Doin valve clearances? Use dappers valve shim exchange program and the job will be carroty - Free (other than you postin me yer shims) for sporting members.
Good to have the marque back in production Ill agree but did they (BSA) not learn a lesson in the sixties / seventies about producing the same old style of bikes and relying totally upon sales from the British & American bikers being all nostalgic and not produce something dynamic and fresh when they had the chance and the technology ð¤·ââ , thats just my first thought but hey good luck to them though, hope it takes off and we see more from them in the future ð¤
<p> Now Sold ð......850 MK2A 4TX6 in Silver, Stainless steel hand rolled slip on end can, stainless 2into1 headers, K&N air filter, Hagon progressive front springs, Gdogg modified rear shock, Else Made "Ridgeback" Gel Seat, Gdogg under seat fender extender, Powrspark leads, Carbon fiber effect vinyl wrap fairing decals & logos, Michelin Pilot Road2's, V-Strom hand guards, Givi monorack & box (colour matched side rails).
I've never understood this desire to resurrect old brands that expired due to lack of development and lousy products. The last BSA was made in '73, which means a BSA customer who was 25 years old then is now 73 himself! All the people who remember riding new BSAs back in the day will be dead soon! I doubt many of them will be buying motorcycles these days. So why bring back the brand and styling for a modern Indian manufactured motorcycle that nobody who rode BSA's back in the day is likely to buy? :dunno:
Quote:I've never understood this desire to resurrect old brands that expired due to lack of development and lousy products. The last BSA was made in '73, which means a BSA customer who was 25 years old then is now 73 himself! All the people who remember riding new BSAs back in the day will be dead soon! I doubt many of them will be buying motorcycles these days. So why bring back the brand and styling for a modern Indian manufactured motorcycle that nobody who rode BSA's back in the day is likely to buy? :dunno:
I agree, my first real motorcycle was a C15 and it was a pile of unreliable crap it was disappointing. However, I am a convert to the recent well made Indian offerings. I bought my Enfield Interceptor this Summer after riding a friends machine and instantly fell for it as a foil to my Tracer. Ideal for days when I just want to potter. The build quality is excellent due no doubt to the improvements in metallurgy and investment in up to date machinery, neither of which were available to the cash-strapped British Motorcycle Industry of the 1950s and 60s. Hopefully the BSA will delight in the same way as my Interceptor.
 '73 Honda CB500 Four, Royal Enfield Interceptor 650 and Triumph Tiger Sport 660.
If it's not made in this country it's not a British bike - it's a nostalgic pastiche.
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Royal Enfield have the truest continuous lineage but they validated a business model that many a johnnie-come-lately now freely milks; they buy a defunct British brand/marque of old and tell us they are back. They are not. The brand alone is back (via China, Indonesia et al ) and those nostalgic enough to buy into this cynical marketing ruse are happy.
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Norton, BSA, AJS, Brough, Matchless, Francis Barnett are "back" but for me they are not British bikes. Triumph qualify but even they are drifting to Indonesia.
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To my mind Ariel, CCM, Hesketh and Matisse are British bikes because they are made here (though there may be more hopefully).
Quote:I've never understood this desire to resurrect old brands that expired due to lack of development and lousy products. The last BSA was made in '73, which means a BSA customer who was 25 years old then is now 73 himself! All the people who remember riding new BSAs back in the day will be dead soon! I doubt many of them will be buying motorcycles these days. So why bring back the brand and styling for a modern Indian manufactured motorcycle that nobody who rode BSA's back in the day is likely to buy? :dunno:
You're just a hopeless old romantic Chris!!
Lock onto my co-ordinates and beam me up !!
04 900 - 92 mk 1 - r 1150 rs - Z550 A1 - 2x bonnies - plastic slug -XL185 - ...not in that order !! (and one or two i don't want / dare to own up to !!)
I started on a 1940s Ariel and I wanted one of the new ones especially with the 'funny' front end which mine had. The new operations are simply using old British names to get a leg up. In a way it is surprising how failed British marques carry so much marketing heft. Bad memories dim, I suppose, and an aura somehow remains.Â
Quote:If it's not made in this country it's not a British bike - it's a nostalgic pastiche.
Â
Royal Enfield have the truest continuous lineage but they validated a business model that many a johnnie-come-lately now freely milks; they buy a defunct British brand/marque of old and tell us they are back. They are not. The brand alone is back (via China, Indonesia et al ) and those nostalgic enough to buy into this cynical marketing ruse are happy.
Â
Norton, BSA, AJS, Brough, Matchless, Francis Barnett are "back" but for me they are not British bikes. Triumph qualify but even they are drifting to Indonesia.
Â
To my mind Ariel, CCM, Hesketh and Matisse are British bikes because they are made here (though there may be more hopefully).
i've never owned a classic British boike but i agree with Larry here. After reading Lee Henty's comments about the out of true / slightly oval headstock on one of those great looking Norton 961's it made me ponder just how good is some of the engineering processes are even on a premium brand bikes?
spyball alarm/immob, bluespot brake calipers and Stainless hoses, Fournales air adjustable shock with Remote Resevoir,
forks raised 10mm thru yokes, racetech linear fork springs in 15 wt oil, Kappa wingrack/luggage, heated grips, Kedo handguards, dual heat controller to power heated jacket liner and or pants!!, Stebel 136DB horn, K&N air filter, colour matched Baglux tank cover (magnetic tank bag modified to fit cover), osram +50% headloight bulbs, headlight protector," NitramSpecial" parking loight, tail light indicators all running on LED's & incorporate "Lite Buddies", MK7 Scottoiler fitted, taller screen, 2-2 stainless steel
CCC's, Devil stainless down pipes. MKI Renntec engine crash bars & sump guard.
engine changed july 20
07 on a dyno run it made
79.1BHP / Torque 59.9Had a brief flirtation with a 1999 MKIIa but it blew an exaust valve on the M5 so was sold on to be repaired.
Quote:Slightly oval would be a damn good feat of engineering if deliberate, but as a cockup is complete ineptitude.
And I don't believe it's deliberate for one second.
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weld distortion iirc
spyball alarm/immob, bluespot brake calipers and Stainless hoses, Fournales air adjustable shock with Remote Resevoir,
forks raised 10mm thru yokes, racetech linear fork springs in 15 wt oil, Kappa wingrack/luggage, heated grips, Kedo handguards, dual heat controller to power heated jacket liner and or pants!!, Stebel 136DB horn, K&N air filter, colour matched Baglux tank cover (magnetic tank bag modified to fit cover), osram +50% headloight bulbs, headlight protector," NitramSpecial" parking loight, tail light indicators all running on LED's & incorporate "Lite Buddies", MK7 Scottoiler fitted, taller screen, 2-2 stainless steel
CCC's, Devil stainless down pipes. MKI Renntec engine crash bars & sump guard.
engine changed july 20
07 on a dyno run it made
79.1BHP / Torque 59.9Had a brief flirtation with a 1999 MKIIa but it blew an exaust valve on the M5 so was sold on to be repaired.