Tuesday, May 14, 2013
Cool "32................
I met a guy the other day who had the coolest little V-8 Flathead Lincoln street rod I had ever seen. Actually he races it and it is very fast.
Since then I have been looking around for an early Ford hot rod and came across this 32 on E Bay. Very clean and very cool. I am trying to figure out how to fit another car in the garage. Stay tuned !!
Wednesday, May 8, 2013
Drag Racer
OK, so I just bought this drag bike chassis minus the engine and transmission. I really didn't want to do another Triumph. What would be the "cats meow", would be a stroked Indian Sport Scout mill as per Stan Dishongs' fantastic Scout dragster. Stay posted. I just dug my my way out of a financial hole and can actually build something now.
Monday, May 6, 2013
Tribute To Stan Dishong
Tribute to Stan Dishong
Taken from Vallejo Times Herald
mostly Harley and Indian," his son said. Stan Dishong bought his first Harley in 1944 at age 16. He first raced on the salt flats of Bonneville in 1951 setting a short lived land speed record of 156 mph. This was the first year the Southern California Timing Association invited motorcycles and Stan was one of only 10 riders asked to participate. Dishong opened Stan's Cycle in Vallejo in 1953. Stan and his wife, Jackie, lived three doors down from the shop on what is now called Dishong Street. It was during this period that Stan raced his reportedly undefeated 1937 Indian Scout drag bike. In addition to Stan's Cycle, he operated Dishong Manufacturing, a facility that made after-market parts for motorcycles. Stan's Cycle was filled with rare motorcycles and related memorabilia. Dishongnot only displayed the racing bikes he had built and raced, he also had some extremely rare antique bikes, originals and restorations of many different makes and models. In 1987, Dishong closed Stan's Cycle in Vallejo and moved to Port Orford, Ore., where they bought a 13 acre ranch and, for the next 15 years, Stan and Jackie restored many of his antique motorcycles. Jackie Dishong died in 2002. After that, Stan, sold the ranch and opened the Antique Motorcycle and Auto Museum in August, 2003. Larry Dishong said he most admired his father for "his courage and ability to think in a crisis." Stan Dishong's most important advice to his son? "When I was 20, he told me I was wasting my life and to join the service, which I did," said Larry, who served 24 years in the U.S. Navy and retired as Lt. Commander. "My Dad was always quick to tell me about the things he didn't like. But if he met someone who was earnestly interested in motorcycles, he would light up like a neon 'welcome' sign," Dishong said. "He was legendary for seeing someone on a bike, stopping to talk with them and inviting them to the shop for free advice and parts."
Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance
If you have never read this book, you might want to do so before you check out. It is a book about the elusive search for quality. Still searching
Progress ???
We've come a long way as a society. It is much better now than it was in the 1950's. Cel phones, I Pads, Kindles and the like have made our lives much richer. yeah right !!!! We don't even know how to dress anymore. With the exception of the civil rights movement and modern medicine, I'll take the 50's any day !!
The BMW R51 was one of the nicest looking motorcycles ever built, it was super clean with no wasted effort. This is one bike I want to own some day.
The BMW R51/3 was Bmw's second post-World War II 500 cc motorcycle, following the briefly produced R51/2. It featured a flat-twin engine and exposed drive shaft. In 1951, the R51/3 succeeded and modernized the 1950 R51/2, which was essentially a pre-war design that was produced after the war. The 600 cc R67, R67/2, and R67/3 series and the more sporting R68 model also followed the R51/2.
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