I've been enjoying the Spring 2007 issue that arrived just before 15" of new snow arrived!
What I can't figure out is how Fritz got his picture on both the front cover AND the back cover? That's gotta be a first. Kinda looks like he's lapping the magazine, don't it?
Good insides too.
The early drag racing article is interesting. Very nice photos too. Who ever gets tired of looking at Knuckleheads? Not me! Seems that the Harley-Petrali 1937 Daytona record bike fits into this story somehow. Part 2 perhaps?
The Vegas Auction prices took my breath away. $230,000 for a Crocker? Yikes! I just talked with a guy who paid $75 for a Croaker, er, Crocker, although not lately....
The German museums piece was good too. They had a quite a motorcycle industry of their own but one most of us aren't too aware of outside of BMW and a few others. But I was under the impression the original wooden-frame Daimler boneshaker "motorcycle" (4-wheels?) had been destroyed too and all them today are replicas. Maybe I'm wrong as the article seemed to state otherwise. One old German machine I liked was the 350cc Shuttoff (p. 60). Looks kinda familiar, don't it?
I wonder if the mystery 1937 German Harley advertising might be Austrian? (p.61). But I'm sure Fritz has looked into that possibility. It almost looks like "Molenaar Harley-Davidson" stamped on that brochure and Hammond, Ind. would be correct. That seems like a clue, but I'm not sure exactly how.
I had to smile when I saw the ed. note in the Ex OHC "Rebirth" article: "Thanks to restorers we now have 26 of the original 21 Harley 8-valve racers."
It's a miracle!
The Indian Torque piece was interesting too. I had a so-called "Scout" 1949 Indian vertical twin at one time. Didn't keep it long tho and never missed it.
Haven't read the FN article yet but it looks to have some meat in it and about a very interesting early job imported into the USA. Advanced 4-cylinder shaft-drive design. Jeez, sounds like my "new" '85 K100 BMW, which, incidently, kinda looks like the brick-like 4-Zylinder Windhoff on p.60. Hmmmm.....
Good issue all around!
What I can't figure out is how Fritz got his picture on both the front cover AND the back cover? That's gotta be a first. Kinda looks like he's lapping the magazine, don't it?
Good insides too.
The early drag racing article is interesting. Very nice photos too. Who ever gets tired of looking at Knuckleheads? Not me! Seems that the Harley-Petrali 1937 Daytona record bike fits into this story somehow. Part 2 perhaps?
The Vegas Auction prices took my breath away. $230,000 for a Crocker? Yikes! I just talked with a guy who paid $75 for a Croaker, er, Crocker, although not lately....
The German museums piece was good too. They had a quite a motorcycle industry of their own but one most of us aren't too aware of outside of BMW and a few others. But I was under the impression the original wooden-frame Daimler boneshaker "motorcycle" (4-wheels?) had been destroyed too and all them today are replicas. Maybe I'm wrong as the article seemed to state otherwise. One old German machine I liked was the 350cc Shuttoff (p. 60). Looks kinda familiar, don't it?
I wonder if the mystery 1937 German Harley advertising might be Austrian? (p.61). But I'm sure Fritz has looked into that possibility. It almost looks like "Molenaar Harley-Davidson" stamped on that brochure and Hammond, Ind. would be correct. That seems like a clue, but I'm not sure exactly how.
I had to smile when I saw the ed. note in the Ex OHC "Rebirth" article: "Thanks to restorers we now have 26 of the original 21 Harley 8-valve racers."
It's a miracle!
The Indian Torque piece was interesting too. I had a so-called "Scout" 1949 Indian vertical twin at one time. Didn't keep it long tho and never missed it.
Haven't read the FN article yet but it looks to have some meat in it and about a very interesting early job imported into the USA. Advanced 4-cylinder shaft-drive design. Jeez, sounds like my "new" '85 K100 BMW, which, incidently, kinda looks like the brick-like 4-Zylinder Windhoff on p.60. Hmmmm.....
Good issue all around!
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