Here is my suggestion for a new forum in which we can exchange posts which are about our motorcycling adventures/exploits/ scrapes/incidents/journeys.
However, unlike other forums where we can tell tales about last Spring's meet in Anytown, or this Summer's Poker Run you almost won, the Antique Motorcyclist Forum has its own 35-year rule.
No, the tales are not recent events about repairing or restoring bikes older than '68 (or is it '69 yet?) models. Instead, let's spin yarns about our riding adventures we enjoyed/survived which occurred more than 35 years ago. While some of you younger members will have to relate (probably truthful) experiences of your parents, etc., those of us who have been riding more than 35 years (the Antique Bikers) will regale you with formerly-true personal stories which have been growing within the depths of our subconsciousnesses for decades, until they have reached mammoth false proportions. (Except my tales, of course, which never suffer from exaggeritis)
My first test post of this idea is an audience participation one.
My first collision with an automobile while riding a motorcycle came one warm South Texas afternoon in December of 1964, as I was slowly cruising the local campus, trying to look cool on my brand-new Honda. An uninsured illegal immigrant in a 1950-something Ford sedan ran a stop sign right in front of me, and my helmetless self tumbled across the old Ford's hood, into a still heap on the pavement on the other side.
I was knocked-out for a few minutes, but no broken bones or serious scrapes. (This was right outside the Fire Station, and uniformed firefighters jogged over to perform first aid.) The bike suffered worse than I did. The impact twisted the front fork assembly so far to the right that it could not be pushed the rest of the way to my house (2 or 3 blocks), much less ridden home.
My dad who had co-signed the bank loan for the bike was not amused by having to shell out the repair costs to straighten the forks and repair the road rash on the new machine.
Here is the quiz: Guess the cost of repairs to put me back on the road. (Hint: the fork assembly was completely replaced with a new one) (Don't ask which model Honda it was, lest you look up an older parts book somewhere, but it was large enough for me to take my younger brother riding pillion to carry the drycleaning/pizza/groceries back home, yet small enough to capture puzzled stares at such antics .
Closest guess to the repair costs posted by Noon on 10/30 will win something silly, as soon as I can think of what it will be. And don't just reply to this post. Unblock that entrance to Motorcycle Memory Lane and tell us about one of your exploits from the Sixties or before. I can't wait to see what you dredge-up.
Roy
However, unlike other forums where we can tell tales about last Spring's meet in Anytown, or this Summer's Poker Run you almost won, the Antique Motorcyclist Forum has its own 35-year rule.
No, the tales are not recent events about repairing or restoring bikes older than '68 (or is it '69 yet?) models. Instead, let's spin yarns about our riding adventures we enjoyed/survived which occurred more than 35 years ago. While some of you younger members will have to relate (probably truthful) experiences of your parents, etc., those of us who have been riding more than 35 years (the Antique Bikers) will regale you with formerly-true personal stories which have been growing within the depths of our subconsciousnesses for decades, until they have reached mammoth false proportions. (Except my tales, of course, which never suffer from exaggeritis)
My first test post of this idea is an audience participation one.
My first collision with an automobile while riding a motorcycle came one warm South Texas afternoon in December of 1964, as I was slowly cruising the local campus, trying to look cool on my brand-new Honda. An uninsured illegal immigrant in a 1950-something Ford sedan ran a stop sign right in front of me, and my helmetless self tumbled across the old Ford's hood, into a still heap on the pavement on the other side.
I was knocked-out for a few minutes, but no broken bones or serious scrapes. (This was right outside the Fire Station, and uniformed firefighters jogged over to perform first aid.) The bike suffered worse than I did. The impact twisted the front fork assembly so far to the right that it could not be pushed the rest of the way to my house (2 or 3 blocks), much less ridden home.
My dad who had co-signed the bank loan for the bike was not amused by having to shell out the repair costs to straighten the forks and repair the road rash on the new machine.
Here is the quiz: Guess the cost of repairs to put me back on the road. (Hint: the fork assembly was completely replaced with a new one) (Don't ask which model Honda it was, lest you look up an older parts book somewhere, but it was large enough for me to take my younger brother riding pillion to carry the drycleaning/pizza/groceries back home, yet small enough to capture puzzled stares at such antics .
Closest guess to the repair costs posted by Noon on 10/30 will win something silly, as soon as I can think of what it will be. And don't just reply to this post. Unblock that entrance to Motorcycle Memory Lane and tell us about one of your exploits from the Sixties or before. I can't wait to see what you dredge-up.
Roy
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