Tuesday 20 December 2016

Save the Children





Christmas Jumper Day 2016

Have you heard of this? I've not seen anything advertised on the telly that this was happening. I posed for pictures in 2015 with a Christmas Jumper on and now it gets to part of this years collage on Facebook for Save the Children. I pictured myself riding through London and seeing myself portrayed on the back of a bus in glorious technicolor larger than life. That didn't happen so I must be content with what was published.





Not normally passive with things I had an e-mail from Guildford Harley's that they were doing Christmas Jumpers for two days, 16th and 17th December. I thought I would go on the 17th using 16th to head off to Jack Lilleys to try some Jumper promotion. They were already doing it with everyone in festive pullovers. Very colourful. I did leave a collection box for the odd coin and squeezed a few coppers from the Police Bike Safe Team who were doing training sessions out of Jack Lilleys 16th and 17th. The guys at Jack Lilleys had organised their collection to go to the local pub who had organised everything. Friday was a nice day and I had a pleasant ride out to Ashford. Saturday was a whole lot different with fog in grades of density and getting clearer all the way to Guildford. 

I met a few of these guys at Jack's Fish and Chips in Bagshott a couple of weeks ago.









I had a great time talking to staff and customers about Christmas Jumper day along with a bit of promotion for the Museum. I took a few photos of those in Christmas gear and after a couple of hours headed back to Ashford to pick up the collection box before returning home with the fog getting thicker all the time. The problem with this fog is that the droplets of water are so fine that you go from seeing to not seeing in seconds and I have to continually wipe my visor consciously leaving plenty of distance in traffic for this exercise and allow for the sillies in cars who don't have clear side windows and don't know you are there. I trust we will all survive for Christmas.
With Christmas Jumper Day behind us and everyone wishing they had another opportunity to wear those jumpers again don't wish just do it! When you get to Christmas you'll be as warm as toast and ready for your stocking filler!!! What is your dream? Something curvaceous? Could it be a Ducati?
A Triumph? A Moto Guzzi? A Honda? Yamaha? Suzuki? Kawasaki? Or something exotic? 




Grindley Peerless? Velocette? Francis Barnett? Gilera? Aermacchi? Beardmore Precision? 
The list could go on all the way to Christmas! 


Wishing everyone the best of riding and prayers from the Royal Enfield Shrine to keep you safe.

Merry Christmas!

Saturday 10 December 2016

After 2016 Off Road Bike Show



After the Off Road Bike Show

As usual there is always some interesting stuff at the show and this one was no exception. There were all manner of scrambles and trials machines including this brace of Ariels that Sammy Miller could well have ridden. There was this EMC with a Puch split single two stroke engine, these Cottons, the scrambler in front of one of the three production racers.Remember the Cotton racer we have at the Museum. It appears to have closer finning than the Villiers Starmaker scrambler engine seen here. There was a DOT with an RCA engine and an array of Italian racing machines. I just love those Guzzi big singles.







 
 

It was a bit frost on the Saturday so I went off to Kempton in the car. It was cold at the show so when I got home I needed a good mug of strong Assam tea fortified with a slug of brandy. I have this feeling that I'm getting a bit more like Guy Martin with his need for tea. Now Sunday was just as frosty as I ventured out on the Kawasaki for the Wey Valley Advanced Motorcycle Observed Sessions.


    My turn to be on the shop. We were and still are clearing old stock as freebies with a request for donations to this years charity. The excess muffs, old biros (some work), key fobs, lanyards and side stand plates or mud buddies need to be shifted. I did take some away to be passed on at the Museum.
More fun this Monday with part three being filmed by the Missenden Flyer about the other things in the Museum.

Part one.

Part two.

Part three.


Some cracking vlogs to watch.

Thursday 8 December 2016

2016 Off Road Bike show



Off Road Bike Show

2016

December already and I still managed to get out for a ride on the Buell the last Thursday in November. It was an interesting ride out skirting towns with an amazing zig-zag route making a good day out of some 220 miles and it stayed dry! I was testing out my new Garmin Zumo, recording the route but when I needed some fuel and a direction to Cranleigh. It refused to allow me just to get to the town centre and I gave up on it. It relies on you knowing the address to enter and if you are out on a run and not knowing where you are or any of the local street names Tomtom has that advantage of being able to get you at least somewhere you know of. The other problem was that it didn't recognise where home was by the most direct route so it was trying to send me off in the wrong direction. I guess I will need to work out what to do from using it.

Brian on Display.



Still cold on Saturday morning as I was up at the crack of dawn to get to Kempton park for the Off Road Bike Show to be on the Museum stand. Another good day handing out fliers and talking to people about bikes and on my wanders I went to a stand that had a Seeley with the tank off so you could see the cross over top tubes and now more information about the design of the frames to try to clarify what had been made. The mark 1 frame has a full cradle that runs under the engine and beyond the pivot fork mounting, not much different to the mark 2 that has an incomplete cradle. The mark 3 may or may not have a cradle but could have front down tube supports depending on the engine used with the crossover behind the headstock having the top tubes on the outside and a cross frame support under the seat. The mark 4 has the top tubes on the inside to make it easier to manufacture. Frames made for Suzuki and Yamaha engines did not have a crossover behind the headstock. It may all be a little clearer from this photo I took.



I took more photos on interesting bikes and this 1927 172cc Francis Barnett Brooklands Track Special recently restored by Brooklands is a gem with additional pannier fuel tanks so it could keep going for at least six hours and in doing so collected many of the small capacity records in the late twenties. The Villiers engine has some interesting features in that it has plain main bearings lubricated by an auxiliary hand pump that is not easy to operate being just in front of the saddle.



Our Museum bikes created quite a bit of interest with Des Heckle's 50cc Moto Minarelli engined sprint bike, the 1927 Sheffield-Henderson Brooklands sprinter, Jim Tebby's speedway bike and rounded off with an unusual Police Rickman Mitesse. Next stand to us were “Reflections and Rust” two ladies who do original oil paintings and prints. One of whom used to ride an ex-police Rickman Mitesse. How about that for co-incidences? The art work is excellent and not to expensive to have you steed captured and preserved on canvas. www.facebook.com/TalanaGamahArtwork

Last but not least Zoe Cano has another book on sale Southern Escapades and her adventures around Florida. I'll report when I have read it. I was in Florida at Daytona for the October Bike Fest in 2003 and it is a place that is just a fantastic Bikerama! I visited the racetrack and had a test ride on a Harley dresser FLT. I had a 1340 shovel 5 speed FLT at the time that I think I should have traded it being that I had it from 1981 from new. It was heavy at 330kg but that is a lightweight compared to the modern dressers at 430kg!!!! Not good for filtering on London's roads. My 1981 FLT.


Thursday 17 November 2016

Video from the Missenden Flyer


More Questions.

Like most interesting things more information is uncovered the further you dig. Some thing I had not considered was that there was more than one style to the Seeley frames. I only thought there was one however soon to be proved lacking Pete comes up with an article referencing Seeley frames. 


During the years of production different styles had evolved beginning with the Mark one and two where I could see no obvious differences to the three and four which ca easily be identified by the position of the top rear suspension mount. The Mark three has a short bracket close to the rear triangle and the Mark four has an extended bracket. Now down to a bit more interesting information the Sanby, Seeley, Khun, Commando in the Museum has a Mark three frame.



I like reading but I am not sure I will have the stamina to read Colin Seeley Racer and the rest volumes one and two but if I do receive them at some point I'll do my best to get through them.
There have been some interesting Mondays with a video being made with the Missenden Flyer and Geoff doing a grand job of presenting it for us. It was too long for one Youtube video and it was split in two. See them through the following links:



These were all about Triumph the next one may be about the rest.
We have had more international visitors from South America, Australia and just around the corner where they have finally found us.
I am always surprised when I see motorcycles in adverts. I think the most memorable one is the lady on a Ducati having used some perfume other than WD40 to attract her fella. Then there are the car ads were a young lady is rushing off with no helmet and wind in her hair. Is it to high light the rebellious nature of motorcycling that the powers that be want us off the roads? Then there is the One Show that is so squeaky clean! However where I going is to a lesser know postage retailer that has used a Mondial racer for its rebellious individuality that, dressed well, will pull the lady. 




John Lewis used a Triumph for last Christmas but it did not appear many times. Keep an eye on the ads for what is symbolised by a motorcycle being there. I think we are missing a trick by not making something of these ads particularly when nearly all our relations who lived in the fifties there only form of transport was a motorcycle and no one complained too much about how they were ridden even thought they were much noisier than today. Just a thought it is believed that the EMC split single we have in the Museum was the loudest and in the fifties you could hear it miles away. I can't hear much now as the continual white noise of traffic dulls the senses with the swish of cars and the rumble from the tyres from the main road. The nostalgia of dad leaving work with the steady beat of the old single ever coming closer to home is now lost in history and a fading memory of what was freedom.


Wednesday 9 November 2016

A Visit to the Bike Shed




The Bike Shed Visit

Another interesting day at the Museum with more visitors from South Africa. I am always amazed how people find us and just keep turning up from all corners of the world. I was a bit more comfortable this week as the heating has now gone on and I don't need two extra layers except when I go into the little barn where Bill Bragg’s sprint bikes are displayed. Yellow Peril has been rechristened “Brown Peril” in respect to Henry Coles efforts at Santa Pod on the Motorcycle Show. 


Just to keep me out of mischief I was out and about the other Thursday and being around St Paul’s I dropped in to the London Tourism Office to leave some fliers. The last time I was there was for the Olympics in 2012. We were quite busy during the Olympics and this prompted us to open for another day a week. It was quite difficult to be open 4 days a week then needing all our Volunteers to do extra. Still in London I headed off to the Bike Shed, Bike display, Shop Restaurant and Bar. It is quite a place under the railway arches near Shoreditch. I had been prompted to visit by an article in the MAG magazine “Road”. 



I have followed them on Facebook for ages with their reports on bikes that have been created in “one's shed” show casing peoples' dreams. They have a show from 11th to 14th November. It is an interesting place as the bar has an amazing selection of wheat beers and the shop has just the right stuff if you have a fair bit of spare cash. Even so a place to visit.



 One of the guys there runs his own bike club, MC Forum and they are always looking for places to go. I had to leave and missed out on the live performance as it was about to start. One side of the arch way under which is the Bike Shed sits is an alley that is used for parking your bike, right next to the entrance. What a bonus for those who a) don't like walking and b) keeping an eye on your bike. I have to go again. On the Monday at the Museum we had a couple from France who like British Triumph bikes and cars. They were talking to someone who likes French Bikes and cars. Strange world this? This Monday another question was asked and that was about the capacity of the Wooler flat four aero engine that was to power a folding aircraft. It turns out to be an over-bored 500cc making it 600cc. I think that would have been a lump to satisfy the sidecar guys. 

There have been some changes in the line up of bikes displayed with a few of the old ones moving on for various reasons and being replaced by others new to visitors. Time to pay us a visit again. Geoff has been working hard at getting some of the history of the bikes down on paper and there will be a short video on Youtube at some point. Peter has been ill and is now better and back with us. His enthusiasm for Ducati remains undiminished and he has passed on to me some information about the racing 50cc Cucciolo. A 60mph moped!!!


Tuesday 18 October 2016

Another visit to the Norfolk Motorcycle Museum





Norfolk Revisited

It is that time of year again when there is a family visit to the Norfolk Broads accompanied by lots of fishing, sailing, eating and frequent visits to a pub. Somewhere to get away from it all, not quite, as in that area is the Caistor Motor Museum, only open from April to September, and I missed it this year and the Norfolk Motorcycle Museum. As it happens, on the last duty at the LMM there were a couple of guys who know George, The Proprietor, through his activities with motorcycle clubs around Cambridge. They too think he has a great set up but didn't know about his treasure trove in the next building that is not open to the general public. His museum has had a good summer and is continuing to do well with much publicity from the area papers. Last year they were working on a Triumph Tigress Twin scooter (250cc ohv four stroke) and its restoration is now, almost complete. I would recommend a visit if you are in the area remembering that during the winter months they are not open on a Sunday. I did buy a lottery ticket in the vain hope of winning some £123 million to save all the museums but that didn't happen. Any one got a spare million or two?



I have missed a number of bike runs recently mainly due to a faulty side-stand switch that I am waiting to get replaced so I have been working on another project that is getting close to completion that will free up more of my time. This has given me a little RSI from filing and fabricating parts from metal making my twist grip hand a bit sore. Not sore enough to not to get out on the Valiant with a request from another member of the LE owners club to come out for Vee Day at the Ace Cafe on the Sunday. The other member failed to arrive having lost his way trying to avoid the North Circular. Even I had to use it but that was only for 50 yards from Hangar lane gyratory to get to the access road that passes a Chinese supermarket. Now that is a place to visit if you are a foodie! At the Ace there were a few Vincents and a few of the bigger Velos and the Valiant was the only little one. It created quite a bit of interest with a few people not ever knowing they were made. One guy tried it for size. He was quite tall but looked comfortable on it. Who knows, we may get another member for the club. 



After a short visit to the LMM on my way home I set about catching up on all the bike racing that had been recorded while I was away. The Tivo box had got to 100% and I have lost a few things. Never mind, Henry Cole will surely get repeated.
  Back at the Museum on Monday and there were discussions about when the first shaft drive appeared on Motorcycles. I know it was around on bicycles as early as 1895 as I have seen one at the History on Wheels Museum at Easton Wick but motorcycles this required a delve into Tragatsch to discover it was FN of Belgium in 1903. They perfected it over the next few years and used it on their famous straight four of 1908. A little while ago a visitor knew of a Vauxhall motorcycle. Only two were made and only one survives. The other is believed to be in the foundations of the Vauxhall factory. Perhaps one day it will be rediscovered.



I have dug up a picture of the survivor and this is from Classic Motorcycle of June 1984. It is still mild enough to be out there and the LE has remained dry in spite of the predicted rain. I just managed to get home and everything put away before the heavens opened last Monday.


Sunday 25 September 2016

Another Hill




Kop Hill Climb 2016

Following a little trip out to Eastbourne there were too many things going on over the weekend to do them all priorities were a birthday and a visit to an old friend. That did leave me a few hours each morning to do something. I was due to pick up some cables at Kempton Park auto-jumble but ran out of time to get there so they are now being posted to me and the weather was not that pleasant after the heat of the week. Sunday was much better and with an early start I was at Kop Hill by 10:00 on the Buell. 



I took a few photos and talked to number of people even before I got to the stand. The stand created a lot of interest with Frank starting the ohc Triumph and with so many people to talk to about the Museum.



I spoke to a journalist who used to make the videos for Duke entertainments and now is looking to do something a bit more interesting now retired from full time work. Arriving at the stand were a threesome who were in period costumes two of the thirties and the other from the fifties pictured with the Brooklands Sprinter.



I am told by Frank that it started like as a 1927 Sheffield Henderson and has a Blackburne engine. The frame has been much modified to take that engine with the lower top tube being pushed up and to one side to squeeze the engine in. Have a close look at it. It has some very interesting features. A new addition to the Museum collection is the Rickman Miteese and the kind owner has donated it to us. It is an ex-police bike that has a black enamel frame, unusual as Rickman usually nickel plate their frames. It is in the little barn at the present so ask if you want to see it.





























If  you wonder why we didn't run something up the hill it is a matter of cost. To enter the hill climb the motorcycle needs to be road legal and that means taxed, insured and number plates!!!

I'm planning for next year to take part with the Valiant so watch this space for the outcome. I left Kop Hill around 12:30 to then go off to see our friend who lives near Alexandra Palace. Another late night.


Waiting at the bottom of Kop Hill, now on Youtube

Now Frank has https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ria5-ukKzfUanother go at starting the Single ohc Triumph at the display at Kop Hill.

Back at the Museum on Monday, not having good start as when I went to leave home on the LE it would not start and I have petrol pouring over the floor. This was just a stuck float. Not having time to wait to sort it out and running late I went on the Kawasaki so I didn't have to unload my magnetic tank bag. Not much going on there were not many visitors, but what was a coincidence that three of them and in the Museum at the same time were from South Africa. A husband and wife and, on her own, another lady who does paintings of motorcycles, took so many pictures from all angles they kept us busy all day. I think they had a good time.


Friday 16 September 2016

Gaydon Motor Museum




Going to Gaydon

I've been up and down the M40 a number of times recently and thought each time I went past I should pay them a visit. I'm building a kit car and was in need of some special sized speedo and handbrake cables and at the Southern Classic Bike Show at the end of May I picked up a flier and when I was ready arranged a visit. This I did and went to JJ cables, not a stones throw from the car museum. Off on the Buell and only a few spots of rain to deal when almost home is was a pleasant dry ride. JJ cables have been supplying things to Bill at Reg Allens's motorcycle shop for years so it was a nice surprise when I arrived that he knew all the people I did. It was not long before I was on to the Car Museum. 





It has some interesting veteran and vintage cars along with many of the prototypes that we all know about like the Issogonis Mini and the Marina but know by numbers and not names. The museum is well laid out leading you from one section to another however to find the cafeteria and toilets required some deciphering. There are no signs on the first floor lobby to tell you where to go. There are only a couple of motorcycles there and they were early Rover before they started making cars. There is even a mention of an Austin motorcycle. 



There are a couple of early tricycles and some period bicycles. In another building were even more cars, vans and small lorries. I was particularly interested in a glass-fibre Mini that came from South America. I had a deep conversation with one of the volunteers about how the structural strength had been imbued into the construction to take the front and rear subframes. I had seen enough after a couple of hours and made my way home thinking about how you could have a strong enough body made from glass-fibre. A future project is in the planning. Needless to say I left some fliers there.






Back to biking and not a lot going on as I have been using the fine weather to work on my car as I have to do it all outside. I'm getting a good tan. 
I was at the Wey Valley Club first Sunday of the month and even then I spent the time doing the Club shop as opposed to riding. More recently the Museum has been down to Brighton for the Ace Cafe London to Brighton run to do more promotion on the sea front. It was a bit cold and windy on that day and the bikes are still in the van being ready for Kop Hill this coming weekend. The Tiger 80 and 1929 single ohc special will hopefully be run up the hill at this event. I look forward to being there on the Sunday but in between I managed a little trip out on the Buell just to Eastbourne for a promised fish and chip lunch with Gita at Harry Ramsdens on the sea front. 



Bike parking was conveniently place just across the road. I have missed so much bike riding weather that this was a real treat covering some 198 miles in the day and enjoying every minute with a blast over Beachy Head on the way back for good measure.

Friday 26 August 2016

PS Speicher Museum



To Einbeck and Back.


So what is there to do in August? There is a summer holiday? Not sure about the summer bit and there is going somewhere special. First of all was the International Citroen Car Club meeting in the Netherlands and the main reason for heading off in the El Cid my kit car that looks like a Citroen Mehari and based on a 2CV to be like minded people and also to visit the Burton Car works as I'm building one and needed some guidance. This was at Zutphen some 10km from the rally. As is my luck rain followed me around (I am the Rainmeister) After this rally I went on to Germany and the very picturesque town of Einbeck in lower Saxony. It has many historical buildings from before 14 century and very cute they are too. However this is not my main interest what is of interest is the PS Speicher Museum there. This part of it has lots of bikes and some small cars in it and has a racing exhibition. The Freigeist Hotel next door is where we stayed. Long suffering Gita needed some luxury after a very damp rally. The hotel four star and has a motoring theme with a four wheeler bubble car truck in the foyer and motorcycles and scooters bolted to the wall high above there is even a table made from a nine cylinder radial engine.





 On each floor there are murals of bike, car and cycling events. It is worth a walk around on its own. Not only does the hotel embrace the spirit of the museum but the town does as well with pictures of bikes on garage doors and alleyways. Surprising for such a quaint town. 





The Museum itself is a converted mill with lots of new additions and has now been open for about two years. It is part of a bigger collection of cars, aeroplanes and memorabilia. I didn't realise it but they were closed on Mondays as are are most German museums. I arrived on a Monday and got as far as the entrance foyer. The guys I met there were Sascha Fillies and Soren Affeldt and they agreed I could get in on the Tuesday an hour early. This mean't, instead of a whole day, I had three hours to look around before heading back to Holland and some work on the ageing carburettor of the car. I can honestly say three hours was not long enough to see all the displays and read the information, much of which was in English. The displays start with early bicycles and motorcycles like the Hildebrand and Wolfmuller 1894 and a replica of the wooden framed Daimler from the  same era.


 As you would expect the museum has mostly German motorcycles on display with many Triumphs of TWNs (Triumph Werks Neurberg) and DKW, NSU, Adler and many more. The number of manufacturers were as many as in the UK. 












There is even a Norton Commando on display as well as a Munch Mammoth but what was a surprise was the carousel of scooters in a coffee bar setting. A great deal of thought and effort has gone into this museum. The displays start on the top floor with the oldest exhibits and as you return to the ground floor you move through different decades. 



I could have been lost for days! This is a museum I need to return to. Just a little coincidence I have just finished reading about Granville Bradshaw and he had involvement with the Bond three wheelers and Nick Witherspoon who wrote about “Lawrie Bond - The man and the marque” was due to arrive later that day. There is a small car display that includes many of the famous three wheelers from the fifties like Heinkel, Isseta, Messchersmidt and of course Bond. It was only a 1200 mile round trip so perhaps I might fly the next time or could I combine it with the Wey Valley French trip to Luxembourg next year?