drrod
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There is a big difference between music and just noise!!!! But......like beauty, it is all in the ear of the beholder.And that is the kind of hype that sells all those Hawgs!
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There is a big difference between music and just noise!!!! But......like beauty, it is all in the ear of the beholder.And that is the kind of hype that sells all those Hawgs!
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There is a big difference between music and just noise!!!! But......like beauty, it is all in the ear of the beholder.
Have you ever driven an MG-TC? It was (is?) a coal cart but it played a very big role in bringing "sports cars" to our shores and sparking the interest in them. I think HD is kinda like that. Old tech for sure but still played a big role in bringing motorcycling to us. The difference is that MG recognized when their day was done. HD is still being a little myopic. I would love to own an MGTC,D, or F. Not for its technology, but just because...........Harley-Davidson - a 117 year history of turning gasoline directly into noise without the annoying by-product of horsepower.
or an MGB - or an E- type Jag - or a Porsche 356 - or a 289 Cobra - or a 48 Ford Woody - or a ( ad infinitum)I would love to own an MGTC,D, or F. Not for its technology, but just because...........
No, my uncle had one though and it was coolness. We can thank them for the concept, but not the execution. I did a short stint in a MGB once. If you didn't hear "tick-tick-tick" when you turned the key, put it back in your pocket, you have been demoted to pedestrian. The light switch had three positions: off, flicker, and dim. The best MG was made by Mazda. It is called the Miata or MX-5. They also showed Fiat how to build a 124 Spider.Have you ever driven an MG-TC? It was (is?) a coal cart but it played a very big role in bringing "sports cars" to our shores and sparking the interest in them. I think HD is kinda like that. Old tech for sure but still played a big role in bringing motorcycling to us. The difference is that MG recognized when their day was done. HD is still being a little myopic. I would love to own an MGTC,D, or F. Not for its technology, but just because...........
HD is hoping that there are still enough of riders that think like that.
In my youth, I recall hearing that the MG 4 cylinder engine was originally designed for a tractor.
You can still own a new MG (well sort of) and just like HD will be soon, they're made in China.Have you ever driven an MG-TC? It was (is?) a coal cart but it played a very big role in bringing "sports cars" to our shores and sparking the interest in them. I think HD is kinda like that. Old tech for sure but still played a big role in bringing motorcycling to us. The difference is that MG recognized when their day was done. HD is still being a little myopic. I would love to own an MGTC,D, or F. Not for its technology, but just because...........
HD is hoping that there are still enough of riders that think like that.
Ah, Lucas the Prince of Darkness -No, my uncle had one though and it was coolness. We can thank them for the concept, but not the execution. I did a short stint in a MGB once. If you didn't hear "tick-tick-tick" when you turned the key, put it back in your pocket, you have been demoted to pedestrian. The light switch had three positions: off, flicker, and dim.
Describe my feelings in 3 words or less... Go...
Au contraire!!!! A simple tap of the electric fuel pump with something (always a wrench available) and away you went. I had a 63 MGB. Never left me walking but is sure taught me a lot about wrenching!! Not really a winter car. You could freeze wine behind the seats on a cold day (DAMHIKT).If you didn't hear "tick-tick-tick" when you turned the key, put it back in your pocket, you have been demoted to pedestrian.
I'm re-running all of his old videos now. They are 100% classic stuff. He gave BMW a good rattle on the shift cam but loved the KTM 1290. Good stuff all around.
My older sister had an MGB GT bought new and I had the pleasure of fixing it on occasion. Greatest gearbox on the planet with that neat little shifter on the console . Just enough length for your hand if you grabbed it around the base of the shaft - then simply rocked your wrist for gearchange . Short throw indeed. But the Achilles heel was the Leyland electric overdrive . If you put the car in reverse with the overdrive engaged you trashed the overdrive - there was no preventive system either- not so much as an idiot light.Au contraire!!!! A simple tap of the electric fuel pump with something (always a wrench available) and away you went. I had a 63 MGB. Never left me walking but is sure taught me a lot about wrenching!! Not really a winter car. You could freeze wine behind the seats on a cold day (DAMHIKT).
I'll have you know young man, Lucas are a much loved (by those who don't know them) English company that can be trusted. Says so on this chartInteresting. As a young guy of twenty in Scotch Plains, N.J. , I bought one of the first Austin Healey's in N.J. It had the electric over drive to use in 2nd and 3rd gears with a switch on the gear shift. The overdrive worked great but most of the early ones lost second gear in the tranny. Naturally no parts so my beautiful Healey ended up on blocks for a few months. Don't get me started on the Lucas parts.
Ed Wing