Monday, 5 May 2014

Another MOT



1911 BSA

It is that time of year again and MOT time for my Velocette LE. I have used Jack Lilys since 1993 when they were first in the High Street in Shepperton and then when they moved to Ashford. The MOT was last Friday and I always feel a little uneasy when I have to be at a destination at a specific time on a 50 year old bike. Needless to say it performed as it should and got me there and home again with no problems. I usually ride a much bigger bike so only having 200cc available you have a different approach to how you ride. Starting with some trepidation with the A312 which is a speedy dual carriage way I expect to be be run over or carved up at any moment but after that it is a much more slow speed journey but still with the same risks. I got to Jack Lilys in plenty of time, got an MOT and made my way home again. Leaving more fliers behind. Pete had been there too as there were still a few left and I also left application forms for the BMCT. On the way home, this time of day, in much heavier traffic I now had the upper hand! I could filter and maintain my progress. All those motorists that whizzed by me only got to the traffic jam sooner, I passed with ease and left most behind. I was well pleased with my trip home and with the traffic, as opposed to the norm of being harassed by impatient drivers.



On Saturday I zipped out to Tescos on it a well and Sunday, after a trip out on the Buell to the Wey Valley Advanced Motorcycle Observed Sundays handing out more flyers for the Museum and the BMCT I was out on the LE again to drop in to the Museum to see what was going on. The Thames Valley Velocette Owners Club had paid a visit the other Sunday Pictures of the bikes is on the Museum Facebook page. Sorry I missed you. I was hanging around to hear Rowley get the Venom Clubman fired up for the first time after rebuilding it. I left before it was started up.





It was a nice sunny afternoon and he was hot and bothered by all the kicking. While waiting I had a close look at our new acquisition the 1911 3 1/2 HP BSA. If you compare it to other machines of that era it was bristling with innovation. BSA had been producing motorcycles since 1906 so had some idea about what they were doing.


On early BSA models the tank badge actually has Birmingham Small Arms in the logo. Later models did not have this. From the outside it had something on the right side that looks like a cloth cap box.










I'm not sure what that was for but the mechanical ideas are very interesting. Heal and toe gear change that operated a Sturmey Archer style hub gear. Unlike the bicycle that you pull the gear into position BSA had used a rod on a screw thread that pushed or pulled it into the right gear. Even the gearbox was connected to the pedal and chain drive.



It must had been a bit heavy to pedal along. The other departure was the type of leather belt used. Instead of using a studded belt they used a link one. I guess that the studded belt ran a bit rough so the linked one would be much smoother.



On the cylinder head is a tap and a pipe that comes from the petrol tank. The carburettor does not appear to have a tickler so I, again, guess that this was a way of getting fuel directly into the engine to aid starting. I think Rowley might need this on the Venom! On the way home I did more filtering on the LE. I think the sun had brought out something nice in the motorists and was quite a pleasant ride.




Wednesday, 30 April 2014

A BSA or Two


BSA Rockets

I didn't get out to the ROG's Run the other Thursday as I spent most of the day getting the car ready for Sunday with trying to get the car radio working however I did get out on the Saturday afternoon up to Redpath Studios to pick up some family portraits. It was a relatively quick trip around the M25 and off at junction 18 towards Ammersham and to the Chennies. I left some fliers there for customers and friends who are also keen motorcyclists.



I was out last Sunday with the 2CV car club for Drive It Day. We all drove off from Denby's vineyard along the A25 east to Ightham Mote. A very old and historic house in pleasant grounds. Good for a visit and even better if you belong to the National Trust. There was an impressive line up of Citroens with a couple of cabriolets to add even more style to the day with Gita taking a shine to a three wheeler.




In the evening Trusty made another appearance in the “Crimson Field” but more to what is going on at the Museum. I have found another article from the Classic Motorcycle magazine from December 1998 about the line up of the Rocket series.



In the Museum we have a Road Rocket and a Super Rocket. The Super Rocket is under going restoration and can be seen in the little barn. In amongst the Triumphs' is the Rocket 3 ohc model to add to the line up. What we don't have is the Rocket Gold Star, but we are ever hopeful that one may land on us soon to boost the collection.



The Rocket series of 650s was much loved by many people with excellent power and handling gave the Bonneville a run for its money. In the Museum we also have the unit construction Spitfire in road going and racing forms. It is interesting to see how compact the bikes become when they are of unit construction.


Friday, 25 April 2014

Matchless Owners Club Visit



A Flying M Visit

If you have been following the “Crimson Field” Nursey has got Trusty back again and I wait to see what adventures there will be in coming episodes. I do hope the bike stays out of the wraps. A few Mondays' ago the Thames Ditton group of the AJS and Matchless owners club paid us a visit and it was good to see some of the old faces again. They turned up on Matchlesses! (no mention of the classic BMW here). Velocette MSS man also an AJS and Matchless man had the Museum team get his bike out and we all had the joy a seeing and hearing the MSS running at the back of the Museum. Once again, when the experts who know their bike, I end up with lots of information about how the model was developed. The Museum is always the place where information flows free.







Coming more up to date I was at the monthly club night of the Wey Valley Advanced Motorcycle Club for a presentation from Lembit Opik the Public Relations Representative for MAG and he gave a very informative lecture about the successes and failures of MAG along with how the public image is changing also if you need to influence your MP as most constituences have at least 7500 motorcyclists and when this is pointed out to an MP they tend to start listening! There are campaigns going on all over the country to try to make motorcycling as enjoyable as possible. He pointed out that when MAG has been successful no one seems to notice. If you want to be more proactive about your biking have a look at the MAG website.




After the meeting I was talking to some guys who are members of the PanEuropean club and they are always looking for events to go to, they already know about the Museum, but not about the British Motorcycle Charitable Trust so I gave them loads of application forms for their members and told them about the benefits of joining the trust. There are a number of machines loaned to the London Motorcycle Museum by them, among them is the 1937 B24S Sunbeam and we have a new one just arrived this week a 1911 BSA that you can also see it on the LMM Facebook page.

Sunday, 20 April 2014

A Week of Flyers


Flyer Week

Last Thursday I had a trip out with the Wey Valley Advanced Motorcycle Club, for me it was a 268 mile day out on the Buell seeing different roads down to the New Forrest for lunch and back. The start was at Ryka's where I left a bundle of fliers for display before we headed off into to deepest Surrey and beyond. 




On Saturday I headed to Birmingham for an overnight stop at the Holiday Inn Birmingham Airport. It was for the Assam New Year celebrations called Bihu where there was much eating and drinking and dancing albeit, from me, Boris style of light bulb, lightbulb, motorbike, motorbike. This Holiday Inn has an international flavour and they were happy to have a goodly number of flyers for their things to do leaflet display. On leaving the Holiday Inn Gita and I went on to the National Motorcycle Museum. It was somewhere I have been wanting to go to for ages. Not only to see what they do but how they do it. It was an impressive display of several hundred motorcycles. I was on a mission to get engine plate measurements for a 1927 Cotton Blackburne. 



Bill has one of these in bits but not the engine/gearbox mounting plates. If anyone has one can we have the dimensions so we can get some made please. There was not one of that year in their display. I had some interesting conversations with the volunteers there and left a wad of flyers for them to display and took some of theirs away to advertise for them “in the south” at the Museum. Back at the Museum for my Monday stint, Bill arrived later in the day to have a meeting with Ealing Council about what surface would be best for the car park at the front of the Museum. I was on my way home before the meeting ended so I don't know the outcome. More to report later.
Tuesday I headed for Bristol for a family visit and was invited along to the Chipping Sodbury Tractor Club. This is a serious club that takes their tractors to shows and events and will be out on the 27th April for “Drive It Day! The presentation that evening was of the history of Parnells of Fishponds Bristol and peaked my interest with their associations with aviation and the Parnell Pixie that used a 700cc Douglas bike engine in 1923 rated at some 6hp but with about 25bhp on tap and more than enough power to put the plane in the air. Parnell and son did many things that included shop fronts and fittings and used at Selfridges in 1908. They also scales that were later to become known as Avery. During World War 11 the company made gun turrets that were fitted to Wellington and Lancaster bombers. I guessed that some of these were electrically powered and the connection with Triumph and the generator was instantly made. I gave a presentation of a couple of minutes at the beginning to the group of about 40 members telling them a little about the Museum and opening times and location but also mentioning that we had a 1914 Triumph model H on display. 



During World War One these was affectionately known as Trusty Triumphs and just to add a bit more, if you are watching the new BBC Nursey series the “Crimson Field” one of the nurses turns up on one late in the first program. More interest was generated in the Museum and another wad of flyers disappeared.


Saturday, 29 March 2014

A Scooter at the Museum




Velocette Viceroy


Just something I forgot to pass from a few weeks ago was and article in the London Evening Standard from Wednesday March 12th and in their regular feature on Homes and property they talked about the amenities near Northolt. They mentioned Greenford park where there are three mounds next to the A40 and the London Motorcycle Museum in Greenford. The photo they used was an old one from 2011 and the display has changed considerably since then!
Now another Monday at the Museum this week as we had around 15 visitors that kept us busy all day with visitors from as far afield as Cornwall and Telford. It seems today there was much interest in the Velocette Viceroy scooter and as you may gather there is another article to quote from in the December 1998 Classic Motorcycle magazine. The article was written by Dennis Frost who is also the LE Velo Club Historian. I have often thought that Velocette had all the ingredients to make some very interesting lightweights but never got around to mixing them together to make more marketable products.


The Viceroy engine was very unusual having a 250 cc flat twin two stroke motor. It had reed valve induction because having a common crankcase piston controlled porting would require twin carburettors or an exceptionally long and cumbersome manifold. Many of the parts were common to the LE and Valiant but was streets ahead in that it had a starter motor run on a gear wheel like a car. Scooters at the time that used Villiers engines had a dynastart fitted that doubled as the generator as well as the starter motor. The Viceroy engine was also used as a commercial engine and many found their way on to lightweight hovercrafts that were the fad at the time. It was a very powerful motor for the day and would pull the scooter along at speeds in excess of 65mph which was quite quick in its day considering that many 350 cc bikes around at the time did not go any faster.



In the range of lightweight models at the time were the LE, Vogue, Valiant and Viceroy all encompassed by the LE Velo Club. The LE and Vogue shared the same running gear. 192 cc side valve water cooled engine. The Valiant was a modified LE engine, air cooled with overhead valves and was also 192 cc. The Viceroy was quite different in having the 250 cc two stroke engine. For the lightweight range you have the LE pressed steel body, the Vogue with the glass fibre body on a tubular frame, the Valiant with the duplex cradle frame and the Viceroy with a pressed steel body around a tubular frame. I wonder what it would have been like to have a Viceroy engine in a Valiant frame. A full 250 cc howling two stroke pushing you along. I reckon it would have given an Ariel Arrow a run for its money!



I have a much modified LE and a black Valiant that has had a few awards at concours over the last few years and if I'm at the Museum you may see one or the other parked up outside.


Friday, 21 March 2014

BSA M20



BSA M20


In the time there are no visitors I sift through the magazines to see if there is something interesting to read or there is an article on one of the machines we do have in the Museum. In the Classic Motorcycle of February 1993 I find, amongst other things one such article on the BSA M20. The 500cc side-valve single that was a strong plodder and used by many for sidecar work.



According to the report the Ministry of Defence people had set specifications that turned the very comfortable civilian M20 into a decidedly uncomfortable forward lean version with too much weight on the arms and knees pressing into the tank. It did about 60 mpg and about 60 mph! Used for dispatch riding. After the gripes there was much praise for the robustness of the machine that it could carry an extra 400lbs of armour plating along with a machine gun. BSA had provided them with a bullet proof machine and some say one has been purported to have survived a nuclear attack! It was not necessarily the best machine for the job and as you may remember the bit about Douglas DW60, and the TRW and there was a BSA twin that was never to get into action. It did not have the ground clearance or the lightness to be what the military needed and as army surplus you could buy one from Pride and Clarke for as little as £20 in the sixties. It was an endearing machine with good reliability and easy maintenance as most people at the time could not afford someone to do the work for them.




The one in the Museum is of a similar spec but without the monumentally long side stand that you could park it up quickly on any terrain, good old canvas bags and in our case a manikin that has got a bit tired and dropped off holding his tray of medals. 



In the background is the little 122cc James, the “Clockwork Mouse” and next to it a Vickers machine gun (sometimes used to wake him up). In the other photo is the “Flying Flee” a 125cc Royal Enfield that was so named because it was used by the parachute regiment and dropped in a steel cage where it could be rescued from the cage and set free to bite the enemy as required. A complete one in its' cage, can be seen at Duxford at the Imperial War Museum.




There is an M20 at Duxford parked up by a communications van. In spite of the extensive use of motorcycles used by the military from the First World War onwards there were only a few examples to be seen there.


The Ormonde



The Ormonde on an outing


I just happened to drop into the Museum on the Sunday to have an update from Bill about what has been going on in my absence and while I was there the owner of the 1902 Ormonde was in to take it out of display in preparation for exhibiting it at the Stafford Classic bike show at the end of April. It was an opportunity not to be missed to take some more pictures of the other side of the bike. It is relatively light and was removed from display with a bit of muscle. It is still at the Museum but now located in the barn waiting for some TLC in readiness for the show. It is surprising what happens when an old bike is just standing there and reveals some of its history.



Out in the sunshine






On the side you are not able to see some of the original paintwork reveals itself.





Mysteriously broken pipework.










The engine number is finally found.







On my travels, later in the day I see something that is a rare sight on our roads today it was bright yellow and turned out to be a modern Triumph outfit heading around the north circular.





During last week I was out and about around Uxbridge and ran into another biker who has lots of biking friends and I passed on a number of Monday discount fliers for him and his mates. I do hope they come and make use of the offer. Also during last week I have set the ball rolling for getting a stand, again this year, at the Southern Classic Bike show at the end of May for the LE Velocette Owners Club. If you look up the EGP Enterprises web site you will be able to see last years winners. Among them were the Tiger cub from the Museum and my Velocette Valiant. I have found another Classic Motorcycle magazine from February 1993 about a BSA M20 and I will be following that up some time soon.