Friday, 21 May 2010

SR500 Tracker on Craigslist

As spotted on Craigslist. Quote:

Street legal, registered and titled 1978 SR 500. Motor was torn down replacing what was needed. Many new parts including the tires. Rear brake caliper completely rebuilt w/ stainless steel brake line. forks rebuilt w/ new seals and stiffer sprngs.Vintage fork brace, Resivoir Marzochi shocks, ASV levers w/ hot start used for compression relief. Motion pro throttle. The paint was just finished a month ago and looks great. Very torquey. Very fun little bike Gets tons of attention. I have the pink and it has current registration. Has a small head light and working tail/brake light. 2600.00 or best offer. Any questions please ask. 714-349-8244

No Prisoners

The Amman valley 'trotting' track belies it's camp name. Situated in the Welsh village of Tairgwaith, it was built in 1979 on the reclaimed site of two coal slag heaps, spoil from the Maerdy and Steer deep mines. It's a hard, cold, grey shale 1/2 mile, the fastest circuit of the UK short track season. IF my bike is ready, I plan to make use of that diagonal short-cut. BP

Walter Kaaden and two-strokes

Given the interest in the two-stroke gif in an earlier post, it seemed appropriate to mention Walter Kaaden, the German engineer responsible to a very large extent for the development of the
expansion chamber.

Kaaden (1919-1996) was a rocket scientist during WWII and after the war was an engineer with MZ motorcycles, by then trapped in the new East Germany. With pitiful resources and materials but huge intellect and ability, he recognised the potential of harnessing the pressure waves in an exhaust to not only aid the clearance of burnt gasses, but also to pressurise the combustion chamber while the exhaust port was still open, returning what would have been wasted charge back into the cylinder. His discoveries and their application on grand prix motorcycles brought MZ success that belied their humble resources and restrictive circumstances. All this is dealt with in great and entertaining detail in Mat Oxley's book, Stealing Speed, which we blogged about just over a year ago. Read it.

In the meantime, I'll leave you with a story. More than ten years ago now, I was lucky enough to interview Alan Shepherd (he died in 2007) an English grand prix racer who rode for MZ during the Sixties. The main story I was chasing was of his dramatic Boy's Own adventures at the 1964 US GP at Daytona, involving Kaaden, and maybe I'll go into that another time. However, during the interview, he gave me this glimpse of Kaaden's genius in action:

"One year at the TT, I think it was 1963, I ran through the pits just once on the 250 MZ. Walter questioned me when I got back, and bear in mind he'd only heard the bike for a few seconds. 'Alan, your 250,' he said, 'Are you confident that it is in good order?' Well, at one stage in the acceleration the engine sounded slightly duller than at other stages, but that was all. In this practice I was top of the leaderboard, or second, and was perfectly satisfied.

"Walter said to his mechanic, 'Please check the timing on the right hand cylinder, if you find it to be exactly correct, and the points gap to be exactly correct, check the carburettor and if you find nothing, please change the needle position to one notch higher.' In the evening practice the slight dullness had of course gone and my times were much improved because of the cleaner acceleration. How did he know it was the right-hand cylinder? That man was absolutely amazing. A genius in every respect." MP

Thursday, 20 May 2010

Amman Valley countdown


This time next week riders (including those pictured) from Italy, Switzerland, Germany and the Netherlands will be driving across Europe to meet up with their British counterparts for the biggest ever flat track race in Europe.
Amman Valley, Saturday-Sunday May 29-30.
Night race Saturday, Day race Sunday
All-American twins, DTX bikes, framers, classics. All abilities from the cream to the novice.
Plus Street Tracker show and Harley XR meet. It's going to be great.

Wednesday, 19 May 2010

Suck Squeeze Bang Blow

No, not a disastrous night with a fatally flawed inflatable friend, but the wonders of the four-stroke (and two-stroke) engine revealed by animated gifs. Look at that expansion pipe working its pressure-wave magic. I find these hypnotic. Click for slightly bigger versions (especially the stroker, else you can't see the whole pipe) then sit back and stare till you drool. MP
Photobucket
Photobucket

Button Badges

Thanks for the badges Marcel. BP

Tuesday, 18 May 2010

German Architecture

Damning the wisdom of those with more of it (especially Jan Leek) headstrong I went and bought some secondhand 19" BMW snowflake wheels today, for my CCM tracker conversion. Couldn't resist these /7 series nut-less handlebar clamps either. A sort of cherry on the top of a cake still in the mixing bowl. Saturday I'm taking the bike and assorted bits to CoBuilt in Oxford, for some jiggery pokery to fit some of their lush yokes mated with Yamaha R6 forks. About bloody time. BP

Sideburn 1 spotted


There might be some at Hepcat in Sweden.

Team Skooter Farm

From L-R: Wilky, Dave, GI, Jon 'Capt. Highside' Lee
Steve Von Red Max and his XR750.
Tanks.
We went to all that bother and I left the camera on the crappiest setting. Sorry.
Ben, can you do us some proper ones (with Jason included) at Amman Valley, please? G

Wood-Rotax Next Generation


This is Matt Weidman on the Wood Rotax twin. Yes, it used to wear a roundel, but the engine was made by Rotax in Austria and the chassis by Ron Wood in California, so it's a Wood Rotax and that's the name it entered the first GNC twins race of 2010 under. Weidman rode the bike for the first time on the Friday of the Yavapai, Arizona round and made the main the next day. That is pretty incredible.
BMW? Nein, nein, nein (not till they give Ron some support). GI
Read Ron Wood's story in Sideburn 3