![Laughing :lol:](./images/smilies/icon_lol.gif)
As I understand it now there were only a hundred and some odd made.
If only I was like a couple of my friends and still owned all the bikes and cars I went thru, I'd be a wealthy man today.
I often think this myself. I had a Velocette Venom and a couple of gold stars and a rocket gold star... I have to stop here as tears block my viewstrad wrote: ↑14 Jun 2018, 22:06Mine was 600cc and had both compression release and a timing lever but you had to get it right to avoid the mentioned consequences.It truly deserved the title bestowed on singles in the day: Thumpers.
As I understand it now there were only a hundred and some odd made.
If only I was like a couple of my friends and still owned all the bikes and cars I went thru, I'd be a wealthy man today.
Big Tea wrote: ↑14 Jun 2018, 12:16The one that scared the pants off me was a Bridgestone GTR.J.A.W. wrote: ↑14 Jun 2018, 05:32Yeah strad, those fabled V-twin beasts of yesteryear (like their Nippon equivalent - the Kawasaki 750 triple),
are still the subject of untold time 'n' money to make them behave, & yet run much harder, than they ever did..
Here's an 'Irving Vincent'* done up as a period racer.. for Goodwood, & the like..
https://c8.alamy.com/comp/KNWFW4/beau-b ... KNWFW4.jpg
*'Irving Vincent' being an Aussie outfit that builds/races the big boomers, from the pictured period style,
to radical NASCAR-tech 'silhouette' muscle-machines - with fat slicks/discs & etc..
I jumped on to what was 'only' a 350 after arriving on a Matchless, took it back and decided to keep my old bike.![]()
J.A.W. wrote: ↑15 Jun 2018, 00:28Big Tea wrote: ↑14 Jun 2018, 12:16The one that scared the pants off me was a Bridgestone GTR.J.A.W. wrote: ↑14 Jun 2018, 05:32Yeah strad, those fabled V-twin beasts of yesteryear (like their Nippon equivalent - the Kawasaki 750 triple),
are still the subject of untold time 'n' money to make them behave, & yet run much harder, than they ever did..
Here's an 'Irving Vincent'* done up as a period racer.. for Goodwood, & the like..
https://c8.alamy.com/comp/KNWFW4/beau-b ... KNWFW4.jpg
*'Irving Vincent' being an Aussie outfit that builds/races the big boomers, from the pictured period style,
to radical NASCAR-tech 'silhouette' muscle-machines - with fat slicks/discs & etc..
I jumped on to what was 'only' a 350 after arriving on a Matchless, took it back and decided to keep my old bike.![]()
Hah! B-T, I had an almost opposite experience..
I jumped on a Suzuki T350 after riding a plodding 'Speed Twin', & was promptly hooked by that wild 2T spirit!
https://c2.staticflickr.com/8/7016/6723 ... c557_b.jpg
J.A.W. wrote: ↑15 Jun 2018, 01:15"Normal bike" B-T? You mean - 'grey porridge' - surely..
A 6-speed gearbox was part of the deal, so you had a choice.. short-shifting & ride sedately.. or.. let 'er rip!
Kawasaki built a Bridgestone clone, too.. albeit a 'plain Jane' & less 'fancy-pants'/costly* 350 disc-valve twin..
http://motolegend-car.com/boutique/imag ... r19692.jpg
*Still, it had a powerful CDI - so no fouled plugs - if/when just 'chuffing about'..
Ye gods B-T!
But you are forgetting the wonderful sound through the inlet side. I had 'long bell' trumpets and the tuned 'swoosh' was amazing. Oh and yeh, it loved revs, but only up to a point. it seemed to level off. More gears would have been nice, but 4 was more than most at that time.J.A.W. wrote: ↑15 Jun 2018, 01:35Ye gods B-T!
If any bike ever needed to have its proverbial 'tits' revved off, it was a little Honda!
I disliked the CB 450, a great heavy lump, handled like a drunken pig, & yeah, it really needed.. a 6-speed box!
& that awful off-beat drone the irregular firing 180` crank caused - was just unbearable, after a Triumph..
Only interesting feature.. IMO, the torsion bar valve springs..
http://www.chinonthetank.com/wp-content ... ars-02.jpg
Never a Triumph fan, but they tended to be quick. My brother rode a Honda 2 speed for may years and would not change it. It was a torque converter (i think) no clutch 400cc.J.A.W. wrote: ↑15 Jun 2018, 10:57Sorry B-T.. but the Honda 450 was a 'clean sheet' design.. it needed, & ought to have received..
5 gears at a minimum.. & not just because the last 'true school' British 500's were stuck with 4..
( due to Edward Turner's minimalist/cheapo ethos)..
& they still steered & handled way better than the Honda, plus..
the Triumph was fast enough to win the 200 at Daytona, while the BSA won an MX World Championship..
I had a bit of fun - slotting a Triumph Daytona mill into a BSA SS OIF chassis - light, strong & good handling..
(& tuned it up to 'Boyer' production race specs - but alas absent the Quaife 5-speed cluster - it too, needed)
http://www.classic-british-motorcycles. ... GINE-R.jpg
http://www.classic-british-motorcycles. ... 8appoS.jpg
Reckon anyone in F1 do the same?dren wrote: ↑15 Jun 2018, 19:47Here's an image for you BT:
https://audimediacenter-a.akamaihd.net/ ... 1461574344
Actually T-C, one of the clever 1970s British protoypes involved a BSA 500 suspended isolastic-wiseTommy Cookers wrote: ↑15 Jun 2018, 13:03how much vibration is there with a single or 360 deg parallel twin ?
though it seems ....
...what some posters found with 350 2 strokes is supported by dyno tests done by Cycle World (in the 2 stroke thread)
showing torque regression ie RD 350 torque actually falling with rpm just where it should be rising