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The 1916 Excelsior
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Some of the miscellaneous things that came up. I had a later muffler so I had to make a reproduction of the earlier style. Again, thanks to Gene Harper for pictures and dimensions of the correct muffler. Mufflers for early motorcycles are probably the rarest parts you’ll ever try to find.
This picture shows all the control parts layed out.
Last edited by exeric; 09-09-2014, 05:43 PM.Eric Smith
AMCA #886
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The carburetor, and intake manifold needed much attention. I trued the manifold to accept new PEEK seals.
And made a core drill to minimize waste of the PEEK. . . Very expensive stuff.
For whatever reason, the Schebler body I had did not perform well. Fortunately, I had a beautiful original finish body and it worked like a dream.
Eric Smith
AMCA #886
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Here it was at the Silver Sands meet last March. Now it sits in my garage, but I love looking at it during cocktail hour. I rarely ride it because it is not a traffic friendly motorcycle and it would break my heart (and my body) to wrap it around a Prius. I am very happy with how everything worked out. For me, the journey of bringing an old bike to life is the best part. I do all of my own work and I’ve seen it in it’s most disassembled state, particularly, all of it’s tiny little parts that were created in Chicago back in 1916. You do bond with a project when you get personally involved and that is the difference between collecting, and interacting. I recommend you buy as much as you can afford to collect, but make sure you spend most of your time in the shop.
Eric Smith
AMCA #886
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A really beautiful job, Eric ! That's the one thing that kind of concerns me with my 27JD.... when the time comes to ride it, where... ? at least i am on the sort of edge of town. not sure how much stopping power the rear brake on a 27JD has, but i'm guessing not terribly adequate for everyday traffic.Steve Swan
27JD 11090 Restored
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ClUPIOo7-o8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LtuptEAlU30
27JD 13514 aka "Frank"
https://forum.antiquemotorcycle.org/...n-Project-SWAN
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hNRB...nnel=steveswan
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RSDeuTqD9Ks
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bwlIsZKmsTY
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Steve, I think these old girls need our loving and I don't want to subject them to the performance I expect from a modern motorcycle. They deserve to live a life of luxurious lounging with the occasional run around the neighborhood. I live in Florida, and we are being invaded by new citizens on a daily basis; and they are all dangerous, distracted, cell phone addicted drivers.Eric Smith
AMCA #886
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Originally posted by Steve Swan View PostA really beautiful job, Eric ! That's the one thing that kind of concerns me with my 27JD.... when the time comes to ride it, where... ? at least i am on the sort of edge of town. not sure how much stopping power the rear brake on a 27JD has, but i'm guessing not terribly adequate for everyday traffic.Steve Swan
27JD 11090 Restored
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ClUPIOo7-o8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LtuptEAlU30
27JD 13514 aka "Frank"
https://forum.antiquemotorcycle.org/...n-Project-SWAN
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hNRB...nnel=steveswan
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RSDeuTqD9Ks
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bwlIsZKmsTY
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Great job Eric,Thanx for all the posts on this fine EX.Here is another Ex Ad from my newly acquired 1915 Iowa City Races program-long sought after piece that I got off Ebay for $10 in a pile of stuff
Iowa City motorcycle races LR Cole.jpg
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