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By Mark M
#27898
Paul is right about my intentions but there is some background you may not know. I have had an early 500 Bullet (1953) from 1980 and built quite a few Enfields over that time including another 1955 500. I bought this bike (a 1955 350 Bullet) from an Ebay advert because it was A) cheap and B) it is very similar in spec to the 500 so I thought it would be interesting and I had conveniently accumulated many of the spares it needed. When I collected it I realised it was much worse than the pictures showed (my fault for not viewing in person, the sellers description was completely honest,) and a check of the parts I had reminded me that I'd sold or used many of them! I was wondering what to do with it at my local REOC club night and Paul, another member, suggested that as he was starting a new online magazine to take up the idea started by Gordon May's Bulletin magazine, maybe I'd write up the rebuild as a series of articles? We discussed the details and agreed that there are many Bullet owners out there who have come to Enfields through Indian bikes but may now fancy an older British built version but may be put off by the lack of information or their own lack of experience. Therefore the articles are intended to be a "How to" guide to rebuilding a Bullet from the ground up, the aim being to keep as close as possible to the specification for 1955 (which is also the year the Indian Bullet began,) but without spending a fortune on paint and chrome, and doing as much work as possible myself. While I've done a lot of these jobs myself I've never built a crankshaft so I'm seeking suitable advice! Meanwhile, you can read the articles in The Royal Enfield Magazine online at greenlane.biz and marvel at how worn out this bike is, even if you're the sort of person who just buys new bits! REgards, Mark
By Norm
#27899
OOPS, looks like I goofed up, I have painted this Super Meteor, got a brilliant finish and everything rechromed and had all the alloy polished
By Paul
#27901
Norm, you are doing a great job keeping the classic motorcycle restoration industry in business.
Please send me some photo's of your sparkling Meteor for the mag and I'll look at them with rust tinted glasses!

[email protected]
By Mark M
#27902
Both options equally valid. If anyone has read the articles from the beginning they would know the logic behind this rebuild. It would be nice to hear what people think of the articles? REgards, Mark
By BobF
#27905
Mark, I know this is going off topic, but in answer to your question, I for one am very interested in your Royal Enfield Magazine articles, particularly the practical problems and your solutions.
By Mark M
#27906
Thanks Bob, I appreciate your interest and I know Paul the Editor will too. It would be a lot of work just doing the rebuild on it's own but planning each stage (working out what to point out and finding alternative parts and techniques) photographing everything and then writing it all up is pretty time consuming and it's all in my spare time too. I take back what I said about Haynes Manuals now... on second thoughts, no I don't! REgards, Mark
By Norm
#27908
Hi Paul, will be a while yet the rims are still at the platers but hopefully it will be back together in a few weeks and Derek will probably want to do a bit of a story on it anyway because he made a special trip out here to look at it as soon as it arrived. Sadly he didn't take then but you have seen them before, bike parked under a lean to since 1988, every upper surface of chrome completely rusted .Sorry Mark for the hijack

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