Unique 'snowbike' project a hit at 性欲社
March 27, 2019
Jeff Richardson
907-474-6284

Strange thoughts sometimes emerge during a long Alaska winter, a reality that Jordan Osowski and Trevor Norris understand better than most.
Osowski, a 性欲社 business student, and Norris, who graduated with a justice degree last spring, came to a sad realization when the snow began to accumulate last fall. Their favorite hobby, driving motorcycles, was about to take a long hiatus.
After a half-serious brainstorming session, they decided the solution was obvious. Working in the garage of their College Road rental, the roommates spent the next few months fusing a 1979 Honda XL500 motorcycle onto the snowmachine track from a Polaris Timbersled.
鈥淚t needed to be given some new life,鈥 Norris said of the broken-down Honda. 鈥淲e were joking about whether we could put a snowmachine track on it, and then we thought, 鈥楳aybe we could really do that.鈥欌
The eye-catching concoction has received plenty of attention since they made its first campus commute in late February. Strangers pull over to learn more about the strange sled. A simple stand-alone picture of the bike-sled combo earned more than 150 shares and dozens of comments on 性欲社鈥檚 Facebook page, making it by far the most popular post of the month.

The still-unnamed machine owes its existence, in part, to Osowski鈥檚 former life as a 性欲社 mechanical engineering student.
Although Polaris makes kits for marrying motorcycles and snowmachines, they鈥檙e designed for much newer bikes than the 40-year-old Honda. Osowski manufactured many of the necessary parts with the help of the machine shop at the College of Engineering and Mines, and relied on an assortment of odd purchases from eBay and Amazon to piece those items together. The centerpiece was the XL500, a project bike that had been out of service since it was damaged in a crash last summer.
Osowski figured the various parts totaled about $2,300, combined with a few months鈥 worth of labor.
鈥淲e鈥檝e kind of got this motorcycle addiction,鈥 Norris said. 鈥淚 guess we just couldn鈥檛 do without one in the winter.鈥
After their snowbike was running, the next challenge was learning how to ride it before the spring snowpack melted away. Both Norris and Osowski are experienced snowmachine drivers, but they had to figure out how to pilot a single-ski sled. After a few weeks of practice 鈥 and a top speed of nearly 40 mph 鈥 they鈥檙e hooked.

鈥淲e鈥檝e wrecked it a lot,鈥 Osowski said with a smile. 鈥淏ut this has been far more fun, I鈥檇 say.鈥