Merry Christmas Everyone, here’s a blog on the Millyard RC374 Honda six replica

Wishing everybody a very Merry Christmas and thank you so much for all your orders.

Wanted to have a long blog with a few videos at the bottom of here to show you how skilled this fella is, I am sure you will enjoy the video’s over the Christmas period?

When rocket scientist and motorcycle madman Allen Millyard went to the motorcycle races at Castle Combe, he met none other than Guy Martin. Martin brought Millyard back to his pit area and showed him his replica Honda RC174. This was the bike that Mike Hailwood dominated the 350 cc class of the 1967 Grand Prix season on with its tiny inline-six engine. Millyard loved it, and Martin suggested that he should build his own RC174 replica, so he did.

In what seems like an act of sacrilege, Millyard started with a pair of Yamaha FZR250RR four-cylinder engines. The Yamaha engine was a better starting point than anything comparable from Honda because the Yamaha’s heads and blocks are symmetrical, making them much easier to add extra cylinders to than some of his previous efforts. He started with the heads, cutting the two outer cylinders off of one and cutting the other in half at the center. Already he could see he would have to rework the oil and coolant routing inside the engine. He’d end up using three separate coolant galleries inside the final engine to keep everything adequately cool.

Millyard repeated the process with the cam covers, creating one to cover all six cylinders. The tricky bit was that these cam covers are magnesium, which is extremely flammable and difficult to extinguish, as he demonstrates (stopping for a cupcake on the way, of course). He cut strips of magnesium out of leftover parts to use as a filler wire, ensuring that the filler would be exactly the same material he was welding on the extended cam cover.


All of the pistons were good, so Millyard chose the six best to go into his engine. All 24 valves were in great shape. He only had five good cylinder liners, though, since one of the original engines had rusted inside. In true Millyard fashion, he simply fabricated his own. Speaking of fabrication, Millyard converted the Yamaha’s original wet clutch to a dry clutch, as on the Honda RC174. He created or heavily modified all the parts to do this, along with a new oil filler. Millyard even made a stainless steel toe cover to prevent him from getting sucked into the completely exposed clutch.

One video in the series shows Millyard extending the crankshaft and crankcase to match the heads and putting the whole engine together. As before, he does an excellent job explaining every detail of his design and build process in terms that a layman can understand, keeping no secrets about how he did it. He calls this the RC374 both as an homage to Honda’s original model name, as well as a more accurate description of its displacement.

I am completely blown away with any of Allens creations and the ease of how he actually creates a unique part, such a laid back fella with so many skills that it would take a year just to get a sample of what Allen has accomplished in his shed/garage back home.

This is Christmas and I am sure you lot are off of work and I am also pretty certain its bloody cold where you are right now?

So, what better way than to watch this at home on the big screen if you can? Only 15 minute videos but if you are into engineering and want to see a Pure Genius at work, you will be mesmerized at the skill set and the ease at how Allen accomplishes any task at hand.  he would make a great Professor at a university to teach you engineering that’s for sure.

The sound of this screaming 6 cylinder Race bike is the same as the Original as I have heard it, I love everything Allen does with all his machines but these Videos are all of building this RC347 Honda Six. so take a hour or so Break away from your Turkey, Ham or tri Tip and sit and watch how this Mechanical Wizard creates this unbelievable machine.

 

Merry Christmas from Carpys Cafe Racers.

Classic CB750 Yoshi Bol d’Or Built in 1975

If a bike like this can’t get your heart beating faster I don’t know what will.  You don’t even have to be into race or vintage bikes to appreciate the attention to detail and engineering excellence here.  We use the term “engineering art” with Bimota alot but this Yosh/Honda just stepped up to the top of the podium as far as that is concerned.  Hats off to the seller for providing some beautiful shots of the bike and the story behind it.

The collector who owned this bike for the last 37 years related to us that it was professionally built in 1975 from the frame-up by Yoshimura North, with no expense spared. It is believed that it was built on commission for a privateer race team that wanted to compete in the Bol d’Or 24 endurance race in France, as well as the LeMans 24 hour race.

But the team’s efforts never materialized and the bike never went to Europe. Instead, the bike was immediately purchased by the aforementioned collector and drained of all its fluids. It went directly into his extensive art collection and was stored in his living room as a prized piece for the next 3 decades.

From what we were told, Yoshimura built the motor to their full race specs. They fitted their aluminum racing tank and racing saddle. They equipped it with authentic Honda CR750 CR31 carburetors, the CR750 megaphone exhaust and CR750 tachometer.

They fabricated a custom aluminum oil tank, used aircraft style oil lines and a heavy duty oil cooler, and fitted an ARD racing magneto. They chose Ceriani forks and triple trees up front, and a Dresda swingarm with Koni air shocks in the rear. The bike rides on amazing Kimtab magnesium wheels and Goodyear racing slicks.

Stopping power is provided by Hunt plasma-cut triple discs. Many of the parts on the bike, especially the carburetors, tach, and magnesium wheels are now extremely hard to find and worth quite a large sum in their own right. The bike is fitted with high powered Marchal headlamps, as well as a low-mounted Cibie spotlight on the right front fork. The fit and finish is exquisite, down to the perfectly braided safety wire on various nuts and fasteners.

 

Racing machines are rarely preserved as new, having never seen the track they were destined for. They are built as a means to an end, a utility, and used as such. They are beaten up, repaired, rebuilt, reskinned. Only a few become truly sought after, the ones that made history through their victories. Ford GT40s, Ferrari Testarossas, Porsche 908s. The Honda CR750 was also one of those machines. And this example has been preserved almost exactly as it was built in 1975, believed to have only ever been ridden a few test miles.

In the early 1970s, Honda had its sights set on the US Market. Although the CB750 had been released in 1969 and received acclaim as a technical tour de force, it had not yet achieved the sales Honda desired. Bob Hansen, the American service manager for Honda, told HQ that they’d have to go racing to make a real impression. Honda had already won the 24 hour Bol d’Or endurance race in France in 1969, but it did not register on the American motorcycle radar. Given the huge popularity of roadbike racing in the 70s, manufacturers were truly experiencing the “race on sunday, sell on monday” phenomenon.

Honda took Hansen’s advice and immediately built 4 individually unique CR750 race bikes in an effort to win the Daytona 200 mile race. They chose 3 British riders and 1969 AMA Grand National titleholder Dick Mann as their pilots. The bikes were equipped with magnesium crankcases, and a broad spectrum of bespoke and lightweight Honda race parts created specifically for them.

During practice, the team suffered numerous mechanical issues. The magnesium crankcases were expanding under high temperatures and the teams worried about total engine failure as a result. To remedy the problem, 4 completely stock CB750 motors were sourced from local dealers. They were modified with the existing CR750 internals. Dick Mann’s team then spotted a weakness in his cam chain tensioner. The team promptly replaced it with a tensioner from a CB450.

The CR750s lined up with over 60 other bikes, including the newest triples from Triumph and BSA, as well as the first XR750 Harley Davidsons. From the drop of the flag to the first corner, Dick Mann shot from his fourth place grid position to a fifty meter lead, using all 93HP he had on tap. He never looked back, and although Champion Gene Romeo was gaining quickly by the finish, Mann crossed the finish line in the lead. It was his first win of the Daytona 200 after 15 attempts.

The win gave Honda the boost they needed. The fact that they did it on stock CB750 cases only helped their case for the road bike. In fact, it created so much demand that Honda released a short run of CR750 kits and parts which they supplied to a select group of dealers. The kits were used to convert a stock CB750K into a race-ready machine using specially designed parts from the CR750 that could simply be bolted on. Today very few of the original kit bikes still exist in complete form with all the original parts.

OK, so enough of the blarb, I am going to leave you with a Plethora of Pics to drool over, I very much doubt we shall see too many of these rare built machines any more, so enjoy and have yourself a grand weekend.

 

Honda Super Hawk NOW SOLD !!!!

Here we are with my 1909 HONDA SUPER HAWK VT1000R        Only $1300

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This was a bike we were going to build to race around a track- but even though this is almost there, I have way to many projects to get on with, all this needs is tail pipes, it runs rides and is fast as hell.

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These Motors are so strong and known as the poor mans Ducati, this will jerk your neck when you grab a lot of the loud grip.

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We have a Hyabusa front and rear end on this , Dakota made the Chain Guard and the half fairing and we fitted our Cafe seat to it as we wanted a cooler look that the bulky stock guise.

 

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I do not know how many miles is on this machine as it has No gauges, we were going to run a GPS speedometer on it, but it runs great and I know that someone can either put it back on the road, or have a fun track bike or even a Drag bike, this is a very fast and powerful machine. the gears and clutch work fine as do the lights etc, this will be a super ride for someone out there and you will turn heads once you have some exhausts and a seat cover etc.

I would love to finish it but- My workload has overfilled and I must move a few things, so my loss your gain.

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We ship all over the globe and I use Eagle One to ship in the lower 48 and you can call him for a shipping quote door to door on 209-495-3729 or email him on beachlerlarry@gmail.com his name is Larry and we have used his services for many years now, the best in the business and drops door to door.

 

 

 

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This is originally from Idaho and here is the title with it that is all good and matches.

 

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A fun machine that’s for certain and runs right now.

 

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Handmade rear chain Guard give this a tough look.

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Our Razorback seat base is what we used for the bike and this is a cool looking set up.

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Mini fairing from one of our cafe fits the bill well.

 

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We also have a lithium dry cell battery that is super strong and fits in the Custom Battery box under the seat.

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Hyabusa front and rear end get the bike round the corners well and stops real fast!!!!

 

 

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A tough bike which ever way you look at it and a strong Motor.

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Have a look and see what you think.

 

 

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Thanks for looking and hope it goes to a good home.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Knighter rides for Honda TT Legends.. ?

My Brother sent me this, so I thought I would Blog it.

For those who do not know about the Knighter, well he is a legend in the Off road Scene and by off road I mean things like GNCC and GBXC, he dominates on Enduroes as well as Last man standing events.

David Knight is a Manx Man, born on the infamous Isle Of man, known for the T.T.

( Tourist Trophy ) Races, David was a natural on anything 2 wheeled and soon became well known in his own right.

 

Me and my brother have followed his career for a long time, we went to see him race at the Enduro cross races here in Las Vegas where he cleaned up and showed the globe that he loves challenges.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Here are just a few of his accomplishments.

 

Career highlights:

  • GNCC Champion XC-1 2007/8
  • GBXC Champion 2008
  • Mexico Fun Enduro Winner 2008
  • AMA Endurocross Champion 2007
  • FIM Indoor Enduro World Champion 2007/8
  • A4DE Champion 2007
  • 3-time World Enduro Champion 2005,06,10
  • 2nd place World Enduro Champion 2000/01/02/04
  • 2-time Erzberg Extreme Winner
  • U.S. Red Bull Last Man Standing Winner 2005 and 2006
  • AMA Enduro Cross Champion 2005
  • ISDE Overall Winner 2005
  • 8-time British Enduro Champion
  • 2010 BSEC Champion
  • MBE awarded in 2011

 

 

David Knight took to the roads on Monday aboard his very own Honda TT Legends CBR 1000 Fireblade !

Is this a change of discipline for the big Manxman? No.. David was invited to a lap of the famous Isle of Man TT Mountain Course as part of the inaugural Classic TT’s parade lap.

Sharing the 37.75 mile circuit with motorcycling legends such as, John McGuinness, Bruce Anstey, Philip McCallen and many more was a great honour for Knighter. He certainly made the most of the closed roads lapping at over 100mph !

The hardest thing for David was not only getting used to using both sides of the road, but also remembering not to slow down for the 30mph limit through towns and villages for fear of a Smokey flagging him down !

The parade lap was a great success and was just one great feature of the brilliant Classic TT.

Visit IOMTT.com Classic TT for more details.

An all round good bloke and has a passion for motorcycles and that’s always a good thing in my book.

After a couple of months lay off with a wrist and hand injury, Knighter.net Honda’s David Knight returned to race action at the big X-Games final in downtown LA on Sunday. After collecting a bronze in Brazil in his only other X-Games outing earlier in the season, David was mainly looking to get back to racing, have fun and get a solid result. David and mechanic Nick arrived on Tuesday to do some training and testing during the week, unfortunately the bike was stuck in customs and wasn’t released until Friday afternoon, too late to do any training but they at least got a couple of hours at the famous Glen Helen raceway on Saturday morning just to make sure all was well.
Sunday race day at the X-Games was very intense, with practice, qualifying, semi final and final all taking place straight after one another. It didn’t give much time between runs to change set up but straight away David was on the gas on the very supercross style track. Being less than a second off pole position was a great start. Finishing third in the semi final where 5 go straight through to the main, ensured David would get a good gate pick which was crucial for the tight and flowing track. In the final, he made another good start, rounding turn 1 in 3rd position and quickly settling into a good solid pace for the tough 12 laps. Battling with a few guys, he made a couple of small errors on the slick track to drop to sixth at the finish but was happy with how he rode and can now work hard for the remainder of the season.

Just a few words from the man:

David Knight:
I’ve really enjoyed X-Games this weekend, it was my first race back after injury and I felt pretty good in practice and my qualifying was really good as normal. I’m happy enough with 6th place in the final, I knew I couldn’t push that extra few percent for the  12 lap race as my fitness is not where it needs to be for endurocross as its completely different from anything else. My bike being stuck in customs all week didn’t help as I was going to train hard and get the bike dialled back in for endurocross during the week. I had to guess gearing and suspension settings for the race which hurt us a little. The track was also very different to normal as it was very supercross like with many jumps, which is something that favours the guys with motocross backgrounds, but I really enjoyed it and it was good fun, that’s the thing I like with it, the tracks are never the same with endurocross. Now I can build back up to where I was at the start of the season, we have lots of races left and I’m ready to get going.

I’d like to say thank you to my sponsors, and also to JCR Honda and Pablo at Del Amo Motorsports for the help they gave me during the week.

Knighter