Original 1967 BSA A65 Race Bike For Sale ! $8000

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HUBBA HUBBA! Look at this thing of original beauty, this is a killer Diller of a machine and full of Nostalgia too.

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This Motorcycle is screaming out yesteryear and the owner doesn’t want it cleaned or wiped down as that’s the way he likes it, this kicks over and runs right away and thats because that good old magneto gives it plenty of spark, and its a reliable motor that’s for sure.

 

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I am helping the old fella sell this and will be posting on a few Vintage motorcycle race sites too, but I sure hope it goes to a good home.

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Just look at that patina and all the great parts this A65 has, Original Borrani Rims still hold the air in the old tires.

 

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The owner cannot remember what was done the the motor but its fast, the Bell mouths are bloody awesome and once you tickle and give her just a little choke, she fires into life and vibrates like a jack hammer.

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If I didn’t have so many other projects to complete, I would have this in a heart beat just take your time and check this BSA out in all its detail.

 

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Yes indeed, that is an original Trackmaster frame, not many of them around and this has been together since 67.

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Lockheart rear brake set up is getting super hard to locate these days too but an awesome part to still see on a motorcycle that still rides.

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BSA rear taillight on the Bates seat and is such a classic look that is dissapearing these days around here.

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The owner has informed me NOT to clean it, so I am just enjoying it and riding it about to make sure it all works and yes it sure does.

 

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This A65 is a fun machine and a great piece of California track racing History, you just dont see these any more that are still used.

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YES- this does have a title and yo can buy this right now if you so wish, I love having it at the shop.

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Yes, thats the oil in frame trackmaster set up and look u the price of the frames alone these days.

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Original Bates headlight still functions, amazing!

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Take your time and see what you think, the owner isnt in a hurry as he has owned it years.

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Even has the original racing bates foot pegs.

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WM3 with old style screws for rim locks is classic touch.

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Lucas tail light still functions too.

 

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These set ups are now getting super hard to locate these days too.

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There she is for all to see.

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BRAAAAP!

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Yes- it has current tags too.

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Real track bike with so much appeal it should be a crime.

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Drop me a line at carpy@carpyscaferacers.com or sling a dime at 714-996-4597 and i will do all I can to help you and yes it has a Title.

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Thruxton I helped create with So-Cal Triumph .

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Here we are on Friday and I thought I would add some cool photos of a thruxton that I helped with at SoCal triumph in Brea.

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Check the deep Flake color of Candy blue, sure is a sweet ride and I am sure the New owner was stoked to receive his 900.

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A Very trick ride and am sure that this will get its rims ridden off.

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Yes, it has the cool seat conversion too that not only looks cool but funtions as a place to put your gloves, registration and sunglasses etc.

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Hope you like this Custom Version as I sure do and what a striking candy blue as well.

 

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Make sure to give them a wave as they come belting down the tarmac.

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A nice machine and I am glad I was asked to help with this cool Thruxton.

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Come out with us on the 59 Club rides, just go to www.meetup.com and look for carpys cafe racer meet ups and come for a ride, its sure fun.

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These bikes are such fun to take out and easy to maintain etc.

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Hope to meet you all at some point as we have made so many like minded people in this industry and always cool to meet more.

 

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Have a Great weekend and hope to see you at an event of ours.

My Thruxton with a New Look !

 

 

 

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Here we are with a brand new look to my 2013 Thruxton, as I had drawn this up a long time ago and wanted the old style look with a new ride.

 

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I was so fortunate to be honored as the President of the 59 Club for Orange County, California and that was back in March 2014 and sure am stoked to have that bestowed upon me and I do my utmost to promote this famous club to the best of my ability.

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I have made numerous changes to my Thruxton and am still making improvements as and when time and money is available.

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As you may notice, I have made my own front bikini fairing, similar to the Thruxton but extended two inches on the top – and of course I have the ears extended back to give it a slight Rickman styling, also I added my 7 inch LED headlight that really sets the front end off on my machine.

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I am from the UK and as a teenager I grew up loving motorcycles and immersed myself in what ever I could, I loved all the classics and my first ever Caff racer was back in 1978 when we got our provisional License and had a 50cc Suzuki that I put Clubman bars on, cut down seat and fitted a fairing and from then on I was hooked into the scene.

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I used to go to all the Rocker Reunions to watch the Gene Vincent styled bands play, from Joe Brown and His Brothers to The Rapiers, who still gig today.

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If you look on the tank I have painted Ton Up and ask any Rocker what that means, it means to go over 100 miles an hour and back in 1959 that was quite a feat to accomplish. This has nothing to do with the TON UP clubs that are all over the place, I had this logo many years ago as we were Ton Up Boys back then and this term was coined back home in the 1950’s by the 59 Club members. I wanted to use a Triumph Style font and love the look.

 

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I made the tail cowl too and my seat has the compartment inside the cowl so that I can store all sorts of stuff for my ride. You will also notice the awesome polished finned Primary Cover that I received from Speed Merchant and boy does that look trick now.

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I have Speed Merchant covers and love the look, fit and style of these castings etc, and get many good positive comments on the set up I have.

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My stainless steel Monarch Megaphones bark like a scolded dog and actually improve performance, hope to get a dyno chart on them soon.

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I also make the side covers too and have an air intake style grill that really helps the bike and as I now have pod filters, these breathes well.

 

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Right now I am working on making brand new stainless steel headers for the Thruxton and the Bonneville, so stay tuned on my website for that.

 

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I have the big wide 5.5 T.T. rear wheel set up with Wave rotors too on a stock swing arm and it handles very well but soon I will have new alloy rear swing arms that will be available for all to purchase for your rides.

 

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I have TEC shocks right now with my covers I machined on them to give that racy look and am happy with that set up until I can afford some Works Performance piggy backs.

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The bike sits well and I have Wave rotors front and rear, it corners so well and have such fun with this bike.

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Just have a look at the gorgeous SM Finned Clutch Cover, it really is a piece of art and a happy I went this route as its kinda Hot Roddy!

 

 

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From the right side you can see that I have my own oil pressure gauge set up on the bike and I love to know I have good oil pressure.

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I changed the Front sprocket to a 19 and love the performance and fuel millage on it and now will be fitting a nickel DID chain to compliment it.

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To break 100 MPH in Great Britain back in the day was a major effort and the 59 Club were the first Rockers organized motorcycle club and that where you started to hear TON UP, doing the Ton, Ton up Boys, Ton Up Pirate, Ton up kid. To break ‘the ton’ was a huge achievement back in the day and gave you some bragging rights.

 

Back in the day my dad would point if we were in the car going somewhere and would say look, “Ton Up Boys”

Ton Up Boys

My first Ton Up experience was putting my brother on the back of an RD200 and tapping him on the shoulder so he could look at my speedometer needle bouncing at the 101 MPH, it was an awesome experience and a sense of accomplishment back then, albeit it highly illegal, as it still is today!

The real badges I have from back home.

 

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The FIRST organized motorcycle club in Great Britain and when Britain was really great was the club I am now president of here (the Orange County, California chapter) some 55 years later.

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I wanted to fit my fairing on the bike and give it a slightly nostalgic look that I grew up with, having a fairing back then was not just cool it made you more aerodynamic, which meant you could go faster, I also used to be able to tuck stuff in the fairing like tools, maps and spark plugs, etc., and on occasion, as my throttle would stick, keep the throttle wide open on cold mornings on the freeway and put my cold hands in the fairing to warm up a bit.

 

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This is the rear of the bike with my own made cowl with old style metal-flake gold paint and of course the famous 59 Club insignia I am so proud of.

 

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My peanut style tank looks great in the new livery as green was just too common and I have had many green bikes over the years but always loved black and gold. you can see my old style European Fog light and oil pressure gauge to the right of the bike.

 

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My ram air system style side covers not only looks cool they are cool and function very well transporting cool air to my pod filters.

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This has House of Kolor Aztec Gold flake and it sure looks good when the sun is out.

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So, here she is outside my shop and has so many of my parts on her, the Oil Pan Bash Plate, the fog light, the fairing, the exhaust, the rear cowl and seat, the side covers and the front alloy fender, all designed by me and available to you, too.

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I have so much fun with my Thruxton and we have many rides to great places, check out meetup.com under Carpy’s Cafe Racer Meet Ups and come on a ride with us all, you will love it.

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I still have more to do to my bike as I will be making a 3/4 Dunstall style fairing for her to give that early 60’s styling and something I really like.

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I thank you for looking at my Cafe and love to hear from you, carpy@carpyscaferacers.com if you want to drop me a line or two?

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Look forward to seeing some of you on the road, as we have many rides and start to go to more places too.

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Stay tuned for more stuff like parts and apparel, etc., as I love what I do and enjoy meeting like minded people.

Just some history below back in 64.

1964 Rockers from Hong Kong Rockers on Vimeo.

1964 Rockers footage
Edit by H.K.R.C. (Hong Kong Rockers Club)

Here is me on my Thruxton a few months ago taking Big Bear Area in, I loved how the bike handled with the new rims on.

Flash Back Friday

Just a quick old Video when I had a Bigger shop that did Cafe Racers and Hot Rods, but am so much happier doing MY own stuff and not relying of other people, so have a great weekend.

 

Distinguished Gentleman’s Ride 2015

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27th September 2015 – A global classic styled motorcycle event that raises money for prostate cancer medical research. To raise awareness and support research into Men’s Health by bringing together dapper riders of classic machines, Cafe Racers, Bobbers, Custom motorcycles, Trackers and undefinable two-wheeled creations.

info@gentlemansride.com  www.gentlemansride.com

27th September 2015 – A global classic styled motorcycle event that raises money for prostate cancer medical research.

OK, here we go, the clock is ticking and, this year I am looking forward to attend this ride and hope that you too grab your Dapper clothing, stick on your old style Skid lid and sling your leg over your Cafe, Bobber, Brat, Tracker, Classic Motorcycle and meet up with us for this fun and epic adventure that is sure to make even the Mona Lisa Smile. plus, anything to do with prostate Cancer research is always something I would support, this ride begins the same day , All over the world, so be part of a Historic ride and just have fun!

This will be a really good fun ride and a chance to meet other like minded folk who ride two wheels like us.

I have no idea what I am going to wear but will give it a go and am sure i will have a laugh doing this.

It is great to be able to have an event where you can just enjoy the day with no hang ups and also that many other people will be there dressed just as crazy as you.

 

So remember the date and come out on this fun day with your Motorcycle, I know that you will love it.

Distinguished Gentleman’s Ride 2015 will take place on September 27 th all over the world.

As soon as I am given the details where to meet up, i shall post them on this blog, so keep checking back and support a great Cause!

Marconi Automotive Museum show this Sunday With the 59 Club !

OK, if you like Super cars, Formula one racing, Vintage fire trucks or a cool fins and chrome, come out with us to a ride to the Marconi Automotive Museum this Sunday, we shall be leaving Alea’s Cafe in Anaheim at 10:00am and will ride to the Museum where we shall all take in the sights and sounds of this phenomenal collection.

Come meet us at the cafe for breakfast then take a ride to the Marconi Museum and check out every thing out, afterwards we shall be riding to Dana point if the weather is not too hot but can discuss when we meet, this is a super place to check out and we are close friends with the Marconis and they are so cool to talk too.

 

There is something for everyone here at the Marconi Museum and I am sure you will love it as much as I shall.

From Super cars to Big fins and chrome, you cannot go wrong with a tour around that magnificent collection of vehicles that have been Donated here.

  • Welcome to the Marconi Automotive Museum & Special Events Venue of Orange County!

    First opened in 1994 by Founder Dick Marconi, this Non-Profit Museum and Special Events Venue has an impressive 30 million-dollar collection of historical, exotic, and classic cars.

    The Marconi Automotive Museum is a non-profit event venue in Orange County, California. Our unique facility can be tailored to your vision and transformed into a experience, whether it be a corporate event, wedding, Bar or Bat Miztvah, or any other event, it will leave your guests speechless.

About The Museum

Marconi Bios

Dick Marconi

Founder, Marconi Automotive Museum

Dick Marconi has a passion for many things in life. 

When he first moved to California from Gary, Indiana, in the late 50′s, he arrived with a wife, an 18 month old son, and $500 to his name. He is passionate about health and fitness and went on to become the world’s largest manufacturer of custom made vitamins, food supplements and weight loss products. He wanted to help make people healthier and educate them on the value of nutritional supplements in their daily lives.

Dick is passionate as a collector. Over the years he has amassed a collection of over 75 cars. They range from American muscle cars to high performance streetcars such as Lamborghini’s, Porsche’s, and many Ferrari’s. His collection also documents years of open wheel racing history, including Keke Rosberg’s pink Formula Atlantic series winner, Mario Andretti’s ’94 Phoenix Oval Indy winner, and a late model F1 car driven by Michael Schumacher in his first year with Ferrari. Dick built this collection to the tune of $30 million. And then he donated it to the Marconi Foundation for Kids…because he has a passion for helping children.

In 1994 Dick purchased the museum building located in Tustin, California. It was a former salad oil manufacturing facility that had gone out of business. He took it all apart, put it back together, moved his car collection in and opened the Marconi Automotive Museum and Foundation for Kids.

In the meantime, between running a 100,000 square foot vitamin manufacturing facility and starting a non-profit car museum, he also occupied his time by participating in very competitive car racing circuits. Marconi Racing was well known in the vintage racing circles and won many a battle in the Formula Ford, Formula Atlantic, and Formula 5000 divisions. In 1994, Dick joined the SCCA and raced professionally in the Long Beach Grand Prix in a black Formula Atlantic car sponsored by Herbalife. At 57, he was the oldest driver to ever qualify for a Long Beach Race. He started in 18th place and finished in 8th. It was a shining moment for Dick and Marconi Racing.

To this day, Dick can be seen walking people around the Marconi Automotive Museum car collection, taking pictures with guests and giving insightful information about this very unique place.  He will challenge you to think about and incorporate into your own life the Marconi phillosophy, passed down from his father: Learn, Earn and Return!

Priscilla “Bo” Marconi

Priscilla “Bo” Marconi grew up in the Pacific Northwest and spent her early years playing the piano and singing. She traveled all over the U.S. and Canada with The Celebrant Singers and has continued to sing at various prestigious events throughout the country.

As a member of the Covenant House California and Covenant House International Board of Directors, along with the advisory council for Childhelp, she has been able to work closely with at-risk children. Her passion is strong for under privileged kids and strives to do whatever she can to influence those in her community to help the plight of these youth.

Priscilla is the CEO of the Marconi Automotive Museum & Foundation for Kids and enjoys her involvement in the exciting and creative events that the Foundation produces. Throughout the year, she brings great energy to her team. She is the driving force that keeps the staff mission focused and infuses them with her passion, ideas and excitement.

It is her goal to live her life with intention and to be part of a solution in regard to the issues of homeless and at-risk youth.

 

 

 

 

 

1974 De Tomaso Pantera GTS

The De Tomaso Pantera GTS is an Italo-American exotic car that is favored by many and considered a king by others. It was the result of Alejandro De Tomaso, Italian engineering, and American muscle. The Pantera looks very similar to the Lamborghini due to Giampaolo Dallara, who styled the Pantera, and helped in designing the Lamborghini Miura. Ford held the distribution of the Pantera, but stopped in 1975 because of poor sales. The US GTS model has bonded and riveted wheel arch extensions and badging, but not the higher compression and solid lifter engine of its European GTS counterpart.

Would you like to experience the De Tomasto Pantera GTS and other rare exotics in person? Visit the Marconi Automotive Museum in Tustin, CA and enjoy an eclectic trip filled with style, class, and a touch of adrenaline.

OPEN HOUSE AT THE MARCONI AUTOMOTIVE MUSEUM | AUGUST 2ND | 10 AM – 2 PM | FREE ADMISSION
Follow Us On Twitter  |  Follow Us On Facebook  |  Pin Us On Pinterest  |  Watch Us On Youtube

 

Marconi Automotive Museum Open House Special Event

On August 2nd, just a little over two weeks away, summer comes together with a unique and eclectic showing of cars for The Marconi Automotive Museum‘s Open House event, which will be held at The Marconi Automotive Museum (1302 Industrial Drive, Tustin, CA, 92780). The event goes from 10 am to 2pm and admission is free.

Dick Marconi, the museum’s founder, will be here giving tours of the museum and telling stories of the many cars he has acquired over the years. Chip Foose, internationally renowned car designer, will be on hand as well. Last but definitely not least, Rebel Off Road will return with another custom out-of-this-world off-road vehicle.

The Marconi Open House will not be complete without some delicious food. We will have The Tri Tip Man food truck serving great sandwiches, as well as Archies Ice Cream scooping up some amazing treats.

There will be an amazing amount of cars on display, such as a custom 1967 Ford Mustang Fastback and Chip Foose’s custom 1960 Ford Starliner. We look forward to seeing all of you on August 2nd. You can RSVP by sending an email to info@marconimuseum.org.

 

 

Hours & Directions

Marconi Automotive Museum

1302 Industrial Drive
Tustin, CA 92780
(714) 258-3001

Directions:

    • From the 55 freeway in either direction
    • Exit Edinger Ave.
    • Turn Right from the off-ramp
    • Turn Right on Red Hill Ave. (about the third stop light)
    • Turn Right on Industrial Dr. (the first stop light)
    • We are located on the left hand side (red and green flags ring the outside of the building)

Bonneville’s Speed Week is Cancelled for Second year

SPEED WEEK 2015

HAS BEEN CANCELLED

​    The SCTA President/Race Director Bill Lattin & the BNI Chairman Roy Creel spent this morning (July 20th) on the salt. The most they could find was 2 1/4 miles of salt suitable for a safe race course. The rest of the salt flats
are either wet or wet and muddy. If the wet salt gets
dry, future events could be possible.

The Nugget will be refunding for reservations for one week

BNI Membership Form.

Racers at Bonneville Salt Flats Pepper Potash Firm With Complaints

WENDOVER, Utah—Are the Bonneville Salt Flats turning into the Bonneville Mud Flats?

Hot rodders who race on them think they are. The expanse of whiteness—hard, flat and fast—has shrunk, they say. The crystalline surface that smashers of land-speed records have made their hallowed ground for nearly a century seems slushy and thin.

The culprit, the hot rodders are convinced, is potash. The potash here is potassium chloride, a kind of salt. It is used in fertilizer, gunpowder and lethal injections.

Just south of the salt crust, across Interstate 80, there’s a single potash mine. The mine sucks brine from under the flats, extracts the tiny percentage of potash, and lets the rest dry out into waste heaps of table salt. So much salt has been removed, the racers believe, that the crust itself is disappearing.

“See our tire tracks?” Larry Volk was saying one windy July day. Mr. Volk, a 70-year-old hot rodder, is chairman of a group called Save the Salt. He had eased his Ford F-150 onto the flats in search of a course for Speed Week, where hundreds of vehicles of different sorts strain to go as fast as they can. This year’s events are to begin Aug. 13.

The tire tracks were light gray, the color of wet wallboard. “That’s mud,” said Mr. Volk. He got out and jabbed at the goop with a screwdriver. “All we want,” he said, “is the salt they take off put back on.”

South of I-80, the excavators of Intrepid Potash Inc., were digging at a moonscape of canals and man-made lakes. Its 48 workers ship 100,000 tons of potash a year at $500 a ton. From their side of the road, the salt crust’s plight doesn’t look so cut and dried.

Speed thrills, but to potash miners, potash thrills, too. “It supports life on Earth,” said Hugh Harvey, an Intrepid executive spending a day at the mine. He placed a potash granule on the tip of his tongue and grinned. “It lights up the mouth,” he said.

Intrepid hardly sells any of its salt waste. At $15 a ton, it isn’t worth the trouble. “To be perceived as helpful,” as Mr. Harvey puts it, the mine already pipes tons of it back onto the flats. The rest of the salt, standing in the rain, will dissolve back into the flats, Mr. Harvey says, in a few hundred years.

 

 

 

That isn’t fast enough for the hot rodders. They want the mine to pump a lot more salt a lot faster, and they want the owner of the salt flats—the federal government—to mandate it, now and forever.

After years of delay blamed on budgets, the Bureau of Land Management is soon to decide—possibly before Speed Week starts—and won’t say a thing yet. But two of the BLM’s geologists—who took the flats’ most up-to-date measurements—have just retired. Their calculations have left them asking the bed-rock question: Has the salt, in fact, been shrinking—or hasn’t it?

 

“What’s normal?” said Bill White, 68. He was standing on a berm in the warm wind, looking over the salt with his fellow geologist, Jim Kohler, who is 65. Said Mr. Kohler, “What’s back to normal?”

The flats have been around since Lake Bonneville dried up 14,000 years ago. The first speed record, set in 1914 by Teddy Tetzlaff in his Blitzen Benz, was followed by the first potash mine in 1917, a response to German gunpowder superiority in World War I.

 

Potash mining took off in the 1930s, hot rodding in 1949. The two coexisted until the 1960s, when the racers say they began having trouble finding a 13-mile straightaway of hard, thick salt.

Experts confirmed it. In 1988, the BLM, which is part of the Interior Department, said the crust was shrinking by 1% a year. In 1989, Save the Salt was formed. In 1997, after years of campaigning, it persuaded the potash miners to voluntarily put some salt back.

At the time, Reilly Chemical Inc. owned the mine. For five years, Reilly pumped brine under I-80 and onto the crust. Intrepid bought Reilly in 2004. While Mr. Harvey says it doubted the effectiveness of the pumping, Intrepid kept it up, just not so fast. In all, it reckons, the mine has dumped 8.2 million tons of salt onto the flats—enough to fill 81,176 hoppers in a train 911 miles long.

What happened? Not much.

 

Checking the old measurements, the geologists found errors. They recalibrated the old figures and matched them with their own new ones. It turned out that the flats hadn’t changed in 16 years. The crust was as thick in 2004—two feet, more or less—after years of pumping, as it was in 1988, after decades of mining.

 

As for the area of the flats, it fluctuates with rainfall, but its raceable surface still covered about 35 square miles.

The big surprise was that the brine pumped from the potash mine had no effect at all. It barely added to the salt’s thickness or expanse. It dribbled right through the crust and into the desert’s aquifer—a sea no amount of pumping will ever fill up.

 

 

“We just gather facts,” says Mr. White.

The racers don’t buy it. They’re certain the salt has gone mucky since Intrepid slowed down its pumps.

If the BLM won’t force the mine to keep pumping, they say they’ll go to Congress and the courts. They haven’t brought in any outside geologists, but they have brought in a lawyer, Russ Deane, to argue their case. “There’s a history of abuse on the flats,” he says.

The BLM’s retired geologists blame the weather. In dry years, they have noticed, race reports call the salt fast; in wet years, it’s slow.

Mr. Kohler and Mr. White were rolling over the flats in their Ford Explorer, leaving gray tire tracks. What about that mud? Doesn’t it mean that the crust has thinned to nothing?

“That’s a misconception,” said Mr. Kohler.

 

 

Mr. White stopped the car. Mr. Kohler got out, crouched and scraped at the ooze with a pick. “It’s not mud,” he said. “It’s surface gypsum, windblown and waterborne.” The damp gypsum was merely coating the crust’s surface. Mr. Kohler hacked into it with his pick, and a chunk of hard salt flew up.

“That’s the crust,” said Mr. White. “About two-feet thick here. I’m skeptical that’s ever going to disappear.”

Mr. Kohler stood and shaded his eyes in the glare. “Is this place doomed?” he said. “I don’t think so. The activities out here—mining or racing—won’t change it much. These salt flats will still have a salt crust. And they’ll still be flat.”

 

Last week, we reported that the 2015 Speed Week at the Bonneville Salt Flats was in danger of canceling due to the poor conditions of the salt surface after recent heavy rains. Over the weekend, Southern California Timing Association (SCTA) visited the site to scope out a usable race course for Speed Week. According to a source that is close with SCTA, 260 out of 338 Speed Week entries voted on a web survey that they would continue to race this year if a single three mile short course could be used. Unfortunately, with input from the Bureau of Land Management, the poor salt conditions lead SCTA to cancel the 2015 Speed Week. On SCTA’s Facebook page, they stated that, “The SCTA President/Race Director Bill Lattin & the BNI Chairman spent this morning (July 20th) on the salt. The most they could find was 2 1/4 miles of salt suitable for a safe race course. The rest of the salt flats are either wet or wet and muddy. If the wet salt gets dry, future events could be possible.” HOT ROD spoke to Bill Lattin, who told us that, “Going towards the big end of the big miles, it gets really rough. And before that, it’s too wet; a bunch of people are getting stuck.”

 

While we were expecting the announcement on July 22, conditions were bad enough to warrant a quick decision by SCTA. While the 2015 Speed Week has been cancelled, Lattin confirmed that SCTA is still planning to run the World Finals race from September 29 to October 2, 2015. Racers are disappointed, but are looking towards the positives. Andy Leach from Cal Customs was going to bring out a brand new build, a ’34 Chevy stretched to run Comp Coupe and powered by a 427 LS. He says, “We’re a little bummed, but it does give us more time to prep the car for the World Finals.” Steve Watt of Maxwell Industries, where the Speed Demon Team streamliner is being built, was disappointed at the news but not disheartened. “It will give us plenty of time for next year.” The team was going to work down to the wire to get the Speed Demon Team streamliner to Bonneville to defend the HOT ROD trophy no matter what kind of track the SCTA was able to prep for Speed Week. With the event cancelled Watt is focusing on getting test runs of the new streamliner, which is considerably lighter and has new data acquisition capability. Stay tuned to HOT ROD News for future Bonneville Salt Flats racing news. While you mule on today’s Speed Week news, take a throwback to Roadkill Episode 20, where Freiburger and Finnegan rebuild a land speed racing 1981 Camaro, and attempt to run at the 2013 Speed Week with the then-new Chevy ramp truck! This early Roadkill episode is true to the name when things don’t go as planned on the salt flats.

Great little Video to watch today!

Well, Friday already, so i thought I would just add a great little promo Video today and let you take it all in, has a great 60’s feel to it and good to see the Rapiers are still playing back home.

So here it is.

 

 

 

 

Published on Jul 17, 2015

Recently, Widow Makers presented a sneak preview of what to expect from us to those who attended the famous ‘Ton Up Day’ event held at Jack’s Hill Cafe in Towcester, Northamptonshire. Widow Makers showed illustrations completed together with our merchandise and following a very successful day a number of new commissions have been requested.

Whilst attending the event, Stuart from Widow Makers and Creative Beast worked with Tom White at Black Rock Creative who filmed the finishing touches of a promotional video for Widow Makers showing the presentation of an illustration completed just days previously to Johnny ‘Chester’ Dowling – the culmination of days of planning, drawing, filming & tea-drinking – we hope that you agree that the illustration is a fitting tribute to what is a lovely machine and that the video captures the essence of a bygone era of motorcycling.

Widow Makers was so happy with the video that we couldn’t wait to show it to you all – we hope you love it as much as we do !

Widow Makers would like to thank the following: Jacks Hill Cafe- Towcester, Davida Helmets, Pure Triumph Motorcycles Wellingborough, Royal Enfield, Haywards Cambridge, The Rapiers, Fury Records
Vince Taylor, Creative Beast Ltd, Toxico Ltd, Guildhall Press, Black Rock Creative

and a very special thanks to

All my family, friends and customers who have supported me on the launch of this project, To all those who attended ‘Ton Up Day’ at Jacks Hill Cafe. Johnny ‘Chester’ Dowling and my wife and best friend, Lorna McDowell.

Soundtrack:
Vince Taylor – Jet Black Machine, The Rapiers – Out of this World, The Rapiers – Chopping and Changing, Supplied by Fury Records. A Film by Thomas White, Black Rock Creative

Widow Makers is owned by Creative Beast Ltd, a registered trademark.

David Beckham – Custom Bonneville

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Win our very own replica of the Triumph that David Beckham rode up the amazon.

David Beckham Into the Unknown

At the end of 2015, Motolegends will be giving away in a free prize draw its very own replica of the Triumph Bonneville that David Beckham and his pals rode into the Amazon Rain Forest last year. To enter, all we need is your name, physical and email addresses, and a telephone number.

 

 

CAUTION: DO NOT ENTER IF OUTSIDE THE UK !!!!

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So here are a few shots of the bike to have a look at and see if you want to register to win this Trumpy.

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A great prize for someone out there and I am sure there but we cannot apply here in the states for it and thats unfair I think.

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Take a close look at these photos and see if any of them turn your dial, but this is a cool give away to be honest.

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 Arrow exhaust set up sounds pretty darn cool to be honest and wouldnt mind it myself, but as I love in California I cant even have a go at winning this.
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The bike sits pretty well and somebody is going to be a lucky so and so to get this bike but its a REPLICA it is NOT Beckhams.
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Hard to see if this has 31,000 Miles or 81,00 if thats the case then this is not worth as much as you may think as the motor will be tired if no service history is shown.
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I must admit the paint looks a little rough on the Motor, but it is a giveaway bike none the less.
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See what you think.
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What’s this all about?

Shortly after the TV documentary about David Beckham’s trip to the Amazon had aired, we decided it would be fun to create our own replica of his bike.

We thought it was a cool looking machine that would be fun to ride; and that we could use it on our stands at some of the events we go to.

But then somebody, in their infinite wisdom, decided that it would be a good idea to give it away in a free prize draw.

And so here we are!

 

 

Win Beckhams bike

To enter the competition, all you have to do is complete the entry form above.

The only stipulations are that you must complete all the fields and be a UK resident. We need your name, your home address, your email address, and a phone number. If any of the fields are empty, you won’t be entered. Sorry!

 

 

Beckham Bike

 

 

We’ll be announcing the winner during the NEC Motorcycle Show in November.

Anyway, good luck. All we can say is that the bike is a stunner, and already we’re jealous that someone other than us is going to have it in their garage, and get to ride it whenever they want!

 

 

New Swing arm now being Drawn up in Solid Works

I have been contemplating getting these manufactured for some time now, a couple of years ago I was speaking to a company that with my input, we should be able to manufacture these to the correct specifics and standards to allow the safe use of Aluminum material and of course as these are mechanical parts I want to make sure these are stress relived and comply to all the safety codes and standards that are required.

 

They will be made from 7075 and an Aerospace company is going to help me with the R&D to make sure that all will be safe and of course have a Perfect fit with easy maintenance etc. The R&D will be done by a friend of mine that has made swing arms for over 50 years for TT bikes, Super bikes and Motocross, so a plethora of experience, these will be top quality, the best anywhere.

 

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This will take a little while for me to get this all how I want it, I have now sent a stock swing arm to a specialist who will be using Solid Works to draw this all up, then once that is done all the Stress relive work and magnafluxing will be determined as these have to be bang on and built by people that know what the Parameters must be for Alloy Swing arms.

 

 

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I think I will have mine as a polished set rather than just Black but also have the option of Powder coat or anodizing too.

 

 

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I will have time and money in these but have many people all on waiting lists now so that means people like what I am doing.

 

 

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I have just seen one from over here and its too 80’s looking and no real style, just a chunk of aluminum will not cut it for me.

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This stuff is what I am into, support a business that loves and breathes this stuff, not some factory that churns stuff out with no ISO or traceability.

 

British aluminum swingarm

 

 

Stay tuned as I will have this done soon and then can take the Deposits to make sure the first 24 are getting theirs.

 

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Drop me a line with your email and phone number if you would like one for your Thruxton Or Bonnie.

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I will also be giving Bulk discount and of course 59 members a deal too.

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If you want Quality and reassurance, then you have come to the right place.

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Stay Tuned as i will be adding progress reports as and when I get more Photos and feedback on this great New swing arm.

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Thanks for looking and pass the word as I know these will be a winner.

 

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This was us last night and we sure have fun, come by some time and enjoy our company and rides.

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