Keith
Lynas lives in his own world. Specifically, his very own planet. For
want of a better name, his place is called Ossa Planet, a place where
the Ossa owner can find parts and pieces that would be otherwise
impossible to come by. Located in Spring Valley, California (near San
Diego), it's a collection of goodies that takes your breath away.
Recently, we spent a day with the King of Ossas.
 A
flawless Yankee Twin gets near completion. |
 Another
view of the ultra clean Yankee. |
ORC - Keith
where is your place at? Give me the phone number and the address. How do
we reach you?
KL - The
phone number is unlisted, and the phone number and the address are not
in the Web Site, so, you kind of got to know how get here.
ORC - So
you do have a certain number of Ossa Fanatics who are hard core?
KL - Yes,
you find me on the Web Site.
ORC - If
they can find you on the Web Site.
KL - Well,
what it does, it has the E-mail on it to contact me thru it, thru the
E-mail address and then...that's one of the ways I keep my anonymity
here, I don't usually let all that stuff out, so I don't have a trail of
people coming here all the time.
ORC - You
don't encourage a lot people to come here?
 Keith
likes it best when no one is in the shop bothering him so he can
get some work done. |
KL - No
really, 'cause I can't work. You know, there's only so many hours in the
day
and if I spent half of it talking to people, I don't get the work done.
ORC - Well,
what you do, primarily, for ah. . . for making a living?
KL - Most
of it, building engines. People ship them to me, I build them and ship
them back.
ORC - You
concentrate on Ossas? Only Ossas?
KL - Yeah,
Ossas and I do the odd, Bultaco and Montesa. There is handful of Maicos
here, as well. I do modify bikes,
as I worked for Honda for 30+ years
ORC - So,
if anyone wants to get in touch with you, they got to go through the
E-mail, right?
 Rarities
abound, as this pristine pair of Ossa flattrackers show. |
 You'll
find a whole bunch of dirt trackers in his collection, like this
perfect Yamaha twin. |
KL - That's
the best way, because that way, I have a little control over it.
ORC - What's your E-mail address?
KL - klynas@aol.com and the Web Site is Ossaplanet.com
ORC - And
you stay on top of it all the time?
KL - I
check it three or four times every day.
ORC - How
many Ossa engines you do a year, ball park?
KL - Ahh. . .
. . .probably twenty five or so. But I got a lot of friends all around
the town and they arrive, so I get my share of local modern stuff to do
as well. So Ossa isn't all that I do. I'll be doing an engine in one of
them, or chassis service on another. I probably do twenty or thirty
modern engines as well a year . In fact there are a couple Kawasakis or
modern Yamahas sitting here to be done.ORC - Ok,
describe the place to us, what you've got here. First of all this is a
rental facility. It's huge. You've got how many square feet?
KL - Just
about five thousand.
ORC - Five
thousand square feet, and eight or ten different facilities?
 You
want pipes? Everything from a Stiletto to a Desert Phantom can
be found hanging on the wall, |
KL - It's
one basic facility, it's unique. Plus I've got a bunch of containers
stored on the property filled with bikes of all kinds and thousands of
parts, both new and used.
ORC - How
long you've been here?
KL - Probably fourteen - fifteen years
ORC - What
you did before?
KL - Worked
the dealerships.
 Keith's
magazine collection is staggering! |
ORC - Worked the dealerships, and you said the Heck with it?
KL - Well,
I worked four days a week at the dealership and then worked here a
couple of days a week and few evenings. It was like a secondary and then
it got to where I couldn't keep up and I got more control of what I can
do and can not do in here.
ORC - What's it going to cost a guy to get an Ossa Phantom done, start to
finish?
KL - Actually , I completed this one, with all the good modern components
using top state of the art, handle bars, controls, everything fresh and
new, titanium hard work and all. It was about a thousand dollars on the
hard ware, and it was like eight grand total.
 Completed
Ossa motors on their way to customers. |
ORC - It
was probably better than a brand new Ossa . I remember, I got a Ossa in
for a test in Dirt
Bike Magazine back in '74 and I went like "Wow! This is light!
It was 192 pounds!"
KL - Yes!
ORC - On
the official scales.
KL - The
Official calibrated Dirt Bike Scales? Well, you probably got that machine through Yankee, as I would
imagine.
ORC - By
the way, Kenny Clark was there.
 Very
rare bikes can be found in various states of restoration, like
this Yamaha TZ 750 road racer that Keith is building just for
the hell of it. |
KL - He had
a lot to do with Ossa; not many people remember that .
ORC - We
got talking to Kenny Clark and John Taylor was there, back and forth in
phone calls or whatever, and he says: "Yeah, your bike is being
tested right now by Dave Aldana."
Anyway, just about
that time I hear this Yankee coming down the street and Aldana goes to
pull right in the parking lot where we are standing. Right at that time,
a station
wagon pulled out in front of him and he just crushed the back of the
station wagon with this Yankee! I mean he just stuffed the Yankee front
end into the rear end of the station wagon.
 The
good stuff can be found on the shelves. |
He had no shirt
on, has levis, flip flops on, no helmet on, and he walks away without a
scratch! The Yankee is a total basket case and I had to come back in
another date to get a Yankee tested, because that was the Yankee that we
were supposed to take with us. Aldana said, "Sorry man, I didn't
know the guy was going to pull out." And that's the story.
Anyway, back to
the Phantom gear box we were talking about earlier. Was the gear box
tender?
KL - The
gearbox was small and yes, you could do some damage if you didn't use
the right components, or the right oil.
 Keith
makes lots of his own goodies, like these Ossa stickers. |
ORC - What
kind of oil was that?
KL - Well,
there were different kind of oils that they recommended. One of them was
a Full Bore oil. That's what they told the most of people, but they seem
to like the Ford Hypoid gear oil. That was one of their favorites,
because it takes high pressure well. The way the gear box is designed,
the output gear is similar to a car gear box and the main shaft is a
split shaft. Bultaco used a similar set up as well, and all for the
first four gears drive thru the split gear. Fifth gear drives direct one
to one right thru the shafts, so the shaft is need to be involved, but
every one of the gears, other than that, does drive thru this outer
gear.
 New
cases await a top end. |
ORC - So
the gear box is working real hard.
KL - Well,
not so much the entire gear box. One pair of gears works harder than all
the rest, as they carry the entire load in every gear except in fifth,
so because of the way they match the size of the gear teeth, you wanna
go high pressure lubricant. If you don't change the oil often, or if you
don't use a good lubricant, they tend to pit the gears. I can show some
of that stuff later.
ORC - So,
as long as you use good oil and change the oil often, then you should be
ok?
 Keith
in action with his light and fast Phantom.
 |
KL - I
recommend to change the oil every race, which really you should do on
every motocross bikes anyway.
ORC - I got
some feedback from some people who are just paranoid about it, and other
guys who'd ride for another two years and no problem at all.
KL - There
were a batch of bikes that came with some mis-machining. That is where
they probably got their bad rep. The detent holes and the shift drum
that would hold the gear, holding the gear into one place, some were
longer as the shift drum can rotate into it a little bit. Well, that
allows bouncing out of gear while it's not holding in gear, as far as
trying to ride like that is a bit of a disaster.
ORC - The
old Stilettos were allegedly bullet proof .
KL - They
worked pretty good. The 1968's through 1970's were four speeds, and you
could break them. The gear boxes were kind of small, but they held up
pretty well.
ORC -What
about the Enduro versions, the Pioneers and the Six Days?
KL - They
were very good as well. The Ossa engine is a lot like a small block
Chevrolet. You have the 283, 327 and 400 and they all share the same
components. You swap the heads, cranks, etc., to make the different
sizes. The Ossa Phantom, Stiletto and Enduro engines are all very
similar. You can take parts from one and swap it to another. They have
differences in head gaskets, crank shafts, barrels, pistons, different
porting in cylinders and so forth.
 Here's
a near-perfect Yankee just waiting for an owner. |
ORC - So
you could take a Pioneer and put a Phantom barrel on it?
KL - Sure,
and you have some of the Phantom performance in your Enduro bike. From
'74 forward they had what they called The Big Crank Engine. The crank
shafts were heavier, larger, and they had more inertia. The earlier
Pioneers had a smaller crankshaft which spun a lot easier, but they also
had a heavier magneto.
ORC - You
told us earlier that you became an Ossa distributor when they went out
of business.
KL - Basically, what happened, when everybody closed down, I stepped up and
bought it. I bought all the parts and bought all the stuff from 75
dealers who were around. We manufacture parts as well.
ORC - What
parts do you make?
 What?
A Hodaka lurks in one of the many containers. |
KL - Pistons, connecting rods, I do a lot of graphic stuff including decals
for all the bikes. Some fiberglass parts I reproduce.
ORC - Ossa
hung on to making fiberglass gas tanks for a long while, when everybody
else went to plastic. Any problems there?
KL - I have
plenty of used ones. I don't have many new ones anymore.
ORC - Let's
say a customer comes in the door with an average Stiletto. What can you
make that thing look perfect for?
KL - Let's
use the term restoration. My interpretation is that you start at the
crank shaft and work out. Everything gets renovated. That can be a
little pricey, because by the time you get done with the engine, that
can cost a thousand to fifteen hundred bucks.
 Here's
a peek at the half-dozen containers filled with bikes and parts. |
Start at the wheel
bearings and work from there. There is pretty and there is function.
Both of them have to work good. Stuff that you might never see, I'll
spend extra hours on it. It's gotta work right.
ORC - I
noticed that you do some Yankees.
KL - I
don't encourage it and I don't push it. The total run of the Yankees was
only 764 bikes. The engines were made by Ossa and the frames were
designed by Dick Mann and they were assembled in Schenectedy, NY.
ORC - You
look at the bikes like the Phantom and the Yankee here, and you see the
excellent Works Performance shocks on the back and it makes you realize
just how good the bikes are with quality shocks.
 Wonder
if Yamaha knows this oldy but goody is here. |
KL - I rode
a stock Stilleto for about a year and never thought much about the
shocks, then put some good shocks on it and my lap times came down
dramatically.
ORC - What
are your plans for future restorations?
KL -The
next half dozen motorcycles I want to restore, I want for myself. I've
done so many for other people, that they are like my children. I don't
want to let them go.
ORC - What
are you going to do for yourself?
 Keith
has a special area he keeps his current rides in. |
KL - Right
now, beside my CBX and my Triumph Bonneville, I have four Phantoms that
I have set up in different trim for different events, and my Stage 2
Super Pioneer, I have a black Six Days replica, the '78 version. I love
my '87 CR500 Hondas and '83 480 Honda. A couple of Stilletos, several
MARs, and a couple of short trackers for when the need arises.
ORC - Back
to the ones you're going to build.
KL - One of
them is a 500 Ossa Roadster. I have a Mick Andrews I'm in the process of
doing. I have a Maico 490 and a hand full of others that I haven't
decide on yet.
ORC - You're 47 years old now, how did you make the transition from business
man to the Ossa-nator?
 Rare
bird! This Honda has the engine built in to the rear wheel. |
KL - I rode
my old Ossas in '70 through '73. I was into motorcycles working for an
Ossa dealer. By '76 or '77, my Ossa wasn't doing the job anymore. By
right around 1980, things changed drastically. There were all these red
motorcycles and they were winning.
I could beat them
in the first turn, but I couldn't beat them anymore. So I got on a Honda
and every year I got a new bike. I raced until about '87 then stopped.
I'd ride after work everyday but lost the urge.
That was the era
when I bought all the Ossa parts and I went to a few Vintage Races in
'91 and '92. Then I saw these guys racing around and I figured that I
could go faster than they could, so I put a bike together and I've been
there ever since.