ANTIQUE NATIONALS- Great Sunday out.

Well Sunday was a bloody Hot day to be at the drags but for some cool rides and great racing, the Antique nationals is always a fun event.
Below Marky of the Shifters, puts his ” Purple people Eater” through it’s paces and this time the Altered is pretty much sorted and puts the power down to the Tarmac, I think the photographers were expecting that Epic 4 wheel Arial run from last year, but it was sweet, she hooked and launched, good job Marky.

Always great to see the Hot rods run and this time on the 1/4 mile so they can really stretch their Flathead powered legs.

Awesome atmospher and everyone is friendly at this Annual event.

I’m not the best camera guy but wanted to capture as much as I could in the heat.

Diane Branch gets into it and love seeing Girls race and she was quick too.

The staging lanes had some cool rides getting ready to let it all go on the 1/4.

Squeak Bell of the Shifters runs his Chopped rod and is sat right in the backseat area, so Nostalgic and fun to watch,albeit my wobbly filming but was trying to watch him and film at the same time.

Cragar powered Midget looked so awesome, but took too long to make a pass, but got hm sitting on the track.

Always love the Gassers and plenty of them to see at Fontana this weekend too.

Diane Branch takes the Win, great to see and of course hear.

My mate Charles Girlfriend Runs her coupe and gets away well, only to be pipped at the end.

I love Motorcycles as you know.

The WL surely was a fun and fast machine for its time and still running strong.

Always great to see a couple of Trumpys going at it.

Let’s hope next year we get more bikes to race each other.

 photo 002_zps35888f1f.jpg

Plenty to see and love the step side.

 photo 003_zpsaf1edcd8.jpg

Pick ups are popular as ever and the weather was perfect for today’s racing at Fontana.

 photo 004_zps71279f75.jpg

Trumpy sits after going to Tech and ready to race.

 photo 005_zps67a2facd.jpg

 

Tom Branch from Pasadena and his oh So Nice Roadster awaits his tech band and then he is ready too.

 photo 006_zpse1250bd3.jpg

Great to see a modified and it was fast fr a four banger too.

 photo 007_zps63632379.jpg

Gassers, freight trains and mountains with the Sun out, superb day ahead.

 photo 008_zps87c1d4f7.jpg

Love the little A-Bone and it was fun seeing this machine get a work out on the 1/4 mile.

 photo 010_zpsbbb7db63.jpg

 

Love this and would be awesome as a shop delivery, Acme sponsored. ” American Company Making Everything”

 photo 012_zps4f8fedd8.jpg

 

 

Diane Branch getting her ride Teched.

 photo 013_zps7f396705.jpg

Squeak Bell of the Shifters sits and awaits tech.

 photo 016_zps29bb69e4.jpg

Braver man than me, half naked and in an Altered too!

 photo 017_zpsb8b43655.jpg

Nice little Scalloped T awaits a check.

 photo 018_zpscd462d95.jpg

Yes please, loved this Caddy- same color as my Triumph too.

 photo 019_zps3fffc5be.jpg

Loved these two just sat on the tarmac, the roadster is just right.

 photo 020_zpse6b8d158.jpg

I so wanted that Roadster just right in every way for me.

 photo 021_zps7070532f.jpg

Just chilling before the call to get o the strip.

 photo 022_zpsad2d4141.jpg

Cool 5 window with slicks, awaits the call.

 photo 023_zps9609fc15.jpg

Loved this Midget and boy what a slick Mill.

 photo 024_zpsc06f6665.jpg

Nice to see still around.

 photo 025_zps5ad87fb9.jpg

 

 

Three window on the strip at half gallop and sounded great.

 photo 026_zps2b8cf3ed.jpg

 

Such a Clean 29 Roadster and ready to take it for a blap up the strip.

 photo 027_zps4bb9a0ce.jpg

Great day to see so many rides stretch their legs.

 photo 029_zpsc9ff4fa6.jpg

BLAAAAP!!!!!

 photo 030_zps5d8ff341.jpg

 

Roadster pick up was Blown, but not a fan of Yellow though.

 photo 031_zpsd324ddb9.jpg

This 5 window was so sweet.

 photo 032_zpsa4903132.jpg

How can you not love a Gasser, looks fast just standing there.

 photo 033_zps1126939e.jpg

Gimme, Gimme, Gimmee!

 photo 034_zpsb7c23e94.jpg

Hanging out at the track.

 photo 035_zps0e75db5f.jpg

A Brace of rare tin that’s for certain.

 photo 036_zps995c51db.jpg

Bills three window is right on the money and a Genny 32 too, how rare is this these days.

 photo 037_zps2cebebb7.jpg

Yes please bill, I will gladly look after this for you.

 photo 038_zpsa99544f9.jpg

 

Such a period Hot Rod and was stoked to see and hear it.

 photo 039_zps0b9c1c23.jpg

Would love to have this Coupe in my driveway.

 photo 040_zps8f654100.jpg

Dakota checks out the Roadster, hopefully we shall have another soon.

 photo 041_zpse1b8ee20.jpg

 

Pheanton anyone?

 photo 042_zps35fc7e9a.jpg

 

 

Sport coupe with a Rumble seat is classic.

 

 photo 043_zps802ab666.jpg

 

Little 8BA flatty with Copper water pipes is a great ride.

 

 photo 044_zpsd9bbfdc8.jpg

 

Another ride that was great to see, as not too many sport coupes around as rods these days.

 photo 045_zps365f5b71.jpg

 

I loved this little Modified.

 photo 046_zps94e2bf82.jpg

 

So perfect a find, see, they are still out there.

 

 photo 047_zps94985037.jpg

 

Not a fan of the rim color but to each their own, but a sweet T though.

 photo 048_zpsd17bb6d4.jpg

Even the Grill shell is nice, be so cool to find something like this in an old abandoned shed.

 photo 050_zps79c5158f.jpg

 

So much cool stuff to see that day.

 photo 051_zpsa1e13cb2.jpg

I love all the flathead motors.

 photo 052_zps85d32f3f.jpg

What a killer Rod, such a nice job and Black is awesome.

 photo 053_zps9137c918.jpg

1939 tear drops and even a quick change rear.

 photo 054_zps912bd0e3.jpg

The belly tank didn’t make a pass on Sunday, would of loved to see it go.

 photo 055_zpsb3278b52.jpg

Double engined Dragster was unique and Two 4 pots would of sounded amazing.

 photo 056_zps7d4506af.jpg

Sweet.

 photo 058_zps8f521e56.jpg

This is the only place you will see rare set ups like this and glad I was there.

 photo 059_zps5c3de7de.jpg

Track nose, nerf bars, dual carb four banger,the whole nine yards, yes please.

 

 photo 060_zpsa836c2d9.jpg

Such a rare Roadster and seeing a 4 banger with all the speed equipment was a treat.

 photo 061_zps7e3ef247.jpg

A rare Four Banger powered 3 window, boy what a neat ride this is.

 photo 062_zps4f5919f9.jpg

Totally blown away with this set up.

 photo 063_zps51677f74.jpg

And more to see as you walked around.

 photo 064_zps6524fd36.jpg

 

Hubba Hubba!

 photo 065_zps25c0c8ee.jpg

 

What a great day to see all this.

 photo 066_zps00f8ab24.jpg

Cant wait for the nest one.

 photo 067_zpsd9878339.jpg

These sounded so good when they were running, an unusual noise too.

 photo 070_zpsf9a3acbc.jpg

Some money thrown into this Bonneville runner deuce.

 photo 071_zps8ab58720.jpg

Love the Motor in this Roadster  too.

 photo 072_zps26a7923d.jpg

 photo 073_zps003a96c0.jpg

The little 5 window A Bone had a wicked engine too.

 photo 074_zps9fb2893e.jpg

Ton of work but it was a strong car.

 photo 075_zpsc5810e60.jpg

 

But I love the V8’s though.

 photo 076_zps64f30fc0.jpg

 

Staging lanes at the track.

 photo 078_zps5a7e8af5.jpg

Pllenty of people turned up.

 photo 079_zps91a58049.jpg

Just cool to hang out and see some buddies I had not seen in many years.

 photo 080_zpsb9ea98a1.jpg

Here is where someone’s Grandad was this weekend

 photo 081_zps54d9252e.jpg

 

Markys Purple people eater did well .

 

 photo 082_zps693b94e1.jpg

Bit of British tin with the Anglia sit up and Beg Gasser.

 photo 083_zpsf18ded8d.jpg

 

Marky sets up on the lane ready to hit the loud button.

 photo 084_zps4cfbf50f.jpg

 

Nice step side with flawless paint hits the strip.

 photo 090_zpsf61711a5.jpg

 

Flatty powered Rail gets ready to run.

 photo 091_zpsef92f87c.jpg

A warm day for sure but remember, bring a Hat- I didnt.

 photo 092_zps4dd1c9a8.jpg

Little T awaits his time to have a go.

 photo 093_zpsda662eb1.jpg

This was aptly named the brick but the little Motor screams.

 photo 095_zps13289010.jpg

Neat shoe box ford ran great all day long.

 photo 097_zps168a4ed7.jpg

 

More staging lane activity.

 photo 098_zpsc90eb12d.jpg

 

Caddy powered roadster and this girl build that ride and races too.

 photo 100_zps5249e6e8.jpg

Such a great day here.

 photo 101_zpsf3863630.jpg

 

Awesome T trackster was great to watch run.

 photo 102_zps84dd13b1.jpg

Both these cars ran and really well too.

 photo 103_zps5f51b7c2.jpg

These both raced and was a close race too.

 photo 104_zpsc7acfc7d.jpg

Rob of the shifters, towing Squeak Bells rod to the lanes.

 photo 107_zps674a9298.jpg

Shugs Mrs ran her Roadster and Shug ran his, great couple I have known for many years.

 photo 108_zps4d1b66ad.jpg

Shug has this up for sale if interested?

 photo 109_zps4ca4bcb2.jpg

Shuggy hooking up Squeak Bell’s ride.

 photo 110_zps890153ba.jpg

I love Gassers and had a 55 in the UK, so love to see these, Kota has a 56 so we always check the tri-Chvys out.

 

 photo 111_zpse2eb37d5.jpg

Sweet hearing the Caddy mill at the drags.

 photo 112_zps632551f5.jpg

Nice eh?

 photo 113_zpsa11138a4.jpg

57 Gasser this time

 

. photo 114_zpsdcbbe9e2.jpg

 

Busy day on the staging lanes and a plethora of rides to feast your eyes upon.

 

 photo 115_zps3ed94a7f.jpg

 

We walked this area a lot and spoke to many faces we knew.

 photo 116_zps33748956.jpg

Just heading to the lanes to race.

 photo 117_zpsc3da21f4.jpg

Cannot get enough of this ride.

 photo 118_zps5a76ef1e.jpg

This fella lives up the road from us in Whittier, drives on the road.

 photo 119_zps039b6a15.jpg

 

You should try and come out to this event it sure is fun but- bring a hat its HOT!

 photo 120_zps112cdee1.jpg

Getting ready to hit the 1/4 mile.

 photo 121_zps7f8e3cfa.jpg

 

Trying to keep cool at Fontana can be quite a task.

 

 photo 122_zpsa0efa658.jpg

 

Love that Four Banger Motor, Cragar powered.

 photo 123_zpsb8a0bcd1.jpg

 

Shugs other half, gets ready to Tow Squeak Bell’s Rod out to the strip.

 photo 127_zps1b1055e9.jpg

 

Great Girl and also dry lakes races too.

 photo 128_zps3405a54f.jpg

 

Squeak is ready to run.

 photo 129_zps57ba2402.jpg

 

Rob of the Shifters gets all set on the staging lanes, he is towing another car this weekend as well but is also running the strip in his coupe.

 photo 132_zpsdd1a819e.jpg

 

Rob gives us the thumbs up as he gets all set to light them up.

 photo 133_zpsf9ebd93f.jpg

 

Shug looks on as time ticks and the starting line gets closer.

 photo 134_zpsbc6ed8b1.jpg

 

Yes, plenty of rides to see that day.

 photo 135_zps65dbc722.jpg

 

Coupes line up and give it their all.

 photo 136_zpsc0357b40.jpg

I spent all day walking around and meeting people, Dakota and I had a great time and so look forward to next year.

 photo 137_zps80e61f89.jpg

 

Roadster gets into it as he floors the accelerator.

 photo 139_zpse8127cf6.jpg

 

Love this Roadster.

 

 photo 140_zpsbbf5c5b6.jpg

 

This five window sure looks toughs as it awaits the green.

 photo 141_zpsd08a088d.jpg

Gassers are always fun to watch and unpredicatbe as they can wheel stand at any moment.

 photo 143_zpsce4f3183.jpg

 

Everything goes on the strip.

 photo 144_zps37df6abd.jpg

 

This Girly will take the win, never race her, she is awesome. That Caddy motor sounds unreal.

 photo 145_zpseb774d1c.jpg

 

Dont ya love watching all this stuff?

 photo 146_zps613483cd.jpg

Slick stepside threw down a good time too.

 photo 147_zps391fd8a4.jpg

 

I loved seeing these race, the coupe has my buddies Girlfriend at the wheel.

 photo 149_zps9a2bd8d0.jpg

 

Diane gets on it and takes the win

 photo 151_zpsb8424bb9.jpg

 

Great racing all day long.

 photo 153_zps2a58189e.jpg

 

Coupe and sedan go for it.

 photo 154_zps797c6fa9.jpg

 

Both flatty powered the truck has rear engine flatty.

 photo 155_zps877eda2e.jpg

 

Great close racing.

 photo 156_zpsed2216fa.jpg

 

Awesome sound too when these get on it.

 photo 157_zps39f298b7.jpg

 

That flatty rail hauls some serious Arse!

 photo 158_zps9872162f.jpg

 

5 window and Roadster hit the track.

 photo 159_zps9ce4b3a7.jpg

 

Roadster pick up took the win but the T Tracksers are suprisingly fast.

 photo 160_zps2cb55f6d.jpg

 

How cool is this shot?

 photo 161_zpsd7615932.jpg

 

This race looked uneven but were so close, I loved watching the T Model.

 photo 162_zps5609ef46.jpg

 

All sorts of rides races all day.

 photo 163_zps68425769.jpg

 

Even some fun time was had too.

 photo 164_zps07f096c4.jpg

 

The rail was fast and looked well.

 photo 168_zpsa20cae36.jpg

 

Roadster gets the head on the roadster pick up.

 

 photo 169_zps71c7c1f5.jpg

This 4 Banger 5 window was so nice.

 

 photo 170_zpsc5348e01.jpg

 

When all fails, try a Whizzer to race!

 photo 171_zps08246b54.jpg

 

A fun day and glad I could share it with you.

 photo 172_zpsc6a7a446.jpg

 photo 173_zpsc46c7fcc.jpg

 

Shug, the flying Scotsman head to the lanes.

 

 photo 174_zpse1a39ebf.jpg

 

Nostalgic real genuine Three Window was such a great thing to see in real life.

 photo 177_zpsfae07225.jpg

Shugs Girlie checking the track out.

 photo 178_zps53a7770a.jpg

 

Yes- the Camfather- Ed Iskendarian was even there chatting to everyone.

 photo 179_zps80eaffc9.jpg

 

Shugs Mrs turning around track side in her T Roadster.

 

 photo 180_zps90045106.jpg

 

All rides there were great to watch race.

 photo 181_zpse3b74a71.jpg

 

Squeak takes on another ride.

 photo 183_zpsc436c82c.jpg

 

Love Gassers.

 photo 184_zps64c2f5ec.jpg

 

Shug gets all set to lay some Scottish power down the track.

 photo 185_zps4f0370a7.jpg

This 5 window was quick all day.

 photo 186_zps5ad32f01.jpg

 

Classic stance.

 photo 187_zps4f8185c6.jpg

Never got bored of hearing that Caddy Mill fire up.

 photo 188_zps6a0dea95.jpg

Gassers are such a cool thing to see and never tire of this stuff.

 

 photo 189_zps87d0fc42.jpg

 photo 190_zps6c3a87d8.jpg

 

The Shugster cruises back after towing.

 

 photo 191_zps3944ed49.jpg

So next year, come out to the Antique Nationals as its a heap of fun, we may even be racing there next time.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Pendine Sands tomorrow, what a great place.

Ok Gang

 

Some of you know that not only am I into the Motorcycle lifestyle, but I really have a passion for the Hot Rod and Custom scene too.

I had a 32 Three Window Coupe in the UK in the 80’s and tomorrow Pendine Sands will have their second meet where you get to race on probably the earliest dry bed speed trials anywhere in the world.

To be part of this would be an awesome thing, just to experience all these cool Hot Rods that have been restored or completely built to their style must be intoxicating.

Lucky for me I was in the Hot Rod fraternity in its early guise and we had a blast but now to see so many people and so many rides is just mind boggling and on such a famous part of the British Isles for Land Speed Racing.

So hopefully my mates will send me some photos and I can share some of it with you on a blog.

 

The Vintage Hot Rod Association presents:

2nd Annual Pendine Sands Hot Rod Races

 

 

 

28th & 29th June 2014

 

 

We are pleased to announce the 2nd Annual Hot Rod Races to be held at Pendine Sands. With the tide playing no small role in determining dates for us, we will be running the event on the 28th and 29th of June 2014. That’s right folks, two days of hot rod racing on the historic beach in South Wales. We will be starting around 11am each day and racing for around five to six hours, with non-stop action from start to finish.

The first running of the event was a complete success and has brought the VHRA international acclaim, peaking with no lesser award than the Motoring Event of the Year at the International Historic Motoring Awards. The press coverage has been phenomenal, with Octane, Motorsport and The Automobile reporting about our time on the beach, along with the more expected magazines such as Custom Car and Classic American. In case you have missed what happened on the 7th September 2013, click here and here to get a taste of the action.

 

Free Spectating

Outside of the pits it’s free if you wish to come and spectate. There is a fee of £3 per car payable on the day which will allow you to park on the hallowed beach in your car. This will not permit you to enter the pit or race areas, nor will you have access to the after race parties on Saturday or Sunday night. No pre-booking is required, you do not need to be a member and there is no limit on numbers.

Racing Classes

 

V – Vintage – Pre 54 engines, inclusive of all Ford flathead V8’s

L – Late – 1954 and later engines

 

4 – 4 Cylinder

6 – 6 Cylinder

8 – 8 Cylinder

U – Unlimited Cylinders

 

B – Blown – Supercharger or Turbo

 

F – Flathead – ALL valves in block, no OHV conversions

 

R – Roadster – Open top factory cars. Roof chops allowed, top must be down.

C – Closed Car – Fixed roof factory cars. Roof chops allowed.

M – Modified – Open top special & shortened bodies including any non factory bodies.

S – Streamliner – Closed car special & shortened bodies, including any non factory bodies.

K – Full Body – Factory cars post 1934. All  body styles, roof chops allowed. Full fenders must be fitted.

 

 

Accommodation

 

For those wishing to stay nearby there are a number of options. If you are quick then the Parkdean Caravan Park across the road is the place to stay. Call 0844 335 3729 and be sure to quote reference HOT ROD 14 to receive a 5% discount whilst the offer still stands. Bookings are done on a short break basis and start from just £229 for a 6 berth caravan. Check out their website for details of the accommodation available. Alternatively there will be camping available on site and nearby, bookable via the VHRA, at £15 per pitch for Friday and Saturday nights and is only available to those booking race or patrol passes. There are also hotels and B&B’s in the area, just search on Google for more information!

 

 

 

How to clean up your S.O.H.C. Caliper

Many people email or call and some have the same problems, so I thought I might do a wee bit of a blog and show you what we do when you grab an old CB750 and fnd out that the front brake sticks and wont release, how can you over come this and get the old girl to function again.

 

Now- this is my way, someone else may in fact do theirs differently, but this is what I taught myself and so far it has helped me so many times and i did it all at the shop with a minimum of tools too.

 

As you can see, this one was nasty and to be honest, most of them are like this, but if you cannot even get the brake pad out, sometimes- if you are lucky, if you remove the brake hose and eave the bleed nipple closed, you can try and blow the thing out with compressed air.

But remember if you are going to do that, wear safety glasses and put the caliper in a bucket with a towel in it, as if that brake pad and piston comes out, it will be traveling faster than your bike can go, so make sure you have a safe area to do this.

Now, if like me, the bugger is stuck in there like a fat foot in a thing shoe, then the only real way to remove the brake pad and piston is to do what we do.

 

 

Get an old pair of handlebars and fit a working master Cylinder to the bars, then simply just bleed the caliper until fluid comes out of the bleed nipple, tighten off and then check the master cylinder for fluid, top off and screw the lid back on and start to pump the brake lever.

If you have bled the caliper the piston WILL start to move and slowly the brake pad will simply plop out, but- keep checking on the brake fluid as you will soon run out and don’t want an air blockage.

 

Fill reservoir with brake fluid and keep pumping and make sure that you have at least a towel under the caliper body as when the piston pops out, of course, all the fluid is going to be right behind it.

Plus the old fluid will be dirty and many times all gummed up and this makes a mess, so a towel is always a good thing, make sure you throw the towel away after as you dont want to use it for cleaning a freshly painted gas tank as brake fluid is brutal on paint.

 

Now the brake pad and caliper is out, you will see just how bad the piston has become, the main factor for this is that the Caliper body is aluminum and the Piston is steel, the steel sweats and then rusts and then it turns into pitting, thus when you press the brake, the pitts will catch against the seal and wont return and the brake sticks on, that’s why sometimes, if you have moved an old bike and the brake sticks and then you see the old boy who owned the bike, kick the caliper, its enough force to pop the piston back home but will always stick.

 

So, we now manufacture a Stainless steel piston to prevent this from happening again and we use them all the time.

 

 

 

Check our parts page out as we sell a reaming kit now to get the Caliper looking good and smooth.

I use a dremel and a rubber wheel and then I gently remove any of the oxidization around the caliper with the rubber wheel, but not harming the aluminum, this works very well and I must of done this to over 150 Calipers over the years.

It gets hot  on the caliper body but this is so worth it and you will be surprised at the end result to be honest.

But once you dremel the body, it will be nice and smooth, I clean her out with lacquer thinner and air dry, then fit a New Rubber seal in its groove, i usually dip it in brake fluid and fit, then use our Stainless Steel piston and put a little brake fluid on that and it will plop in the caliper nice and smoothly.

Then simply add your brake pads and then fit to the caliper bracket on your machine, just bleed the brake and you are done.

We sell the brake bleeders too and the Rubber seals, so we have ya covered with it all, as well as the brake lines too.


Now if you would like a little more insight, I made three videos with my little camera today, so check them out as these may help you as you go along with your brake rebuild.

Part 2

part3

UGG BOOT PHOTO SHOOT

A fun time we had, as UGG BOOT Australia asked if i could help with a Photos shoot for some of their new fashion boots. Sure I said and took a couple of bikes down, a bunch of my helmets and jackets and hen went to a cool old spanish villa in Siera madre for this shoot.

 

A great bunch of lads, the main Model they flew in from italy and the girl Model they flew in from germany, the make up guy was from France, so a whole global community was here and just a mellow cool atmosphere.

 

 

 

We were there maybe 4 hours and just had fun to be honest, plenty of food and plenty of laughs too thats for sure.

 

This fella was a great laugh and get to chin wag on the good old Facebook with him from time to time.

 

A really pictursque place to do the shoot and am so glad that I did it.

 

The cool thing for me was that when me and Jennifer went to london to see my folks, we went in the UGG boot store in pica dilly and there I was on their video, and then I was also on a giant bill board on ceasers Palace wall for all and sundrie to see, just a great time.

 

They were trying to capture the spirit from an old photos taken in the 60’s and got it pretty close.

I thought that I would post a couple of photos on here for you lot to see and I can share the moment.

I suppled a few bikes and a lot of clothing etc and it really turned out well.

 

 

Look forward to another shoot one day as we all seemed to hit it off that day and I will never forget it.

 

Hope you dig the photos, and it was nice to be in a little bit of that show Biz environment.

Thanks for looking and have a great weekend.

.

 

 

.

 

 

Harleys New Electric Motorcycle – LIVEWIRE –

 Well here we are Below- who would of thought Harley would make an Electric Motorcycle, but its pretty stealthy, although I noticed it has to have some sort of thumping noise coming out of it and below you will see a Video so you can hear the electric motor winding up.

Just wanted to Blog it today for you to to feast ya eyes on.

An all-new fully electric Harley-Davidson called the Livewire has been leaked through a blog Asphalt & Rubber, just hours before the firm was about to make an official announcement and it confirms the American company as the first mainstream manufacturer to produce an electric motorcycle.

There is still no official information on the bike but leaked specifications suggest it will have a 55kW electric motor which will generate an equivalent of 74bhp. The biggest surprise is that traditionally conservative Harley-Davidson has beaten every other major manufacturer to the punch with a fully electric motorcycle; the closest to date is the BMW C-Evolution electric scooter.

What really surprises along with the technology is the styling which is a long way from the standard Harley-Davidson cruiser that is so familiar. There is an LED front light and a modern glass dashboard

 

 

http://www.motorcyclenews.com/upload/304549/images/hd23.jpg

 

http://www.motorcyclenews.com/upload/304549/images/hd34.jpg

 

 

.

 Will this battery-powered hog help the famed cyclemaker grow beyond aging boomers?

 

Harley Davidson, battery powered, 2014, Motorcycle

 

 

It’s bike night at the Harley-Davidson Museum near downtown Milwaukee. Outside this Modernist cathedral of chrome, hundreds of riders have parked their Harleys to admire one another’s bikes, swap stories and enjoy a perfect May evening. Anyone from a corporate marketing department happening on this scene might have been horrified, because it would not suggest a growing market. Bike Night in Milwaukee sure looks like Old White Guys’ Night. The only diversity among this group of aging boomers is in the beer brands in the cozies they carry. But Mark-Hans Richer, who is indeed Harley’s marketing boss, isn’t bothered. “We love old white guys,” says Richer, who is not quite one. “Our old white guys are great customers, we love them, and we never want to walk away from them.”

 

 

That said, Harley is in the midst of a complete reimagining as it increasingly tries to appeal to African Americans, Hispanics and women, not to mention riders in China and India, all of whom have become target customers. Global demographics–more young people with less money to spend–are forging big changes at the iconic firm. Harley still sells the rebellious, hell-raising, American free-spirit ideal that it rode to fame in the 1950s and ’60s. But that isn’t a strategy for running a company in 2014.

The Great Recession drove Ford to the wall and Chrysler and GM into bankruptcy, forcing drastic operational and cultural changes that made them more efficient, higher-quality operators. Harley was in better shape than the auto companies going into the recession but fared worse after the downturn: motorcycles are typically a second or third ride for Americans. Harley’s sales plunged from $5.8 billion in 2006 to $3.1 billion in 2010, even as autos were recovering. Its U.S. market share fell from 51% in 2006 to 43% in 2008, according to the Trefis research firm. The average age of its customers increased to 49 from 44.

Worse, perhaps, is that when sales turned up again, Harley reverted to form. And form wasn’t particularly good. Harley’s product line was full of retreads, and it had little to offer consumers in emerging markets like India and China. “There was a recognition that it was a great company, 108 years old,” says CEO Keith Wandell, a former auto-parts executive who took over in 2009 and began to force Harley to behave. “A lot of great things had happened, but I think what was apparent was that we’d become stuck in time. We had become sort of resistant to change and doing things differently.”

This year Harley’s sales should increase 9.7%, to $6.5 billion, and it will move perhaps 283,000 motorcycles. It’s introducing new lower-powered, lower-priced models for young riders and taking its biggest technology risk ever: the LiveWire, an electric-powered, urban globocycle whose high-pitched, jetlike whine sounds nothing like the Harley roar–that hurricane of sound that tells you a V-twin gas-engine hog is approaching even before you check your rearview. “We have a powerful brand and a powerful product–that’s why we are doing this. It isn’t the better-mousetrap strategy,” says Wandell. If the bike sells, it will punctuate the turnaround of a uniquely American corporation.

 

The electric Harley sitting on a small test track behind the company’s development center in Wauwatosa, outside Milwaukee, isn’t going to be confused with some of the putt-putt electrics on the market today. The design of LiveWire is gnarly enough to be Harley: it’s angular and agile, with a cast-aluminum exoskeleton sitting on a short wheelbase with 18-in. tires. The tires are a little bigger than normal and the seat a little higher, so the cycle can more easily jump curbs and handle the potholes of New Delhi or New York City. The turn signals and rear lamp are glowing LEDs, like those found on high-end Audis. What’s missing is the steroidal engine sitting under the rider–replaced by a lithium-ion-battery-powered motor.

 

In electric cars, the compartment for the battery that powers the vehicle takes up a disproportionate amount of space and produces a lot of heat that has to be dissipated. That’s a lot harder to do on a bike. Engineers jammed as much battery into the bike as they could to deliver sufficient acceleration. LiveWire generates 75 horsepower and goes from zero to 60 m.p.h. in four seconds.

 

 

 

Sound was another challenge because Harleys rumble even at low r.p.m.–a sound referenced, onomatopoeically, as potato, potato, potato. The LiveWire’s gearbox-and-motor combo produced a new and somewhat unexpected sound, which the engineers tuned. “We knew immediately we had something cool,” says Jeff Richlen, the chief engineer.

 

What’s it like to ride? The beauty of all electric motors is that you get torque–the force that turns the wheels–on command. You don’t have to go through the gears. Twist the throttle and LiveWire responds like an impatient New Yorker, even if the engine growl lags. (The pedal-to-engine-noise disconnect is familiar to owners of electric cars like the Chevrolet Volt, Toyota Prius and Nissan Leaf.) LiveWire’s speed tops out at 92 m.p.h, by which time it sounds like a big Fourth of July rocket whizzing by. “We wanted to make this a real Harley,” says Richlen. Right now, the bike has a range of 100 miles–fine for city riding–and recharges in about three hours.

Harley isn’t releasing LiveWire for sale until customers and dealers have a chance to weigh in. The company began offering test rides to select customers this month. Can they accept any battery-powered bike as a true Harley? Yes, says Gail Worth, who owns Gail’s Harley-Davidson, located outside Kansas City, Mo. “The world is ready for a Harley-Davidson e-bike,” she says. “Electric bikes are going to be on the street. That is the one element left that will allow Harley to just take over the motorcycle market.” Harley hasn’t priced its rocket yet, but as with electric automobiles, consumers will typically pay a 10% to 20% premium for electric bikes, which suggests something north of $20,000. Worth expects LiveWire to debut in a year.

 

The electric-motorcycle market is generating a lot of interest these days. BMW already sells a $22,500 C Evolution e-Scooter in Europe. Although the market for e-cycles is still small, the consultancy Navigant Research predicts that domestic sales will grow tenfold and reach 36,000 units by 2018. A couple of specialty manufacturers, such as Brammo and Zero, are already in the market. Harley says it isn’t worried about being late to market. “If it’s green, it’s badass green. It has character,” says Richer. “We don’t see our competitor understanding that.”

 

Livewire isn’t just a flashy new concept for Harley; it’s also the product of a painful corporate revolution long in the making. In the depths of the downturn, the company produced print ads that proclaimed, “We don’t do fear … Screw it, let’s ride.” The bravado was a misdirected rallying cry. “We were heading downhill–not spiraling but walking down this hill pretty fast,” says Worth, who also heads Harley’s dealer council. Sales of the company’s best-selling heavy bikes fell 50%.

When Wandell arrived in 2009, sales had begun to pick up, but the company had no new products in the pipeline to meet the increasing demand. Harley’s 1,500 dealers vented, but Harley’s product-development cycle was so sluggish that the company needed far more time to get new products to market than the competition: some five to six years. New cars are created in half that time.

Global regard for the Harley brand had long insulated it from bad management. In 1969 a conglomerate named AMF, which you might know from its bowling pins, bought Harley. The motorcycle company suffered from corporate inattention, and in 1981 a management-led investor group bought it back. But it remained a boom-bust outfit that relied on periodic economic upticks to bail it out.

Wandell spent most of his career at Johnson Controls, an auto-components maker. So his being chosen to become Harley’s boss attracted some criticism–he wasn’t a Harley guy. But Wandell quickly drew up a “short list of big things” that had to change: how the company designed products, how it made them and how it interacted with customers. Everything, in other words. He replaced all but one of the top bosses, mostly with talent he found being squandered in middle management.

One of those talented people was Michelle Kumbier, whom Wandell tapped to reshape Harley’s product development. Though not an engineer, Kumbier took an engineer’s approach, benchmarking the company against other manufacturers like Ford. Then she shared the not-so-pretty results: by any measure, Harley was a laggard in both product-development cycles and manufacturing efficiency. “Engineers were able to accept the truth if you showed them the data and the evidence. We showed them the road map. This is how we are going to get to world class.” Since then Harley has cut its time to market in half.

In another big shift, Harley says it has become customer- and dealer-led. Worth says the listening is real. “It used to be lip service,” she says. “‘Let’s sit down and have a beer.’ They’d fix onesie-twosie things. Now they handle it as business. We don’t sit around drinking beer with each other anymore.” Oddly enough, for an outfit with such a devoted following, Harley used to build products based on its managers’ gut feelings, which was fine when the customers were mostly white boomers. But now the customers could be newly wealthy Chinese looking for style, city-dwelling millennials who need utility and affordability or retirees who want a trike that doesn’t embarrass them.

That shift led to a company initiative code-named Rushmore, whose mission was to produce new products for this multiculti world. Harley took a fresh look at every aspect of motorcycling–the issue of the rider’s head being buffeted by wind, the position of the saddlebags, the passenger’s viewpoint–and integrated new technology like GPS. How, for instance, could a rider use a touchscreen while going 80 m.p.h. and wearing leather riding gloves? The research led to more than 106 changes in the way that its touring bikes are built.

Harley-Davidson’s plunge into advanced technology–a third of its engineering is now focused on innovation–led it to LiveWire. A small group of developers was freed to work on the project. “It’s a symbol of what we can be,” says Matt Levatich, Harley’s president, “not what we shouldn’t do. Why not us?”

More immediately, Rushmore yielded something that wouldn’t have been contemplated before: smaller bikes for younger riders, especially women. This year Harley introduced its lower-end Street series, high-riding bikes with 500-cc and 750-cc engines that still provide a Harley feel for less than $7,500. “Street is about access over engine displacement,” says Richer. “It is designed with a global customer in mind. You can grow up in Beijing and Chicago, and you might have a cultural connection that your parents didn’t have 25 years ago.”

With Street, the company now has models that can compete in developing nations such as Brazil, South Africa and India, where price matters. Harley is a latecomer to India, but it is now assembling bikes in Bawal and sponsoring group rides in places like Goa that can attract 5,000 cyclists who want to taste the American ideal. Harley is feeding that hunger: overseas cycle sales now account for 36% of the company’s total. Indeed, there are now group-ride events in China, Africa and India.

The smaller bikes are also a better fit for Europe, where consumers prefer sport and utility cycles like Street over Softail cruisers. In China, Harley doesn’t have the opportunity that American automakers have. Motorcycles are banned from many highways and urban areas. But just as they prefer big Buicks, Chinese riders are hog lovers, as are riders in Japan, home to giants such as Yamaha and Kawasaki.

So far, the strategy appears to be working. Harley has picked up two market-share points in Europe on BMW. And while Street models are now heading to U.S. dealers, the company is living you-know-where on the hog with its traditional cruiser bikes. It owns 56% of the market, up from 41.5% in 2008, according to Wells Fargo Securities. Even better, the supply of white guys over age 35 figures to be about 50 million strong in the U.S. for the next 25 years. “We’re not dying a slow death,” says Levatich. “We’re creating a new future.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

THRUXTON CURVED LICENSE PLATE

Well, Back in the Day, many of the rockers decided to put their License plate across the front forks and made the bike look more aggressive.

I have grown up in this industry and had these on my machines, as they banned fendered mounting number plates back in the early 70’s aptly names Pedestrian slicers and i rode with mine across the forks too.

 

So- here is our New product and its for the good old Thruxton, although we are making some with Rockers on right now, but the Thruxton was an iconic bike and I wanted something cool on my machine, so we came up with this set up.

 

 

This is hand made and come with all ready to bolt to your THRUXTON, the brackets are thick gauge steel and the License plate is fully Embossed Aluminum just as it was back home in Blighty in the day.

 

This is ready to bolt and go, takes 2 minutes and you are ready to go and yes, the bolts come with it.

If you like the yesteryear look, then this is right up your alley and I really love it on my machine.

 

Have a look and see  if you like this, we have made quite a few of these and now available to you, we also ship 6 days a week and all over the globe.

 

 

This will not flop about and bend as we used thick steel and I know you will like this set up and will be eager to fit this to your machine.

We are making all sorts of parts for the Triumph Thruxton, Bonneville and the Royal Enfield and a New Website almost upon us too, so keep checking back.

 

We really do enjoy what we do here at CCR and hope that you like the products we offer to the public.

 

 

Thick steel and the bracket is welded to the curve and the Embossed plate is ontop of that, she will be all set and you can fit right away using your existing Thruxton brackets under your headlight.

 

Black and silver is the old school way and I am pleased to offer these to you right away.

If you have a Thruxton and you dig the old rockers stuff, then I am sure you will love this set up for your machine.

 

You can call us on 714-996-4597 and we will help the very best that we can or you can sling some coins in the slot after hours and leave a message, if you prefer to email us then simply carpy@carpyscaferacers.com and I always answer emails.

 

 

 

Relive the days of the Rockers with our license plate that screams Nostalgia.

 

We live and breath this stuff and that’s why we do so much in this styling.

 


Carpy’s Cafe Racers
3305 Miraloma Ave., Suite 172
Anaheim, CA 92806

Phone: 714-996-4597 or 714-996-4599

Hot Rod Reunion Bowling Green, KY- Gasser Crash!

The “Traveler” Altizer, Finders, and Kibler 33 Willys Crash Sequence

 

Header_title

 

 

 

 

In the first round of the 1/8 mile contested AA/Gas category Ted Turley Jr. driving the “Traveler” Altizer, Finders, and Kibler 33 Willys had just beat Steve Crooks’ “Blew By You” Gasser with a 5.617 at 118.42 mph when disaster struck.  A brief puff of white smoke appeared from the car which was followed by a hard right turn that sent the car on its roof and across the track behind Crooks’ car. The 33 Willys briefly went airborne landing on its side and sliding to a stop just short of the opposite guardrail.  Turley fortunately was able to walk away from the car uninjured.      by Mike Sopko Jr.

 

I wanted to show these photos  today on Monday as to be honest, after this sentence no words need to be said but, glad he walked away, testament to modern structural engineering in the chassis of Drag cars, scary but Phew- it could of easily ended worse for the driver.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A Royal Enfield kinda day!

 

These bikes have really come a long way and that’s why we actually purchased one and in the last 2 weeks we have been changing a few things to make this stand out from the crowd, as this will become a popular choice I am sure.

 

 

We have already changed the shocks to our own style (available here) and love it way much better on the road and for looks as I just didn’t like the Yellow on the factory ones.

We shortened the front fender and took the silly reflectors off the sides, as well as then looking at the machine and decided to lose the big bulbous headlight and fitted our Classic chrome version (available here) and that’s way cooler.

 

As you can see, our prototype Megaphone is on the bike and I have run it for 159 miles with no issues, so now it is time to make stainless steel versions and they will be offered as Raw stainless or super highly polished stainless, either way a very unique look and sound.

 

This is a long stroking motor and when you run our system its sounds pretty darn cool, like the days of yesteryear.

 

 

We shortened the rear fender too and removed the huge Euro license plate surround and fitted our own and that’s way better.

Next up was to remove the big plastic turn signals for some cool steel/chrome versions and I am just about ready with the New Stainless mounting bracket that will be available next week.

 

Of course, I had to have some sort of pin stripe on the Red, just to break it up, and also painted the fenders RED to match and i think it works very well indeed.

 

 

 

 

we still had other things to do, I removed the stock Mirrors as they were ugly and the right side I couldn’t even see out of, so now replaced with our version and love these, available through us on the website right now.

 

I removed the safety switch from the bloody side stand as it was a pain in the arse to be honest and so much better now but i am changing- or-reconfiguring the side stand next week, so stay tuned on that.

Still more to do, as I will remove the Charcoal box at the front of the bike so this bike breathes a little easier.

 

She pulls pretty good and will eventually do some hop up on the Motor when she is all run in and I am happy with it, small steps until I get t know my way around this bike.

 

 

But I am happy with the outcome already and wanted to hsare some photos with you lot so you can see what we have created here at CCR.

Next week the Stainless Steel megaphone will be on and a few more cool parts added to increase the styling of this Red Rocket.

 

Many thanks for stopping to look at the bike, i shall be taking sme videos soon , that way you can hear how she is.

 

 

Enjoy your Royal Enfield as they are a blast to ride.

 

We love Our Royal Enfield Continental GT and we hope to be producing many parts for these machines, so stay tuned to the website.

 

Friday the 13th but a good day at the shop

OK- its Friday and its also Friday the 13th but a good one, the sun is out, the shop is busy and its almost the weekend.
A number of things going on where we are in this sunny state. SoCal speed shop and Waldens have their Open days, limeworks was yesterday and he had a blast, and the start of the Fathers day Roadster show is on in Pomona, as well as at Fontana, Our shop greaser is racing his Kawasaki in the summit series and also racing against his old man, which is great as it will be fathers day, so maybe kota will give him some slack?…NOT!

Ok I like to put Music videos on that cheer my day up and some of you like them by the emails we get here at CCR, so here is a great band, the Reverend Horton heat, who plays down here on a regular basis.
So check this high def video out called “let me teach you how to eat” Bit risque but great for a Friday.

Below is a video from Danny Rockabilly and His Clan-Dirty Baby Music Video and its a new upbeat tempo that i really dig, the riffs are pretty reminisant of early Sun recordings and I just like it and thought would share wit you.

Massive part of my life for over 3 decades and I lived the whole lifestyle, I loved the music clothes the jiving, we sure had a ball back in the UK in the 80’s and 90’s, this was a 5 night a week lifestyle for me and good old Ronnie dawson was a superb guy that was taken away from us waaaay to early.
This is just a smidgen of what we did.