me and a few friends finally got together and are going to make a few short coupled frames for ohv popes.as well as forks.seems to be a few engines out there.there will probably be 2 extra frames and forks available.if anyone has an OHV single or twin engine let me know.or any spare parts.i got alot of extra pope goodies to trade.
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popes O.H.V.
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resto pope
this is a nice bike,though restos dont really do it for me anymore.although i have heard from R.L. and a few others that this is a true race engine. lonnie
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Cool pics! And cool parts. I've always wondered if the Pope over-head valve motors were influenced by Perry Mack and his motors? These Pope motor's top ends look very similar to Mack's Waverley motors. Do you or anyone else know who designed them or if there are blueprints still around? I know the Lake motor(circa 1919/20) is an exact copy of Mack's Mack motor so I assume there might have been other copies.
Thanks
Dick Werner
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ohv's
hey eric,glad to see you still at it too.i have been wondering about you and your merkel.whats the status? i ask cause santa just scored me a 12 rolling chassis. i got a single lower end but no cylinder. dick ,there are definatly alot of things similar about the jefferson and the pope head.i'll try and get a side by side shot of the 2 heads tomorrow.
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Oh, and anyone that's into these machines should have a look at Dale's unrestored machine!!! It's awesome!!!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iFmVTUT8GiUCory Othen
Membership#10953
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ohv
so dick,what do you think? i think perry was a mechanical genius,and mr. pope was a shrewd business man who saw a great idea.
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I agree completely. To think he designed these motors when he was still in his 20's/early 30's is pretty amazing considering he never had any formal education. I see your motor has
the "buttons" installed in the heads to prevent the valve's from falling into the motor when
they broke. That was the achilles heel for these motors. Too bad they didn't have the metallurgy we have now. You just have to wonder what happened when those buttons turned red hot. Would the motor would start dieselling? Another knockoff of Mack's design had to be the motor used in the 1915 "Saginaw" Cyclecar made by the Valley Boat & Engine Company of Saginaw, Mi. Their brochure shows rows of finnished v-twin motors laying on the foor and stacks of cases waiting to be machined. Where is all this stuff now?
Dick Werner
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