Showing posts with label First Motorcycles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label First Motorcycles. Show all posts

June 10, 2012

RHINEBECK AMCA MEET, NY

While you'd think an Antique Motorcycle Club of America show and sale would be dominated by Harleys (and there were plenty...), I was impressed by the sheer variety of interesting machines for sale at Rhinebeck, the 'grandaddy' of the East Coast old bike swaps.  This Rumi Gentleman Junior 'dans son jus' is not only rare, but complete except for the exhaust...an amazing find for someone.  Apparently is sat in an antique shop for quite a while...love the original Dell'Orto carbs with shared remote float.
Mosquito abatement via Velocette MAC...
The H-D speedo guy...
This fellow rode in mid-day on Friday, and the closer I looked at his Sportster XLCH, the better I liked it.  Ceriani road race forks, dual-plug heads, an aluminum oil tank in the shape of the standard steel item...sweet.
Spark plugs where they oughtn't be...a clue to hidden performance
Nothing 'square' about this fellow but his handlebars...
Gorgeous 1924 Brough Superior SS80 with JAP engine...
...and nickel plated everything.
Flattery will get you everywhere; this gent, formerly of the SF Bay Area, found the image for his tattoo on The Vintagent...
This one came from a Ducati catalog
Improving the lines of a BSA A65...
...and giving Rollie Free wings (and breasts!)
Triumph Trident drag bike
Love this electric Indian homage, for when walking gets to be a chore (Rhinebeck is a big show...)
Sweet HD Knucklehead custom, with unique twin-barrel Schebler carbs
The kids are lovin' their customs...flatties, Pans, Knucks, Shovels...all good, even Yam XS650s!
Don't strain your memory, just a fun pastiche...
 William Eggers builds replicas of the 1867 Roper steam velocipede and the Daimler 4-wheel petrol-engine 'motorcycle' (ish...it has four wheels, and doesn't rate as a moto in my book, even though every 'history of motorcycles' lists it as first, because it has two big wheels in a line, and ran on petrol.  It was the Roper, and Michaux, who were first; no training wheels.)

1911 Indian, in fantastic condition
More chops, this time Yamaha powered
Beautiful original-paint 1936 Indian Chief
Need a Royal Enfield engine?
Cycle-pacers are better recognized these days as an important part of moto-history...they were the first motorcycle racers (when pacers ditched the bicycles, and raced each other!)
Benelli Monkey
Nice Victoria Bermeister...Moto Guzzi were not the only transverse v-twin; in fact, many other machines since the 1920s used this layout.
Original-paint BMW R51/3, which ran like a top

Buzz Kanter and his JDH Harley 'Cannonball' entry.  The sound of thunder!  I envied the power...I'll be running 1/3 his capacity across country...
Buzz is publisher/editor of American Iron magazine...
1902 Indian 'Camelback' for sale...once again, original paint.  The antique motorcycle community has really 'got the message' that old bikes are best kept original - the collector car world is still dominated by 'magpies' who prefer shiny objects...
Cannonball veteran single-cylinder 1914 Harley...
I get asked a lot what's on my 'list'; OK, I found one.  The Cleveland 4-cylinder was faster than the Indian or Henderson 4s, and looks it - low and compact, like a 1920s cafĂ© racer...
...and this one happens to be in original paint.  I'm rarely envious, but I admit to greening around this one...

One of Eggers' Daimler replicas; purchased mainly by museums looking for a timeline
Magneto man Doug Wood and his 1927 Velocette KSS
Someone's Dream...
Absolutely the craziest motorcycle seat ever, on this Emblem; there are two further 'sidesaddle' seats behind this 'mom n' pop'...for the kids!

Most AMC dirt racers came to the USofA...
Voilá, a Harley flat twin...
HD Knuckleheads have become crazily popular of late, which means a lot are coming out of hibernation, and they're getting expensive... still, it's good to see so many in riding condition

November 14, 2011

FIRST DEPICTION OF A MOTORCYCLE?

The Science Museum print from 1818, depicting a German 'Vélocipédraisiavaporianna'
While researching the history of early motorcycle advertising (subject of an upcoming article in the French CafĂ© Racers magazine), I ran across this 1818 sketch of a powered two-wheeler in the London Science Museum, the first such depiction of a proto-motorcycle I've come across.  Called, cheekily, the 'Velocipedraisiavaporianna', the pictured machine is a conjunction of the world's first steerable two-wheeler, the 'Laufsmachine' (or 'Draisine' in France), and a small steam engine with a small army of stokers and fuel-carriers following behind. Parsing the title, a 'Velocipede/Draisia' meets the 'vaporianna', or steam engine. If the 1818 attribution of this French print is correct, this vehicle was remarkably conceived only a year after the two-wheeler was invented, in a world with no electronic media.  A close look reveals two pipes with shut-off valves leading from the large boiler box, one to each wheel.

The steam petcocks and pipes are clear, as is the implication of a hub-drive steam turbine...
While the wheels are insufficiently detailed, steam leading to the wheel hubs would imply a pair of small turbines in the hubs...which would not have sufficient torque to move a heavy machine from a standstill, but would give a useful boost once moving, perhaps even enough to propel the machine without assistance. The principles of steam boilers and turbines were well known by 1818, and the first powered vehicle, Cugnot's steam tricycle, had been demonstrated 60 years earlier.

The idea is clear; an engine could power two wheels, and even if this sketch is notional, the concept of the motorcycle was born.
An 1820 version of the Laufmaschine, with steerable front wheel
 Karl Drais invented his 'Laufmaschine' (running machine) in Mannheim, Germany, in 1817, and word (plus copies) of his invention spread rapidly, with the new machine called the 'Draisine' in France, the 'Velocipede' in England, and the 'Dandy Horse' (likely due to 'riders' being the well-heeled sort; new technology is always expensive...).  Drais may have been inspired to refine a 'horse substitute' as a result of a serious famine in Europe in 1816, the 'Year Without a Summer', in which disastrous climatic changes from the largest volcanic eruption in 1300 years, of Mount Tambora in Indonesia, spelled doom for expendable livestock, which included horses.  Necessity is the mother of invention, and Europe's hunger planted the root stock of all two-wheelers to come.
Hats off to Karl; we're nearing the 200th birthday of his invention.

April 21, 2011

ROPER STEAM VELOCIPEDES

Roper's Steam Velocipede of 1867, now at the Smithsonian
Sylvester H. Roper invented the motorcycle in 1867, in Boston, around the same time Messr's Michaux and Perreaux also invented the motorcycle, in Paris.  Each of these inventions was created independently, and as small, light, portable steam engines were almost nonexistent at that date, each required the creation of its own motive power unit.  These are remarkable achievements with no historic precedent, barring the very first powered vehicle of all, the Cugnot steam tricycle, built a century prior to either Steam Velocipede. Technology progressed slowly in the 1700s!
Roper with his first Steam Carriage of 1863
Sylvester Roper, born in 1823, was a singularly brilliant individual, patenting sewing machines, machine tools, furnaces, shotguns, fire escapes, as well as building his steam-powered two, three, and four-wheelers, which he did not patent.  His Steam Velocipede was created a few years after building his first Steam Carriage (ie, automobile) in 1863, in the midst of America's Civil War, while he was stationed at the Springfield Armory.

His first Velocipede of 1897 used a very small steam engine, which Roper built himself. The engine was suspended from a forged iron frame -purpose-built for the machine- on spring steel strips, which absorbed many of the road shocks typical of the 'boneshaker' bicycle chassis.  The front fork was also iron, and wheels were wooden with steel 'tires', 34" in diameter; water for the boiler was carried inside the rider's saddle!  The engine had two pistons of 164cc capacity, each connected by a crank-arm and rod to the rear wheel.  The total engine capacity was 328cc.
Roper's patented Repeating Shotgun
The rider controlled his Velocipede by rotating the handlebars forward - and thus the twistgrip throttle was born, decades before Glenn Curtiss claimed the same with his first motorcycles, which was again before Indian received general credit for this excellent idea!  To stop the Roper, the rider rotated the handlebars backward, which pressed a steel 'spoon' onto the front wheel.  Water was automatically fed from the seat to the boiler via a water pump actuated by engine rotation. The small firebox at the bottom of the motor was fed with charcoal, and a pressure gauge mounted on the steering-head kept the rider apprised of power, and danger.
Roper with another of his Steam Carriages, ca.1867
The contraption worked, although perhaps not as well as his Steam Carriages, which had space for much larger engines, and carrying capacity for water and fuel, which meant a longer travel range.  The harsh ride of the wooden wheels with steel tires must have become tiresome as well, in contrast to his four-wheelers which used buggy springs for rider comfort...Roper postponed work on his Velocipedes for 15 years.

Drawings for the second Steam Velocipede
In the intervening years, bicycle design had undergone a sea change, as in 1880, the Rover Safety Bicycle was invented, and rubber tires came into general use.  These improvements must have spurred Roper to take up two wheels again in 1894, when Albert Augustus Pope commissioned Roper to make a new Steam Velocipede using a modified version of Pope's popular 'Columbia' safety-bicycle frame, with pneumatic 'Dunlop' tires.   The intention of Pope (who by 1911 manufactured his own motorcycles) was to use the machine as a cycle-pacer on the incredibly popular bicycle racing velodromes of the day.

Roper with his Steam Velocipede in 1895/6
 Roper designed a new steam unit weighing about 125lbs, making an all-up weight of the machine 150lbs. The bump absorption capacity of air-filled tires made it possible to solidly mount the engine to the frame, in the 'right' location, with the weight low and centrally between the wheels.  A single cylinder and piston of 160cc drove the bicycle via a long connecting rod, and a short crank at the rear wheel. Steam pressure was kept between 160 and 225psi (for hills), although the engine was tested to 450psi. The machine was good for at least 40mph, and carried enough coal for a 7-mile trip.
The new machine was compact, light, and very fast, and Roper, pleased with his results, put in quite a few miles on his steamer, regularly riding a round-trip of 7 miles between his home in Roxbury to the Boston Yacht ClubAmerican Machinist magazine noted, "the exhaust from the stack was entirely invisible so far as steam was concerned; a slight noise was perceptible, but not to any disagreeable extent."
The 1895 Roper Steam Velocipede, currently in private hands.
Roper was happy to demonstrate his steam vehicles to the public, at fairs and exhibitions, and claimed his latest Velocipede, or 'Self Propeller' as he called it, could "climb any hill and outrun any horse."  On June 1st, 1896, he rode to the Charles River Speedway in Cambridge, to show the local bicycle racers his new cycle-pacer.  Several cyclists agreed to keep pace with him on the banked 1/3 mile cement track. The Boston Globe of June 2 reported, "The trained racing men could not keep up with him and he made the mile in two minutes, one and two-fifths seconds.  After crossing the line, Mr.Roper was apparently so elated that he proposed making even better time and continued to scorch around the track.  The machine was cutting out a lively pace on the back stretch when the men seated near the training quarters noticed the bicycle was unsteady. The forward wheel wobbled badly...", and it seems track-side viewers rushed out to catch the slowing rider, who had died of a massive heart attack, while riding at age 73.  As Roper controlled the throttle with a cord around his thumb, steam power shut down as he relaxed into the arms eternal night, having proved himself the first motorcycle Speed Merchant.
Roper's son Charles, wheeling the Steam Cycle from the Cambridge track after his father's death.
Both of Roper's Steam Velocipede exist; the First Motorcycle is on permanent display in the Smithsonian Museum, the second is privately held, originally in the hands of Roper's son Charles.  It is rumored this machine will soon come up for sale...watch this space.

For an educational look at what it takes to build a steam cycle, visit the Flash Fabrications website!

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