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Watch out for splinters!! That seat is sure to give you an iron butt, too.
Intereasing reading on their links about the steam motorcycle guy, too.
"Roper reached the age of 73 in 1896. That June he showed up at a bicycle track near Harvard with a modified motorcycle. They clocked him at a remarkable forty miles an hour. Then the machine wobbled, and Roper fell off. He was dead when they found him. The autopsy showed he'd died, not from the fall, but of a heart attack."
What a way to go!
80 XS1100SG
81 XS400SH
Some men miss opportunity because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
(Oh yeah, my mind is not totaly gone yet) Geezer is correct, the Hildebrand-Wolfmuller is considered to be the worlds first production motorcycle. I think that I remember reading a long time ago that they made about 7 bikes total.
KTM started making motorcycles in Austria in the early 50's, (powered by Sachs motors)they were called Penton's over here up until the mid 70's.
Howard Raymond Davies was a pilot in WW1 whom was shot down over Germany. While in captivity he made his plans to build motorcycles. He built a pretty fast one for the time. A few years later Philip Vincent purchased his plans and the name HRD and a legend was born.
I'm familiar with Howard R Davies history. Back in the 1970's I managed to get my hands on parts of a 1926 HRD model 90. Unfortunately it was too butchered to restore.
Old Howard was the first to get the layout right and also greatly improved rider position. It's too bad the great depression of the 1930's wiped him out. He was a man ahead of is time. Then again so was Charlie Vincent...
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