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Showing posts with label 1916 Indian Motorcycle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1916 Indian Motorcycle. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Ken Smith's Original Paint 1916 Indian Powerplus.......and other stuff.


Ken Smith's secret location somewhere in ...........a secret location.


Ken Smith has some really nice motorcycles and sidecars,but his Original Paint 1916 Indian Powerplus Sidecar outfit is a classic and a little tricky to find these days.






The heart of the 61ci(1000cc) Indian Powerplus,a 42 deg V-twin engine.It had a top speed of 60 mph.


Indian Motorcycles were manufactured from 1910 to 1953 in Springfield,Massachusetts,USA.
Initially known as the Hendee Manufacturing Company,founded by George Hendee in 1897, it was renamed the Indian Motorcycle Manufacturing Company in 1928.

That box atop the gas tank is not an OEM Indian part,it's where Ken wants his ashes put when he dies.


During the 1910's Indian became the largest manufacturer of motorcycles in the world,including the Scout,made from 1920 to 1946 and the Chief,made from 1922 to 1953.



As the US entered World War 1,Indian unnecessarily sold most of it's Powerplus line in 1917 and 1918 to the United States government,starving it's network of dealers.This blow to domestic availability of the motorcycles led to a loss of dealers Indian never recovered from.
While Indian shared in the business boom of the 1920's,it had lost it's No.1 position in the US market to harley-Davidson.





The Indian Motorcycle Company went bankrupt in 1953,the year the last Indian Motorcycle was made.


A number of successor organizations have perpetuated the name,most believe that the last Indian was made in 1953.















Erwin "cannonball" Baker was best know for his many record setting cross country rides and drives.His first was in 1914,riding coast to coast on an Indian motorcycle in 11 days.A journalist at the time compared him to the "Cannonball Express" train,and the nickname stuck.
He made 143 cross-country motorcycle speed runs before turning his attention to feats performed in cars.


When you really think about it,riding coast to coast today on modern motorcycles that are capable of up to 10,000 miles between services,it's a breeze compared to the days of external valve springs that needed to be lubricated every 20 or 30 miles with little bottles of oil the rider carried with him as part of his kit.
No GPS,no good maps,no roads like we have today with all modern conveniences spaced 10-20 miles apart,no protective gear that was worth a damn in a crash.I think leather helmets were the latest in motorcycle headgear in the 20's,leather!!!.
And all the technology in suspension and fuel control make riding down the highway at 100 mph seem effortless today,unlike top speeds of the 20's being around the 50-60 mph mark,and that was wide open,nothing left.


Thanks to Ken Smith for the hospitality.








MURPH



Monday, October 10, 2011

New York City..............Street Level.

New York City seems to be a "Love It" or "Hate It" city for a lot of people.Me,I love it.Always have,always will.Even though the changes to the city and lifestyle have been dramatic and extreme since I left there in '97 or '98,and especially since 9/11,it still gets me and draws me in everytime.
It's one of the most functionally dysfunctional places,where a newcomer might look at it as the most chaotic scene they have ever witnessed,but yet it works,it flows smoothly,it manages to absorb all of the blows it has had rained down upon it for a long time now without imploding.
Even after 19 cowards got on 4 planes and tried to kill the soul of New York,it still didn't fall.It may have faltered a bit,but the City of New York,the State and the whole country came together to help keep it up,and they did.Today,it is still a magical place,where people flock to every day of the year just to get a piece of her and the people who make it great.
The FDNY are just some of the many people who help make NYC who she is,and 343 paid with their lives on Sept 11th,2001.
I happened to run into a few of them while I was there on this trip.










Some of the guys of FDNY Hook and Ladder Co.3 and Water Tower No.2 on East 13th Street,NYC.
I stopped by the station while I was next door at Phototech getting a lens repaired.When I lived in Mahattan I knew a few of the firemen at the Great Jones St Firehouse,which houses Ladder 9 and Engine 33 trucks and crew.
Thanks to the guys of Hook & Ladder Co. 3 and Water Tower Co.2 for spending time with me.


Up on 89th Street and Riverside Drive in Manhattan is the Soldiers and Sailors monument,built in the late 1800's and dedicated on Memorial Day 1902 to commerate the Union Army soldiers and sailors who served in the American Civil War.



The Fireman's Monument on 100th street,Riverside Dr. 
The origins on the FDNY go all the way back to 1648 when New York was the dutch settlement of New Amsterdam.The organization known as the "Prowlers" but nicknamed "The Rattle Watch"patrolled the streets with buckets,hooks and ladders,hence the term "Hook and Ladder Co." of the FDNY.


Only in Chelsea.


Jersey City as seen from Chelsea Piers.

Cellist Peter Lewy,Washing Square Park Arch,September 2011.
A video of Peter I shot is on my YouTube page here and here.

This could be Italy or Tokyo,but it's on the West Side Hwy.


7th Ave. looking north from 22nd St.

Soho.

Some of the motorcycles in the collection at Kiehl's on 3rd Ave.
Kiehl's,an American cosmetics brand retailer that was founded as a single pharmacy in New York City's East Village in 1851 by John Kiehl,located at 3rd Avenue and 13th street.In 1921,Irving Morse purchased the store and in the 1960,Irvings son Aaron took over the store.It is Aarons motorcycles and planes that are on display at the store,although the planes are no longer displayed there.












"Hmmm,a Flyin Eyeball".....




Jersey City




And as Gotham sleeps,so do I.........



Murph