Hot this weekend that’s for sure in Southern California

Hot weather is still here and will continue for a couple of weeks I think, but 112 and 114 is a little too hot to be in the shed this weekend, plus I have stuff to do in our Garden with my Girl. so I have been out doing that, but tomorrow I have to fit some throttle cables to that K6 and tidy a few things up before I offer it for sale, its a great bike for the money with so many New parts.

I have many projects to get into later on, another 16 bikes to sort out but its fun doing it and doing it at home in my own time and do what ever I want to do, I love that feeling and always have a smile when I go in the Barn.  I love all machines and have a few different bikes to build but the platform I have loved is the inline four, always cool to see people on them.

Hope that some of you get time to get out on your machines this Summer, before it gets colder further North, lucky for me, we can ride most of the year round, I ride every single day and never tire of it to be honest.

I’m still busy with my parts and builds and more to come later but just wanted to say howdy and do a quick Blog as its been a while, but always check my daily emails and texts.

Have a great weekend and thank you for all your orders, I am here to help, next year is 25 years in business and its going to be exciting as ever.

 

 

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 )

Norton 650 Scrambler

I was reading my MCN today and at Last Norton are contemplating creating a 650 Scrambler and I think this will be a great opportunity for Back home and worldwide.

I’d love to hve a Norton Dual Sport, a very fun and ergonomic machine that would be something to see for sure, so keep your eyes peeled at the Motorcycle expos and Show circuits for this to pop up, I think it will be a real winner.

MCN report below:

By Richard Newland

Deputy Editor

 

Norton will reveal their intention to build a new family of 650cc parallel-twins at this weekend’s Motorcycle Live, showing renderings of a new scrambler model to canvass input from potential owners.

The desire is to launch two scrambler-styled bikes, one more road focussed, the other a more serious dual-purpose option for riders who want to get their kicks in the dirt – and ride home afterwards.

“It started off life as half of the V4,” says Norton head of design Simon Skinner. “We always knew we wanted to do a 650 parallel-twin to create a new range of bikes with a retro engine platform, and a high-performance platform, and a high-volume platform. And that would cover everything we want to do for the foreseeable future as a brand.

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“The first bike that the 650 will appear in is a Scrambler type bike. The engine has been designed to have three power levels, with the top-end high-spec 175bhp supercharged version, then a normally aspirated high-performance version at 100bhp, the a low-powered one with just under 70bhp. It’s the same core 650cc parallel-twin engine with a 270-degree crank, which give it nice drive characteristic, a nice sound and a nice vibe – and matches the firing order of the Commando engine.

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“It’s a very lightweight, modern parallel-twin, so it’s not like a BMW or Kawasaki mid-capacity parallel-twin. This is literally half the V4, and by losing the rear bank of cylinders we can make the bike very short, very compact. It shares a lot of architecture with the V4 engine, the cylinderhead and valvetrain are all common. The engine is very versatile with what we can do with it, and has been designed to work across a range of applications and both steel and aluminium chassis.

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“The first bike will be the Scrambler version, and that will use a steel trellis frame some aluminium bolt-on sections to give it more rigidity and stiffness. It still needs to be a lightweight bike, and a Norton, but I looked back at what Norton used to with P11s and other models back in the day, and the performance was always a step up from the competition, and that’s our goal. It need to be a proper Scrambler, not something that just looks the part. It needs to be capable, and it should be a proper giggle. This is about rideability, not trying to make an adventure tourer.

“It’s not going to be a cheap bike, but you’ve got to be able to ride it through mud, bash it about, drop it, and pick it up and carry on. It’s got to be a pure and honest bike that can do what it looks like it’s capable of doing.

“One of the stipulations for the design,” says Garner, “is that if I’m out greenlining or in a gravel pit mucking about and I drop it, I want to be easily able to pick it back up on my own and carry on with my ride. It has to be durable. It’ll all be honest, with items like the bash guard being able to do the job, rather than just being there for show. The bike should last a long time, because it’ll be made with proper components.”

“The chassis and geometry is all our own,” says Skinner. “The more off-road focussed version will get a longer swingarm for more capability off-road. We’re certainly intended to offer both versions from birth, a street scrambler version, then a more off-road capable desert racer. The rears will be 17in on both models, and the more road biased bike will get an 18 in front, while the more off-road bias one will get a 19in.

“The tricky part is getting the styling right. I’ve looked back through the old Norton models, and penned some designs with a lot of those traditional styling cues, and they just don’t look right on this. The hard part is paying homage to the heritage, without being old-fashioned, or retro – it’s got to be an authentic Norton, but it’s got to be modern.

“This is an everyday Norton,” says Garner. “It’s honest and faithful, and the sort of bike I’d use as an all-year-round ride. You can imagine someone buying the V4, then having this as their everyday bike – with switchable ABS and traction control – and that’s what it’s for. In volume terms, we expect this to be our biggest seller, and we’re targeting a £10k target for the base model and around £12k for the higher-spec version. And if this bike is a success, it’ll enable us to build the 650 sportsbike – hopefully within a year of the scrambler going on sale.”

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Norton 650 supersport in development

Even more exciting for those who yearn for a V4 RR, but are unlikely to ever raise the funds needed to buy one, Norton also confirmed that the Scrambler model will be followed into production by a sportsbike version using the same 650 parallel-twin. But don’t’ start thinking this is a budget clone of a Ninja 650, this is a proper TT lightweight destroyer.

Weighing in at a projected 140kg, and developing over 100bhp in standard trim – with the possibility of a supercharged version even further in the future that could see the output rise to 175bhp – it will redefine how we think about parallel-twin 650 sportsbikes forever – and should they choose to campaign it in the TT Lightweight, it’s nice to dream that we might see a Norton winner on the island at its debut.

But faired sportbike versions are still a long way off, so there’s no point putting one on this year’s Christmas list. Save it for 2018’s letter to Santa, for a 2019 delivery.

Norton thinking big

A little while back Norton struck a deal with Zongshen to licence their new 650cc engine platform, which also enabled Zongshen to distribute the bikes in China. As part of the deal Zongshen would be producing new bikes using the Norton engine, but nothing would be branded Norton. Now Norton have set their international sights even further by singing a joint venture agreement with Motoroyale, the motorcycle arm of Indian business group Kinetic.

Unlike the deal with Zongshen, the new joint venture will build the current range of Nortons and any future models in at Kinetic’s plant in Ahmednagar, India. These models will then be sold in India and all over Asia by 2018, although bikes destined for other markets will still be built in the UK. Kinetic have been producing motorcycles in India since 1972 and current import MV Agusta and SWM to the region.

SO- Lets wait and see what happens, I for one and very eager to sling my leg over this steed and see what it has to offer, be great to see the Noton again, I mean hey, they started in 1898 for Gods Sake.

Norton

The 1898 James Lansdowne Norton (known to all as ‘Pa’) founded Norton as a manufacturer of “fittings and parts for the two-wheel trade.” By 1902 the first Norton motorcycles were being produced using French and Swiss engines. … By the mid 1930sNorton was producing over 4,000 road bikes annually.

 

New Triumph Street Scrambler

Triumph has taken the wraps off their new 2017 Triumph Street Scrambler this morning at the EICMA show in Milan, Italy, and aim to prove that they still reign king when it comes to the popular scrambler category.

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The new bike is built around Triumph’s new Street Twin, which uses their all-new 900cc parallel twin motor. The platform, which also spawned the new T100, T100 Black, and Street Cup cafe racer has been incredibly well received, with the little motor taking a spot in most of our staff’s hearts right behind Triumph’s new halo Thruxton R.

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This new Street Scrambler takes that 900cc “high torque” engine from the Street Twin and puts it in a new, more off-road biased chassis. Compared to the outgoing Triumph Scrambler, the new rear shocks are longer and the bars wider, which should give it a better stance for riding in the dirt. It also gets ride-by-wire fueling and switchable ABS that are unique to the Street Scrambler, in addition to traction control and a torque assist clutch. And of course, no Triumph Scrambler would be complete without that beautiful high exhaust pipe.

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While Ducati have pushed their Scrambler further into the dirt this EICMA with the Desert Sled, the Triumph version seems to focus much more on looking stylish on the street. Triumph have definitely improved the lines of their new Scrambler, and the press release boasts premium finishes, graphite badges, brushed aluminum tank decals, an interchangeable pillion seat/rear aluminum rack that comes standard, number-board side panels, and a custom parts catalog with over 150 items to further customize the bike.

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They claim a lower seat height (but give no specs), and offer no information yet regarding the suspension length or travel, weight of the bike, or pricing. The one thing they do give us is that the Street Scrambler has a service interval of 10,000 miles.

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As much as I want to not like this bike (because fake carbs), I think they did a really nice job with the aesthetics of the bike. Triumph understand better than most that the little finishing touches on a bike can make a huge difference in the perception and overall happiness of someone swinging their leg over the thing, so I really appreciate things like the black bezel on the headlight or the aluminum bracket used to attach it, the rubber knee pads in the tank, the finish of the new mirrors, the bash plate, or the beautiful machined speedometer face.

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Mini rant: I think we need to stop being so angry about scramblers that don’t scramble. At this point, the term “scrambler” is like “cafe racer” in that, at least to me, it describes a specific aesthetic style of bike. It’s a style that’s en vogue now and for good reason, because they’re cool looking and nice to ride. In the same way that no one is racing from cafe to cafe on their cafe racers, I think there’s nothing wrong with just liking the looks and riding position of these bikes and riding them around the streets.

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All of that said, it’s still something worth discussing for people who actually do want to scramble, so we can help them get onto something that actually can go in the dirt. All of this to say, we’re going to talk about these bikes a lot and give ourselves permission to like them, even if that’s just because they’d be great daily riders for people who think they look pretty. Because we’d love one of the bikes in this category parked in the garage next to the dual sport.

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This thing will likely have the same issues as the outgoing model when it comes to going off-road but, if you’re into scramblers as a style, this thing nails it better than anything else on the market. The choice of the 900cc motor over the 1200cc one is an interesting one, but with a name like Street Scrambler, it seems Triumph are aiming at a much different market than BMW did with their R nineT Scrambler (though I expect they’re still going to try and take us on a fire road or two when they launch the thing).

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I still haven’t had a chance to ride the Street Twin but, outside of the Thruxton R, it’s the favorite of the other staffers around here which makes me think Triumph might have nailed it with the motor (even if it isn’t impressive on paper with only 55 horsepower or so).

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For those of you dying to get a look at the new Street Scrambler in person, Triumph is taking it on a tour called the “Brutal Beauty Tour,” which has over 50 stops where you can check it and the rest of their modern retro line out. For more info about the dates of the stops, which take place all over the U.S. and Canada, check out their For The Adventure site.

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What do you think of scramblers released in the last few years? Which is your favorite? Don’t forget, the Husqvarnas are still to come, though those take a decidedly different take on the look.

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A Great looking Machine.