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  • 100 point bikes

    Dear All, I'm starting a new thread to pull away from discussion of a particular bike towards a more general judging issue.

    Architect asked :

    "Regardless of how a machine is judged, I have been surprised to see so many "100 Point" bikes recently. As someone with a very critical eye for my area of expertise, I find it hard to understand that nothing was wrong with a XX year old machine. Not trying to stir the pot or anything, but being realistic there is always something you can find, perhaps minor but it is there. 100 Points to me would be a bike from the Archives that left the assembly line and went into climate control storage and comes out only to be wiped down and shown. Everything else will have inaccuracies, minor or not.

    I applaud all that attempt and succeed at restorations, just have an issue buying into 100 Points, my opinion. Perfection is a goal, but not achievable."

    Well, I've seen at least two 100 point bikes after 60 Meets. I led the team on that unrestored Harley XLCH at Oley a while back. The dealer had bought ten of this notoriously slow selling model, then kept the last one in its crate until he retired and it was 35 years old. When I saw it, it had 3 miles on the odometer where it had been started up, with all the factory stickers still on it and absolutely no faults to be found. The second one was Pete Reeves' restored 1942 ELC, judged by Bruce Palmer and Bruce Linsday. Pete is a meticulous restorer of this low volume but well-documented model and, from memory, made 99.75 and then got the quarter point back on appeal.

    Our rules say that any potential 100 point bike has to be signed-off by the Chief Judge or Event Chief Judge before awards are given. Technically a 100 point bike has had no faults found in 20 minutes of judging by a qualified team, so there could still be small items they missed. The '100 point' Australian bike on the Nov/Dec 2020 magazine cover had faults found later by our armchair critics, and any posting of very high points scores will always be a hostage to fortune, as we have seen recently.

    Today we see a lot of unrestored motorcycles from the 1980s at our Meets, and I can understand some of them getting close to 100 points. These bikes were made in sufficient volume that some of them will have hardly been ridden, then dry stored until 35 years old. Lack of judging knowledge across all makes will also be an issue, as we take on minor or low volume makes for judging when we have no Marque Specialists. The new 21 day lead time is allowing us to research unusual makes, and we also declined to judge one Sunshine Meet entry for lack of qualified judges.

    For the record, we have no '100 point medallion' or any plans to introduce one, so you 'only' need to make 95 points twice to get into Winners Circle, from where you can compete for the demanding 98 point Marque Excellence award. This requires advance submission of 7 digital photos for scrutiny by our experts, and not all the entries are taking the Excellence award.

  • #2
    I'll bite on this one Steve.If you don't give 100 points to a bike restored with all correct parts in correct finish the owner will throw a fit.[I don't blame them.]As a judge or Chief judge it would not be pleasant !

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by Steve Slocombe View Post
      .... Lack of judging knowledge across all makes will also be an issue, as we take on minor or low volume makes for judging when we have no Marque Specialists. The new 21 day lead time is allowing us to research unusual makes, and we also declined to judge one Sunshine Meet entry for lack of qualified judges....
      Shouldn't twenty minutes be enough to 'digitize' a machine, Steve?

      Then it could be judged at leasure, when 'specialists' (other than the owner himself), should appear.

      ....Cotten


      AMCA #776
      Dumpster Diver's Motto: Seek,... and Ye Shall Find!

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      • #4
        Chief Judge Kevin Valentine always told us there is no such thing as a 100 point bike.
        Be sure to visit;
        http://www.vintageamericanmotorcycles.com/main.php
        Be sure to register at the site so you can see large images.
        Also be sure to visit http://www.caimag.com/forum/

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by Chris Haynes View Post
          Chief Judge Kevin Valentine always told us there is no such thing as a 100 point bike.
          I'll bet the assembly lines would agree, Chris!

          ....Cotten

          PS: Show us the crate it came in, and you should get a thousand points. But whats the 'point', if it isn't recorded, and shared with posterity?

          crate48.jpg
          Last edited by T. Cotten; 03-15-2023, 03:33 PM.
          AMCA #776
          Dumpster Diver's Motto: Seek,... and Ye Shall Find!

          Comment


          • #6
            Dear Chris, yes, Kevin Valentine also told me there was no such thing as a 100 point bike, but I now disagree with him. For Tom, our judging basis is 'boots on the ground' judging for 20 minutes and we can make mistakes, as said in the Judging Disclaimer. For this season we are using the 21 day registration lead time to research low volume or unusual marques, and it seems to be working well. In the past I think we've judged too many 'oddball' motorcycles that may have been incorrect but we didn't have judges who knew that. We declined to judge one unusual bike last season, and have already seen another walk-up entry declined this year. Our aim is to judge all marques accurately and fairly, and this is hard to achieve. Again I urge all of you with previous judging experience to come to one of our National Meets and give it a try again. A lot has changed.

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by Steve Slocombe View Post
              Dear Chris, yes, Kevin Valentine also told me there was no such thing as a 100 point bike, but I now disagree with him. For Tom, our judging basis is 'boots on the ground' judging for 20 minutes and we can make mistakes, as said in the Judging Disclaimer. For this season we are using the 21 day registration lead time to research low volume or unusual marques, and it seems to be working well. In the past I think we've judged too many 'oddball' motorcycles that may have been incorrect but we didn't have judges who knew that. We declined to judge one unusual bike last season, and have already seen another walk-up entry declined this year. Our aim is to judge all marques accurately and fairly, and this is hard to achieve. Again I urge all of you with previous judging experience to come to one of our National Meets and give it a try again. A lot has changed.
              Wouldn't it make more sense, Steve,...

              To digitize machines at the Meets, and then find experts to review them?

              It would serve better than running people off.

              ....Cotten
              PS: The disclaimer won't let me open it, and I'm not jumping through the hoops of changing passwords again; Last time, "Cotten" was already taken.
              AMCA #776
              Dumpster Diver's Motto: Seek,... and Ye Shall Find!

              Comment


              • #8
                I appreciate the hard work; dedication, patience and resources that goes into a "points bike".

                That said I would never have my bike judged (too sensitive too weak an ego??) whatever; but then it is MY Bike.

                I like the Marque feature, just wish there were more than 4-6 pictures of each bike.

                Mr Bingers ninety-nine point 1927 Indian should settle the question of "Indian Red"!

                Just my two cents.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Where can the Marque bike photographs be viewed? Thank You

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Where can the Marque bike photographs be viewed?

                    Rusty
                    Go to the Home Page of the AMCA NOT the Forum
                    Under the EVENTs heading there is a menu of Seven item Marque Bikes is last item
                    PS You need to sign into view.
                    The Forum is separate and distinct from the AMCA home page You need to establish a USER NAME and PASSWORD
                    Some particularly lazy types have used the same User Name and Password for both the Forum and The Home Page (Probably not what Jason Bourne would do)
                    From the Home Page there are all sorts of goodies: The Marque bikes; the Archives of back issues of the magazine; the Library and Merchandise.
                    Good Luck

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Thank You! PaulCDF, I was rooting around on the site, but it never occurred to me to hit the events tab. I think I might be one of those “particularly lazy types” Jason Bourne be damned.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by PaulCDF View Post
                        That said I would never have my bike judged (too sensitive too weak an ego??) whatever; but then it is MY Bike.
                        Well, an honest man I agree, Paul. It's fun for some members and glad the club provides it for them, but not my cup of tea either.
                        Eric Smith
                        AMCA #886

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          If you simply adhere to the rules and don’t imagine your own definition of what a 100pt machine is, there really isn’t a lot of argument. If it scores properly under AMCA judging guidelines then it can get 100 points. It would seem a lot more questionable to arbitrarily take away a 1/4 point on a principle.

                          Craig

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