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Experimental Knucklehead

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  • Experimental Knucklehead

    Experimental Knucklehead pictures

    What do you suppose is the purpose of this little hand crank thingamajig
    on this experimental knucklehead?

    Ride Free!
    IRon
    Attached Files

  • #2
    Exhaust valve lifter for starting. If you ever have ridden a big single you know why its there!
    Robbie
    Robbie Knight Amca #2736

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    • #3
      Makes sense - a compression relief lever.

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by Rub View Post
        Exhaust valve lifter for starting. If you ever have ridden a big single you know why its there!
        Robbie
        That was my same thought Robbie. Either for halping you get the piston into position to start it OR to kill the engine by lifting the exhaust valve and dumping the compression out.
        Buzz Kanter
        Classic-Harley.Info Classic Harley History
        [Classic American Iron Forum Classic Harley Forum
        [American Iron Magazine Harley Magazine

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        • #5
          "If you ever have ridden a big single you know why its there!"

          I'd like to re-phase this statement: If you ever tried to "start" a big single and some English twins for that matter! BPK!!

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          • #6
            I had a 67 BSA Starfire single lung that would try to take your leg off if you didn't use that decompresion lever. Nasty motorcycle.
            AMCA #3149
            http://www.thegoodoldmotorcyclepartscompany.com

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            • #7
              My '63 FLH will give you a hard time kicking when cold. My Triumphs ( 65,70,73) were easy.
              Rod Hansen, Jr.

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              • #8
                My '63 FLH will give you a hard time kicking when cold. My Triumphs ( 65,70,73) were easy.
                Your '63 had a manual advance timer. It was intended to be used. The triumph's (I assume twins) all had automatic advance timers on them. No need to learn a technique. And parallel twins are notoriously easy to start. Ever try to start a Gold Star, or even a Victor?
                Robbie
                Robbie Knight Amca #2736

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                • #9
                  Well, we had this A John Deere, .....

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                  • #10
                    The engine is a "sloper". Early-nineteen-thirties British and Continental singles were built this way. In the mid-thirties all the leading foreign marques switched to a vertical cylinder.

                    Harley-Davidson and Indian almost certainly subscribed to one or both of the British motorcycling weekly magazines. The trans Atlantic influence on American motorcycles was also evident on the 1934 (first year) Indian Sport Scout which featured the engine and transmission as primary load-bearing elements of the "frame." The Sport Scout "diamond" frame arrived just as the trans Atlantic firms switched to a conventional or "cradle" frame like Indian had popularized with the 1920-1931 Scouts and all Chiefs. Fashions come and go, huh?
                    Jerry Hatfield

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