Showing posts with label Ariel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ariel. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Sprinting in U.K Airfields

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By David Lancaster

David Lancaster is a journalist and lecturer, based in London. After studying philosophy at the University of Warwick, he spent three years as deputy editor of MotorCycle International magazine (published by BIKE founder, Mark Williams) before freelancing for Arena, BIKE, Classic Bike, and The Times, Independent and others.
He later founded the food, drink and travel title EatSoup for IPC Magazines and then launched Restaurant magazine. He rides his family's Vincent Black Prince, has sold too many old BMWs, and is road registering a Reed Titan Honda K4.




Scattered over England are numerous disused airfields. Further reductions in RAF spending may see more shutting down soon. They have a peculiar, elegiac charm: quiet, often deserted, with decaying wartime buildings, whose ghosts could tell of five years of wartime industry and danger as fighters, bombers, gliders even, were dispatched to be nervously counted back hours later by command and ground crew.



A few, still, have a life devoted to mechanical ingenuity and speed related endeavourer. Bruntingthorpe in the Midlands, is used for car and bike testing, and aircraft preservation. It was where I cut my teeth as a bike journalist in the late 80s, learning just how hard mph is to come by beyond 120mph. And when to brake on its two-mile runway. Removing the mirrors helped us crack 150mph on a Kawasaki ZXR750.


A few less industrious and high maintenance airfields host drag racing meetings from around May to October, organised by the National Sprint Association and supported by local clubs. The make-do-and-mend spirit is one wartime RAF pilots would recognise. Bikes range from the barely modified ‘run-what-you-brung’ machines, to highly tuned, leading edge racers, replete with anti-wheelie bars, turbos and hand-built frames. The vintage bikes have a compelling minimalism/brutalism to them: hard tails, often powered by large capacity V-twins, they strongly echo post war Stateside street style.




A drive to collect a Honda 350 K4 from its Manx owner led me to Keevil airfield, near Swindon, south of England, on a soaking wet autumn day. The Manx team’s members – the Lonan Gentlemens' Motorcycle Club - have near-dominated TT and Manx Grand Prix sprints for the past few years. The Honda I was collecting had won its class three years in a row.



The team’s Paul ‘Hodgie’ Hogson would take his class fastest time (and course record) later that day at Keevil when the rain eventually eased, running 9.79 secs on his Yamaha FZR 500 based sprinter. He took the 250 class too, on a RG Suzuki based special. While the rain fell I took the chance to photograph and chat to the owners of some wonderful machinery.


British Douglas’s were out in force, supported by the company founder’s great grandson, Bill Douglas, featured on the left of a shot here, with blazer and handlebar moustache. His family bikes were built not far from the airfield, in Bristol. Pictured with him is Henry Body, now in his 60th year of motorcycle competition, and still fast on his solo and sidecar-lugging Dougies, taking the best in the vintage sidecar and solo classes that day.





Jap engined-specials are popular with vintage sprinters; the units are ‘built to tune’ according to one rider. Yet others, such as the lad pictured, cut their teeth on tuned and stripped scooters, with kicked out forks. Keevil airfield itself played a key part in the war effort. It was built solely for the war, and was mostly out of use by 1947. Not only was it the launch pad for fighters, bombers and gliders, whose pilots would land in mainland Europe on secret missions, but Spitfires were built there too. In response to the successful German bombing of the south coast assembly plants, production was shifted to a new hanger at Keevil and by 1945 some 600 were dispatched. More info, with photos.




Action pics by Alan Turner

I came away more than happy with my new old Honda, and as ever impressed with this most subtle form of racing. Technique and split seconds matter – in the sprint time, of course, but more importantly in the launch. Just as appealing is, though, is the range of machines and the skills and depth of knowledge of the riders. And, at somewhere like Keevil, there is a sense of riding in the tyre marks of the RAF and USAF crews, launching themselves into the dark night heading toward mainland Europe, relying just as much as the sprinters on technique, skilled assembly, horsepower – and luck.




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Monday, July 26, 2010

Reader Submittal. Stunner Of An Ariel Square Four From Ted Guthrie.

Ted wrote about this Vintage Days Beauty:

The Ariel club's display included this beauty. This group was also just set up in the swap meet. Note all the congestion behind the Square Four, which is typical of Vintage Days - just tons and tons of fantastic old bikes and parts.



Sunday, May 16, 2010

Riding into History Show and I had the wrong Camera... Brough Superior. Arial Square Four. Vincent. Triumph

Next few days will be some of the better posts from the local Riding Into History Motorcycle Concourse in St Augustine Florida. Sadly, I packed the wrong lower resolution camera so my pics are not as sharp as I'd usually hope for. A little post processing seems to have given them some usefulness though. Here's some of the first pics I snapped. I was an perfect day and an outstanding event. 

FYI: If you want to see the whole album go to the "Links to full albums" page at the top of this blog and there are links to this album as well as most of the rest of my pics.  Enjoy!










Monday, April 12, 2010

Wayne's Ariel

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When we saw Wayne's Ariel we immediately wanted to know more about this bike.
We wrote to Wayne and asked him to tell us more about his fabulous 1959 Ariel.
Wayne is a 1969 born Rocker and lives in UK. Enjoy this bike, its a real jewel.
Frank



I bought the bike 19 years ago & it was a collection of odd bits & peices (see early photo) I think it had been Cafe-Raced before (probably in the '60's) as it already had Borrani ally wheel rims on it & John Tickle bits & bobs & rearset footrest (they were being used as pillion footrests at the time I got it!)


It had a Honda petrol tank (held on with jubilee clips!) & various other Japanese parts on it! High bars & forward footpegs were also on it! The first thing I did when I got it home was replace the bars with clip-ons & took the forward footrests off! A week later I got hold of a glass-fibre 'Goldie' petrol tank, fitted a new seat cover & pretty much rode it like that for a few years! Had swapped tank for another as first one split, same style as the one now fitted (but glass-fibre again!)

"Looked like this for a few years! "

In 1995 I totally re-built the engine & at the same time drilled out the cylinder head to lighten it (it's BSA A10 iron head, by the way not the original ARIEL one!) I got the idea from a bike magazine that was my fathers from the '60's, showing how to lighten a Norvin for racing, by drilling just about everything full of holes! I then rode it for a couple more years (as daily transport) until the magneto packed up!


By this time I had something more modern, an A65 Lightning! The bike stood around for nearly 5 years, until I decided to have the mag rebuilt, by this time I had kids so never got 'round to getting it back on the road!.....Until 2 years ago, then I replaced the tank with an Ally one I'd had made to fit the bike perfectly, Bought a re-conditioned smiths speedo (as someone pinched the other one) new headlamp, brakes, cables & re-sprayed the tinware! Fitted new exhausts & 'Goldie' type silencers! Recently fitted 'Bacon slicers' to the front wheel, but not sure I like them, they're not a perfect fit!.......


It started life as An ARIEL FH650 Huntmaster (The Ariel Huntmaster FH 650 was particularly popular with sidecar fanatics in the late 1950s. ), registered in 1959!

The Ariel Huntmaster

As for me I have been riding Brit bikes since I passed my bike test in 1986, did have a couple of jap bikes but never really liked them, so have had nothing but brits since 1988! I used to be in the 59 Club, rode bikes for everyday transport until my family came along (had to get a car!)


I'm 41 but don't tell anybody! Ha! Ha! Would like to get a Velocette Venom next, that's what my goal is anyway! Had Triumphs & BSA twins, so feel like a big sporty single! Used to attend the Rockers Reunion Runs in the late '80's/early '90's, love Rock 'n' Roll/Rock-a-Billy music, that's about it really!.Wayne.

Wayne

Outside Johnsons Cafe.

On his 650 Lightning, outside Johnsons Cafe.


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Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Kim & Pete Young San Francisco California

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The United States are the land of Choppers and flat trackers of course, but not only.
Apparently, there are many communities of old motorcycles fans.
San Francisco is a very good spot.

Pete Young and his wife Kim are very active. Pete despite a busy schedule between job family life, engineering, and blogging, kindly respond to our invitation.
Pete started riding bikes at age 10, Kim at 24. They Only own and ride pre WWII era bikes, with a focus on pre 1916 bikes lately.They enjoy Velocettes.
Kim rides her 1930 KSS 350 OHC, Pete on 1938 MSS, now with a sidecar They Try to use the bikes as often as possible, the way that they were made to be used. No bikes are collected for display purposes, only to be ridden.

Their kids started riding at 9 months of age in the sidecar K&P organize some rides every year: the Rigid Ride for pre WWII bikes and the SF 49 Mile ride for pre 1975 bikes.



"49 Mile" is 10th anniversary this year, expecting around 200-250 bikes.
Pete have previously been president of the Velo club of N. America, and organized the 2006 Rally.
They Attend the Velo club rallies every July, with the kids. Rallies are 1000 miles in 5 days, in a different US state or Canadian Province each year.
They are volunteer and judge at bike events like the BSA Clubman’s show, Legends, etc.



K&P restored Kim’s 1936 Ariel Red Hunter after riding it for 10 years, in time for the 2008 Legend Show.
The bike was built in 1998 from a very incomplete basket case, with 75% of the bike missing.

Pete’s 1913 Premier is ridden pretty often at Pre16 events, and won best pre1930 at legends 2007. Peter will be riding the Premier on the Cannonball Rally, 3300 miles across the USA in September.
He's currently restoring the 1916 Excelsior.they do almost all of the work on the bikes themselves, except magneto windings, chrome and some painting.Pete spend about 3 hours in the shop for every one hour on the road.


They attend about 10-15 organized rides/rallies each year, plus rides with the family around town, to coffee on Sundays, etc.

Where does the passion for old bikes come from? Hmm. The beauty and the engineering of
the early bikes is very nice, and also interesting. The simplicity, and conversely,
the complexity of some parts keeps his attention. Shop repairs and restorations are done together, as are organizing rides and attending rides, rallies, shows, etc.

Thanks to ©Craig Howell "El Caganer" for the photos.


As you can see riding, is a big part of their time thus far...


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