Saturday, December 22, 2012
Monday, December 17, 2012
Friday, December 14, 2012
29 jd
I picked up a 29 jd frame awhile ago and have been slowly grabbing parts for it when I see them. The other day I was looking on eBay and noticed jd parts located in Lake Orion. Well turns out the Dave lives across the street, small world. He is building a 29 and has a 23 engine. His blog is Fastisfast
Thursday, December 13, 2012
Wednesday, December 12, 2012
Saturday, December 8, 2012
Marine city Parts for the Harley D
Got a call from Jeff in Canada said he had some parts for me. So this morning I rode over to Marine City to take the ferry to Canada. Not the most pleasant day to ride the ferry. Rain and snow but I do enjoy the blue water. Never really seems like I'm crossing to a foreign country. I got some good controls I believe there off a 32 but they will work on the 30 frame. I also got the 29 valve covers the other day. Covers came from the Czech Republic. So far this bike is a combination of parts from 4 countries. Next hopefully I find a rear wheel/hub
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Zinc plating
I've been avoiding it but its time to get it done. I have 2 Triumph restorations going on a 71 and a 68. Plus the Triumphs I've been building. So I've spent the last seems like thousand hour going and pulling everything's that needs plating.The bucket should have maybe 4 bikes worth of bolts.and hardware. Hopefully with a couple trips to the plater I will have nothing but clean beautiful hardware.
Monday, December 3, 2012
Reggae and motorcyles
I'm a huge reggae fan! My Dad introduced rasta and reggae to me when I was a child. Reggae is always on in my house. It is a major soundtrack to my life in and out of the garage. Reggae and motorcycles have a great history. The small displacement bike was a perfect match for the island. Cheap and easy on gas and you could load a hundred "45's" on the rack. The record industry was built with a major help from the bike. A song could be recorded, a "45" pressed and be cranking at the local Sound System in a matter of hours. The motorcycle was a quick way to get the record there. Really its how the first album was ever spoke over by URoy. Which lead to the creation of Hip Hop down the road. The studio recorded the album so quick that when they pressed the "45" they forgot to record the vocals. When URoy got the "45" at the SoundSystem, he dropped the needle to only realize there was no vocals. So what did URoy do? He picked up the mic and made history!
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