Cool TT shots

 A Picture tells a thousand words right? So lets not beat about the Bush as this chap Martyn takes some cool shots that I was sent today, will try and get more info when I get it.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Isle Of Man TT times.

Well, racing is going well today, here are some Lap times for you to look at.

 

tt27 tt26 tt25 tt24 tt23

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

tt14 tt15 tt16 tt17 tt18 tt19 tt20

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

tt21

 

 

 

 

 

 

Below is Glen Helen

 

 

 

 

 

Thursday, June 4th last updated 19:21:09
Competitor Machine Sector Lap
Michael Dunlop3 2014 BMW S1000RR 04:16.397 136.195 (4:16.397)L3
Ian Hutchinson9 2015 Kawasaki ZX10 04:16.484 136.149 (4:16.484)L2
Bruce Anstey5 2015 Honda CBR1000RR 04:17.081 135.833 (4:17.081)L2
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

William Dunlop6 2015 BMW S1000RR 04:18.581 135.045 (4:18.581)L2
John McGuinness1 2015 Honda CBR1000RRSP 04:19.403 134.617 (4:19.403)L2
Conor Cummins10 2015 Honda CBR1000RRSP 04:19.941 134.338 (4:19.941)L2
Michael Rutter4 2015 BMW S1000RR 04:20.645 133.975 (4:20.645)L2
Guy Martin8 2015 BMW S1000RR 04:21.121 133.731 (4:21.121)L2
Dean Harrison11 2015 Yamaha YZF-R1 04:22.112 133.225 (4:22.112)L2
David Johnson16 SST BMW S1000RR 04:22.151 133.206 (4:22.151)L2
John McGuinness1 2015 Honda CBR1000RRSP 04:22.526 133.015 (4:22.526)L1
Jamie Hamilton24 2014 Suzuki GSX-R1000 04:23.079 132.736 (4:23.079)L2
Ian Hutchinson9 2015 Kawasaki ZX10 04:23.100 132.725 (4:23.100)L1
James Hillier2 2013 Kawasaki ZX-10R 04:23.674 132.436 (4:23.674)L2
Bruce Anstey5 2015 Honda CBR1000RR 04:23.844 132.351 (4:23.844)L1
Lee Johnston13 BMW STK 04:24.358 132.094 (4:24.358)L2
Peter Hickman17 2015 BMW S1000RR 04:24.858 131.844 (4:24.858)L2
Michael Rutter4 2015 BMW S1000RR 04:24.985 131.781 (4:24.985)L1
Gary Johnson7 2015 Kawasaki ZX-10R 04:25.194 131.677 (4:25.194)L1
Dan Kneen15 DK 2015 Honda CBR1000RR 04:25.564 131.494 (4:25.564)L2
Conor Cummins10 2015 Honda CBR1000RRSP 04:25.900 131.328 (4:25.900)L1
Ian Hutchinson9 1000cc Kawasaki ZX10 04:25.940 131.308 (4:25.940)L1
James Hillier2 2013 Kawasaki ZX-10R 04:26.061 131.248 (4:26.061)L1
Jamie Hamilton24 2014 Suzuki GSX-R1000 04:26.068 131.245 (4:26.068)L1
Steve Mercer20 2014 Honda CBR1000RR 04:26.374 131.094 (4:26.374)L2
Michael Dunlop3 2014 BMW S1000RR 04:26.652 130.957 (4:26.652)L2
Ryan Kneen56 2013 Kawasaki ZX-10R 04:27.152 130.712 (4:27.152)L2
Guy Martin8 2015 BMW S1000RR 04:27.501 130.542 (4:27.501)L1
Michael Dunlop3 2014 BMW S1000RR 04:27.507 130.539 (4:27.507)L1
Gary Johnson7 2015 Kawasaki ZX-10R 04:27.729 130.430 (4:27.729)L2
Dean Harrison11 2015 Yamaha YZF-R1 04:28.051 130.274 (4:28.051)L1
Alan Bonner86 2014 Kawasaki ZX-10R 04:28.197 130.203 (4:28.197)L2
William Dunlop6 2015 BMW S1000RR 04:28.507 130.052 (4:28.507)L1
Bruce Anstey5 SST 2015 Honda CBR1000RR 04:28.538 130.037 (4:28.538)L1
Dean Harrison11 2015 Yamaha YZF-R1 04:29.204 129.716 (4:29.204)L1
William Dunlop6 2015 BMW S1000RR 04:29.437 129.604 (4:29.437)L1
John McGuinness1 SST 2015 Honda CBR1000RRSSP 04:29.489 129.579 (4:29.489)L1
Ryan Farquhar14 2015 Kawasaki ZX-10R 04:29.973 129.346 (4:29.973)L1
Steve Mercer20 2014 Honda CBR1000RR 04:30.338 129.172 (4:30.338)L1
Guy Martin8 2015 BMW S1000RR 04:30.667 129.015 (4:30.667)L1

Triumph Slippery Sam looks great

 

“Slippery Sam” was one of three similar motorcycles initially built by Triumph built for the 1970 Isle of Man Production TT. The bike was created by the engine’s designer, Doug Hele, who joined with frame expert Rob North to produce the successful works Formula 750 race bikes. One of these was ridden by Malcolm Uphill, won the TT at 97.71 mph (157.25 km/h). Other riders included Mick Grant; and in 1971 Percy Tait and Ray Pickrell won the Bol d’Or 24-hour endurance race on a Triumph triple.[4] The motorcycles were prepared for races by Les Williams and his team. (Williams went on to develop the Triumph Legend 964cc). Bert Hopwood urged BSA‘s managers to make a production version of the racing triple, producing 84 bhp (63 kW) at 8,250 rpm – but this suggestion was ignored, partly due to financial concerns.

Further racing development in the USA was carried out at the Duarte, California, facility under Racing Manager Dan Macias. USA BSA/Triumph dealers had access to factory race parts, but due to difficulties in obtaining race frames from the UK, Macias built his own jig and the frames were manufactured by Wenco. The main differences from the factory North frames were TIG welding instead of brazed, flat plate rear engine mounts instead of built-up formed sheet and 4130 Cro-Mo steel material. Dick Mann‘s win at the 1971 Daytona 200 was on a US specification bike.

Many have been Replicated over the years, Love this Trident below as it is just amazing.

But Below is Germanys New answer to it and boy have they done a Bang up job and would love one.

 

This machine is totally awesome from every angle, I would love to get my leg over this machine and throw it in the corners.

The Avon style fairing is reminiscent of my days in the late 70’s and early 80’s.

 

 

Talk about looking down the Barrels of a 12 gauge Shot Gun, these are as nice as a Original Purdy side by side.

 

Everything Rocks about this bike right down to the front forks and Brembo double Bacon Slicers!

Yes, it says it all right there on the Petrol tank for all to see and Bow too!

 

Nice styling of the race seat to cover the tail pipes and the stainless exhaust is tighter than a New Shoe!

 

I would love this in my shop right now!

 

Just pure class and lovely finishing, makes me envious but in a good way!

 

Would Love to hear this thing on a cold Morning!      Love the PVM Rims!

 

Looking forward to adding some Video of this machine so you can all see and hear this awesome Café Racer .

One of these days I hope to change mine to this set up.

That Bird is so Lucky to be able to blap that through the twisties in Germany!

 

 

Paton S1 Strada $22,000-$32000

I thought I would show you this neat ride, not cheap but a hand made motorcycle that really goes back to braised frames and twin shock suspension.
I got this from
Bike EXIF and a neat ride, just wanted to hsare as a blog today to get ya week off in the right mood.

Paton S1 Strada
Paton S1 Strada
Posted: 23 Feb 2014 09:30 AM PST
Paton motorcycle

 

Paton motorcycle

 
Gentlemen, place your orders. If you love the style of classic racebikes, but don’t like the thought of tricky maintenance, take a look at the new Paton S1 Strada. It’s a seductive mix of vintage style and modern technology, and best of all, it’s road legal.

 

 

Paton motorcycle

There will be four levels of specification, ranging between €16,000 ($22,000) for the ‘standard’ model and €23,000 ($32,000) for limited edition ‘Factory Signature’ models. Most trim levels include custom adjustable forks, Öhlins adjustable shocks and vintage-style instrumentation from Motogadget.

 

 

Paton motorcycle

 

 

Paton motorcycle
Motorcycling history is littered with the remains of old marques revived and then abandoned, but the signs are very promising with Paton. Production starts in Milan in one month, and 25 bikes are sold already. The company has a long history of building bikes, so the production side should be viable.

 

Paton motorcycle

 

Paton motorcycle
Giuseppe ‘Pep’ Pattoni founded the marque in 1958 with Mike Hailwood on board, and by the 70s, his 8-valve 500cc racers were a force to be reckoned with on European tracks. But racing became prohibitively expensive at the turn of the century, so Paton switched focus to building replicas of their 1968 and 1973 racebikes, selling them to privateers competing in ‘classic’ races.

 

 

 

Paton motorcycle

 

 

 

Paton motorcycle
The new Paton S1 may have a resemblance to those replicas, but it’s a completely different beast under the elegant fairing. Power comes from a reliable injected parallel twin—the same 649 cc, liquid-cooled mill used in the Kawasaki ER-6n/Ninja 650. It’s an engine renowned for its broad torque delivery and accessible 72 bhp, and it’s hooked up to a six-speed cassette-style gearbox. Power rises a little thanks to an exhaust system designed by Termignoni.

 

 

 

 

 

Paton motorcycle

Paton motorcycle
Performance is brisk. Thanks to a lightweight Claudio Colombo frame and high-spec components, curb weight is a svelte 158 kg with all fluids. Top speed is 215 kph (133 mph), and the Paton sprints to 100 kph in less than four seconds—on a par with much larger bikes such as the BMW R1200RT.

There’s even a chance we’ll see Paton return to full-scale racing. In May, they’ll be fielding a 100 bhp race version of the S1 at the Isle of Man TT, competing in the Lightweight class.

If you’d like to put one of these beautiful machines in your garage, brush up on your Italian and contact Paton via their website atwww.paton.it.

Thanks to Silodrome for the tip.

Paton motorcycle

The post Paton S1 Strada appeared first on Bike EXIF.