My Dad had one just like it when I was a kid...
http://www.bonhams.com/usa/carsusaquailbikespreview/
My Dad had one just like it when I was a kid...
http://www.bonhams.com/usa/carsusaquailbikespreview/
Peter Kane
'72 911S Targa
Message Board Co-Moderator - Early 911S Registry #100
I'll take the '59 Norton Manx....
Du must schwein haben
901/05 #305701
Bultaco Metralla 62 M8
1968 BMW R69S
Early911SReg #606
I'm a fan of the Vincent...
-Marco
SReg. #778 OGrp: #8 RGrp: #---
TLG Auto: Website
Searching for engine #907495 and gearbox 902/1 #229687
Here's a shot of it a couple of months ago.
On display at the Reagan Library in Simi Valley. It was included in an exhibition of motorcycles celebrating Ronnie's signing a bill putting a tariff on imported bikes over XXX cc's in order to protect Harley Davidson from going under.
My 1973 BMW R75 was also part of the exhibit...
It made friends with Steve's 1927 Indian Scout...;-)
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Last edited by Bummler; 04-01-2011 at 06:42 PM.
Stefan Josef Koch
RGruppe #194/SRegistry #1063
1969 Porsche 911E, Light Ivory (38 years and counting)
2015 Porsche Cayman S
2012 BMW R1200GS, 1973 BMW R75/5
"An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools." -E. Hemingway
Nice /5 !.......
Du must schwein haben
901/05 #305701
Bultaco Metralla 62 M8
1968 BMW R69S
Early911SReg #606
Last edited by Bummler; 04-01-2011 at 10:52 AM.
Stefan Josef Koch
RGruppe #194/SRegistry #1063
1969 Porsche 911E, Light Ivory (38 years and counting)
2015 Porsche Cayman S
2012 BMW R1200GS, 1973 BMW R75/5
"An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools." -E. Hemingway
That's way nicer than nice !
Du must schwein haben
901/05 #305701
Bultaco Metralla 62 M8
1968 BMW R69S
Early911SReg #606
S. Mcqueens 1971 Husky 400 (Frame no. MI3845 / Engine no. MI3845) . Sold yesterday at Bonhams Motorcycle auction located at Quail Lodge , in Carmel Valley , Ca.
For $144,500
That's nuts !
Very nice bike but no way other than star appeal is it worth that much.
Maybe a different tool, but I would rather have Bummlers bike - or maybe any dirt bike I could use as intended - or certainly the cash the movie stars bike sold for.
Last edited by John Fusco; 05-15-2011 at 08:55 AM.
Du must schwein haben
901/05 #305701
Bultaco Metralla 62 M8
1968 BMW R69S
Early911SReg #606
From looking at the whole auction results , there was not much spending going on (i mean not much at all - low numbers).
The only exceptions were the Mcqueen Husky and this :
"Lot No: 120•
Blueprint for future BMWs
1925 BMW 494cc R32
Frame no. 33645
Engine no. 33645
Very rarely can a motorcycle brand's DNA be traced back to its first model in a straight, unwavering line. There are usually side trips and dead-ends along the way. Not so with BMW and its debut motorcycle, the R32 of 1923. Today's Beemer rider would recognize it as a BMW even if the famed "spinning propeller" logo was taped over. Likewise a rider from yesteryear could easily pick a new BMW out of a lineup of modern machines.
Bayerische Motoren Werke, a maker of aircraft engines starting in 1917, came to motorcycles courtesy of the Treaty Of Versailles, which ended World War I. Under the treaty's strict rules, a defeated Germany could have neither an air force nor a domestic aviation industry. Faced with that ultimatum, BMW turned to producing engines for land-bound vehicles, including the Victoria motorcycle of Nuremburg. It used a Max Friz-designed BMW motor but with its opposed cylinders running north-south, the front jug benefitting from cooling air while the rear cylinder, "shaded" from the airstream, tended to run hot. When BMW decided to build its own complete machine, Friz thought he had a better idea. By turning the motor 90 degrees sideways, each cylinder jutted into the onrushing windblast like stubby airplane wings, cooled equally and effectively. The blueprint for all future BMW "Boxer" motors had been laid down.
Other features have carried over the decades. At a time when most motorcycles had separate engines and gearboxes, the R32 had a bolted-together "semi-unit" design that would foreshadow the combined engine/transmission housings almost universal today. The engine was lubricated by recirculating oiling system, an advanced feature compared to total-loss lubrication that was normal at the time. For reliability, clean running and low maintenance the R32 ran a shaft final drive instead of a chain, a feature that has remained synonymous with BMW.
Friz's masterwork 486cc flat-twin gave 8.5 horsepower, good for a top speed of about 60 mph, plenty for the roads of the day. Factory speed demon Ernst Henne rode a much-modified supercharged version to a world speed record of 173.88 mph.
The 1925 version on auction is one of perhaps 60 R32s thought to exist. Paperwork from the factory documents it as a matching-numbers machine and denotes its build-date. Stampings on the engine case halves, transmission case halves and rear drive housing all match, and the components show no signs of repair. The carburetor and most other running gear appear original to the bike. It has the rare Norris speedometer option while most other R32s – if they have a speedo at all – wear the more common AVC unit. The bike is also equipped with the higher-output "laydown" magneto, another rare factory option.
Part of a large collection of motorcycles the R32, fittingly, is owned by a mechanical engineer. He advises us that the BMW runs well and is used occasionally at meets and rallies. Most of the time, though, it is kept on static display at a private residence. Sold on an Arizona certificate of title.
Sold for $139,000 inclusive of Buyer's Premium"