Old relics in the Cold

Well happy Saturday to you all

Here in SoCal, the only snow we see is 90 minutes up the road at high elevation in Big bear etc, but you don’t find cool stuff like this anymore and what cool rides are sat in the cold on this video , albeit they will be crushed but if the owner had any sense, he would make a bloody fortune if he sold each one.

Plenty to chose from as I can Model A’s to cool step side pick ups and panel wagons, a must see if you can make it here, but not sure if the owner will stick the shotgun out the window.

Sure hope someone buys these as there is so much potential here.

Enjoy you Saturday.

 

 

Peace and Grease.

HAPPY THANKSGIVING EVERYONE!

Just want to take this opportunity to thank you all for everything you have dome in the past to keep me going on in this dream job I have.

I am blessed to be in this country and I am totally blessed to have super customers and friends such as you, so I hope that you all spend the day with Family and friends and sit down, eat, and reflect on what you have, think of the homeless and poor, and give where you can, even if it is just a burger, a meal goes a long way and will make everybody a better person.

 

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The 59 Motorcycle Club O.C. section has a ride in the morning and then heads home to have food and enjoy the rest of the day, I sure look forward to seeing and hearing from all you avid Motorcyclists, stay safe out there and once again……

Thanksgiving-Large

Hope to see some of you on the Road sometime.

thanksgiving turkey

Great Little Low key Movie

Happy Monday all

 

Just wanted to add a little independent movie that has a great feeling to it, a little dark, a little cold and yet a little funny, I dig movies like this, cool bikes, great places, real towns and real people, plus for me, any bird riding a motorcycle is thumbs up.

Of course, I will let you decide that, enjoy.

 

TOKYO GONE from Speedtractor on Vimeo.

How to remove stripped Bolts from your Motor

Well, sometimes, people email me with an array of questions about their machines and the issues that they have encountered as they try in vain, to pull some part of their beloved motorcycle.

I try and help the best way I can, this tip is an easy one but I do get quite a few regular questions as to this issue when people are taking their machines apart to build into a cool ride for the warmer months.

So have a look, I know the majority of you already know this but- I like to help where I can and hopefully, even if I help out Just one person, it was worth me stopping to film this segment for you.

Jay Parker who designed the SUN Logo passes away!

 

Last week the designer of iconic Sun Records logo died in Memphis at the age of 87. Jay Parker was born in Tuscaloosa, Alabama on February 1, 1925. Parker was high school friends with Sam Phillips, and after establishing himself as an art director at the Memphis Engraving Company, he received a visit from Sam asking him to create the image that has been associated with the legendary Sun Records label ever since.

Some of Parker’s other notable works include Alka-Seltzer, Super Bubble Gum, and the tiger-stripe helmet used for the Cincinnati Bengals NFL team.

ABOUT SUN RECORDS

The Sun Sound began when Sam Phillips launched his record company in February of 1952. He named it Sun Records as a sign of his perpetual optimism: a new day and a new beginning. Sam rented a small space at 706 Union Avenue for his own all-purpose studio. The label was launched amid a growing number of independent labels. In a short while Sun gained the reputation throughout Memphis as a label that treated local artists with respect and honesty. Sam provided a non-critical, spontaneous environment that invited creativity and vision.

Sam Phillips

As a businessman, Phillips was patient and willing to listen to almost anyone who came in off the street to record. Memphis was a happy home to a diverse musical scene: gospel, blues, hillbilly, country, boogie, and western swing. Taking advantage of this range of talent, there were no style limitations at the label. In one form or another Sun recorded them all.

Then in 1954 Sam found Elvis Presley, an artist who could perform with the excitement, unpredictability and energy of a blues artist but could reach across regional, musical and racial barriers.

He helped form the beginnings of the Sun Sound by infusing Country music with R&B. Elvis’s bright star attracted even more ground-breaking talent to the Sun galaxy. Listed among his contemporaries and lab mates were Johnny Cash, the inimitable Jerry Lee Lewis, and the “Rockin’ Guitar Man”, Carl Perkins. These four soon became known as the Million Dollar Quartet. Right behind them came Roy Orbison, Charlie Rich, Bill Justis, Harold Jenkins (a.k.a. Conway Twitty) and other equally memorable musical talents. All eventually sold on Pop, R&B and Country charts and grew to international fame.

Rockabilly became the major evolution in the Sun Sound. Lyrically it was bold; musically it was sparse; but it moved. In the 1950’s Country music rarely used drums that were so vital to jazz, blues, and jump bands. In fact, drums were prohibited on stage at the Grand Ole Opry. However, Rockabilly drums played an essential role in driving teens across the nation to become enamored with the Rockabilly movement and the revolutionary Sun Sound. Once again, Sun was able to break new ground recording music of unparalleled diversity in an incubator of creativity.

Inherent in the music of Sun is a vibrancy that survives to this day. Sincere, passionate music. Music that has stood the test of time. It is music that has reached across race, age and gender boundaries. It reflects the diversity and vision of the talent that recorded on the Sun label, and indeed, American popular culture itself.

MILLION DOLLAR QUARTET – DEC. 4 1956

Million Dollar Quartet

The Million Dollar Quartet is the name given to recordings made on Tuesday December 4, 1956 in the Sun Record Studios in Memphis, Tennessee. The recordings were of an impromptu jam session between Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins, and Johnny Cash. The jam session seems to have happened by pure chance. Perkins, who by this time had already met success with “Blue Suede Shoes,” had come into the studios that day, accompanied by his brothers Clayton and Jay and by drummer W.S. Holland, their aim being to cut some new material, including a revamped version of an old blues song, “Matchbox.” Sam Phillips, the owner of Sun Records, who wished to try to fatten this sparse rockabilly instrumentation, had brought in his latest acquisition, singer and piano man extraordinaire, Jerry Lee Lewis, still unknown outside Memphis, to play the piano on the Perkins session.

Sometime in the early afternoon, Elvis Presley, a former Sun artist himself, but now at RCA, dropped in to pay a casual visit accompanied by a girlfriend, Marilyn Evans. He was, at the time, the biggest name in show business, having hit the top of the singles charts five times, and topping the album charts twice in the preceding 12 month period. Less than four months earlier, he had appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show, pulling an unheard-of 83% of the television audience, which was estimated at 55 million, the largest in history, up to that time.
After chatting with Philips in the control room, Presley listened to the playback of the Perkins’ session, which he pronounced to be good. Then he went into the studio and some time later the jam session began. Phillips left the tapes running in order to “capture the moment” as a souvenir and for posterity. At some point during the session, Sun artist Johnny Cash, who had also enjoyed a few hits on the country charts, popped in (Cash noted in his autobiography Cash that it was he who was the first to arrive at Sun Studio that day). As Jerry Lee pounded away on the piano, Elvis and his girlfriend at some point slipped out.
Cash claims in Cash that “no one wanted to follow Jerry Lee, not even Elvis”
The following day, an article, written by Memphis newspaperman Bob Johnson about the session, was published in the Memphis Press-Scimitar under the title, “Million Dollar Quartet.” The article contained the now well known photograph of Elvis Presley seated at the piano surrounded by Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins and Johnny Cash.

A BOX OF OLD RECORDS HELD TREASURE – A RARE AND PRICEY GEM

August 24, 2009 | Tags: ,

1record0806-300x210 A St. Paul record dealer scored $10,323 on eBay Wednesday. Not bad for a hissy 7-inch blues record that gets stuck in the middle and cost him less than 25 cents.

“I’m pretty amazed,” said Tim Schloe, 39. “I had no idea what to expect” because the disc — “Greyhound Blues,” a 1953 single by obscure Alabama bluesman D.A. Hunt — is “insanely rare,” as he put it. It was one of the first singles from Sun Records, the historic Memphis label that would soon discover Elvis Presley.

The 45-rpm record surfaced recently as Schloe sorted through boxes of more than 10,000 discs he bought two years ago from a Texas collector’s estate.

“A 45 that’s bid up to more than $10,000 is in a very select group of rare vinyl,” said Joyce Greenholdt of Goldmine, the discophiles’ bible. The highest-known price for a Sun 45 was $17,820 for a mint-condition copy of Presley’s first single, “That’s Alright, Mama.” A West Coast blues collector outbid 33 others — including the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame — for the Hunt disc, according to Schloe. Once he sends it off (by registered mail), he plans to dig through that Texas collection for another gem — even if it gets stuck in the middle.

 

Some of Suns legends!

 

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HUBBA HUBBA- HONDA’S HUBLESS MACHINE!

 

Meet Honda’s 2016 Hubless Electric Concept Motorcycle

Well, who would of thought you would see a Honda like this, but to be honest, I really dig it.

Hubless-Electric Honda-Motorcycle

Hubless-Electric Honda-Motorcycle (Image Courtesy www.honda.com)

Last week, Honda unveiled its retro-modern Honda hubless electric motorcycle.

According to Yanko Design, the new hubless CB160 (2016) motorcycle was designed by James Stumpf to “pay tribute to the classic Honda 160 in a not-so-subtle way… with a modern electric engine twist.”

Meet Honda's 2016 Hubless Electric Concept

The features of the retro design reflect modern standards with Electronic Twist Throttle, Electronic Twist Brakes, and Dual MagDrive Wheels. The CB160 has a top speed of 100 mph and a range of 160 miles.

Following are a couple of Honda’s previous hubless designs:

Hubless-Electric Honda Motorcycle

Hubless-Electric Honda Motorcycle (Image Courtesy www.honda.com)

Hubless-Electric Honda-Three-Wheel

So, with Modern technology and a little of yesteryear sprinkled in, you may well see one of these whispering past you as you shop in Target on a Sunday.

Be fun to run around the business park here, or as a pit bike etc.

So keep your eyes out at the new Concept shows as something is bound to come out with a look similar to this.

 

Below is Harleys 2020 Concept, Looks like they have seen the Honda!

The Humble beginnings of the 59 Club.

HOW THE CLUB BEGAN


This is an article published about Father Bill when he passed away and his own words on the start of the club, It describes our first links with the ACE and how they are part of our history with few words by an early member Palladin

My Memories of Father Bill and the 59 Club are still very vivid.
By Palladin
I got to know Father Bill reasonably well and found him very approachable and down to earth person, very likable but did not suffer fools. I remember him coming to the Busy Bee on one occasion and he was in a bad mood he had just come off his Bike and damaged his new gloves, we had a laugh at the time as we thought he would like to swear to relieve his annoyance.
Father Bill always used to tell of his first visit to the Busy Bee when some one drove in one door and out the other, I have to admit that was me in my young silly days just 17 but should have known better.

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I did not meet Father bill on that occasion but as a result of his visit to the Bee a group of us when to the opening of the 59 Club in October 1962. The last time I spoke to him was after he retired about 18 years ago the Busy Bee Club were having a reunion, I was asked to contact him and invite him to attend. I eventually made contact with him and we were talking about the times at Hackney Wick I said to him about the Dorchester and the other things that we had done, I can’t remember the exact word but it was along the lines that he had met so many people over the years and it was difficult to remember names so it would be difficult for him to remember it I said my name, I said that in those days my nick name was Palladin, he retorted I remember you you road though the Bee on my first visit.

I wish he had remembered me for a good deed.
Whilst I have all the photos and cutting from that period I have managed to loose my original membership, I was below 10 I think number 7. So myself and my friends from the Busy Bee where there right from the beginning.

 

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I was fortunate enough to be invited to afternoon Tea at the Vicarage., to go to Blackpool with Father Bill and stayed overnight in a church hall it was the first trip arranged by the 59 club. The most exciting and memorable was to the “Fleur de Lys Ball” at the Dorchester where a small group of us won a draw to go to the charity Ball and represent the 59 Club. I am fortunate to have had a lot of pictures in Books and Magazines to remind me of that time.

 

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Father Bill was still active in later years it worth reading his story. It is interesting that in 1991, when he was over 70, Wrangler jeans invited Father Bill to spearhead a new advertising campaign, for which he was photographed under Southend Pier astride a 1960s motorbike. When he was approached by Wrangler, Father Bill sought the advice of his rector, who told him: “Of course you must do it. Good for the Church to be seen doing ordinary, rather silly things.” ( Bill was chairman of the 59 until his death a regulary attended AGM’s)

By 1964 the 59 Club was the biggest Motor Cycle Club in the World with 3,800 members, the club was immortalised in Giles cartoons. I am proud to have been a member of the 59 Club to have been there on the first night, to have been one of the first to join and to have part of it in its early days. Also being lucky to be in the right place at the right time to be involved with events such as the Dorchester also to have had the opportunity to get to know Father Bill, his passing is a sad loss to all those that knew him.


The Rev William Shergold, priest and motorcyclist, was born on October 17, 1919. He died on May 17, 2009, aged 89

By Rev. Bill Shergold. From Magazine of the Fifty Nine Club, November 1966

 

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For the next two or three years I used the bike for pottering around my parish, but the thought never entered my head that one day I would start a club for motorcyclists. Most of my time was taken up with the youth club, which had just been launched by the Revd. John Oates. Perhaps I ought to say a word about this club because it answers the question of why the club is called the 59.

“The club which we now know as the 59 Club started in 1962 as a section of the already flourishing 59 Club of the Eton Mission.”

This was the club we started in January 1959 with Cliff Richards as our guest star. We called it the 59 Club because we wanted to get away from the rather stuffy image of the traditional church youth fellowship. It was immensely successful from the start and many well-known recording stars came to visit us. The most fabulous evening of all was the night we were visited by Princess Margaret and her husband, together with Cliff Richard and the Shadows..


By this time the motorcycle disease had really taken hold of me. I traded in my C15 for 1959 Speed Twin and began to enjoy the thrills of a bike. I even bought a crash helmet(police-style with peak) and a leather jacket(three-quarter length, of course). Then one day I read in the daily papers that a special service for motorcyclists had been held in the newly opened cathedral at Guildford. This struck me as odd because cathedrals tend to be rather respectable. But it gave me an idea.

I caused a minor crisis at the hospital by riding my bike into a rainwater down pipe and smashing it. Bob sent me along to the North London branch of the Triumph Owners Club which in those days had its headquarters in a Quaker meeting house at Stoke Newington.
I shall always be grateful to the members of the TOMC for the way they welcomed me and backed up my ideas. Up to this moment I had been very much a lone motorcyclist. Now, through the Friday evening meetings at Stoke Newington, I found myself enjoying for the first time the fantastic comradeship of the motorcycle world.

Meanwhile plans were slowly taking shape for our big event which was now fixed for a Sunday in May, 1962. We had roped in the local road safety officer and we sent out dozens of circulars to all the motorcycle clubs in the area. Then something happened which was to have a profound effect on the whole future course of events.

 

One day, while I was talking about the service with some of the lads from the Triumph Owners Club, somebody said: “Of course the people you really ought to invite to your service are those young hooligans who go blasting along the North Circular Road.” “That’s all very well, ” I said, “but I don’t’ know any of them. How can I get in tough with them?” “If you really want to meet them you should go along to the Ace Cafe.” “Okay,” I said, “I will!”

Until know we had thought only of inviting members of highly respectable motorcycle clubs to our service. The other section of the motorcycling fraternity was completely unknown to me. I did recall, however, a magazine article I had read some years before whilst waiting to have my hair cut. It was the sort of article which appears from time to time in the American Press, describing the activities of the Hell’s Angels. It was lavishly illustrated with pictures taken at the Ace.

 

It certainly wasn’t calculated to inspire confidence in anyone proposing to visit that cafe for the first time.
The more I thought about it the more alarmed I became. The time I chose my trip to the Ace was a Sunday afternoon. Had I known more about the habits of young motorcyclists I certainly would not have chosen that particular time. The Ace is about 13 miles from Hackney Wick and I set out with several posters rolled up on the back of my bike, hoping that I might persuade the proprietors to put one up for me. Unsure of the kind of reception I should get, I wrapped a scarf around my neck covering up my dog collar. Just past Staple’s Corner about a dozen bikes ridden by sinister looking figures in black leathers roared past in the opposite direction. I felt almost sick with fear.

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By the time I had passed under the bridges at Stonebridge Park, I was in such a panic that I opened the throttle up and fled past the Ace as fast as I could. Then I realized that I was being a coward.


So at the next intersection I turned back. Again panic seized me and I went past. Then I turned back a second time and finally rode into the forecourt. By this time, the Ace was practically deserted. I ordered a cup of tea and sat drinking it, my face crimson with embarrassment. I left for home with out getting rid of a single poster. But I consoled myself with the fact that I had at least penetrated into the lions’ den, even if the lions were in fact out on the prowl.
Several weeks elapsed before my next attempt to reach the boys at the Ace.

In fact It was the night before the service was due to take place that I finally summoned enough courage to go there again. This time I made no attempt to conceal my collar and I went armed with a bundle of leaflets which said: “This is a personal invitation to YOU to come to church next Sunday for a special service for motorcyclists.” It must have been about eight o’clock on the Saturday evening when once again I entered the forecourt at the Ace.

It was packed with bikes. Hundreds of boys were milling around, laughing and talking. “This is it, ” I thought, “I shall almost certainly lose my trousers or land up in the canal.” I rode up to the nearest group and went straight to the point. “I want you all to come to church tomorrow.” Looking back I am amazed at my own nerve- I, a middle-aged clergyman invading the stronghold of one of the toughest groups of youngsters in the country.
There was no joking, no mickey talking. Instead they came crowding round, bombarding me with questions: “What’s it all about? Where is it? How do we get there?” Someone brought me a cup of tea. I never got inside the Ace at all- people kept coming to talk with me outside. All in all it was the most fantastic evening I have ever spent.


At midnight I managed to get away to snatch some sleep before making final preparations for the services at three o’clock the next day….. And what a service it was! Several days before I had issued a kind of press release, hoping that the papers would give us some advance publicity and so ensure we had a congregation. Only one paper mentioned it beforehand, but they turned up in force on the day itself-I suppose there must have been a dearth of murders and international crises that weekend. In addition, BBC and ITV sent news teams and I think there was a newsreel team there as well.

The theme of the service was that we should dedicate our bikes and ourselves to God’s service, endeavoring to use the machines in a responsible sort of way. In my address I compared the present-day motorcyclist to the knights of old and suggested that we should try to uphold the same ideals of courage, courtesy and chivalry.

To drive home the idea we had arranged for a number of different bikes to be placed inside the church-symbolizing the offering of our machines to God. It was a strange assortment, ranging from a Tina scooter to a magnificent Manx Norton which had been raced the previous weekend.
Looking back I suppose it was a bit of a gimmick to have the bikes in church. I never intended it that way. People bring cabbages and marrows to church for the Harvest Festival and no one complains. It seemed to me perfectly natural for those who love motor bikes to bring them into God’s house.

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I can’t imagine how we got through the service at all. There were photographers and cameramen everywhere. The church looked like a film studio with all the lights and trailing wires. Yet despite all these distractions there was a wonderful atmosphere of devotion and reverence.
Next day the papers were full of what had happened at Hackney Wick. Here are some of the headlines: “The Knight Errant’s of 1962 – Ton-Up Kids in Church”, “Ton Up Bikes Are Blessed”, “Pictures of a 100-mph Gang that may Cause a Storm”, “Blessings by the Ton”, “A Vicar blesses the Ton-Uppers.” One paper rang up the Bishop of London at midnight to ask him what he thought about it all!

 

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On Tuesday several papers published cartoons, the most famous of which was by Giles in Daily Express. I wrote and told Giles how much I had liked his picture and to my delight he sent me the original drawing signed by himself. This is one of my most treasured possessions and occupies a place of honor in my study. I was a bit overwhelmed by all this publicity.

But for me it had one great advantage. I couldn’t care less about having my pictures in the papers. What did please me was that almost overnight I had made friends with the boys at the Ace. Press cuttings and photographs poured in to the vicarage, so I took them up to the Ace and showed them around.

The lads were delighted at receiving some good publicity for a change. In the past any mention of them in the press had been unfavorable. I soon became a regular visitor at the Ace and got to know some of the lads quite well. One of them even invited me to his home to have lunch with his family. Others began to tell me about their mates in the hospital. At this time, also, I received considerable “fan” mail, some of it complimentary, some of it not so nice.

One anonymous letter warned me of the dire consequences that would follow if I continued to associate with these “leather-hearted louts.” From these letters, but above all from the conversations with the boys themselves, I soon began to realize that they were virtually an outcast section of the community. Because of their dress, their noisy bikes and their tendency to move around in gangs, nobody wanted them.

Dance halls refused them, bowling alleys told them to go home and change into ordinary clothes. Youth clubs were afraid of them. Even the transport cafe’s didn’t really welcome their custom. After all, a motorcyclist consumes on average a cup of tea or Coke every two hours.

A lorry driver or a coach tripper will spend five bob on a meal and be on his way within 30 minutes. I was becoming more and more convinced that what they really needed was a new kind of club which would combine the personal and friendly touch of a youth club with the free and easy atmosphere of a transport cafe or coffee bar.

My difficulty was that our premises at the Eton Mission were already being used almost to capacity. And in any case, Hackney Wick is such a difficult place to find in its maze of one way streets that I doubted very much if it would meet our requirements.
Eventually I decided on an experiment. It so happened that the 20th anniversary of my ordination was approaching. Instead of having a party for my Parishioners I decided to throw a party for my new friends from the Ace. It was a tremendous success. About 80 turned up, thus proving that the situation of the Eton Mission was no obstacle.


At this point I was fortunate to come in contact with two existing motorcycle clubs, both of which showed real interest in my plans for a new club. I well remember being approached outside the Ace one day by Mick Ingarfield of the Friendly Club, who invited me to HQ at Hammersmith to meet their members. About this time, too, I met Garth Pettitt of the Sunbeam Club. Garth is an astonishing person – he holds some high position in the Civil Service but thinks nothing of arriving at a Mansion House reception on his SS Norton and changing out of his leathers in the gents.
There two clubs were tremendous and I can never adequately repay their kindness in supporting me in these early days. Eventually we decided to make use of Saturday nights – the only time when the halls were not being used – And to launch the new club in October, 1962.

 

 

As a matter of fact it was never intended that it should be a club at all – as witness the affectionate title of the Vicar’s Caff which it was soon given. The question of finding a suitable personality of the motorcycling world to open the club was solved during one of my weekly visits to the Ace. I was sitting at a table drinking tea and showing photographs to a crowd of the lads when I noticed at the next table a gentleman of more than ample proportions.

 

 

How he managed to fit himself into one of those funny swivel seats I have never discovered. He was obviously bursting with curiosity and in the end could contain himself no long. He introduced himself as “Harold Harvey” and asked if he might see the photographs. It appeared that he was a photographer and often went to motorcycle race meetings to take action pictures. He said that he might be able to find us a suitable guest. As a result of this chance meeting we not only secured the services of Alf Hagon on the opening night but the Club acquired its first adult helper.
I would like to pay tribute to all that Bob Harvey has done for the club since its inception. In order to publicize our opening night as widely as possible we prepared some handbills which I took around to places like the Busy Bee, the Dug-Out, Woodlands, Johnsons and of course, the Ace. I never found it easy visiting a cafe for the first time but in the case of the Busy Bee I was lucky.

 

A German TV company was making a documentary film about British youth and asked me to put them in touch with some young motorcyclists. Off I hurried to the Bee to find motorcyclists to take part in the filming. I needed no further introduction at the Bee. We spent hours making the film and the lads had a wonderful time. I shall never forget riding three-abreast down the Watford By-Pass at one o’clock in the morning with a TV camera filming from the back of a van and enormous arc lights blazing in our eyes.


We have to thank the Daily Mirror for another bit of useful publicity at this time. Among my many letters was one from a keen motorcyclist in America. He enclosed a type-written prayer which was widely used by members of his club. I trimmed it down and had it printed on cards, small enough to carry in a wallet. The problem was to distribute it. I have always shrunk away from using my friendship with the boys in the cafes to thrust religion at them.
So I hesitated to hand out the prayer cards myself. Instead I sent one to the Daily Mirror who were kind enough to give it quite a splash. I received applications from all over the country.

 

The most amusing was from an MoT examiner who asked for 50 copies, explaining that he proposed to give one to every motorcyclist who came to him for his driving test.


The article in the Mirror was also occasion of another cartoon at my expense. This time I was provided with a wife – but not a very attractive one. She piloted a sidecar outfit while I perched precariously in a gothic-looking pulpit balanced on the chair. I was pictured with a megaphone, calling out to the passing motorcyclists. The caption read: “I’ll say one thing for the vicar – he’s determined to get through to us.”


Well, the message certainly got through. At our opening that October evening we had an attendance of about 100. They were the first of thousands; and they were in at the humble beginning of what was soon to become the largest motorcycle club the world has ever known.

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Carpy’s 2 cents worth:

I remember reading some of these in the little books that floated about and is so great to re-read this article, I distinctly remember Father Shergolds experience on the North Circular to the Ace, because we lived not far from there in North London and my mum even closer grew up in Enfield Middlesex.

The Rocker subculture came about due to factors such as: the end of post-war rationing in the UK, a general rise in prosperity for working class youths, the recent availability of credit and financing for young people, the influence of American popular music and films, the construction of arterial roads around British cities such as the North Circular Road in Middlesex and North London, the development of transport cafes and a peak in British motorcycle engineering.

And now it flourishes all over the globe and me being proof of that as I am the President of the 59 Club in the O.C. area of California.

We always have fun and if you are into these like we are come check a ride or meet up with us on:

http://www.meetup.com/Carpys-Cafe-Racer-Meetups/

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Insane Meat Slicer Turbo Visor from back in the day!

As a kid, I used to think that this was nuts even then and now, well how frigging crazy is this invention to see, I cannot imaging the distraction from the noise of this circular Buzz saw that screams around at the speed of sound to “Fling” off any H2O that maybe sitting on the visor.

So Today I thought that I would show some of these Crazy inventions and make you smile today, but- in all the many decades of riding I have done back home and all over Europe, I have never encountered one of these.

Were there ever any injury’s from this contraption at all I wonder?

Even the infamous Formula 1 race car driver Graham Hill tried this insane idea out.

 

So I wonder what happened to these things, as these were very antiquated inventions.

So I did a little research and bloody hell, they still frigging make them.

Some use them for Go karting and racing, how mad is that?

So . Pardon the Pun-it has actually come full circle?

 

So keep your eyes out for one of these, but I bet you hear it coming before you see it, it is sure to sound like an old Bi-Plane losing power.

So, what is there now that maybe knocks this into a cocked hat?

How about this then?

Now there cannot be anything more embarrassing than this contraption.

 

So, stick this on your Christmas list.

Triumph Motorcycles, it’s all in the branding!

Hey there gear heads

 

Well today I shall write a short blog on branding, as many people like to watch my blogs, even my competitor reads my website everyday to see if he can cash in on any idea’s. LOL!

 

But today I wanted to add some videos, seeing it is Friday and thought that this would be a good day to have a few snippets of movies, documentarys or commercials that show the Triumph brand.

 

First up is this unusual snipet, a little boring but it says Branding of the Trumpy all the way.

 

 

 

Well not all that interesting as it was to and fro on a few occasions but next up for your entertainment is this video.
Just a Thruxton going around downtown LA and through the old Bladerunner tunnel.

 

 

Now, this Girl rider Lauren Richards from cold and wet Wales, takes the New Ace Thruxton for a little blap around her area and gives a nice run down on how she likes this Motorcycle. More power to you as we need more girl riders.

 

 

Now, this long winded Brit chin wags about his Machine, albeit a wee bit too dangerous if you are riding on busy roads as you tend to lose concentration whilst riding a motorcycle, but, again if you have a few minutes its great for me to check some of the countryside out of back home, but click past if you feel the geezer rattles on too long.

 

OK, lets whiz off to Austria and check this fella’s Trumpy out.

 

Break into a little bit of Music for this one to get your weekend off to a great start with these Scramblers.

 

Have a great Friday everyone.

It’s Bonfire Night, remembering Guy Fawkes!

Remember, remember, the Fifth of November, the Gunpowder Treason and Plot. I know of no reason why the Gunpowder Treason should ever be forgot…

 

As kids we would build a image of Guy Fawkes and then put him in a wheel barrow, Go Kart or a pram and have a cup or tin with “Penny For the guy” written on it and we would collect a few quid to be able to buy fireworks for the evening, you made the bonfire as high as you could and then placed the Guy on the Bonfire and then it was time to light it and the fireworks, as well as have jacket potatoes, Warm soups and enjoy the crackle of the fire and the sound of the air bomb repeaters as they exploded in the sky.

 

As kids, we would let off fireworks, either at home or, more fun was out with your mates. “Quick- Run”

 

If you’ve seen “V for Vendetta,” you’re well acquainted with the rhyme about Guy Fawkes, who famously tried to blow up the Houses of Parliament on Nov. 5, 1605. But more than 400 years later, the real-life revolutionary is still remembered today with “Bonfire Night,” also known as Guy Fawkes Night (or Guy Fawkes Day) in the UK.

Why? Why do we need to remember the 5th? And why has Fawkes’ face been used as a mask in a movie, or appropriated by the hacker group known as Anonymous?

According to The Telegraph, Fawkes was caught trying to smuggle 36 barrels of gunpowder into a cellar of the House of Lords in an attempt to completely destroy the building. He was part of a group of Roman Catholic activists attempting to kill King James I, a Protestant, after 45 years of perceived persecution under Queen Elizabeth.

According to Business Insider, a politician tipped off authorities to the Gunpowder Plot and Fawkes was caught in the act. He was interrogated (and likely tortured) at the Tower of London until he gave up his co-conspirators — eight days later.

Fawkes was reportedly hanged, drawn, and quartered for his crimes, with his remains sent to the four corners of the kingdom as a warning to anyone else who tried the same.

The Independent describes Bonfire Night as a celebration of the foiling of Fawkes’ assassination attempt. In 1605, when word spread, the public lit bonfires around London, and the tradition continues today with bonfires, fireworks and the burning of Fawkes in effigy. However, others believe some use the day to honor the failed attempt to murder the royal family.

In the Wachowskis’ 2005 film “V for Vendetta” (and the ’80s graphic novel of the same name), a freedom fighter named “V” (Hugo Weaving) wears a Fawkes mask while rallying support (from Natalie Portman and others) in an attempt to overthrow a futuristic British tyranny.

“Voilà! In view, a humble vaudevillian veteran, cast vicariously as both victim and villain by the vicissitudes of Fate. This visage, no mere veneer of vanity, is a vestige of the vox populi, now vacant, vanished,” the character alliteratively explains of his decision to wear the mask. “However, this valorous visitation of a by-gone vexation, stands vivified and has vowed to vanquish these venal and virulent vermin vanguarding vice and vouchsafing the violently vicious and voracious violation of volition.”

Fawkesian masks have since become a symbol of the “post-modern protest,” according to the Economist. “Hacktivist” group Anonymous rose to worldwide fame in 2008 when it targeted the Church of Scientology’s website while members wore Fawkes masks in online videos.

The Economist reports Anonymous chose the mask for two reasons: To protect their identities (and remain “anonymous”) and because of the final scene in “V for Vendetta,” in which (spoiler alert) a large crowd of people wearing Fawkes masks watch Parliament successfully blown up.

The mask has also been worn by Occupy protestors and WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, and continues to be a popular Halloween costume today. In short, few have forgotten Fawkes — even if they don’t necessarily know of the Gunpowder Plot.

 

 


 

 

This is what we do back home on this day-evening.

 

If you ever get to the UK at this time of year, head down to LEWES as its the best there is in tradition, with up to 60,000 people attending.

You can make this such a fun family affair by making great food to eat on this special celebration.


Have a nice Chocolate Flake Bonfire cake.

Good old Toffee Apples.

Bonfire cup Cakes.

Hot Chestnuts, used to love buying them from guy in Oxford Street.

Good old jacket potatoes.

You used to throw your potato in the Bonfire and it tasted awesome.

Have a safe ,but Fun Fireworks night to you all.