Thruxton Gal
Marlon Shakespeare
Light the Blue touch paper……..~*
It all comes together: wheels are laced and new tyres shod onto the spruced up rims. Let’s not talk about the blueness… it’s somewhat bright, like an ice cream van from my youth… … but I’m sure in the right company and setting it looks perfect.
Nevertheless, bolting the chassis together with the ‘new’ tins, triple-tree’d forks and various brakeing, oiling, wiring appendages and fixin’s.
The headlight nacelle is a gorgeous unified design element of these twins, it’s a shame they didn’t keep this going through to later models, or even bring this back to the modern classics… … the Smiths Clocks look potent too – put’s the speed in Speed Twin.
Shoehorn the engine in, pop on the wheels and a motorcycles rebirth is imminent. Love the wall mounted tool rack, specialist pullers, keys, and Whitworth spangles are touched by the patina of oily hands.
The penultimate throes of the project always throw up hidden gremlins: tolerances between refinished and new parts, Lucasian electrical imps, and the other item that always takes patience: the paperwork. Every country, state, municipality, hamlet, whatever needs the bike registered, licensed , titled, taxed etc. A wad of document nearly as thick as the receipts for parts, machine work, painting, and the miscellaneous nut, bolts and washers renewed sith stainless steel replacements to allay future rot from damp Bengal Bay breezes…
oh, and the ice cream van? Mr Softee, Wall’s, ours was Coxon’s Ices of Seahouses.
An Oily Autopsy
Unzipping an old moto, engine and chassis both, gives the restorer the first view of the road ahead. Will parts be useable with necessary cleaning and restoring or will a new replacement be needed? Our Speed Twin shows a veritable horror story when the internals are laid bare…
Primary and clutch are shot… though the aluminium cases look solid and serviceable. I bet it was a fun peek under the cylinder head and peering down the piston barrels into the heart of the twin. So remember kids if you ever want to abandon an old motorcycle distribute oil to the innards and cover the heck out of it with a protective layer of oil and put it away in a dark dry place away from prying eyes. Makes the discovery worthwhile…
The gas tank has seen better days and is past it’s useable life; probably only suitable as a wall ornament (in the garage or workshop of course). A nice included parcel rack could be cleaned, chromed and reused though.
After all of that discovery I think a cup of tea would be well deserved. The road ahead needs a bit of a head scratch before venturing onward…
A Barn-find from the Sub-Continent
A Rat bike reborn…
All over the world Triumph’s are still being unearthed from dusty sheds, oily tarpaulins, or aged cellars. Here is one such project from an Indian moto-forum where the owner, one Sanjay, based in Chennai, was gifted from a dear uncle. The photos show what 30-plus years in a basement off the monsoon airs of the Bay of Bengal can do. A complete looking bike but a LOT of work lies ahead. These were taken in 2009.
It’s got some rust issues. and may have some engine internals requiring a little more than basic machine work. However there is a worldwide network and supply chain of information available to these old gals’ restoration.
Ooh! To get my hands on something like this… It’s the Meccano builder in me; the lad who likes to take things apart; the biker who want to ride his very own machine… knowing every nut and bolt!
There’s a Speed Twin under there somewhere… a good soaking in oil, warm up the old Whitworth spanners and plenty of elbow grease… notebook, ziplock baggies, camera, and some helpful co-conspirators on the interweb or a local moto-group and the next several months or years are busied up!
…to be continued!
Wheelie World
“Have you got the primus stove packed honey?”
Hemi
Look closely at this Triumph engine and you see a small tuning adjustment to scavenge more power from the twin. The spark plug has been repositioned to be directly over the center of the piston. What is the reason for this? Well the valve positions relative to the chamber and domed piston head provides the most efficient and powerful bang from the cross flow pattern within the chamber. Of course carb tuning and ignition timing are essential to attain these extra ponies!
Found online, here is a good summary of a Hemi engine…..
The term Hemi which is short for Hemispherical which simply means half sphere which is what the combustion chamber looks like, with one valve on each side.
The Hemi has been around for a long, long time in various forms. Early Triumph motorcycles used this design in 1937 and continued using it up until 1988. Chrysler borrowed ideas for their design from Weslake which built speed parts for Bonneville salt flat racers. Chrysler really utilized it best in automobiles in the early fifties and it’s still the all time power king in racing. A drag racing blown hemi produces in excess of 6000 horsepower which is many times what anything else is capable of producing.
The hemi has four main advantages:
1) The spark plug(s) reside directly in the middle and top of the combustion chamber. This makes for a nice, even firing pattern. This is why Hemi engines have spark plug holes right in the middle of the valve covers. Other “wedge” engines like Chevy and Ford V-8’s have their spark plugs off-center which is cheaper to build but less efficient.
2) Larger valve size. Draw a circle on a piece of paper. Now draw a line through the middle of it. Now draw two circles on ONE side of that line and you’ll see how most ordinary V-8 heads are designed. To draw a Hemi, place one big circle on one side of the line and another big circle on the other side of the line. Bigger valves mean more efficient and rapid airflow through the engine.
3) Larger combustion chamber surface area. The chamber is of the pentroof design (used by Ricardo in the 1910’s) which means it’s kinda funnel shaped. More area means more even heat transfer and distribution. More fuel and air can be crammed into the combustion chamber thus producing more power.
4) By placing the valves across from each other, the intake and exhaust flows across the combustion chamber. On a standard wedge head, they enter on one side, turn and cross and turn again to exit the cylinder. That’s inefficient. The Hemi is a true flow-through design.
Today, there are numerous manufacturer’s who make more efficient designs than the 2-valve Hemi. Most of the DOHC 4-valve designs will easily outflow a Hemi to a point. They have more valve area, however the size of the ports is usually very small increasing intake and exhaust velocity. That’s great if you want maximum combustion efficiency but not great if your goal is to move massive amounts of fuel and air through the engine.
For today, the modern Dodge street Hemi is primarily a sales tool. The name, reputation and mystique alone will sell cars. It does produce great power & torque and is definitely an option worth considering.
………
Basically big lungs, Big Bang, big power!
Team Orange Go!!!!!!
Here’s a beaut photo of yesterday’s triple in action. Pilot is Klaus Mueller at a Triple prepared moto from the fine folks at Rob North Triples in the East Midlands. You can even pick up a race-ready 750 for twenty grand… Race proven at the Manx GP!
A Bowl of Gold
If I wanted to hare around one of the premium tracks of Europe for twenty four hours what better beast than a Gulf colored Triomphe! This Moto is set up much like Slippery Sam, the original 24hour killer from 1970. Remake of LeMans but on a bike?
“A lot of people go through life doing things badly. Racing’s important to men who do it well. When you’re racing, it’s life. Anything that happens before or after is just waiting.” Michael Delaney
“Oi’ll give that one foive”
Barry Taylor, the “bashful, bumbling, boring, Brummie” sparky from our current fave telly revisit is here seen getting his tempestuous Bonnie going. What’s German for: “fuel tap on, tickle the carbs, and give her a nice swift kick”? Oh yes: “Mein BMW ist eine besserre motorrad als ein Triumph!”.
Aye mebbee sonny, but not nearly as much fun!
Uneasy Rider: Captain Britain
It was of course Peter Fonda and Dennis Hopper’s Easy Rider that provides a visual cusp of a counter-culture youth between the free-lovin’ sixties and the ‘back down with a thud’ hangover of the seventies. Well this here is a chopped Turnip left to fade under a moth eaten canvas tarp in some back pasture barn. The communes fled decades ago and the pot smokers moved out west…
“Needs some T.L.C.” Darn tootin’ it does! But boy if you squint hard enough- well, just close your eyes and plain imagine, you can nearly see a chromed out beast resplendent with Union Flag petrol tank. The journey this time? A couple of weary biker vagabonds heading eastward from Newquay along the A303 across the Salisbury Plains, stopping off at Stonehenge aiming for the seafront of Brighton before meeting an untimely demise on the A23 by a swerving white Ford Transit driven recklessly by a pair of Cockney chavs…
“You know, this used to be a helluva good country. I can’t understand what’s gone wrong with it.” George Hanson 1969
Gotta learn to run, before you can Sprint!
Red Rocket…… The Triumph Sprint is a bike built on the 955cc sports triple motor but with a wee slant on comfort. Pack yer bags and take to the open road, whether blasting the ‘superslab’ or high-speed curvy lanes. Pop off the bags and take to the twisties; let the country airs flow through your cardinal feathers.
$3,200 on Craigslist today!





























