- Sun Apr 19, 2015 8:20 am
#46702
Gidday Norm,I haven't used the Indian front end. I had the front brake drum machined circular as it was slightly out of whack and found that whoever had put the bike together had not tightened up the head-yoke bearing properly so what was happening was the front brake was snatching and the forks shuddering making me think that the fork sliders were worn. I was in the process of pulling off the lower fork legs when I found that the sliders were not worn. So, if it weren't that broke I wasn't going to fix it. Tim (NZ) also sold me lower fork legs with sliders etc so now I am free to run into at least two brick walls before I run out of fork parts.I can't say I am excited about the way the front wheel and brakes on the Meteor all hang together, and when the bike settles down and runs properly then I will consider going "Indian". However, with an A10 still to fix and a Panther to make oil tight, and another Panther bucket of rust from around 1930 to think of sorting out, I can find the old style 1930s Enfield hubs and brakes to make wheels from (the rear brake is on the right and the drive sprocket on the left) the Indian front end may well gather dust for a while.
I am impressed by the Meteor 700. It is a very tractable motor with plenty of torque, is a pleasure to handle and will happily keep up with stuff like Bonnevilles on club runs, assuming I want to. The suspension seems a bit hard though. I have ordered a new coil and condenser from Mr H.
As for BMWs. There are enough of them in the Tasmanian so-called-British Motorcycle Club and the Vintage Motorcycle Club of Tas to make we want another, but not a cow of a thing like the last one. That tooth is still a little tender but I stopped limping some time back. And I am now leery about hydraulic brakes!
As for cast-iron barrels. There is nothing wrong with them. I had one on the genuine Indian-built little grey Bullet 500 that I ran in PNG and it never gave me problems even when trying to keep up with high-speed Ducattis and Suzukis and Harleys. Ambitious, I know; they were kind enough to wait.
Cheers,
Bob