I have a lot of books, so am not looking for someone to take their time to do research for me, but a few comments could help a lot at this point. Most of the books I've looked through thus far are vague on model designations, and I've yet to find enough to figure out if HD actually had some sort of logical naming convention. But, to the point, I haven't yet figured out what constitutes a "U" in general, let alone a "UL." Harry Sucher comes closest, but even there it's uncertain. In an Appendix he shows that 74 c.i. U and UL machines from 1937 onwards were o.h.v., whereas 80 c.i. UH and UHL machines 1936-47 were side valves. You guys have said that the '37-'39 ULs were side valve machines, which is inconsistent with information in Sucher. Anyway, assuming "U" is some major category and "H, HL, and L" are sub-categories (which I hope you will tell me is a good assumption, if it is...), what constitutes a "U," and what then differentiates UH, UHL and UL (and other Us, if there are any) from each other?
Having this basic understanding of H-D "U-terminology" would help me a lot when looking through all those books for relevant information. Thanks in advance.
A basic "U" is a medium compression 74ci engined bike most often used for commercial and sidecar applications.
A "UL" is a 74ci high compression engined bike most often in solo trim.
A "UH" is an 80ci medium compression engined bike used similarly to the U 74.
A"ULH" is an 80ci high compression engined solo bike.
There are a few variations such as
UMG, a special magneto equipped version which is quite rare, built only for a NYPD contract.
UA a military version
A U low compression, basically a U with compression reduction plates under the cylinders.
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