Founded by three industrialists, BarryDay, Noah Robinson and Cyril Kieft –hence the name – DKR was a small go-ahead company which between 1957 and 1966 turned out a range of well made, quirkily styled scooters in 150 to 200cc capacities, with the Capella their best seller.
Production records are scant, but it’s reckoned that in their six years of manufacture around 2,000 rolled off the production lines at Pendeford Airport in Wolverhampton before falling sales and increased foreign competition meant that the Midlands manufacturer went out of business in 1966. However, with six decades of production on models they are now highly prized amongst scooter aficionados. In researching the history of the Capella, I was able to track down Ivan Bowen, a man who for three years in the early Sixties worked on the DKR production line, so it’s quite possible he actually made the same machine all those years ago. He takes up the story.
“This was in the days when there was plenty of work and on leaving school I got a job at the big Villiers factory on engine assembly. After a while I moved on to Britool, but was only there for a couple of weeks. Following a strike I got to hear about a job going at the DKR factory in nearby Wolverhampton. I was put on the production line, but the title is a bit far-fetched because in total there were only about 10 people working there and the ‘construction team’ consisted of just three of us – Ron, Chris Evans and me. The whole factory space consisted of two offices and three workshops, one of which was where a girl made the seats and put the rubber edging on the panels; our production line and another very small workshop were where any repairs were carried out. It wasn’t very big and during some grim winters it was extremely cold and our only source of heat was a cast-iron wood-burning stove.
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Denne historien er fra December 2019 - January 2020-utgaven av Classic Scooterist.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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Vespa On A Vindaloo (And A Few Beers, Too)!
Over time my sanity has been tested by Vespas, including the PX125,PX150, LML150, a T5, a T5 Classic and PX200.
Simon's DKR Capella 175cc
It’s probably fair to say that in the 1950s most British scooters were well short of the styling and panache of their Latin rivals, but this all changed in 1960 with the launch of the DKR Capella - a sleek Villiers-powered two-stroke which period road testers described as being ‘the most beautiful small-wheeler ever made by a British manufacturer’.
Mark's Model B And Sidecar
You don't see many early Lambretta and Tittarelli sidecar outfits, so when you come across someone who owns two the same matching colour – wow!
Mark's 1980s Classic Custom
Revisiting one of the UK’s best-known custom scooters from the 1980s, which still remains in the possession of its original owner.
Barry's Dayton Albatross Continental Twin
In my younger days, as well as motorcycles, I had a Vespa 90 and a Vespa 90SS, which I thoroughly enjoyed. I returned to scootering (after having several classic cars) with a 1965 Vespa VBB, but I had always hankered after a Dayton Albatross since I was about 12 or 13. Last year I decided to finally fulfil that dream…
Have records will travel
How many DJs do you know who would travel to a music gig on their trusty 2-Tone Vespa PX with a huge box of rare vinyl records strapped on the back?
Model (D) behaviour!
Visitors to the Newark Scooter World halls couldn’t fail to notice the line-up of machines being shown by Martin Robinson.
Rob's Heinkel Tourist
After receiving another phone call from bike collector Rob Carter of Barton upon Humber, Rich realised it would be something special of superb quality and condition; so he decided to investigate.
Iso Milano (Diva) De Luxe 150
Bristol’s Carole Nash Classic MotorCycle Show always brings out rarities and the 2016 event was no exception with a host of unusual scooters on display. Rubbing handlebars with an IWL Berlin, and a rare Coswio Jika Pandora on the Vintage Motor Scooter Club stand was one with a curvy Latin lovely adorning the legshields.
Tabby's Indian GP200
To see it within a crowded scooter compound or lined up at the side of the road at a busy rally, you’d possibly not pay Tabby’s Indian GP200 too much attention or perhaps even feel it was worth a second glance. But that’s precisely where you would be wrong...