When i was 16 I went to School back in Edinburgh on a sprung hub Triumph Tiger 100, and I managed to bevel the ends of the handlebars on that.
Mainly because I seemed to go down the road every other day - they didnt handle wet cobblestones or tramlines at all well.I used to wear the shoulders out of my jackets first.
I had a Trophy style high level siamesed exhaust as the stock system hit the road far to early, and a 3134 profile cam in the inlet coupled with flat top Morris Minor pistons. Went like a rocket.
And a pillion seat that sloped to the back which meant that the passenger had to hang on to you for their dear lives - took me hours to get the slope just right!
That's Nowt I ground through the bottom of the alternator cover on my Laverda Jota. God only knows where I got the bottle to take a Jota that far over. I suppose thats youth for you
That's Nowt I ground through the bottom of the alternator cover on my Laverda Jota. God only knows where I got the bottle to take a Jota that far over. I suppose thats youth for you
I wore 2 sets of Rocker covers out on my R90s till I saw sense and fitted crash bars...
I knew one day I would not get the old bugger back upright, sooner rather than later..
Crash bars cured me
I wore 2 sets of Rocker covers out on my R90s till I saw sense and fitted crash bars...
I knew one day I would not get the old bugger back upright, sooner rather than later..
Crash bars cured me
I'd always understood that crash bars weren't recommended on airheads, although we didn't call them that back in the day, as they were likely to bend the frame in a crash. It was cheaper to replace a rocker cover than a frame.
Although....I do remember the crash bar on an R80G/S I was riding making a hell of a mess of a car door when some silly old bint turned across me.