I abhor the hype such as was (and is) generated by the "Art of" and "Legends" type of Concours/Auction/Exhibition events since it paints an inaccurate picture of what many of our treasured old bikes really were made for. They were motorcycles made to be ridden for transport and pleasure - not artistic "icons" to be put on a pedestal and worshipped.
AFJ[/QUOTE]
You have captured my sentiments exactly. I hate seeing motorcycles turned into religious icons by recently minted collectors with tons of money and a penchant for snobbery. The Knucklehead is the most recent victim of this. I love restoration and I appreciate well done and accurate work but that can't be the "end-all" reason for collecting. These bikes have to be ridden. The most disturbing thing I have ever seen in this hobby was a guy who was actually crying because of a minor detail problem on his bike during judging.
I guess our passion for old bikes is a two edged sword. We always knew they were beautiful, wicked, and fun and tried to convince everyone to appreciate them. . . . . . . Now they do.
AFJ[/QUOTE]
You have captured my sentiments exactly. I hate seeing motorcycles turned into religious icons by recently minted collectors with tons of money and a penchant for snobbery. The Knucklehead is the most recent victim of this. I love restoration and I appreciate well done and accurate work but that can't be the "end-all" reason for collecting. These bikes have to be ridden. The most disturbing thing I have ever seen in this hobby was a guy who was actually crying because of a minor detail problem on his bike during judging.
I guess our passion for old bikes is a two edged sword. We always knew they were beautiful, wicked, and fun and tried to convince everyone to appreciate them. . . . . . . Now they do.
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