Thursday, July 2, 2015

Today in motorcycle history, July 2, 1955




  









  New Zealander Russell Wright sets a new World Land Speed Record of 184.83 mph at Swannanoa, Canterbury, New Zealand, straddled upon his Vincent Black Lightning.







  Stunningly, unlike other more famous Land Speed Records Wright's were achieved not on the Autobahn or the huge expanses of Bonneville but on a narrow Canterbury road, still drying out from rain the night before, a ballsy move in itself. Tram Road at Swannanoa, about 20 miles northwest of Christchurch, was bordered by gravel, wire fences, some people and, partly on one side, a hedge. 

   On Russell's first run a sound like a shotgun blast pierced even the scream of his Vincent's motor. He'd hit a damn bird, unfazed, he continued twisting the throttle. 

  Although the Vincent was handling well, a thought crept into his mind about the Smiths 150 mph mark. 

  "I realized as I was gripping those 15-inch width handlebars, and with the stark knowledge that I had only 2 inches of steering leeway, that I was now completely in the hands of the good Lord above." 

  On the second run, just at the point where the high hedge on his left side stopped, a wind gust hit the side of the Vincent's fish-shaped shell pushing it across the road and towards spectators. An instinctive and delicate correction saved who knows how many lives. This time Wright stepped off his bike with a chalky complexion, to confirmation from an International Motorcycle Federation (IMF) timekeeper that the 187 mph run meant he was now the holder of a new World Land Speed Record.



  Just thirty-one Black Lightnings were built and they were effectively a competition-prepared version of the Black Shadow. Wright's Lightning had been tweaked by the Scottish engineering legend Bob Burns, who also provided the bike's streamlined shell.



 After the speed record was official Burns attached a simple sidecar to the bike and Russell then broke the record for sidecars, his two runs averaging 162 mph.





  Russell Wright died in 2013 at 83, his widow, Elaine, sprinkled the first of his ashes near a memorial set up to commemorate her late husband's feat. The rest were released into the wind from the back of a bike, as he would have loved.
  "Russell and I have come here many times and it's very sad to think this is his last ride here, but this was his last wish, to have his ashes scattered at Tram Road."







  Today in motorcycle history proudly supports the National Association for Bikers with a Disability (NABD). www.nabd.org.uk

Wednesday, July 1, 2015

Today in motorcycle history, July 1, 1955

  





  



  Yamaha Motor Co. Ltd is founded.  







  Genichi Kawakami, then president of Nippon Gakki, develops the first Yamaha motorcycle, the YA-1. T
he  125cc, two-stroke, single is nicknamed 'Aka-tombo', meaning red dragonfly after its maroon and ivory two-tone paint job. 


  The YA-1 goes on sale in February 1955, and on July 1 the new motorcycle division is separated from Nippon Gakki. Yamaha Motor Co. Ltd. is born.


   With two wooden, single-story factory buildings and 274 employees, the fledgling company dares to confront the competition.
 Yamaha almost immediately becomes known for their high-performance bikes by winning the third Mt. Fuji Ascent Race in July 1955, and then sweeping the top places in the Ultra-Light Class of the first Asama Highlands Race of the All Japan Endurance Championships. 


  Although Yamaha Motor Co. Ltd were latecomers to the party, with their success on Japan's racing scene and with the introduction of the YC-1, a deluxe version of the YA-1, in 1956, they were able to prove they belong and at the same time boost the image of Yamaha and draw the attention of motorcycle fans across Japan.




  Also on this date -

 
 1961 - the Hells Angels grant Auckland, New Zealand, a charter making it their first official chapter outside of the United States.




  2000 - The mandatory lid law* is repealed in Florida.

  *Riders over 21 years of age may operate or ride upon a motorcycle without wearing protective headgear securely fastened upon his or her head if such person is covered by an insurance policy providing for at least $10,000 in medical benefits for injuries incurred as a result of a crash while operating or riding on a motorcycle.





  Today in motorcycle history proudly supports the National Association for Bikers with a Disability (NABD). www.nabd.org.uk

Friday, June 26, 2015

Today in motorcycle history, June 26, 1998


 
  


   






  The Art of the Motorcycle exhibit opens at the Solomon R.Guggenheim Museum in New York City.








  The Art of the Motorcycle exhibition presented 114 bikes chosen for their historic significance and/or design excellence. The exhibition attracted the Guggenheim's largest crowds ever. Rock star crowds. It was reported that some people waited in line for over three hours. The exhibit received mixed but positive reviews in the art world, with the exception of some snobby art critics who turned their noses at the very thought of such a show desecrating the hallowed halls of the Guggenheim. Please.


  The thought of turning the Guggenheim into a three month long bike show came from the gas and oil-stained mind of then director Thomas Krens, an admitted lover of two-wheeled art himself, and supported by a novel corporate tie-in with BMW. The motorcycles were selected by both motorcycle and art historians, plus the help of Guggenheim advisers. The exhibition was described by historian Jeremy Packer, "... as representing the end of a cycle of demonization and social rejection of motorcyclists, followed by acceptance and reintegration that had begun with the mythologized Hollister riot of 1947 and ended with the high-end marketing of motorcycles and the newly fashionable biker image of the 1980's and 1990's. A long-overdue celebration of the sport, the machines and the pioneers they love."


  A few mouth-watering samples in case you missed it...The 1894 German built two cylinder, water cooled, four-stroke, 1,489cc Hildebrand & Wolfmüller, the 1907 air cooled, F-head Curtiss V8 that set the unofficial land speed record of 136.36 mph, a 1926 Brough Superior SS100 Alpine Grand Sport, 1915 1000cc Indian 8-valve board track racer, 1923 1000cc Harley-Davidson 8-valve board track racer, 1937 500cc Triumph Speed Twin, 1974 Ducati 750SS, 1969 Norton 750 Commando Fastback, 1930 740cc Excelsior Super X, 1931 497cc Ariel Square Four and a 1924 498cc Moto Guzzi C4V. My palms are sweating and there were 103 more I haven't even mentioned.


  With over 2 million visitors in New York, Chicago, Bilbao, Spain and the Guggenheim Las Vegas, it became the most successful exhibition of industrial design ever assembled, and one of the most attended museum exhibitions of any kind, ever. In the words of Billy "Flint" Williams, "Fuckin' A, brother. Fuckin' A."





  The mind blowing exhibition ran until September 20, 1998, giving motorcycle geeks, such as Flint and myself, plenty of time to gawk, drool and quiver. 





  Today in motorcycle history proudly supports the National Association for Bikers with a Disability (NABD). www.nabd.org.uk

Thursday, June 25, 2015

Today in motorcycle history, June 25, 1941


               

    









  The BSA Club of Perth, Australia, votes to suspend club activities due to the shortage of available fuel. The club will remain idle until 1946.







  The inaugural meeting of Perth's BSA Club was held on Monday, March 15, 1937 at Mortlock Bros Ltd.,  914 Hay Street (the address was the Mortlock Brothers BSA/Harley-Davidson shop).

   35 BSA riders decided to form the club, draw up a constitution and elect officers. It was decided that membership was open only to owners and riders of BSA motorcycles.

  The BSA Club was very active in organizing road races, rally's and various social events from the get-go. Then came 'The War'.  At the clubs 100th meeting, (held on June 25, 1941), it was decided that they would put the kickstands down until fuel conditions improve, or for "the duration of the war" whichever comes first.

  The first post-war meeting was held on the February 27, 1946, it was at this meeting when the constitution was, begrudgingly, altered to open membership to riders of other makes of motorcycles.


  The club is still going strong, but today they're known as the BSA & Harley-Davidson Club.






  Today in motorcycle history proudly supports the National Association for Bikers with a Disability (NABD). www.nabd.org.uk

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

Today in motorcycle history, June 24, 1972


















  Evel Knievel, still feeling the results of a compressed vertebrae and broken knuckles suffered at Lakewood Speedway in Atlanta, Georgia two weeks earlier, straps on a doctor-ordered back brace and jumps ten cars in East St. Louis, Illinois. 







  Evel Knievel successfully jumps ten assorted vehicles at St. Louis International Raceway in East St. Louis, Illinois. On June 11, Knievel crashed his Harley-Davidson XR during a practice jump in Atlanta causing him to do the unthinkable - cancel the Atlanta show.  

  Fast forward 13 days - Evel gets help adjusting his fitted back brace and does wheelies back and forth for the crowd to see. After the jump he feels 'minor discomfort' and actually sees a doctor only to find what the Atlanta hospital missed - four broken ribs.   

  Broken ribs or not, he would repeat the performance the next day.



  "The people don't come to see me die. They come to see me defy death." - Evel Knievel






  In 2008, Six Flags St. Louis introduced their $7-million Evel Knievel wooden roller coaster. Passengers ride in 24-passenger red, white and blue trains that fly along 2,700-feet of track with features like high banked turns, fan curves, camelbacks, a double down drop, and sixteen hills. During the ride the twisted maze of wood track crosses over itself 14 times.








  Today in motorcycle history proudly supports the National Association for Bikers with a Disability (NABD). www.nabd.org.uk

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Today in motorcycle history, June 23, 1973


  

  




  






  A German, a Swiss and the Dutch...aboard an ever-trusty Kreidler, Switzerland's Bruno Kneubühler wins the 50cc Class Dutch TT in Assens, Netherlands.





  During his career, Bruno Kneubühler was one of just a handful of riders to have competed in every Grand Prix Class from 50cc to 500cc. Racing professionally from 1972-1989, while a championship always alluded him, Bruno finished second three times, winning 5 Grand Prix races and sharing the podium 33 times with GP riders from Giacomo Agostini to Mick Doohan.



  In the 1973 Grand Prix 50cc Class final standings nine out of ten were riding a Kreidler. The one "nomad" was on a Dutch-built Jamathi.





Today in motorcycle history proudly supports the National Association for Bikers with a Disability (NABD). www.nabd.org.uk

Monday, June 22, 2015

Today in motorcycle history, June 22, 1952



  

   





  Riding for the Indian racing team, Bill Tuman, wins the AMA Grand National Mile on a rough one-mile dirt oval track in San Mateo, California.







  Bill Tuman was part of Indian Motorcycle's famous racing team, along with Bobby Hill and Ernie Beckman, known as the "Indian Wrecking Crew".


  Born and raised in Rockford, Illinois, racing outside of the midwest was a rarity for Tuman. With four children to raise, he tried to race as much as possible near his home often missing the AMA Grand Nationals in order to race, and usually win, local and regional races. Not only did racing locally keep Tuman closer to his home and his family, but it turned out to be profitable as well.

  "I was making too much money racing the local events to worry about racing in all the Nationals," Tuman recalled in a 1979 interview with 'Indian Racers' magazine. "I can remember during county fair times I would race six and seven races a week."



  Bill Tuman was the last single-day winner of the AMA Grand National Championship crown, the result of his victory at the Springfield Mile in
August of 1953. It's interesting to note that Bill won Springfield racing with a motor he borrowed from a fellow Indian rider. His own motor had shit the bed due to dozens of local races he had competed in that summer. Sadly, it would be the last time that an Indian rider would win the prestigious AMA Grand National No. 1 plate.





  Today in motorcycle history proudly supports the National Association for Bikers with a Disability (NABD). www.nabd.org.uk