Constant Mesh Gearbox- Great explanation for you.

Happy Hump day folks.

Sometimes, people ask me all sorts of question on the Motorcycles I work on, now, here is a superb explanation from Hot Bike, that clearly informs you as to the purpose of a Constant mesh Sequential gearbox and how they function.

So there you go, today you may of picked up a little more understanding of a close ratio gearbox and hope it cheered your day up?

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Thanks for watching and now you know what the real term “Shifting gears” means.

Great weekend watching Dakota graduate from Navy Boot Camp

A proud weekend for us as we flew from 80 degree weather into Snowy roads in Chicago as we headed to the Great Lakes to watch Dakota Kai Sun graduate from Boot Camp as he is training to be a Navy Diver. That’s Dakota below as you look at photo he is far left and the second sailor.

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Not that many years ago whilst he was still at school in La Mirada, Dakota came to me to see if I could give him a job, I sure did and have loved the lad ever since, a tremendously talented young Man with many strings to hid proverbial Bow, and to see him graduate brought a tear to my eye as I am so proud of this Young Man.

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Both his Grandad’s were in the Navy and Dakota carries on the tradition, and now that those 8 Grueling 8 weeks of being shouted at, constant push ups, swimming, fire training, Live round shooting, and of course Gas Chamber experience, well it would wake anyone up from the dead thats for sure. Kota is above singing their Sailors creed. Carrying white flag.

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Dakota has always excelled in what ever he has attempted and he got through Boot Camp pretty well, not easy as this is a tough course for 800 Division as they are special Operations, so have the same training as the Navy Seals.

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But he and his Division did so well, they won the captains cup in the camp, thats not an easy task to accomplish by any means, watching him March and carrying their flag, filled me with pride for him and his Division, they are great people and I know that will do well in their trades that they are hoping to get into. it was a long hard and exhausting experience for Dakota.

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But , he stuck it out and is now an E2 and will now be spending a few weeks with grueling training for A school, thats even more Physical work and they will be pushed to their limits to try and weed out a few more, if Dakota gets through that lot, he will then transfer to Panama City in Florida for Dive School. Where he will learn all aspects of Welding underwater, using explosives and so many other operations that Navy Divers are qualified to do, anywhere, anytime.

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Spending Thursday through Sunday at the Great Lakes with His Mom ( Jennifer, My Girlfriend.) and Family were something I shall cherish, to see a young lad transform into a Man is something that is hard to explain but sure happy I was there for support. Above Dakota and Mom take time to get a photo.

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So just a little Blog today as we got in late last night and I have to do quite a few things today but I cannot express my pride for Dakota in becoming a sailor and look forward to him Graduate in panama City a little later on to become a Navy Diver. Above Dakota and his Grandma Carolyn he sure was happy to see her.

Below: jennifer made this awesome Sailor appreciation  Anchor to congratulate her son Dakota and it has his Division and ship em-blazed in wood, she made all this herself and even had some dog tags made up and ties the Square Knot herself. Dakota loved it and a touching memento to have at home to always be thinking of him.

 

I shall of course pass on any messages from people that know him and follow him on all the media’s etc, he is a very likable fella and so glad I am a little part of his life.

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Above, the family came out to meet their new Sailor and what a fun time we had out here in Cold North Chicago, looking forward to seeing him in Panama City later on Kota Kai.

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Below, just a few shots I took with my phone. You can just see some snow on the ground and last week it was -15 degrees!!!!

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Below:  Dakota with one of his Bunk mates and a very cool guy he was and his family too, so friendly.

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How must this feel after almost 9 weeks without a phone, he had to send all his stuff home to us, so that day he got his phone back, he sure was happy about that.

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Below, sat with Grandma, she was so proud to see her grandson become a Sailor just like her Husband.

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A very cool photo of Sailor “Sun” we are ALL so very proud of your achievements Dakota we miss you already.

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YAMAHA 1981 XT250 Trail Bike for Sale , Road Ready $1100

Here we are with a fun little trail bike, this is a genuine Original 1981 XT250 Yamaha and is Road legal, complete with headlight, tail light, turn signal and horn, this bike is registered on the road and would be a cheap form of transportation for anybody but still could go off road and check out the trails. Just $1100 will get you this fun machine.

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Just changed Oil and fitted New battery, fun 250cc Motorcycle.

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Comes with Title and registration.

 

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The Bike starts up and goes through all the gears, all stock and in great condition for the age.

 

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Located in La Mirada and can deliver withing 15 miles if you so wish.

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It now has 2018 Tags on and ready to go, so a great price and a great little 250cc Yamaha.

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Original Mileage too.

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Thanks for looking, if you are interested you can email me on carpy@carpyscaferacers.com

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Great Learners bike too, 714-598-8392 Call or text.

If its good enough for Sylvester Stallone, then its good enough for anyone. ( First Blood )

Amazing 1/4 Scale Motorcycles Built by Hand back in England and a Well known Classic TT Racer.

As kids I am sure we had some sort of Model kit to try and assemble, be it in the UK with the good old Airfix kit, ir in the states with ERTL , Revell, Monogram etc, and if you did, you would know the hours of preparation, sanding, glueing, cutting etc that it took.

The final part fitted and you stood back to admire your work of art, mine didn’t have the finesse as I wanted it done as fast as I could but some of my mates were just astounding model builders and that brings me on to this guy.

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Glen English lives down In Cornwall, not too far from my brother, Glen is a Phenomenal Classic Motorcycle racer clocking up up many wins you would think he was making it up, racing at Snetterton where I used to go and watch Clubman racing, then he went onto the TT and the Irish races.

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So not just a Model maker, a racer and also working under his pops who made suits of armor for the film industry, giving Glen many skills that is hard to come anywhere near.

His passions shows in his hand made Motorcycles and cars and the scale is so perfect too just works of art.

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I dont need to say much else, just have a look at what he creates, Just stunning.

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In the back garden sits a Norton Roadster with a full Mick Hemmings hot-rod motor. Slotted between the fridge and kitchen table is a Yamaha TZ350, fresh from Goodwood, stripped to fix a leaky water pump. Enter the front room and there’s an original TZ250A that’s earmarked for a rebuild. Underneath the window sits a dinky Itom 50 – fitted with a race kit, it’s used to hound the local sports bike crew on roundabouts.

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Welcome to the home of Glen English, one of the world’s leading classic bike racers, who’s also equally at home on a Manx Norton or a screaming two-stroke. He’s equally well known for his art: sculptures and quarter-scale motorcycle models he creates from scratch, using crafts learned since working as a teenager with his dad Terry, one of the world’s leading armourers in the film and theatrical industry.

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Glen’s debut outing on the TZ350 (which his dad bought him last year for his 50th birthday) at this year’s 75th Goodwood Members Meeting was stymied by what he thought was oil from the gearbox leaking onto the footpeg; he later discovered it was coolant due to the previous builder having forgotten to fit a gasket on the water pump. The TZ250A is a recent acquisition: “I bought it a year ago from a guy who had kept in untouched in a shed for 25 years. I got it home, bumped it up and it started. Imagine my surprise. It just needs a good going-over, but I’m not sure what to do with it. You don’t see completely original bike like this any more – it’s even got the original shocks and steering damper.”

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The Itom is Glen’s town bike. “I bought it from Murray’s Museum on the Isle of Man about 25 years ago,” he says. “Itom made race bikes as well as little road bikes like this – and this came with a race kit fitted. I was riding on the TT course one day when some guy on a sports bike pulls up and says: ‘What is that thing? I’ve just clocked you at 85mph?’ It was 76mph actually – I had a bicycle speedo fitted which was obviously way more accurate than his bike’s,” he laughs. “I still ride this in summer. There’s a couple more of these over at my dad’s which we ride.”

Glen also has a 1966 Gilera Giubileo 175cc four-stroke with a story behind it. “We were in Italy and my uncle Jim – who had a hand in the design of the Rocket III ‘ray gun’ exhausts, as well as the Raleigh Chopper and Reliant Scimitar – got talking to these guys about bikes; they said he could take the bike because it was broken. We pushed it through the town to our hotel, but we got arrested for stealing the bike.

We got that sorted and took it home in the back of a car. That was 1983. Two years ago, I finally dragged it out and got it going. All it needed was a condenser. I rode it around town – in a pall of smoke. It needs a top-end rebuild!”

Glen’s first ‘job’ came at the age of 10 when he worked on the set of Jabberwocky (a 1977 film directed by Terry Gilliam) with his dad. “I was the kid in one of dad’s suits of armour, fighting the dragon!” He left school and started working for his dad in the film industry by dressing Sean Connery in armour on the set of Sword of the Valiant: The Legend of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (1984, directed by Stephen Weeks).

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Motorcycles have always been a part of Glen’s life: “Dad had a bike, but it was uncle Jim who was really into it – he had a Rocket Gold Star and a Triumph. My dad had a Speed Twin. They went from Romford, where we lived, to the Isle of Man one time and came back raving about Ago. Jim put an Ago poster up on my bedroom wall. That’s what inspired me. I always wanted to race at the TT – despite the fact I’d never been. I’ve still got that poster! At that point I was happy being a lunatic on a bicycle, but I always wanted to be a motorcycle racer.

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With the money from his first job, he bought a 350LC – purely to race. “I never had a road licence then, in fact I’d only just learned to ride a bike – a Kawasaki 50. I finished something like eighth in the wet at Snetterton in my first race and then became really good at crashing! Problem was, I wasn’t scared. When I look back, I was nuts.”

Back then production racing was the usual apprenticeship. Glen raced LCS and by 1986 was a regular winner on a Suzuki Gamma, but money was always an issue. “Dad had moved to Cornwall with his business so I was working as a despatch rider in London – not really my thing. I bought a TZ350 and won races throughout 1987, but then dislocated my shoulder in a road bike crash and missed most of the next season.”

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In ’89 Colin Aldridge, one of the sport’s top sponsors at the time, let Glen race his number one rider’s FZR600 – but penniless Glen had to run the bike himself and could only afford to ride on second-hand tyres. “I was too shy to ask for more,” he admits. The following year he raced at the TT on the FZR. “I had no idea where I was going,” he admits. “There was no special tuition for newcomers like there is now. I turned up on the day and did a 100mph lap, but the bike handled terribly. But the big thing was, they gave me start money and I could afford to buy new tyres. Then I did the Irish road races and Southern 100 and got help to get there.”

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But a despatch rider’s wages didn’t go far, so he moved down to Cornwall to work for his dad again on The Messenger: The Story of Joan of Arc (directed by Luc Besson). In 1996 friends chipped in for Glen to ride a race-kitted Honda in the 125 TT. “It was so sweet. For the first time I had a brand new bike. I only got two laps of practice on it, then Padgetts fitted the race kit – but didn’t change the gearing, so I was hopelessly under-geared. Joey Dunlop won the race by 12s. If only my gearing had been spot-on.”

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Racing is full of ‘if onlys’ and Glen never really fulfilled his potential to become a top class pro racer. “My career never really happened,” he says without a tinge of regret. “I never had the money. And I never had the confidence to approach people. I’d see the top riders on the grid and think: ‘I can have him,’ but didn’t realise at the time the massive gulf between our equipment.”

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Most young racers quietly walk away from the sport once the cash runs out, but Glen dug his heels in and found a new way to get his kicks. “In 1991 a guy called Vic Cross – an ex-speedway rider and a mate of my dad’s – had let me ride his classic Aermacchi. I won most of the races I entered. Then Colin Aldridge teamed up with Norman Miles to build a Rocket III. I won at the Southern and Ulster on that.

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“I enjoyed racing the old bikes, so I wrote to George Beale. I’d seen the Matchless G50s he was building in magazines and asked him to bear me in mind if he ever needed a rider. He rang me and said he’d build me one for the Manx. A condenser went down there, but I got on the podium with Nick Jefferies and John Cronshaw at the Ulster.”

Glen quickly earned an enviable record as one of the men to beat in classic racing. He’s won the Senior Classic Manx GP, the FIM Classic Bike championship, the British National Classics Championship and the Landsdowne Cup.

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“I rode for two years for Fred Walmsley on his Seeley G50 in 2003/04. His bikes are so good. We did 60 races in two years – we won all bar three, and finished second in one and third in two others. I never crashed once. His bike ran like a watch.”

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After Joan of Arc, though, the film business went quiet for Glen. “I started on my own, doing sculptures. I’d done one of Mike Hailwood – in bronze, the size of an Action Man. I sold a lot of those. Other sculptures he’s done include Joey Dunlop in action, a TT replica trophy, George Formby on the Shuttleworth Snap and, more recently, a small but delightfully-detailed, hand-painted resin casing of Bob Mcintyre in action to celebrate his 1957 100mph lap on the dustbin-faired Gilera.

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“Doing the Hailwood sculpture, I met Javan Smith, who made scale-model racing cars. I looked at what he was doing and said: ‘I’ll have a go at bikes’. He was really helpful with advice, but I remember his son saying: ‘It’s not as easy as you think,’ which gave me the encouragement to make it work. I’d always made bike models as a kid. I used to buy those plastic Protar motorcycle model kits, but the things used to annoy me because they weren’t accurate enough and I’d end up modifying them. “In 2004 I made a Manx Norton and sold it for two grand. Last year it went for six grand plus commission at auction. I’ve done 50 of them since and made models ever since.” Glen’s since done over 30 AJS 7Rs and G50s and now is on with an MV Agusta

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‘THE DETAIL IN EACH OF HIS QUARTER-SCALE MODELS IS INCREDIBLY INTRICATE’

based on the 500-3 raced by Giacomo Agostini. “I’ve got 19 to do,” he says. “I was hoping to get Ago to endorse it and give him one, but it’s all gone quiet on that front.”

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The detail in each quarter-scale model is incredibly intricate – right down to individual clutch plates and tiny fasteners. Glen makes the frames from metal tube and builds the engines up from resin blocks he casts himself, with copper plate used to build up the sump and barrels. He gets the wheel hubs and rims machined by his racing sponsor Ed Fenwick, and laces the wheels himself using special spokes the thickness of pins that he’s had specially made. “I’ve got a box of 8000 of them – should keep me going for a while.” He even moulds his own tyres then hand-cuts the tread with a scalpel. The MVS sell for £8750 – Glen’s managed to do two so far and has been working on the project for two years now. He says: “I don’t go to the pub or watch telly. I spend two to three hours an evening out here instead. When you don’t pay attention at school you have to do something to earn money. But I never get bored with making things.”

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He’s never lost his desire to race bikes, either. Going back to modern racing on a supermono, he won the British title in 2007, riding a Yamaha owned by Joe Mcburnie, but then returned to classics, first with Fred Walmsley, then with Patrick Walker’s Works Racing in 2010. He still rides the latter’s bikes, run by Ed Fenwick. “I race in the Landsdowne; it’s more period-correct than other classic racing that run disc brakes, for example. I don’t get that. I really like period racing. Ed’s bike will be good this year. Last year we ran a lightweight frame, but we’ve gone back to a more traditional frame now, which I think handles better.”

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Glen also plans to race his TZ this year; his other commitment is the Donington Endurance round on the Guzzi he took to second place last year in the same event.

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“It’s a big beast and very different to the TZ. Imagine trying to do the International Classic Grand Prix race on my Yamaha and riding the big Guzzi in the four-hour endurance event at the same Donington meeting.”

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On the model-making front, he’s got enough projects to keep him busy for some years to come, with the next one planned being a Vincent Black Lightning. “I was taking pictures of Thommo Thompson’s outfit at the track and he asks me why I’m taking so many pics. Then he recognises me as the ‘bloke who builds models’ and says: ‘don’t mess about with pictures, I’ll lend you an engine.’ He let me borrow it for two years, so I have really accurate measurements and images of the Vinnie. I’d also like to do a model of Bob Mcintyre’s Gilera 500-4 and a Brough Superior. I’d love to get some kind of official tie-up with Brough owner Mark Upham to do a Bert Le Vack record-breaker but maybe just do ten of them. I like to keep busy.”

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Carburetor Rebuild Service

Offering a Complete Carburetor Rebuild service for ALL of the SOHC HONDA CB750K Models and what you get is a Jewel in the crown of carburetors.

Not cheap at $600 but take a look at the finished set up from the ones you send me and make your own mind up.

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Send me your snotty, grimy and oily carburetors, and I will take them all apart, replace any worn parts, clean and vapor blast the bodies, Zinc plate hardware and of course fit New Jets and set the air mixture etc.

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Then Fit to a Motor and synchronize to make sure these are right on the money for your machine, all I need to know is what exhaust set up you are running so I can set the jetting.

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Also, all the Aluminum Float Bowls and Carb tops are Polished to a chrome finish, these Carbs will really stand out against many and I am sure you will be over the moon with the Quality.

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Been doing this over 17 years and offer this service to anyone around the world, we ship Globally and I know that you will love the refurbished set up.

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See Below, these are Messy and need totally going through.

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Below, now all cleaned, rebuilt and synchronized and ready to bolt on and go.

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If you are building your Honda this year but the Carbs are really letting it down, then send them to me and I will send them back ready to fit, just hook your Throttle Cables up once pushed into your intake Manifolds and you are ready to go.

 

See the Difference when these are completely taken apart and cleaned out, then put back together with new parts, you will love the way these look.

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Take the No nonsense approach and get these to me ,and watch how your bike performs with these on rack of Four performing as they did from the Factory.

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You can see the Difference, some of the Carbs people have sent me have not been touched in over 3 decades and are covered in all sorts of Nastiness.

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Have a look at all the re-plated parts, the finish, the fit, the look and the cleanliness here, this isn’t just sprayed with a bottle of Carb cleaner.

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Most people spend all their time on the rest of the Motorcycle and forget about the Carbs, these are all set up right and the air mixture screw is set too, literally push carbs on Manifolds and you are set, your bike will love you for it too.

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Needles are set accordingly and parts are stripped and Plated for a show look and you can be sure of a head turning Rack of carbs, they will no longer resemble the ones that you sent in the mail to me.

 

 

 

 

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So treat yourself to a magnificent set of inline refurbished Carbs sending me yours, not cheap but, look how much work goes into getting them to this stage.

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I ship all over the Globe, so no worries with that, I also tick the Gift Box and low value for over sea’s Customers, so you dont get hammered with sill Duty charges.

 

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I also offer a Black version of these as well for all the Custom fans out there, the choice is yours.

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Thanks for looking and I hope that I am of some Help to you.

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OK, back into the Garage as I have many things to get on with on the good old SOHC Honda’s.

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www.carpyscaferacers.com   714-598-8392  Call or Text for any help I can give you.

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TRIUMPH T100 Custom Build for sale

Here we have a really Clean and well maintained Triumph T100 that is one of our Club members, it has only 4,500 lovingly used miles and this is a dialled in machine that you just fire up and go.

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No Bones about this bike, Tim put a lot of time. money and effort into making this Motorcycle stand out from the Norm, it rides well and handles even better.

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If you want a really well looked after and maintained Motorcycle, then look no further.

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2015 Triumph T-100 Blk 4,500 miles

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Bought New at So Cal Triumph as part of Custom line and upgraded by me with performance parts and many custom components and has extended warranty through November 2019.

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Engine mods  

Air injection removed, K&N high flow filter with Motone Bellmouth intake, Carpy’s Café Racer Polished Stainless Performance Megaphone exhaust, remapped, 19 tooth front sprocket and trickle charger.

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Handling and control upgrades

Tec piggy back rear shocks, progressive front springs, Pazzo shorty racing levers, Biltwell Kung Fu grips, Lossa clubman 1” bars and risers, Nolan bar end mirrors and Motone custom riser cover.

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Custom features

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Thruxton front fender, BC fender eliminator kit with LED taillight, bullet turn signals, Roland Sands Custom seat, Mule sprocket cover, Motone billet carb tops, Motone custom side panel covers, Union Jack custom gas cap, Motone light bracket and relocation kit and Carpy’s Custom Halo LED headlamp.

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Extra take off parts

Original peashooter exhaust, side covers, sprocket cover, lever controls, headlamp and mounts, front springs and rear shocks.

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Other items for sale separately, front wheel bike stand, riding jackets from Triumph (Mesh)

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Soft ride too with the Roland Sand Custom seat with High density memory foam, your Arse will thank you for that later.

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TEC Piggy Back shocks do take the Bumps out of the road and not your Sacroiliac.

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A really well put together machine, super Low Miles and all the Bells and whistles to boot, now thats a deal right there.

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If you dig this Machine, Drop a Dime to Tim @ 626-658-5701 as you will be impressed by this British iron steed.

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Ride off into the Sunset today!!!

 

 

 

1995 VE- VJ Parade I took part in memory of 50 years since the end of WW2

I just came across this footage of the 50th Anniversary Parade I was in at Buckingham Palace, On this video you can just catch a glimpse of me in an American 8th Air force uniform standing by the jeep with my Buddy. About 1:58. to a bit past 2;10 Really had a fun weekend .

At about 10:08 you can see me in the Jeep on the left, its old footage and not that clear but you can see the Jeep easily, my MUM, and My Aunt saw this on the National News and I was easy to spot waiving at the Queen and Lady Diana.

Such a fantastic experience and to get so close to all the Royal Family too, I used to deliver to Princess Margaret when I was a dispatch Rider, but to see the Queen, Prince Phillip, Prince Charles, Lady Diana, Prince William and Prince Harry was a really rare sight and with 250,000 people screaming with joy was breath taking to say the least.

There were 50 of use Jeeps to represent every year since the end of WW2 and were located right in the middle with Chattanooga emblazoned across the front of the Original Normandy Landing Willy’s Jeep.

Such a brilliant feeling having a WW1 Veteran in the back of our Jeep taking the salute to Queen Elizabeth the 2nd.

I was wearing a Captains Uniform but we made a general 3 Star plate up to get in the middle of the group, and boy what a day.

Just thought I would share, I mean, I doubt I will get my Knighthood, so that may be the last chance I get to meet Her Royal Highness.

Chelsea Miller Hand Crafted Knives

Well I am sure many of you have used a grinding wheel, sanding disc or belt sander to clean up some steel that you have, I always wanted to have a go at making a knife but always seemed to end up making something for the Motorcycle I was working on.

Now, young Dakota went on a Blacksmiths course and he loved it and when you see a finished item, it gives you a sense of satisfaction and pride from all that effort, time, sweat and hard work under a grinder etc.

Now take all this and when your father is a Blacksmith and Carpenter and have a daughter that loves working with Dad, well all I can say is “GREAT JOB GIRL”.

Below is an interview with her and then I added a bunch of very short videos so she can tell YOU her story.

Chelsea Miller:

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I’m Chelsea Miller and I make knives. Some of the world’s best chefs use her knives. Chelsea Miller: The chefs at Eleven Madison, Mario Batali, Massimo Bottura. Chefs who make some really, really delicious food.

Let’s say that. And they don’t come cheap. Chelsea Miller: My smaller knives start at $200, the largest knife, the chef knife are $800. I moved to New York when I was 18 and I was singing, dancing, acting, and as much as I love that kind of storytelling, I grew up in Vermont on a farm, home-schooled, my father was a blacksmith, and I was really missing that quality of working with your hands and that creative process.

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So I went home for a while at the end of 2011 and started playing around in my father’s shop. These knives came out of that exploration. My friends encouraged me to take out a booth at the Brooklyn Flea and the Brooklyn Flea is an incredible place to be as a creator because there’s an incredible amount of foot traffic and a lot of high profile writers, photographers, chefs. And that’s how I got my first publications in Saveur Magazine and The New York Times and it really blew up from there. Most of all my knives have a grater on the side, which is very unique because I’ve never seen a knife with a grater, but also that is the original function of the original material that I make it from.

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They’re made from horseshoe rasps which have that rasp on the side that was originally used for filing horse’s hooves. So in my mind, I thought, “Why take that away?” We can incorporate that into this new tool. Since I’ve started my own business, I’ve noticed a real progressive movement towards more and more and more handmade things and a lot more consciousness about where you items are coming from.

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Trying to buy things that are going to last you your lifetime instead of something that’s meant to be thrown away the second you open it. I leave a window of about three to six months. If I were making one knife at a time, that would take me a couple of days, but because I have so many I tend to make them in batches, so as many as I can, I start from the beginning process, maybe 10 knives at the same time. Also other Flatware is available now.

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So for a few weeks I’ll be working on those first initial processes on those knives altogether. Then I’ll move on to the next stage. I use the forge for all of my smaller knives and essentially what we’re doing is we’re heating the metal and then using the hammer to hammer out the metal, lengthen the metal, to give us a longer, smoother material. And I don’t do that with the chef’s knives because I want to leave that grater on the side of the knife. So with the larger chef’s knives, I’ve already cut out the pieces in Vermont with an oxy acetylene torch and then once I get them here, I start the stock removal process.

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So I start with my bench grinder, grinding away the excess metal on one side to leave the grater on the other. And then I’ll move to my belt sander, and using a series of belts that go from very coarse to very fine, I’ll bring that blade down to a fine edge and make it all shiny and smooth and sharp. Each piece, depending on the way that it looks, it calls for a different piece of wood.

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So I’ll shuffle through a lot of wood to find the right wood for the right knife. And we’ll cut out the wood, we will sand the handle a little bit, then we’ll drill the holes, glue it together, clamp it, and then wait for it to cure.

I usually let it cure for about 24 hours. Then we’ll take that off, sand the handle down, all the excess glue off the edges. And then we’ll put a final sharpen on the blade, oil up the handle, and it’s ready to go off and cut some vegetables. ————————————————– Follow BI Video on Twitter: http://bit.ly/1oS68Zs Follow BI on Facebook: http://bit.ly/1W9Lk0n Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/

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Chelsea Miller

 

DAN GURNEY PASSES AWAY

 

Daniel Sexton Gurney
(April 13, 1931 ) passed away Yesterday, we remember him as one of the premier racers/builders/owners the U.S. has produced…like so many other racers, Dan started out as a Hot Rodder. I only met him a couple of times at Cooks Corner as he was on one of his crazy Motorcycles, we chatted for quite some time and never forget how genuine and happy he was.
A talented man that has been taken too early.
Gone but will never forgotten.
RIP Dan.

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Some History below

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Dan Gurney was born to Jack Gurney and Roma Sexton. His father, John R. “Jack” Gurney, was a graduate of Harvard Business school with a master’s degree. Dan’s three uncles were each MIT engineers. His grandfather was F.W. Gurney who was responsible for the invention of the Gurney Ball Bearing. He had one sister, Celisssa. Jack was discovered to have a beautiful voice after taking voice lessons in Paris and changed his career path to became lead basso with the Metropolitan Opera Company in New York  who retired in 1947. Jack moved his family to Riverside, California when Dan was a teenager and had just graduated from Manhasset High School. After moving to California, young Dan quickly became caught up in the California hot rod culture.

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At age 19, he built and raced a car that went 138 miles per hour (mph) (222 kilometres per hour [km/h]) at the Bonneville Salt Flats. He later studied at Menlo Junior College, a feeder school for Stanford University. He then became an amateur drag racer and sports car racer. He served in the United States Army for two years as an artillery mechanic during the Korean War.

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His first Formula 1 victory came in 1961 for BRM and he gave Porsche its maiden Grand Prix win the following year. In a growing tradition, Gurney went on to give Brabham its first F1 win in 1964.

Gurney’s most famous driving accomplishment has become part of American lore. Piloting a car designed and built by his own All American Racers outfit, Gurney’s win at the 1967 Belgian Grand Prix continues to serve as the only victory captured by an American in an American Formula 1 car.

The win at Spa came seven days after he traveled from France to from Belgium. In that brief span, Gurney authored the greatest week of driving accomplishments the world has seen by capturing the 24 Hours of Le Mans for Ford in its iconic GT40 with co-driver A.J. Foyt on June 11, and topped it with an incomparable F1 victory on June 18. Gurney’s Golden Week stands in perpetuity.

Prior to retiring from the cockpit in 1970, the Big Eagle’s versatility led his rivals as wins in F1, NASCAR, IndyCar, and Can-Am left Gurney in rarified air. Major sports car victories at Sebring, Daytona, and all manner of domestic and international venues cemented his status as a great among greats.

Through AAR, which built and sold everything from Formula Fords to Indy cars, Gurney’s southern California den of innovation shattered speed records at the Indy 500 while capturing multiple wins at the Brickyard. At one point in the 1970s, AAR became the highest volume producer of open-wheel race cars in North America.

AAR’s winning tradition—one steeped in engineering advancements—extended into the 1980s with Gurney’s favorite car, 1981’s ‘Pepsi Challenger,’ which took a memorable last-to-first victory on the Milwaukee Mile.

As Gurney’s Eagles lost their footing in IndyCar racing, a shift to the burgeoning IMSA series representing Toyota added to the company’s legacy. Sports car racing was far from new for AAR; it’s gorgeous factory Plymouth Barracuda Trans-Am cars paved the way in 1970, Gurney’s final year behind the wheel.

An initial foray into the IMSA GTU category was upgraded to fire-breathing turbocharged GTO Celicas, and with the GTP class nearly rivaling IndyCar for the hearts of racing fans, AAR joined IMSA’s most popular show and it wasn’t long before Gurney’s Eagle Mk III chassis ran its rival manufacturers out of the series.

Just as Bobby Unser’s 1972 Eagle chassis—with the brand-new Gurney flaps installed—destroyed the existing speed record at Indy by 17 miles per hour, the Mk III caused the GTP class to collapse under the weight of its dominance in 1993. So advanced were the Mk III’s aerodynamics, Gurney readily refused to explain all of its tricks more than 20 years after the cars turned their final laps.

One last stint for AAR in the CART IndyCar Series—a championship Gurney brought to life in 1979 with his transformational ‘White Paper’—bore minimal fruit from 1996-1999, and other than supporting the racing career of his son Alex, Gurney’s team took a backseat in the new millennium to government contracts and the occasional support of fresh sports car projects.

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An avid motorcycle rider, Gurney started his own line of sit-down motorcycles under the Alligator banner, and continued to work on pioneering motorcycle engine designs until his final days.

There were few who were smarter, or faster, or gave to the sport more than he received.

If stature could be measured, Gurney would surely stand atop the sport for all he created and achieved during his 86 years.

Some drove. Some owned. Some designed. Some built. Gurney did it all, won it all, and used innate curiosity and humor as his energy source. Below That’s Dan waving with the Tall Hat and Oily shirt.

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“I was a hot rod guy for sure,” Gurney said in a recent interview. “It was the only thing possible to do on a shoestring, as you could put a car together from junkyard parts.”

He started it all in high school by adding a two-carburetor setup to his 1933 Ford roadster. “I sent away for California Bill’s hot rod book on how you do it,” he said.

“[The Ford] made all kinds of noise, but didn’t run any faster. That was the beginning of learning how to do things,” Gurney remembered.

In 1948, a few days after he graduated from Long Island’s Manhasset High School, he and his family moved to California. His parents had purchased an orange grove in Riverside, and Dan drove across the country in a 1940 Standard two-door Ford. He immediately traded it for a chopped ’32 five-window coupe.

“I got the long end of that deal, but it was a huge education for me,” Gurney said. He described the Deuce’s flathead V-8 as “mild,” but it must have been good enough to get him into trouble with the local police.

“After getting too many tickets I no longer wanted it to be so obvious that I was driving a hot rod, so I ended up putting a good engine in a ’35 Ford,” he said. Gurney bought the two-door sedan for $50 in west Riverside. It was definitely less noticeable than the chopped ’32 Ford coupe with the aggressive stance.

Royal Enfield Continental GT seats that I make.

Hey there you lot

Well its the weekend and finally got around to do a little Blog, work is busy and sometimes I simply run out of time to get on the Computer and type out a blog everyday, I do try but this week has been crazy busy.

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Today I made a Seat for a Customer in Australia, he has a Royal Enfield Continental GT model of which I first started to make when these models first came out, and continue to make things like Seats, Chain guards and Turn signal brackets as well as coo headlights etc.

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The stock seat is OK but just not big enough, I prefer to lose the rear fender/ Mudguard, although if you want, you can still fit your stock one if you so wish.

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I also Frenched in a pocket for the LED Round tail light assembly that will sit snugly into that recess and this tail light is a stop-Running tail light.and to be seen is to be safe is my Motto and I am happy the way these looks when all fitted.

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The Seat assembly is made from a Robust Resin and Glass-fiber, it is also gel Coated in a Gloss red to look like the Factory Red, but- You can of course always paint if you have a different color bike.

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I upholster in a Black Naugahyde Material and you can choose whether you would like White Diamond stitching, Red, or Silver, as well as a choice of piping color options.

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I also use the Vintage style snaps to give the seat a little more Nostalgia and the good thing about this is that you can simply pull the cover off and store your registration under the foam.

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And, it is high density foam that I use, that way this is way more comfortable then the stock material that is used originally and use the same Foam in ALL my seat Products that I produce.

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Also, another good thing to know is this is made by me here in California, not over sea’s, I purchased one in Vietnam just to have a look, man it didn’t even fit the frame, so a lesson there, stick with who you know and trust.

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You can contact me at carpy@carpyscaferacers.com anytime or if you like you can even text me on 714-598-8392 so I can respond a little faster, I am here to help, this business is My Passion.

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Many thanks for looking, I hope that you may have time to check out the rest of the website and I continue to add more parts all the time, so always check back for cool deals and products.

 

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So if you need to hop your Machine up, well, you know where to come. Thanks for Looking, Peace & Grease

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Carpy