Archive for January, 2013

January 16, 2013

Drokk! Dredd!

Earlier this week I managed to watch the new Dredd movie outing: this one with the appropriately stoney faced Karl Urban (Eomer of LotR) as the man with the badge. It was a grim, ultraviolent tale of a dystopian future Mega City with a population on the edge. They kept the story tight to limit the characters background explanations; concentrating the story on a City-Block drug bust. There was some good Lawmaster riding action on the streets too: his single sided swingarm ride could chase down the worst of ’em. One aspect of the film was the use of Carlos Ezquerra’s original vision of JD, a lean, mean lawman who isn’t to be messed with. No eagle shoulder patch, but that seemed kinda superfluous anyway. Cassie Anderson as a rookie on her street assessment added good depth; especially with her psychic abilities.
Great Stuff!

January 15, 2013

An Army pedaling

Keeping on the bicycle vein here is a magazine graphic from nigh-on a hundred years ago showing an army use of this two-wheeled transport. Nice fluffy clouds behind the pyramid tented camp.

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January 14, 2013

A world without worry… On two wheels

A couple of examples of advertising for the fun lifestyle to be had as a Triumph cyclist. One an ideal couple sauntering through the idyllic English countryside without a care in the world. The storms of World War Two are barely a grey cloud on tomorrow’s horizon. “Fancy tea and scones honey pie?”

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Here we are again, this time the other side of world altering hostilities and the weary elders want to evoke some idea of youthful jollity to the growing generation. Don’t worry folks Rock ‘n’ Roll will take care of that! Then punk, then New Wave, then grunge…
“Not that there is anything wrong with it!”

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January 13, 2013

Beelzebub in comic print

I had change from my ten pence for a black-jack, a kola-cube and a sherbet filled flying saucer. But I got the latest edition of Action! This week’s edition included a story based on a UK where adults have all been wiped out leaving everyone under the age of 18 in charge of their destinies. Lord of the Flies meets Grange Hill (the early years). There was a lot of yob culture represented in the anarchy.

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So the motorcycle was used as gang ‘steeds’, the hog riders running over the opposing groups, ransacking territory, cracking skulls, quite literally. The newspapers, Esther Rantzen and other wardens of cotton wool had a field day!

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How did they get away with this? Boys aged between 8 and 15 were craving this each week! And it’s not putting a good face to bikers either.

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Petrol bombs, and other terrorist methods were illustrated each week. This story was the nail in the coffin for Action; they’d stepped over the line – reflecting a world out of control; inner city schools were scary enough, but without authority to contain, the result was carnage.

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Great illustration by Mike White of what looks like a Triumph in darkened silhouette as the rider is run-down by a transit van. Obviously kids: don’t try this at home!

January 12, 2013

Action! – the sevenpenny nightmare

Before 2000AD, the sci-fi comic which has starred the iconic Judge Dredd since 1977, there was a short lived publication called Action. It was written for the male UK youth of the day; pre-punk, mid-Labour meltdown, post 60’s pop. An aggressive line up of killer sharks, football hooligans, anarchy on the streets; it only lasted 36 editions before it was shut down for its ultra-violent content. It mimicked what movies of the day portrayed: Jaws, Rollerball, Dirty Harry to name a few. It did however cut the teeth of writers and illustrators who went on to great effect in 2000AD: sub-editor Steve MacManus (who became Tharg the Mighty during that titles ‘golden era’ in the eighties), writers John Wagner and Pat Mills, and the fantastic penmanship of the likes of Carlos Ezquerra (who devised the appearance of Joe Dredd) and Dave Gibbons (the artist for Alan Moore’s Watchmen).

Digging through the numerous stories motorcycles take a leading role in the action: one classic story is Death Game 1999. A futuristic ice-hockey/pinball mix played with motorcycle riding convicts. The body count was the spectators interest, not the score. One final episode covered blatant violent artwork with a large BA-ROOM. (what makes a sound “ba-room?”). Cinders, tire studs and speed: that’s Action. Massimo Belardinelli’s artwork is too sublime to censor with letter-noise.

action-5This was an obvious precursor to Harlem Heroes and it’s spinoff Inferno; itself heading down the violence-game route a few years later. I’ve covered these here.

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More tomorrow! Only 7p at your newsagent!

January 11, 2013

Words of Wisdom

“There are some things nobody needs in this world, and a bright-red, hunch-back, warp-speed 900cc cafe racer is one of them – but I want one anyway, and on some days I actually believe I need one.” – HST Song of the sausage creature.

January 10, 2013

Printed Material

Poster art and printmaking are in a strong resurgence right now, harking back to the heyday of poster graphics in the early Twentieth Century. Here a clean print of an orange and white stripe dress’d gal atop a sweet sky blue Twentyone ‘bathtub’. The paper colour becomes the skin, all else is tinted for detail and depth. The artist is Chris Thornley. A graphic artist who also goes by the name Raid71. This is one from his series ‘Angels from Hell’. The couple on a Bonnie is a cracker too! Great Stuff!

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January 9, 2013

Bike

Head tube badge of a Triumph bicycle. Nottingham is the British center of unpowered cycle manufacture. Raleigh being the king.

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The chainwheel is the other part where a name is evident: here’s Triumphs. Nice detail.

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January 8, 2013

Rebel Rebel

The great Ziggy Stardust of Martian Spiders fame is 66 today! That’s right David Jones, aka David Bowie has a birthday celebration today so we’ll see how the sad clown fits into the moto-world… For starters he IS the sound of the 70’s defining a look and music that moulded the next generation, or two, or three, in a refreshing style of glam, punk, funk, soul and rock all together and all alone. His alter ego persona over the decade would allow him to reinvent his ideas, always staying a step or two ahead of everyone else.

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Here’s a super image from his early career, sitting around with Lou Reed & Mick Jagger, while Lulu looks on (she is of course a Lawrie so there’s a family connection somewhere!)

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Of course he has so much to look back on with his 66 years; here he is as the titular Thomas Jerome Newton in The Man Who Fell to Earth.

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January 7, 2013

‘Gin of a Trumpet

Engineering Balance: a simple composition of engine, tank, exhaust & carb. This is the original appearance of the early 70’s Bonnie. Mustard yellow is a particular taste but good for its era.

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Go Triumph! go!

January 6, 2013

Forking brake upgrade

The weekend sees the start of my brake upgrade work. Most of the parts are in hand: disc wheel, fork lowers, caliper, lever and mastercylinder. So I have disassembled the existing forks for the work. About two hours of work saw the task done.
Next step: tire swapped.

January 5, 2013

The Conqueror

A Moto-mechanics factory: Phil Vincent’s gaff at Stevenage Herts. These images show the rolling assembly line, yes each bike has its own platform, as it would be trundled around the Great North Road plant.

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Apparently they would take each component and either machine it to a finer tolerance fit or take another component from the stock shelves. Truly high end motorcycles ready for fast work on the new motorways being branched through the nation post war.

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The Rapide: 1000cc’s of Superbike. 150mph out of the factory.

January 4, 2013

Priory Street Works

For nigh on the first half of the Twentieth Century the Triumph company was based in Coventry. Housed in a large factory where both motorcycles and cars were built in large numbers. The clunking of machinery, grinding of lathes, and rumbling of engines must have been a heady experience. Horn blows and the shift starts.

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Here’s a great image of a squad of weathertight adorned test riders ready to hit the Midlands lanes to check the bike for owner worthiness.

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The factory turned to war efforts in the late thirties which put it square in the sights of the German Wehrmacht; and lo, during the Coventry Blitz between September 1940 and May 1941 the works, along with other manufacturing, were flattened by Heinkel and Dornier bombers. (A side note: Coventry is twinned with Volgagrad and Dresden, both noted sites of major WWII history)

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Triumph Motorcycles were rapidly rebuilt in ’42, this time over in Solihull at the Meriden factory.

January 3, 2013

Jubilee: a Diamond in the Rough

I forgot to post this last year when all of the Diamond Jubilation hullaballoo was going on… well here it is: the original silver celebration Triumph. A limited edition red, white (well silver really) and blue seven fifty Bonnie. That’s Ma’am as in jam, not as in farm… or so they say!

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“I should like to be a horse”  Elizabeth Windsor

 

January 2, 2013

Motorcycle expert recycles his way through retirement

By THERESA WINSLOW Staff Writer

Published January 11, 2004,
The Capital, Annapolis, Md.

It’s a good thing Frank Deihl is retired.Otherwise, he wouldn’t have enough time for work.

The Gambrills god of the British motorcycle toils for “only” 60 to 70 hours a week in a basement workshop that’s so crammed with machinery, bikes and parts that there’s little room to walk around. Gas tanks hang from the wall, exhaust pipes dangle from the ceiling, and there are cardboard boxes in every direction full of parts for repairs.

And that’s just the start.

A barn behind his home – complete with the dust and oily smell of an old garage – holds even more parts and about 30 more bikes, all waiting for Mr. Deihl to lovingly restore them to their former glory. Any cycle junkie could get lost in Mr. Deihl’s work space for years, but everything he’s accumulated in an almost 40-year career in bike repair is carefully cataloged. “This is what happens when your hobby goes out of control,” joked Mr. Deihl, glancing around his digs last week. The 63-year-old doesn’t have any other hobbies, though he said he’s tried them all. Motorcycles keep him more than fulfilled. The British bikes he loves were made by three companies: BSA, Triumph and Norton, and had their heyday in the ’50s and ’60s. Mr. Deihl still gets a thrill when he revs one up for the first time after hours of repair work. “It’s absolutely great,” he said. “It’s the same rush I got when I was 18 – but even more now. It’s even better. Everytime you do one, you learn a little more.” Terry Parker, a Montgomery County resident who organizes an annual event called British Bike Day, said Mr. Deihl knows plenty already. The two men met about 15 years ago through their shared interest in the motorcycles. “He’s like a god when it comes to BSAs and Triumphs,” Mr. Parker said. “Everyone knows Frank. Frank knows everything. He’s done it all. He’s raced. He’ll do whatever you ask and do it with a personal touch. He’s a legend.”

Bikes in the blood

The way Mr. Deihl sees it, he was born into bikes. His father owned several, and he got his first one at 16. But it wasn’t British. That came two years later. He wanted a faster ride, and in those days, British bikes were a lot speedier, he said. He never looked back.

Mr. Deihl said he has nothing against other motorcycle makes and newer bikes, he just prefers the vintage British models because they’re fun to ride and tinker with. Since they weren’t made with computerized machinery, each one has its own personality and challenges, he said. A grandfather of nine, Mr. Deihl got his first motorcycle job at a Wheaton shop in 1965. He stayed there five years before switching to Heyser Cycle in Laurel, where he worked until “retirement” three years ago. His vast inventory was accumulated over his long career. He still goes to shows and travels to England periodically for new stock, but he got a lot of his supplies when British bikes fell out of favor in the late ’60s and ’70s. That was when people became enamored of Japanese motorcycles, and British bike supplies could be bought inexpensively, he said. Mr. Deihl says he likes working on his own, but hates the fact that he’s so busy he has no time to work on personal projects. Mr. Deihl said a lot of his customers grew up with British bikes and might be trying to recapture a bit of their youth by riding them now. A few minutes after he spoke, he started a bike parked just outside his workshop. It had a distinctive sound, faster than the blat of a Harley and a bit higher pitched. “When you get used to it, you can tell which bike pulls up by the sounds it makes,” he said. The power made the ground rumble, and the more Mr. Deihl opened it up, the wider the grin grew on his face. Customer Bobby Gordon of Virginia had the same expression as he looked at a British bike calender while Mr. Deihl went to get a part. Mr. Gordon drove more than 3 hours with a friend and fellow biker, Andrew Brown, to get to the workshop. Mr. Gordon does this several times a year, relishing his visits to swap stories and get supplies for his own bike collection. “(Mr. Deihl) has everything we need or, if he doesn’t have it, he knows where to get it,” Mr. Gordon said. “He’s such a decent guy.”

Beautiful bikes

Talk about putting your work on a pedestal. At Staples Corner Liquors in Gambrills, about a mile from Mr. Deihl’s workshop, one of the main attractions has nothing whatsoever to do with spirits. Sitting on top of two separate wine displays are vintage Triumphs, a purple one from 1971 and a red and white model from 1967. And, of course, Mr. Deihl restored both of them. “People come in here just to look at them,” said Bill Stevens, who works part time at the store. “They’re beautiful bikes. They don’t make ’em like that anymore.” The bikes are the property of store owner John Fisher, who first met the soft-spoken Mr. Deihl about 15 years ago. Mr. Deihl came into the store occasionally when it first opened and Mr. Fisher noticed him pull up on a British bike. It just so happened that Mr. Fisher had one languishing in his garage and asked Mr. Deihl to get it running again. Two days later, Mr. Fisher called Mr. Deihl and told him to fully restore it. Mr. Fisher didn’t have room at his own house for the bike, so it ended up at the store. At first, he kept it in back, but about five years ago, he decided to put it on display. The second bike came three years later – and Mr. Fisher wouldn’t mind more. “It’s good advertising,” he said. “(Mr. Deihl’s) a craftsman. He really is. He does beautiful work.” For his part, Mr. Deihl is flattered that the bikes are on display. (But then he smiles and admits that he’d really be pleased if the bikes were ridden.) “They really should be out,” he said. “Today’s motorcycles are much better (made) than the old ones, but these are fun bikes.” Mr. Fisher used to ride, but said that after bypass surgery he prefers not to chance taking a spill on the road. “I’m just content to look at them,” he said. A few minutes later, he adds, “Did you go in the barn? My God! There’s a lifetime in there!”

For more information about Mr. Deihl and his work, call him at 843-520-0542 or go to his Web site,

http://www.franksclassiccycle.com

Copyright © 2004
The Capital, Annapolis, MD