chunk of tubing and a 2-5/16-inch hitch ball to get the convex shape we were after.

Amazon Diesel Engine Powered Mini Bike
Inching Toward the Tiny Reveal I don’t know how it looks from where you’re sitting, but for me, I cannot look at this machine without losing my sh*t. If you haven’t spent much time around old-school mini bikes, I’m telling you, go scoop up some garbage on Marketplace and put it together. The parts are dirt-cheap, and there’s zero reason to chase perfection. Also, everything motorcycle-related just becomes infinitely cooler when it’s tiny. A crude exhaust, a backwards dirt-bike fender or even a sprung seat over rear shocks, the rules just don’t apply here.

From here, we’re ready to tear everything back down and splash some color on this hog, so be sure to tune in next week for the big reveal.

Amazon Diesel Engine Powered Mini Bike

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Saturday, May 10, 2025

Spring Fever: Amazon Diesel-Powered Mini Bike Pt. 1


Spring Fever: Amazon Diesel-Powered Mini Bike Pt. 1

Amazon Diesel Engine Mini Bike
Spring Fever. I’m not sure how it hits in less desolate parts of the world, but around here it gets our brains churning with ideas. After six months of snow and rain, the itch sets in for all the ill-advised marketplace transactions, wild pet projects and trips we’d like to take. With summer and hope on the horizon, we scoured the shop for something entertaining to do after hours—something just for fun—and the perfect project was in the corner gathering dust.

Amazon Diesel Engine
Sipping and Swiping I can trace the genesis of this idea back to a particular Whiskey Wednesday in June of 2023. Somehow, Jeff had stumbled upon a small air-cooled diesel engine on Amazon selling for a measly $179.99. Essentially the redneck cousin of Harbor Freight’s Predator 212, the Amazon diesel displaces 196 cc and is rated at 3 hp and (wait for it) 35 Nm [26 lb-ft]. I trust that figure as much as anything else on Amazon, but there was no doubt that we had to get our hands on one of these engines.

It arrived in Amazon Prime fashion just several days later in a ridiculous wooden crate, and we had it billowing black smoke several minutes later with the hokey wing-nut silencer removed. Boys will be boys, I guess. The little diesel is one hell of a buy if you ask us. It starts and runs great, and the build quality is far better than expected for the price of admission. Where things get a little silly is the language barrier.

  • Amazon Diesel Engine Mini Bike

‘Fill diesel, can’t fill other diesel,’ the sticker on the fuel tank instructs. The stock muffler supplied similar insight, as its label warns ‘High temperature papt, dont touchit.’ And it’s a good thing we’re well-rounded small engine mechanics, because the instruction manual included with the engine is actually for a water pump.

With the power to move something on our hands, we needed a vehicle that could be revived with the stump-pulling power of the Amazon diesel engine, and we arrived at the most logical solution possible—a mini bike.


Facebook Marketplace brought numerous possibilities to the table, and we settled on a stripped-out, rather homely-looking Sears-Allstate Roper mini bike, probably built in the 1970s. It’s neither conventional nor stylish compared to its peers, and upon closer inspection, it wasn’t in all that good of shape either. The suspension was seized, the fenders, seat and grab bar were long gone, and it was wearing a partial shade-tree restoration. But something told us this was our machine, and greatness lay in store for it.

Amazon Diesel Engine Mini Bike
Unholy Combination Unfortunately, that’s about as far as it went for the better part of two years, a classic case of perfection being the enemy of progress. That is, until we gave ourselves a deadline to piece this thing together with whatever we had lying around. We still needed a few important pieces, including a torque converter and some tires, and you can guess where those came from.

Vevor 30 series torque converter
For $55, we were pleasantly surprised with the quality of the Vevor 30-series torque converter, and it’s a super adjustable setup for haribrained projects like this one. However, we had a slight size mismatch between the engine’s output shaft and the drive clutch of the torque converter, a situation we rectified by running the engine on the table with a file on the output shaft. (Insert joke about the lathe we have at home.)

  • Amazon Diesel Engine Mini Bike

Having proven on the bench that our 3-hp engine would bring the CVT to full shift, we got to work fitting it in the chassis. And that’s where our issues started. The CVT’s driven clutch interfered with the back of the frame and the valve cover was all over the front legs of the frame. Sounds bad, but the solution was quite simple.

The Roper frame is comprised of three sections: the front fork, the main tubular section and the rear section that serves as the swingarm and engine mounting plate. There’s a pivot point on the bottom of the chassis that allows the swing arm to move, and by relocating that point further back and shifting our engine to the rider’s left, everything came together.

Amazon Diesel Engine Mini Bike
The Scrap Bin Provides With our Shinko 421 3.50 x 10 Golden Boy tires mocked up on the crusty three-piece wheels, we had a roller (of sorts) and continued piecing it together with whatever junk we had lying around. The diesel’s stock silencer wouldn’t do, and while numerous parties involved wanted to see a stack and tractor flapper, I shot ’em all down in favor of a more conventional upswept exhaust.

Straight from the scrap bin, the header is made from 1-inch mild steel and the muffler is 1-1/2-inch stainless with the tapers and bends made from pie cuts. While testing the ergonomics, we decided a heat shield was a worthwhile addition, made from sections of the same 1-1/2-inch stainless. We later added a homebrewed silencer insert in the tailpipe to bring decibels back to livable levels.

  • Amazon Diesel Engine Mini Bike

Our new hot rod was starting to take shape, but we were missing a critical piece to keep this thing propped up when we’re through terrorizing the neighborhood. If the Roper ever had a kickstand, there was no evidence of it, so we went back to the scrap bin to look for options.

If you’ve been following our Honda CB550 street tracker build, you’ll recall that we ditched the bulky center stand in our latest update. While it seemed obnoxious on the Honda, it fit the mini bike like a glove, and we fit it on the swingarm’s pivot point with minor trimming. We then hacked a couple inches off the legs to suit the mini bike’s diminutive stature and welded on some feet for sure footing.

  • Amazon Diesel Engine Mini Bike

We were starting to see our perverse vision of a crude-oil-burning pit machine come to life, but a few things still weren’t hitting the mark. The fuel tank was a big one, as the mini bike’s triangular frame ruled out conventional motorcycle tanks, and the engine’s original tank looked like an afterthought when moved up top. The only logical solution was something completely custom, and we fabricated a rad diesel tank out of aluminum. You’ll have to tune in to the next installment for that.

  • Amazon Diesel Engine Mini Bike

But I will leave you with this tidbit, and it’s a prized item from my personal stash that I hope you’ll appreciate. The Roper’s frame comes to a wide and abrupt end out back, and with the OE rear fender long gone, the side profile was missing something. We mocked up several options, but an old dirt bike fender I’d grabbed while combing a bone yard put all the others to shame.

It had that skinny shape and goofy curves of the 1970s, but the selling feature was a faded yellow ‘Udder Mudder’ fender extension. I shuddered to give up this prized piece of junk, but the bike had spoken, and it installed easily with a quick bracket we fabbed up.

Amazon Diesel Engine Mini Bike
Tiny Bike Mini-Series What you’ve just read brings us to a point where our diesel mini bike rolls around and has all its big working components in place—or so we thought. I promise you, there are hiccups, creative workarounds and real tech coming in the next installment before the big reveal.

I think back to some feedback I received on an article not long ago, where a reader was miffed that I thought something was worthy of being featured on the pages of Bike EXIF. To that we say, why not? While you won’t find a site on the web that’s more dedicated to the art of building real motorcycles, you’re missing out on a whole lotta fun if that’s your sole focus.

Amazon Diesel Engine Mini Bike
The whole idea of this series is to build something off-the-wall—a hairbrained idea brought to fruition by sheer will and the wealth of cheap parts available on the web. And since this bike’s already seen some test passes in the parking lot, I’ll reveal that it’s put a sh*t-eating grin on the face of everyone who’s twisted the throttle. And that’s what it’s all about, right?