Saturday, June 4, 2022

John McGuiness




I guess that John McGuiness is one of my favorite TT racers.  He has won 23 times on the island course and he did pretty good today with a 5th in the Superbike with an average speed of 129.274
He is the old guy at 50 racing against a much younger crowd.  Like my old friend Ralph used to say "it's all about long term conditioning"!

2022 TT Superbike Results

Isle of Man TT Superbike Results


 

It was an interesting race with Peter Hickman pretty much leading the whole way which wasn't much of a surprise after the qualifying sessions.  His Gas Monkey BMW was a real piece of work and he rode it like he stole it!

1st Place Peter Hickman with an average speed of 130.634 mph  01:43:58.544   BMW M1000RR
2nd Place Dean Harrison @ 01:44:37.744       Kawasaki ZX-10RR
3rd Place Michael Dunlop @ 01:44:37.744     Suzuki GSXR1000
4th Place Ian Hutchinson @ 01:46:56.648       BMW M1000RR  
5th Place John McGuiness @ 01:47:07.411     Honda CBR1000RR-RSP

Consider the fact that this is a six lap race over 37.73  miles with a cumulative mileage of 226.38 miles.

Stay tuned......

Friday, June 3, 2022

Peter Hickman is the Man To Watch


Peter Hickman is really doing well in the 2022 TT with a lap time of 132.876 !  Absolutely mind boggling...................


 

Michael Dunlop Isle of Man TT

 



Michael Dunlop is back for the 2022 TT  .  He is definitely giving a credible showing in the practice sessions with a time of 129.346 in Superbike and 129.299 in Superstock  in qualifying session six.

Keep in mind that there are over 200 turns in the 37.75 mile course.  To get that kind of times he is hedging on 200 mph on a road course.

Hope that he does well!

Thursday, June 2, 2022

Mark Purslow Killed at Isle of Man


Mark Purslow was killed on the Isle of Man during the fourth qualifying session.  He was on his third lap and had just completed his fastest lap ever over the mountain course at 120.86 mph.  The accident happened at Ballagarey.

Mark grew up around racing and was inspired by his father's love of the sport.  He typified the spirit of the privateer racer, preparing his own machinery with the help of friends and family.
Road racing was his passion- competing in Northern Ireland and Europe- but becoming a TT racer was a life's ambition that represented the ultimate personal goal.

He was riding a 2021 Yamaha YZF-R6 and racing for the team NEVER BE CLEVER RACING.

Mark was only 29 years old....................
 

Tuesday, May 31, 2022

Searching For My Old Harley Davidson K Model In the Vallejo, California Area

The picture is something I found on the internet

I have been searching for a 1952 or 53 Harley Davidson K Model that I owned years ago.  Many years ago!

I know it was a 52 or 53 because it did not have the trapdoor to gain access to the gearbox.  The last time I saw it was in Vallejo, California and I believe it is still in the Vallejo area.

Here is all of the history that I have.  I went to Vacaville to look at a basket case K Model with my friend Mark Alexander, this was in about 1983.  It was scattered throughout an old shed behind the sellers house and we picked up everything that looked like a Harley part and Mark bought it.

I had always fancied having a flathead Sportster since looking at a beautiful custom K Model chopper in Benicia earlier in life.  It was for sale but hopelessly beyond what I could afford.

After my Death Trap 650 BSA tried to kill me one last time I decided to sell it.  I was then working on my 1947 45" Harley and the thrill of owning the BSA had passed.  I asked Mark if he would swap the Harley K Model  for my BSA.  It was a pretty rapid transaction.

After the horrible accident on Highway 29 my friend Mike Dickerson was in need of something to focus on so I gave him the Harley K Model project.  He never built it and the last time I saw it he had painted the sheet metal tan and the frame black.  After his death, his brother Ralph Dickerson inherited the motorcycle.

Ralph went away for awhile and a guy named Donald Williams in Vallejo had possession of it.  I believe that Donald also died and after that the trail went cold.

It was in a garage in Vallejo the last I heard but I couldn't get a response from the person who had it,  I believe it is a relative of Donald Williams.

Here is the chain of ownership as I know it

Mark Alexander

Tim Drennen

Mike Dickerson

Ralph Dickerson

Donald Williams

Donald Williams relative ???

So if anyone knows where this motorcycle presently resides please give me a call @ 951-992-9839
 

Monday, May 30, 2022

The Death trap BSA 650

The Death Trap BSA 650

The first week that I owned my 1972 BSA 650 Thunderbolt it tried to kill me!  

I had graduated from a Honda CL185 to a 650 British twin and I was in heaven...for a minute.

I had my girl on the back and we were blasting along a narrow tree lined road...no helmets of course, this was 1976.  We were celebrating our independence from the same Britts who made my newly purchased machine. As I entered a tight corner the throttle stuck in the wide open position rocketing us toward the guard rail.  There was about a foot wide space between the pavement and the rail and as the rear tire shot dirt behind us we magically navigated the corner and pulled to the side of the road and took a deep breath.  This was the first time I almost died on that bike.  I don't think it registered with Celeste how close we came to cashing it in that day!

I was 17 that summer and new to the San Francisco Bay area.  I would fill up the tank and just ride around... getting lost most of the time..  This was before Google maps so you had to wing it.

Later on I lived on Idora Street in Vallejo and parked always my motorcycle in the living room...that's where they belong... Right?  I came home at around 2;00 in the morning and decided to to do a burn out in the living room and almost launched it through the rear window. My neighbor Mike was not amused!


When I bought the bike it was a stock machine.  I rode it stock for quite a while but I was out scrambling one day and fried the electrical system.  I pushed it home and the next day took it down to bits and decided to build a chopper.

I was living in Vallejo and Ted Phelps had a chopper shop out on highway 37.  Its a Hells Angels shop now but back then it was cool old bike shop.  Originally my bike had an oil in tank frame so I looked around and found an earlier frame and had Ted weld on a hard tail section.  Now I was cooking with gas.  Not quite....it would be several years and several states before it ever ran again.

I moved to Wyoming and hauled it along with me.  I moved to the hinterlands of Wyoming to work in construction.  My girl Celeste came with me but we had an unpleasant surprise when we ended up living way out in the sticks by a fishing lake.  It was a dumpy little cabin with no bathroom facilities! You had to walk about 100 feet to the restroom.  She was not impressed.  After a short time she went back to California and I don't blame her.

When winter hit the whole adventure turned a bit sour and I was looking for a way back to warmer climes.  After work one day my boss was telling me how his divorce was a bitter one and he was stuck with a Chevy Corvette and would I be interested in taking his bright yellow car and make it disappear.  He he said he would give me a 24 hour head start.....he didn't!

I secured the Corvette and went home that Friday to my dingy little cabin and removed the passenger seat and loaded everything I owned, including the BSA, into the car and headed West.

I hauled that bike back to California and put it in a friends closet.  Later it went into my girlfriends car trunk where it stayed for a long time.  I had other things to worry about....

Looking back on it I cant believe everything that happened myself.

It's too long of a story to tell now but I ended up back in Montana and was working construction.  I had bought a 1953 Ford pickup and I decided that it was time to go get my BSA from my then ex-girlfriend. One fine day my brother Gil and I loaded up and headed out to California to get my bike.

The trip out was pretty uneventful but when we got to Vallejo it got interesting!  My ex-girlfriends family had decided that they had just about enough of me and my antics but they had graciously stored my basket case chopper...thank you.  I can't mention names here but you all were great!

Gil and I loaded up my bike in the Ford pickup and planned our trip back to Montana.  I had to find him first.  He had disappeared for about a week!  My friends in Vallejo had changed since I was last there and they changed even more before I got back to good old  Vallejo later on.

We finally headed back home and got as far as Sparks, Nevada. Remember that name, it will always live in infamy in my mind. I still cringe when I pass through there.

So here we are stuck in Sparks, Nevada with very little cash and my basket case motorcycle.  This is a strange but true story....we sold the pickup and loaded the bike on an airplane where it sailed comfortably back to Billings while Gil and I hitch hike home. Oh yes..it was a fine trip indeed.

I put the bike mostly back together in Montana and got married to my wife Lori.  We are still married but she sure put up with a lot, to put it very mildly!

After living in Montana I decided that I had enough of Montana and the cold and decided to head back to the coast.  I had an old Ford Econo-Line van that I had fixed up.  We loaded up everything in the van including the BSA and headed out.  As we were coming into ...you guessed it!  Sparks Nevada The engine blew up!  Here we were stuck in Sparks...again!  We finally made it to Vallejo but it was quite an ordeal.  We ended up towing our van behind a U-Haul truck across the mountains all the way to Vallejo.  I wouldn't sell The BSA even though we were in dire straits.

After a while I got the thing running but it was a death trap.  I had little money and grand ideas!

It launched me into a block wall one day when my rear brake didn't work right.    I bent my brand new 6 over fork tubes.  I almost ate it that day..

The next time it tried to kill me a car stopped dead in front of me and I locked my front wheel under it's rear bumper.

I was a bit crazy back then and would split lanes at 100 mph with Lori on the back.  When she was pregnant with our son she stopped riding with me for good.  Again, I don't blame her.  I wasn't even running a front brake because they didn't look righteous!

One summer my wife's family came out and visited us in Vallejo.  We were going to go up to the lake  and everyone was riding with her dad in his truck except her brother Sam and I .  We were going to take the bike as it was a fine summer day.  I did a pre-trip inspection and tightened everything up including the rear chain.  We were heading up to the lake on Highway 80 in the fast lane...always the fast lane my friends!  All of a sudden the bike started to whip violently back and forth across two lanes!  I steered and countered steered and finally wrestled it to a stop.  We didn't go down but it was a miracle .  The guy who was behind us said it was something to behold as we went side ways back and forth across two lanes at around 70 mph !  The axle had come loose and the wheel was locked up in the frame  Thank God the bolt hadn't come all the way out of the framed or life would have gotten a whole lot shorter that day!

The final attempt on my life was the most memorable.  My friend Mike Dickerson and I were racing down Highway 29 headed for Napa.  We were going around 80 mph when a car turned right out in front of us and stopped!  I was in the right lane and nailed the throttle so I was going at least 90 when I missed his front bumper by a few inches.  I had just gotten by him when I heard a horrible crash, Mike had tee boned the car at around 70 mph.  He was almost killed that day.  It was horrific........

The bizarre thing about it was that the man who turned out in front us... had the same exact thing happen to him and his wife on their honeymoon.  He was a cool old guy and he felt horrible about it and later visited Mike in the hospital.

I rode home and parked it.  

I later traded it for a K Model Harley Davidson basket case which I gave to Mike to try and get him interested in living again.  It didn't work. He didn't die in the wreck  when he hit the car but it did ultimately kill him! He ended it all himself after years of trying to heal from that horrible day.

What an adventure the BSA 650 Thunderbolt turned out to be!  Hey , maybe it was me!


My beautiful wife on the BSA


Yep.. a true death trap chopper