Funny, the sellers of this thing call it the "infamous bike of the century."
The word infamous, to me, means, "famous for all the wrong reasons," exemplified by FDR on Dec. 8th, labeling "December 7th, Nineteen hundred and forty-one," as "a date which will live in infamy."
Geez, I wonder just how many folks this bike has killed? Riders, or just pedestrians who got in its way?
And, all the time I looked at that photo of the cover, I didn't notice that it had no 1947-50 'redball' tank emblems. Whether the original did or not, it may have just been the Saturday Evening Post's way of not copying Harley-Davidson's trademark to its cover.
The word infamous, to me, means, "famous for all the wrong reasons," exemplified by FDR on Dec. 8th, labeling "December 7th, Nineteen hundred and forty-one," as "a date which will live in infamy."
Geez, I wonder just how many folks this bike has killed? Riders, or just pedestrians who got in its way?
And, all the time I looked at that photo of the cover, I didn't notice that it had no 1947-50 'redball' tank emblems. Whether the original did or not, it may have just been the Saturday Evening Post's way of not copying Harley-Davidson's trademark to its cover.
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