Cotten, I respect your stand but I must confess that I have never understood where you're comming from. I think you should try to define what you mean by presevation and restoration.
My application of preservation as it applies to antique motorcycles is: Slow down the aging process of paint and plated or bare metal with chemicals and good strorage. Replace missing pieces with correct year parts and hope to match patina. Unfortunately, I have never come close to owning an unrestored motorcycle. They are extreamly rare and have always been very expensive.
Restoration is what I know because the bikes I come across are very rusty, have been "restored" by one or more previous owners, and missing 50% or more parts. There is never anything left to preserve. Unfortunately, I think this is the scenario for most of us. I think your argument would have held water in 1970 when there were 700 AMCA members, little or no demand for antique motorcycles, and a member philosophy that thought restoring an original paint bike was progressive. By the mid-80s the antique motorcycle hobby was very different and has been refined since. I have never seen or been exposed to the type of revisionism you claim is rampant in the AMCA judging system. I think you need to define and site example of what you mean.
My application of preservation as it applies to antique motorcycles is: Slow down the aging process of paint and plated or bare metal with chemicals and good strorage. Replace missing pieces with correct year parts and hope to match patina. Unfortunately, I have never come close to owning an unrestored motorcycle. They are extreamly rare and have always been very expensive.
Restoration is what I know because the bikes I come across are very rusty, have been "restored" by one or more previous owners, and missing 50% or more parts. There is never anything left to preserve. Unfortunately, I think this is the scenario for most of us. I think your argument would have held water in 1970 when there were 700 AMCA members, little or no demand for antique motorcycles, and a member philosophy that thought restoring an original paint bike was progressive. By the mid-80s the antique motorcycle hobby was very different and has been refined since. I have never seen or been exposed to the type of revisionism you claim is rampant in the AMCA judging system. I think you need to define and site example of what you mean.
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