- Joined
- May 16, 2021
- Messages
- 30
Hi all
Nice to see some familiar faces here from triumph rat.
Eli here, brit based in France with an unhealthy obsession with classic cars and bikes.
I've had my bike licence for about 18 months and I've been bitten by the britbike bug hard!
First to come was a 1968 triumph t100c. New loom, rebuilt the carb, changed wheel bearings, new front wheel and brakes, oil pump, had gearbox out a few times... It's now a sweet running bike with oodles of patina.
Then about two months ago I bought a 1970 tr6 which was delivered just before Christmas. New tank, tyres, rebuilt the mikuni carb, lots of wiring work and it's now a one kick bike. I've put 1000km on it in just over 4 weeks. Time flies and so does this bike!
And this morning I received delivery of a bike baxter cycle in the US found for me 10 months ago! A very original looking 1973 interstate which has been off the road for at least a few years, maybe more.
Here's Dad in his overalls sizing up the new bike!
The 650
And the 500
Here are some more pics of the Norton : https://postimg.cc/gallery/wv8FJT7
I plan to follow the advice from waking the sleeping beast. I'm undecided between keeping the original fibreglass tank and finding a steel one for safety reasons. Other than that I don't want to restore the bike but get it so its usable for long trips. Electronic ignition, better headlamp, maybe a mikuni carb... But no touching the patina!
Nice to see some familiar faces here from triumph rat.
Eli here, brit based in France with an unhealthy obsession with classic cars and bikes.
I've had my bike licence for about 18 months and I've been bitten by the britbike bug hard!
First to come was a 1968 triumph t100c. New loom, rebuilt the carb, changed wheel bearings, new front wheel and brakes, oil pump, had gearbox out a few times... It's now a sweet running bike with oodles of patina.
Then about two months ago I bought a 1970 tr6 which was delivered just before Christmas. New tank, tyres, rebuilt the mikuni carb, lots of wiring work and it's now a one kick bike. I've put 1000km on it in just over 4 weeks. Time flies and so does this bike!
And this morning I received delivery of a bike baxter cycle in the US found for me 10 months ago! A very original looking 1973 interstate which has been off the road for at least a few years, maybe more.
Here's Dad in his overalls sizing up the new bike!
The 650
And the 500
Here are some more pics of the Norton : https://postimg.cc/gallery/wv8FJT7
I plan to follow the advice from waking the sleeping beast. I'm undecided between keeping the original fibreglass tank and finding a steel one for safety reasons. Other than that I don't want to restore the bike but get it so its usable for long trips. Electronic ignition, better headlamp, maybe a mikuni carb... But no touching the patina!