Hey Guy's, just curious about your experiences with antique motorcycles and our hobbie. I was wondering alot lately, expecially with the Cannonbal thing getting going. How did these old machines survive? The odd's are so againts it, most motorcycles are pretty much beat to death after 10 or 20 years at best. Yet when the old machines were not worth anything much at all. People started saving them for 30 - 70 years or more!
Was it just a guy who had a Thor, or knew someone who had a Thor and because of that would not let go of it for the next 50 or so years? Or was it an old nut who collected every old motorcycle he found, no mater their worth and or what people said? I can understand it abit more if it was in the family, or a business. Just wondering how so many have survived, that this hobbie as done as well as it has. Was it hard core collectors, or just the little guys who loved a brand or something like that? My guess is all the above, what's been your experience?
Best example I have, is the guy I bought my Henderson from. He had a beat up KJ before the war, he rode to school on occasion. That old KJ must of made one heck of an impression, because he collected Henderson parts and lots of them, for many years. He helped many folks with Henderson's over the years in the club and out. When I first ment him and saw all those parts he had saved, a three car garage all but full of them. At the price he sold lots of parts for, I thought he was nut's, he had held them for so many years, looked like fool's gold to me. But without folks like that, I think we would not have a hobbie like we do. Your thought's ?
Was it just a guy who had a Thor, or knew someone who had a Thor and because of that would not let go of it for the next 50 or so years? Or was it an old nut who collected every old motorcycle he found, no mater their worth and or what people said? I can understand it abit more if it was in the family, or a business. Just wondering how so many have survived, that this hobbie as done as well as it has. Was it hard core collectors, or just the little guys who loved a brand or something like that? My guess is all the above, what's been your experience?
Best example I have, is the guy I bought my Henderson from. He had a beat up KJ before the war, he rode to school on occasion. That old KJ must of made one heck of an impression, because he collected Henderson parts and lots of them, for many years. He helped many folks with Henderson's over the years in the club and out. When I first ment him and saw all those parts he had saved, a three car garage all but full of them. At the price he sold lots of parts for, I thought he was nut's, he had held them for so many years, looked like fool's gold to me. But without folks like that, I think we would not have a hobbie like we do. Your thought's ?
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