I'd seen photos of Harley's Model KL prototype in a couple books over the years but with very little explanation. This may be the first time it's been placed into the bigger picture of Harley's grand strategy in the late 1940s & early 50s that FINALLY resulted in the ohv XL Sportster of 1957. That was one LONG wait.
The KL (KL => Kewl Looking?) is an exotic motorcycle and shows what Harley was really aiming at in order to fight off the Brit competition as a replacement for the old Flathead 45. The KL was the dream "Sportster" that was supposed to be.
I wonder what the KL's output really was and how well it actually performed on the road? One thing is certain and that's what a unique and exotic looking package it was. Just watch out for those side exhaust pipes: "Ouch!"
How about it you artist-machinist replica bike builders? How about creating an exotic KL high-cam similar to the bike in these photos of the factory prototype?
There's gotta be a millionaire out there who needs one!
The KL chassis looks similiar to the standard Model K chassis so that part would be child's play. In "Ride Free Forever" (p.276) there's a photo of the KL crankcases (with the timing cover off). HDMC still owns these parts as this was the motor wired to the wall in the Experimental Department for many years as a memento as mentioned in the article, although for some reason the guts don't seem to be there.
Too secret to for us to see or something?
The KL (KL => Kewl Looking?) is an exotic motorcycle and shows what Harley was really aiming at in order to fight off the Brit competition as a replacement for the old Flathead 45. The KL was the dream "Sportster" that was supposed to be.
I wonder what the KL's output really was and how well it actually performed on the road? One thing is certain and that's what a unique and exotic looking package it was. Just watch out for those side exhaust pipes: "Ouch!"
How about it you artist-machinist replica bike builders? How about creating an exotic KL high-cam similar to the bike in these photos of the factory prototype?
There's gotta be a millionaire out there who needs one!
The KL chassis looks similiar to the standard Model K chassis so that part would be child's play. In "Ride Free Forever" (p.276) there's a photo of the KL crankcases (with the timing cover off). HDMC still owns these parts as this was the motor wired to the wall in the Experimental Department for many years as a memento as mentioned in the article, although for some reason the guts don't seem to be there.
Too secret to for us to see or something?
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