Store Cupboard Special
The Classic MotorCycle|January 2021
On to part six, and momentum is still being maintained, I though the shopping list is growing ever-longer.
JAMES ROBINSON
Store Cupboard Special
What started out as a joint project between my father and I has, truth be told, become his solo enterprise. While I spend my days indoors in my ‘office’ (aka the spare bedroom) at his house (where I’ve been since March, owing to you know what) staring at my computer screen, in between fretting about have we enough material to get through winter and trying to understand and remember the principles of invoicing, among many, many other things, he, pretty much, heads out into the garage, to keep up the Velocette project momentum.

That’show we’ve got on as far as we have. The other evening, I was chuckling at my colleague Matt Hull’s reference to ‘part 507’ of his own Norton ES2 rebuild in our sister title Classic Bike Guide – it’s nothing like; can’t even be half that yet… – while our own Tim Britton’s Triumph rebuild has gone on since goodness-knows-when, but it does demonstrate how time-consuming these projects are. My dad (retired) almost treats his hobby like a job, and though he’s not out in the garage at 7am, he doesn’t hang about too long in the mornings, and while he ‘knocks off’ by about 4 pm most days – unless he’s on with something he’s particularly enjoying – there’s still about six hours lavished, daily. That is how to make progress.

By the end of last month’s instalment we had a rolling chassis, and, to that chassis, has been added a whole number of parts, including the exciting news that the engine is now in – but we’re getting ahead of ourselves. Before then, attention was focussed on the footrests and centre stand. The bits and pieces we had included rear-set footrests and so they were to be retained.

Denne historien er fra January 2021-utgaven av The Classic MotorCycle.

Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.

Denne historien er fra January 2021-utgaven av The Classic MotorCycle.

Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA THE CLASSIC MOTORCYCLESe alt
Runs should be fun
The Classic MotorCycle

Runs should be fun

The club run is an integral part of the old motorcycle scene. During 2020, a variation on the usual theme emerged, enabling people to ride in the company of like-minded souls.

time-read
3 mins  |
April 2021
Hybrid chicken
The Classic MotorCycle

Hybrid chicken

BSA Bantams come in many forms, and the ability to interchange parts between different models permits an almost endless number of variants.

time-read
7 mins  |
February 2021
Green WITH ENVY
The Classic MotorCycle

Green WITH ENVY

Life aboard a 1950s 350cc British single is perhaps as good and as uncomplicated as it can get.

time-read
9 mins  |
February 2021
Worth the wait
The Classic MotorCycle

Worth the wait

Captivated by sight of one as a small boy, finally our man has the chance to try an NSU Max.And a ‘Spezial’ one at that…

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10 mins  |
February 2021
The Motorcycle: DESIGN, ART AND DESIRE
The Classic MotorCycle

The Motorcycle: DESIGN, ART AND DESIRE

The concluding part of a two-part feature, in which the history of motorcycle evolution is examined and a new book’s author interviewed.

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7 mins  |
February 2021
Cream rises
The Classic MotorCycle

Cream rises

There were several ‘star performers’ at Bonhams’ winter sale, as the choice machines achieved huge sums.

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4 mins  |
February 2021
The Giant of Provence
The Classic MotorCycle

The Giant of Provence

With so few events to report from, it’s time to look back over a spectacular French event and look forward to its hopeful resumption.

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8 mins  |
February 2021
Store cupboard special
The Classic MotorCycle

Store cupboard special

A big box of presents? Must be Christmas! More deliveries keep the project on track.

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6 mins  |
February 2021
By 1929, CJP Dodson was a bona fide top level road racer, pretty much unbeatable on the sand, too.
The Classic MotorCycle

By 1929, CJP Dodson was a bona fide top level road racer, pretty much unbeatable on the sand, too.

The diminutive Charlie Dodson was the last man to win a TT, the 1928 Senior, on a ‘flat-tank’ machine, then the next year became the first (and only) winner of a TT on a saddle tank Sunbeam, as well as recording the last ever success in the Island for the Marston maker.

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3 mins  |
February 2021
Cassandra the Canadian Commando
The Classic MotorCycle

Cassandra the Canadian Commando

After landing a new job and with time on his hands, a young man in Vancouver decided to restore a British motorcycle considerably older than him.

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8 mins  |
February 2021