Taking a grinder to Britain's motorcycling heritage.
Disclaimer
This "Blog" represents the thoughts and actions of the author. It is created for academic interest and entertainment only. It is neither intended or implied that any person reading any article contained within, imitates or recreates any work described.




BRITISH CLASS

BRITISH CLASS
TRIUMPH GP500

Saturday, 11 December 2010

As the CRO' flies......


Caught the postman trying to ram a package through my door this mornin.
Wrestled it off him, and brought it in...... opened it up and this is what was in it.
A crackin' bag of goodies from Cro at Cro Customs, I've always reckoned that the Cigar Chewing Crow is one of the best logos out there and now it's here.
Pure quality, thanks Man!

It sounds crazy Jim...........but it might just work.


I know that y'all sick of Yokohama pics already, and it was only last Sunday fer chrissakes but a Brat Bonnie from them Krazy Kats at Heiwa Japan is worthy of mention. Lest ya missed it. Wouldn't have dreamed of it, but they have and it works well.

Down The Smoke Last Night


Went up to London last night, funny thing that I live to the North of London but you always "go up there", to see the Modfather, Mr Paul Weller. I can't think of any other artist to have emerged from the punk scene, who has retained their integrity quite as well as he has. Still plays a balls to the wall two hour set, still accessible and still a man of the people. Plus he's as cool as a penguins gonads.






Friday, 10 December 2010

British Spanner (Wrench) Confusion.


In a reply to a comment made by Grant the other day I quoted a spanner as 1/4" Whitworth, 5/16" Bolt Size, now I've been in and around engineering all my working life and these two sets of numbers are second nature to me. It struck me however, that this may not be the case for every body that may be lucky enough to be working on a pre-1972 British bike. I will, with a bit of help from Wikipedia, try to explain a little about English threads and spanners.

Joseph Whitworth created the World's first Standard in 1841, when he introduced the Whitworth thread form. Until then each manufacturer used a thread system that they devised themselves, so not even nuts and bolts were interchangeable let alone parts. Mr Whitworth specified a thread form with a 55 degree angle and a pitch that increases with bolt diameter, this is specified on a Thread Chart. The system was so successful that it was introduced as a British Standard and henceforth became known as British Standard Whitworth or BSW An example of the breakthrough created by the standardisation of fixings and parts is shown in this extract from Joseph Whitworth's obituary in The Times of January 1887.



The Crimean War began, and Sir Charles Napier demanded of the Admiralty 120 gunboats, each with engines of 60 horsepower, for the campaign of 1855 in the Baltic. There were just ninety days in which to meet this requisition, and, short as the time was, the building of the gunboats presented no difficulty. It was otherwise however with the engines, and the Admiralty were in despair. Suddenly, by a flash of the mechanical genius which was inherent in him, the late Mr John Penn solved the difficulty, and solved it quite easily. He had a pair of engines on hand of the exact size. He took them to pieces and he distributed the parts among the best machine shops in the country, telling each to make ninety sets exactly in all respects to the sample. The orders were executed with unfailing regularity, and he actually completed ninety sets of engines of 60 horsepower in ninety days – a feat which made the great Continental Powers stare with wonder, and which was possible only because the Whitworth standards of measurement and of accuracy and finish were by that time thoroughly recognised and established throughout the country.



At the turn of the last century this thread form was considered as a standard throughout the English speaking world. In the USA the standard was eventually changed when steel replaced iron as the material of choice for making fasteners. The Unified National Coarse series was introduced, although in Australia it remained at the forefront well into the 20th Century, until it was outmoded by the Metric system.

The British Standard Fine (BSF) thread has the same angle as the BSW, but has a finer thread pitch and smaller thread depth. The width across the flats and therefore the spanner sizes was common to the BSW series.
Whereas BSW, being a coarse thread is good for tapped holes in materials such as aluminium and cast iron, it is susceptible to loosening due to vibration when used in a "nut and bolt" configuration. BSF being a much finer thread and is far more vibration resistant, thus better suited for attaching, and keeping attached, parts to machinery such as motorcycles.
Because the BSF system employs a much finer thread it is easier to strip a bolt through over tightening. For this reason the hexagon of the head was always one size smaller than the equivalent bolt diameter in the Whitworth range.
During the Second World War as a way to save valuable steel, the size of the hexagon on BSW bolts and their nuts was reduced to the same size as that already employed for the BSF system.
This change was never rebuked following the end of hostilities and it is here where the confusion lies. Looking at the picture of the spanner at the top of the post reveals the two pieces of information, it is a 3/8" Whitworth spanner, but it fits a 7/16" Bolt Size fastener. This is the same throughout the range, a 1/4"W spanner will fit a 5/16" bolt, a 5/16" will fit 3/8" and so on.
To really add to the confusion, there seems to be no logic applied to the size of the hexagons across the flats, and there are no spanners from another standard that fit! Some come close but never that good close fit that leaves the bolt head or nut un marked.

A guide to the sizes of across the flats of the bolt heads used in common systems can be viewed here.

ONLY USE GOOD QUALITY WHITWORTH SPANNERS ON BSW AND BSF FASTENERS

Thursday, 9 December 2010

Holy Crapper Batman !!!!, It's A Japper !



Now I gotta tell ya, this has never happened before and it won't happen very often again, the clue's in the name of the site really. But Markus is a friend of BIW and he's after selling his Brat Style SR500 Yam. Now over here in England this style of bike has yet to fire the imagination of many builders, but if Japan is anything to go by it could well be a whole new sub-genre very soon. It's beginning to make headway in the US and in parts of Europe, so why not get in early and be the King of Kool down ya local this Spring. This is what Markus has got to say about it;


Sr500 Cafe Racer Project.


There is so much work on this bike it's difficult to know where to begin.......but here goes!


Professionally modified frame to fit the nitroheads seat and give that nice open look at the back of the bike.


Beautiful alloy tank and again frame professionally modified to suit.


Lots of very sought after custom parts - check out redzporvida.com on line for prices and you can see the sheer expense that has gone into this bike so far.


Alloy top yoke
One off full stainless exhaust - this pipe is stunning!!
Custom Decompression lever
Alloy Clip Ons
Alloy headlight mount
Battery eliminator
Pod filter
Tacho blank
Nitroheads duck tail seat
Alloy fuel tank
oil temp gauge
Stainless model a tail light
taper roller bearings
finned engine casings
finned oil cover
finned rocker covers
Plus lots more I can't remember.......


The bike has been built to be very minimal, it does not require a battery and all switches are located in the headlight shell and only horn and kill on the bars.
I was going to run a racing twin leading shoe drum on the front - this is available at a further £250 - it is fully reconditioned and selling for what it cost me, if you were to use this it would need a wheel building onto it and a new spindle turning up.


To finish the bike needs wiring (original loom supplied), the frame painting, probably the carb cleaning an inner for the headlight and some ancillary parts such as number plate etc


The engine was a great runner with 16000kms when I got the bike, have no reason to doubt it.


V5 is present and in my name, I am the second UK owner, this bike originally imported from Japan by Bridge Moto in Reading


Included is a whole bunch of standard parts including a mint v.rare rear guard, all cables, leavers and controls, the original wiring loom, and the mentioned custom parts.




I am only selling this bike as I've just been made redundant, I will be exceptionally sorry to see it go and as such won't take silly money for it.
I have over £3500 invested in this machine - it has the potential to be great.

Yours for £2750


Any questions please contact Markus on 07854116505 - I will be happy to help.





Looks like a nice project with not much input to gain extra Kool Kredits this coming season

Wednesday, 8 December 2010

Definitely The Next In The Queue









Them's of you that have been poppin' in here for a while will remember this. It's the big lumps of a 1946 500cc BSA B33, that I scored about 6 months ago. All this talk of Chicara, Board Trackers and the like has got the brain ticking over. Just Future Games at the moment of course but there is a master plan beginning to form as to the direction this bike is going to take. Because the frame is so narrow, I'm thinking big finned Gold Star top end, so the motor is by far the widest thing when viewed from the back. Girder forks with short straight bars and Talon 19" moto-cross wheels. Trials and/or moto-cross fittings to keep everything on the frame as narrow as possible. Sort of a pre-war cafe racer type of deal................just thinkin' at the moment you understand.

Tuesday, 7 December 2010

It used to be so easy




THE CHICARA No. 3 BIKE



There was no contest, it's on my screensaver, look at it every day, without doubt the nicest bike I'd ever seen. The stance, the craftsmanship, the stunning attention to detail, all in all an amazing piece of work. Didn't really expect to have to change that point of view for quite a while, the chances of anything coming close seemed very remote indeed.





MARK DREW'S '57 TRIUMPH "SOLITARY CONFINEMENT"



Then all of a sudden along comes Solitary Confinement, I know this bike has been plastered all over the blogscape for the last couple of months. There's a reason for this, and the reason is, to my eye, it is close to perfection. Again, the proportions, the detail, the finish are all just soooo right. Building something of this quality can be a double edged sword I guess, as the next one should be an improvement, difficult to see how though.
I don't wear a hat, but if I did I would be obliged to take it off and salute these two masters of their craft.

Monday, 6 December 2010

I'll get there one day.



Mark Drew's "Solitary Confinement" on here amongst others.

Saturday, 4 December 2010

Top Stuff



Forget Clapton, Peter Green the best Blues guitarist to ever come from these shores!

Friday, 3 December 2010

Retro Stylee Baby............

These two bikes have come to my attention today, both are genuine 70's survivors and both are for sale. No need to try and build a bike that harks back to a golden age, here is an opportunity to own something that is period correct as far as the British scene went in the early seventies.


This Enfield has the rare pre-war 500 cc J2 twin port motor in it which is certainly an unusual power plant nowadays. Don't recognise the custom springer on the front but maybe somebody can shed some light on that.



The AJS or Matchless is running a later alternator motor, first introduced in 1958. This bike typifies what people were doing "back in the day" although springers were always an expensive commodity.
Both bike are said to be running fine and are on offer at £2750 a piece, not a bad price for authenticity.



If you're interested, contact Kieran at wardepartment@btinternet.com


Thursday, 2 December 2010

The Birth Of A Contender


Other than The Osmonds, Utah's main claim to fame has got to be the revered dry salt lakes at Bonneville. So famous in fact Edward T named his most celebrated twin after them, following some success there in the fifties by people using his products. Of late there has been a growing link between the Kustom world and the temple of speed, Wes at Four Aces Cycle Supply has been a regular visitor to speed week for the last 5 years, Tyler and Kyle from Lowbrow had a crack at it this year and vow to return. Our very own Sumo of Vintage Chop is constructing a really novel machine for an attempt in 2012. Now Peter Allan can be added to the list, he's putting together a pre-unit Triumph to follow the black line to the horizon.


Using a set of cherry, late big bearing crankcases and a Factory Metalworks frame as the foundations for his "Epsom Salt Special" this promises to be a fascinating build, nothing stretches a man's wit, wisdom and wallet quite like the need for speed. Being ably assisted by Barons Speed Shop he has a wealth of fast Trumpet experience in his corner, so it will be quick, of that there's no doubt. Quick enough, that remains to be seen but hopefully we can follow the build from the Genesis we see here to a rear muddy hurtling off towards the Utah horizon in 2012.
Go Get em Pete!!!!

Wednesday, 1 December 2010

You don't see one of these everyday


For them's of you that don't live in the Fair Sceptered Isle, we are pretty much clamped down in the grip of an early start to Winter over here. Been trawling through some pix taken in the Summer and came up with this. Now Veol's are pretty rare at the best of times, but I think this is probably the only customised one I've seen for years, so here ya go. Roll on Summer