Just sat with a constant smile on my face for 22 minutes but also getting quite emotional at the same time. I started my biking journey back in 1976 when I was 16 and my grandad lent me the money for a yellow and black fizzy, and I’m still biking today, thanks for the trip down memory lane. Fantastic collection.
Great collection! Ive always been of the opinion that there's many a good tune played on an old fiddle! Lots of these bikes will give your newer bikes(full of rider aids etc) a good run for their money! A good ole pal of mine was born 1935 and he still regularly rides, ATM he has a BMW 1250r. He claims to have had at least half these bikes. He's been single for 25 years plus and his bikes are his replacement for a human partner as he explains to me. He usually part ex's for a different bike, nearly every year & using this method has gone through mostly every bike he has ever fancied. I'm 35 yrs his junior & started to try a similar method about 2 years ago. Ive had quite a few in this line up. Although I don't have as much disposable cash as he has nor am as mechanically skilled, but still I have been gradually flipping through most of my favorite bikes(mainly street legal racers). Ive realized as long as you try to buy bikes that haven't been too molested, stick to close to original as possible & as long as you aren't losing money when you sell you will have enough to get your next bike & wont go far wrong. Although I got a Yamaha Fz1s Fazer 1000 2010 atm I tend to go for pre 2000 bikes that are generally appreciating in value. It greatly helps to do as much of your own work on the bikes as possible to save cash & time. I'm on my 21st so far since 2020 though already had many of my top 10 favorite bikes. My 1st bought at start of lock-down was a Srad 750 Telefonica replica, I bought in 2020 & still remains IMO right up there at the top somewhere n just bought another 100% original Srad 750. Also had a barn find 1987 Gsxr400 I paid partly to be restored professionally last summer n even sold for a few hundred profit! The 400 apparently gave the high revving 2 strokes a good run their money at the time and I still have a thing for 2 stroke road bikes. Had a Kh500 2 stroke 'Widow maker' in the 90s although if i can afford one Im hoping of finding a project Rg500 at some stage though imagine paying 5 figure sum!
Similar story to mine, in 1978 i was at friends house and in the garden under some tarpaulin was a Casal 50 (very similar to the fizzy) it was a non-runner and my friends Dad sold it to me for £25, my Dad found out it was a broken piston ring, replaced it and tuned it just before my 16th birthday. Little story, one day i was at the traffic lights on my Casal and a lad pulled up next to me on what looked like a brand new Suzuki TS50ER, this lad (proper knob) was being overboard with being smug, revving his engine, laughing, egging me on for a race, anyway the lights changed and i left him way behind, he obviously didn't know that my Casal was unrestricted and could do 46mph, one over inflated ego burst, made my day though.
@ biker Nazi I have not heard the term (fizzy) before. Would like to learn. I got a 1972 Yamaha jt1 60 black and yellow mini enduro ( in 1972 when I was 12 ) my mom payed the first $25.00 then I paid the rest of the $320.00 from my paper route. I wish I had done better in school so I could afford a collection like this .
I think everyone gets a "tingle" when they see a mint example of a bike that they used to thrash back in the day. A bike that gained rust, blow up or was crashed. But like a dream its standing there! Your FIRST bike is probably the most emotional to see.
At the ripe old age of 70 I have now seen every god dam bike I either rode as a kid or wanted to ride !!!!!!!!!!! Hairs on the back of me neck on end.. Thanks for that walk about brought back so so many memories a tear in my eye thats for sure !! THANK YOU !!
That is just jaw dropping! I could honestly spend a full day in there just on my hands and knees pouring over those bikes! Especially that mezzanine level with the NSR’s and RGV’s!!!! OAFT! My tiny mind is BLOWN! Thanks for uploading Lee!
The Yamsel is what you think, a Seeley frame( made famous by Colin Seeley) back in the seventies, John Cooper beat Agostini 's MV on a 350 Yamsel, all fitted with 350/250 TZ motors.Handling was much improved with these frames. Seeley also framed the 500 singles , ie G50 Matchless. Out of pure racing interest checkout Peter Williams Arter Matchless, its a real beauty, notably the first racing bike fitted with cast wheels, which was quite unique back in the 1970's.
Still regarded as one of John Coopers greatest races is when he beat Ago at the 1971 Race of the year at Mallory Park on the BSA ROCKET 3 by three-fifths of a second
@@johngolding6030 Absolutely John, it was a brilliant achievement at the time, it made everyone take notice how versatile a rider he was, lovely guy met him and chatted to him at Oulton Park before he won that Race of the year.
@@brianmorris6965 Yep thats right Brian you just brought that back to me, he finished 2nd three times 70/71/73 at the TT, what an innovator he was, Peter ,and Tom Arter created one of the best singles ever constructed, shame its in the hands of an American across the pond.
I saw this collection back in July - amazing ! The owner hadn’t finished the new building so most of these were in his house. It was an absolute pleasure being shown this collection. The owner made me laugh, I asked “ do you have an RGV 250” he said “no I have 4”. Mega collection and a brilliant chap with some stores 👍 great to see all the bikes together in one collection. Great video thanks
Truly amazing! the rare models in pristine condition, well all the bikes are in amazing condition, and surrounded by all the memorabilia, simply priceless! Really appreciate the owner sharing a mind blowing collection!
Unreal collection of bikes, thanks for showing all them. Lee the bike in question at 7:59 is an Excelsior Consort 98cc two stroke with a Villiers 4F engine and a two speed gearbox, 1953 model going by what I see on it. I started off on the road with a Fizzy running on Castrol R30, I would be a RGV, TZR, RD type man but I restore and ride old BSA's, Triumphs, and Nortons as well, keeps you on your toes remembering gear lever is on the right and brake lever on the left.
What a collection! Every bike I've drooled over since I was a teenager in the 70s, is in that 'hanger'. I could bring down my sleeping bag and live there for a month! Thanks for the vlog Lee.
Excelsior motorcycles from Coventry. Built bikes from 1896 ish to 1967. They also built a few cars in that period. Got sold off in the late sixties and produced low number of cars before going into liquidation.
John Cooper started the Yamsel story by fitting a TD2 or TR2/3 engine into his Seeley fram from his uncompetitive 500 single and started the trend for which I don't think he ever had full credit .
Thanks for posting this. Like my life flashing before my eyes, literally! Personal highlights were the black Yam 250 LC. Bought a 350 just like that brand new in '81. And the Suzuki GT750 kettles. Pestered my brother to take me out on the back of his mate's one for a year or two in the 70s. Finally did when I was about 15. Can still remember exactly how good that felt. Spotted a Barry Sheene helmet too, my hero in the 70s.
What a collection of motorcycles. Some unbelievable bikes, TT winners, endurance machines, rare road bikes and other awesome road bikes. Thanks for showing us Lee 👍
That picture of graeme with joey is from cookstown 100, was joeys 1st race on the sp1, was amazing to see him racing it at a national. That collection is unreal👍
Wow, that's all I can say. My mates all had 2 strokes. 2 had Rg 250, 1 had rd350 cola colours. 1 had Rd 500, 1 had rg500, nsr400. Always at the petrol station. I had the gpz600r. Wish I went for a 2 stroke. Brings back amazing memories. Thanks for that Lee.
OMG that is where Santa left the bike i wanted for Christmas . lol. Thanks for the look , a older man lived down the road from me had the water cooled suzuki when i was 14 and i thought that was the coolest thing. Seeing the Honda 750-4s took me on the wayback when i was younger that was the first time i saw disk breaks on a bike. Now I ride a Goldwing ... or as my brother calls it a Geezer Glide , cause I am 58, but I have had some super bikes in my day ,Gsxr,fzr,and my favorite was a Vrf, love my hondas , but as long as you are riding , lets go. On my bucket list is to come to the TT . Thanks from West Virginia , if you ever come to the states ,lets ride ,
Thanks for the tour Lee and to the owner for letting you show us around the most fantastic collection. Great to see such a wide variety of machinery and as someone who started riding in the mid 1970s there 's a lot of stuff there that really connects. Great vlog - keep them coming.
This just emphasizes how important and cool history is. Vintage/Classics, beats current modern & new, all day, every day imo. You could walk into a privately owned dealership/showroom/current day bike collection, twice the size of this, and it wouldn’t even come close, to invoking the feelings you get, with this collection. So much character, and so much history, in this room. It’s beyond cool and absolutely mind-boggling.
Wow. Pretty much every bike I ever wanted is in that collection. Would love a go on a few of them. Thanks man. Thanks Christie. I think Joey was the best too.
The white Triumph scrambler in your vid is a 1966 650cc Twin Triumph T120 TT, colours are Alaskan White and Grenadier Red and the rest of the parts are black, around just 1300 bikes made in 66 for the US market and the C or later named TT was only made from 63-67. I restored one a few years back for myself and there is a vid on my page if you would like to hear how nice they sound.
No probs Lee, Su n me gave up sports bikes a few years back but still follow the bike racing as it's in our blood lol just the old Triumphs now, we have 8 in total and ride them all as much as we can. Have a great year and can't wait for the first races of the year to start :-)
Wow, what an amazing collection! I spotted the Honda ss50. That was my first bike but the 4 speed version lol. Bought it for £25. Seen them going for £5k now ! Grew up watching those TZ Yamahas. Best era ever!
Unbelievable, you could spend all day in there. And never get board. Thankyou Lee, and your wife for the nice music. And your friend who owns it. 🤪🤪🤪🤪🤪👍👍👍
Man you just walked passed the most iconic bike of all the kawasaki z1 900 if it wasn't for this bike all those other bikes wouldn't of surfaced for 30yrs that's how advanced it was for its year, and I have had 3 of them and still by fat the favourite of all time and I think most people who know all about it would agree great video by the way👍cheers mate🍻
We know how to live.. The powers that be won't allow it anymore. Never had all these 20 zones when I started riding. I never got any trouble for speed despite probably never going the limit. And so many people are trying to use mobile phones wile driving now it's not very safe out there.
@@chrishart8548 yes, agreed. Side swiped 2 years ago, car shot across Junction, wrong side of road, crossed chevrons, didn't brake. Broken spine L5, compression C5, both knees fukked. Still trying to claim..........
Great no BS vlogs Lee, nice tour of the collection with genuine reactions. Better than a cold fact filled tour. Good luck for the coming season and keep the videos coming.
To see a truly impressive display...the world's largest motorcycle collection is in Birmingham, Alabama at the Barber Museum. More than 1,600 bikes on 5 floors.
This is one of those times its good to be lets say mad on bikes since the mid sixties. Thanks so much for doing your best to show us this collection, a hard task in 22 minutes! Strange thing just occured to me, I now have a new royal enfield and a vintage or `classic` 650 yamaha. (42 years old)
Lee, there I was, a little despondent, stumbled upon your excellent & good natured video. Loved the Suzuki triples, having owned seven, still got two (380 & 750). Not only did you cheer me up, but you prompted me to think ahead to the TT! Four months or so away….good luck in training and in the run up to the best road race in the world. Thank you, Lee :)
That’s a superb collection, thanks for letting us see it…..The Yamsel…is a Yamaha in a Seeley chassis….the Black one you couldn’t t pronounce, is an Excelsior…..said …. Ex-sel-see-or…..👍🇮🇲
@@Leejohnston totally mind blowing , everywhere you look , there’s an iconic bike….FairPlay to the guy for having the insight to collect , what where everyday models back in the day, but are so much rarer to see now……👍🇮🇲
Thanks for sharing this, and yes your taste in bikes is different than mine but but I creak in the morning getting out of bed. Love the vintage stuff and Sammy Miller's museum is on my bucket list. If I ever make it to England again. Thanks again
Unbelievable, hard to take it all in and everything is set out so well and presented so beautifully. Thank you for sharing this with us all Lee, a real privilege and hopefully you can pass our thanks onto the owner.
What a collection! Started riding in 1969 and have ridden quite a few models displayed, right up to the current bike I own, a Yamaha MT01 (shown in 2nd row.)
Very cool indeed. Would love to visit there. Love all the stuff in that collection. Not sure how you can notice an R7 and a yzf 750 with a fast orange paint job but totally miss an original mint OW01 though🤣. Saying that there's soooo much cool stuff there you'd forgiven for missing the odd one in a 20min tour. What an amazing place that is!!!
@@Leejohnston I'm not a youtube wizard but I think the best would be, if time allows, making a shorter (around 5 mins) walkaround video without commentary first and Christie doing editing magic and then making a longer one with you talking about anything that comes to mind while walking around. I think there's a high demand for rambling Lee!
Thank you Lee and Christie Wow how many memories has that brought back Two stroke heaven in the 70's Thank you so much And the King of the roads bikes ! Respect.
I rode my bike down to Maggie Valley North Carolina 5 years ago. There's a museum there called Wheels Through Time. Dale Walksler owned it. He passed away a couple years ago. He has probably the rarest collections of bikes going back to the beginning. If you live in the states or plan to visit the East Coast, you should not miss it. I was absolutely blown away at the amount of rare bikes he has. Including the well known Traub, found behind an old wall of a house. Rarest bike in the world.
That was the best 20 mins of youtube in a long time, thank you Lee, from The FS1E to the GSXR 1000K1 and a host of bikes in-between it was a road map of my biking history. Some memory's of the two stroke 70?/80s bikes when freedom was the smell of castor R :) 😃
Thank you Lee. I love the fact that you are a bike enthusiast first and foremost, so engaging. Its a shame the collection is not open to the masses - obviously I understand why but that collection puts the motorcycle museum in the shade. Bloody love it. Power to the force of 100 to the owner.
I have followed your career for years from the periphery, a bit like I've done with Warwick Davis, and I have been enjoying your vlogging very much Lee!
@@Leejohnston FYI I reckon you're a bit taller than Warwick too! - I don't think you'd find a better displayed collection of bikes in a more impressive environment. Love the Yer Maun wall art work. Funny old world when someone has all this, and of course they can spend their own wealth on anything of their own choosing, but others can't even afford to put the heating on. Does it smell of bikes, rubber and oil in there?
I had a UK spec (not import like 99% of them are) NC30 in the 90's. Only had it about two weeks though before it was stolen, and insurance refused to pay out. Still grieves me to this day, and if I could find another, I'd buy it immediately. I've had a lot of 400's from the 90's and this was one of the best, almost as good as the NC35.
Excelsior.....(X sell see ur) mate......'Bout as old as me that one...lol....Passed my test on an Enfield Crusader Sport in 1966 and moved straight on to a 650 6T Triumph Thunderbird uprated to T110 spec.......Looked like a really nice T120 Bonneville next to that Triumph scrambler you mentioned....Fabulous collection Lee, thanks for letting us in on it, great to bring so many memories back for an old fart like myself.....Thank you....Malc
Wow ! just an amazing collection - a fantastic mixture of the old and new - great to see the yellow S type Norton Commando 750 in there and the sports motorcycles Ducati. The red Benelli is a 650 Tornado ( vertical twin ), and heads up for the CB1300 Honda, a big beast of a machine .... brilliant bikes, all of them 👌
Thats an awesome collection mate! Those little 250 two strokes are so sweet and want i really wanted as a teen, i'll take the Pepsi RGV and the Rothmans NSR please!!! 😍
The first Ducati race bike reminds me of when I used to work for Xerox UK and the race team brought their bikes to the car park for a good burn-up and look round. James Toseland and Neil Hodgeson did the honours and were both welcome guests. We had a race bike in the reception area for the long period when Xerox were the main sponsor, though unfortunately for us nerds without most of the electronics and sensors. Of course, I looked.. However the frame identification plate by the headstock was definitely from the Bologna Factory.
I bought a brand new NSR50 as my practice bike back in 2010. Was never run before. Joined a mini-moto race series and what a blast I had on it! Now they are worth big bucks I guess. Quite a collection there Lee! Thank you so much for sharing
What a stunning collection, I loved the British section, especially Triumph, and then the Yamaha FS-1E, I had the FS-1E-DX with the front disc brake back In 1976, My first bike (moped). My next bike was when I got into Trials with a Montesa Cota 348, then Speedway with a Weslake.
Oh my word! That’s a stunning collection, thanks for sharing that Lee. I was getting worried that I hadn’t seen an H2, but there it is in Purple nasty colours and in front of the Kettle as is right and proper! 😉
This is absolutely Mental. If I was going to have a collection it would look something like this. Thanks very very much for sharing this with us all Lee.
Thanks for showing this amazing collection, I must admit I remember them 40 years ago (or more likely 50+). I raced a Honda CX500B in the club endurance event at RAF West Rarnham against Yamahas LC350 in the 80's even picking up 6th in class! Later years I have toured Scotland on various types of BWW GS's 600 singles 800 twins + the boxer lump, all have which given me great fun, different type of riding but still finding fun.
My first bike was a Honda SS50 in 1977 when I was 16 green like the 0ne in the vid, used to get left behind By the fizzies and suz AP50s Had bikes ever since and still riding today, great vid lee👍
Always a bit mind-boggling, seeing how much money, some of the 1% have lol. Let’s be honest, someone with a collection like this, probably isn’t living in a flat, or a modest home. They probably aren’t driving your every day grocery getter car either. It reminds me of something my Aunt told me. She has her own gardening company on Long Island, NY and has been featured in a few magazines. She has clients, with multi multi multi million dollar homes, that she works at their home, that have a $300,000 annual “garden budget”!! Keep in mind, that doesn’t include landscaping, or vegetable gardens. That is just flower gardens, and flower boxes. Imagine spending $300,000 a year, just on your flower gardens, on your property. 🤯
Thanks Lee for showing us somewhere that we would never get to see it is a fantastic collection we really appreciate things you do not only on the racing side of things but you go above and beyond I think you just showed us motorcyclists and motorcycle fans what heaven is like 👍 cheers mate 😀
Just sat with a constant smile on my face for 22 minutes but also getting quite emotional at the same time. I started my biking journey back in 1976 when I was 16 and my grandad lent me the money for a yellow and black fizzy, and I’m still biking today, thanks for the trip down memory lane. Fantastic collection.
Still biking at 76, Yamaha Fazer
Great collection!
Ive always been of the opinion that there's many a good tune played on an old fiddle!
Lots of these bikes will give your newer bikes(full of rider aids etc) a good run for their money!
A good ole pal of mine was born 1935 and he still regularly rides, ATM he has a BMW 1250r.
He claims to have had at least half these bikes.
He's been single for 25 years plus and his bikes are his replacement for a human partner as he explains to me.
He usually part ex's for a different bike, nearly every year & using this method has gone through mostly every bike he has ever fancied.
I'm 35 yrs his junior & started to try a similar method about 2 years ago.
Ive had quite a few in this line up.
Although I don't have as much disposable cash as he has nor am as mechanically skilled, but still I have been gradually flipping through most of my favorite bikes(mainly street legal racers).
Ive realized as long as you try to buy bikes that haven't been too molested, stick to close to original as possible & as long as you aren't losing money when you sell you will have enough to get your next bike & wont go far wrong.
Although I got a Yamaha Fz1s Fazer 1000 2010 atm I tend to go for pre 2000 bikes that are generally appreciating in value.
It greatly helps to do as much of your own work on the bikes as possible to save cash & time.
I'm on my 21st so far since 2020 though already had many of my top 10 favorite bikes.
My 1st bought at start of lock-down was a Srad 750 Telefonica replica, I bought in 2020 & still remains IMO right up there at the top somewhere n just bought another 100% original Srad 750.
Also had a barn find 1987 Gsxr400 I paid partly to be restored professionally last summer n even sold for a few hundred profit! The 400 apparently gave the high revving 2 strokes a good run their money at the time and I still have a thing for 2 stroke road bikes.
Had a Kh500 2 stroke 'Widow maker' in the 90s although if i can afford one Im hoping of finding a project Rg500 at some stage though imagine paying 5 figure sum!
Similar story to mine, in 1978 i was at friends house and in the garden under some tarpaulin was a Casal 50 (very similar to the fizzy) it was a non-runner and my friends Dad sold it to me for £25, my Dad found out it was a broken piston ring, replaced it and tuned it just before my 16th birthday.
Little story, one day i was at the traffic lights on my Casal and a lad pulled up next to me on what looked like a brand new Suzuki TS50ER, this lad (proper knob) was being overboard with being smug, revving his engine, laughing, egging me on for a race, anyway the lights changed and i left him way behind, he obviously didn't know that my Casal was unrestricted and could do 46mph, one over inflated ego burst, made my day though.
All the bike history, amazing!
@ biker Nazi
I have not heard the term (fizzy) before. Would like to learn.
I got a 1972 Yamaha jt1 60 black and yellow mini enduro ( in 1972 when I was 12 ) my mom payed the first $25.00 then I paid the rest of the $320.00 from my paper route. I wish I had done better in school so I could afford a collection like this .
I think everyone gets a "tingle" when they see a mint example of a bike that they used to thrash back in the day. A bike that gained rust, blow up or was crashed. But like a dream its standing there!
Your FIRST bike is probably the most emotional to see.
At the ripe old age of 70 I have now seen every god dam bike I either rode as a kid or wanted to ride !!!!!!!!!!! Hairs on the back of me neck on end.. Thanks for that walk about brought back so so many memories a tear in my eye thats for sure !! THANK YOU !!
That is just jaw dropping! I could honestly spend a full day in there just on my hands and knees pouring over those bikes! Especially that mezzanine level with the NSR’s and RGV’s!!!! OAFT! My tiny mind is BLOWN! Thanks for uploading Lee!
He who dies with the most toys wins ..........I believe we have the winner. What a fine collection hope he has time to ride a few of his favorites.
Ronnie Smiths helmet next to Barry Sheene’s. He would of loved that. R.I.P. Ronnie,Gus & of course Barry.🕊
The Yamsel is what you think, a Seeley frame( made famous by Colin Seeley) back in the seventies, John Cooper beat Agostini 's MV on a 350 Yamsel, all fitted with 350/250 TZ motors.Handling was much improved with these frames. Seeley also framed the 500 singles , ie G50 Matchless. Out of pure racing interest checkout Peter Williams Arter Matchless, its a real beauty, notably the first racing bike fitted with cast wheels, which was quite unique back in the 1970's.
They used to call it the waggon wheels G50 Peter finished 2nd in the 1973 Senior TT to Jack Finley on a Suzuki
Still regarded as one of John Coopers greatest races is when he beat Ago at the 1971 Race of the year at Mallory Park on the BSA ROCKET 3 by three-fifths of a second
@@johngolding6030 Absolutely John, it was a brilliant achievement at the time, it made everyone take notice how versatile a rider he was, lovely guy met him and chatted to him at Oulton Park before he won that Race of the year.
@@brianmorris6965 Yep thats right Brian you just brought that back to me, he finished 2nd three times 70/71/73 at the TT, what an innovator he was, Peter ,and Tom Arter created one of the best singles ever constructed, shame its in the hands of an American across the pond.
I had a 750 Phil reed in the 80’s Seely parts all over it what a beast
I saw this collection back in July - amazing ! The owner hadn’t finished the new building so most of these were in his house. It was an absolute pleasure being shown this collection. The owner made me laugh, I asked “ do you have an RGV 250” he said “no I have 4”. Mega collection and a brilliant chap with some stores 👍 great to see all the bikes together in one collection. Great video thanks
Truly amazing! the rare models in pristine condition, well all the bikes are in amazing condition, and surrounded by all the memorabilia, simply priceless! Really appreciate the owner sharing a mind blowing collection!
Couldn't agree more thank for watching
Unreal collection of bikes, thanks for showing all them. Lee the bike in question at 7:59 is an Excelsior Consort 98cc two stroke with a Villiers 4F engine and a two speed gearbox, 1953 model going by what I see on it. I started off on the road with a Fizzy running on Castrol R30, I would be a RGV, TZR, RD type man but I restore and ride old BSA's, Triumphs, and Nortons as well, keeps you on your toes remembering gear lever is on the right and brake lever on the left.
What a collection! Every bike I've drooled over since I was a teenager in the 70s, is in that 'hanger'. I could bring down my sleeping bag and live there for a month! Thanks for the vlog Lee.
Wow, what a collection , my wife complains that I have too many bikes, I shall use this video to prove that I don’t. Thanks for sharing Lee, awesome!
There you go your welcome haha 😂
Excelsior motorcycles from Coventry. Built bikes from 1896 ish to 1967. They also built a few cars in that period. Got sold off in the late sixties and produced low number of cars before going into liquidation.
John Cooper started the Yamsel story by fitting a TD2 or TR2/3 engine into his Seeley fram from his uncompetitive 500 single and started the trend for which I don't think he ever had full credit .
Thanks for posting this. Like my life flashing before my eyes, literally! Personal highlights were the black Yam 250 LC. Bought a 350 just like that brand new in '81. And the Suzuki GT750 kettles. Pestered my brother to take me out on the back of his mate's one for a year or two in the 70s. Finally did when I was about 15. Can still remember exactly how good that felt. Spotted a Barry Sheene helmet too, my hero in the 70s.
Stunning collection. Saw a Mervyn Robinson bike in there too. Paul Robinson’s Dad and Joey’s brother in law. Thanks for sharing Lee! 👌
Aww I missed that thanks for sharing
What a collection of motorcycles. Some unbelievable bikes, TT winners, endurance machines, rare road bikes and other awesome road bikes. Thanks for showing us Lee 👍
That picture of graeme with joey is from cookstown 100, was joeys 1st race on the sp1, was amazing to see him racing it at a national. That collection is unreal👍
Wow, that's all I can say. My mates all had 2 strokes. 2 had Rg 250, 1 had rd350 cola colours. 1 had Rd 500, 1 had rg500, nsr400. Always at the petrol station. I had the gpz600r. Wish I went for a 2 stroke. Brings back amazing memories. Thanks for that Lee.
glad you liked my comment,met Sammy briefly at the beaulieu autojumble....both upto our wrists in rusty parts looking for that one bit!!
Amazing and varied collection. 2 stroke heaven upstairs, but it was DJ's bikes that brought a lump in the throat. Thank you for sharing!
OMG that is where Santa left the bike i wanted for Christmas . lol. Thanks for the look , a older man lived down the road from me had the water cooled suzuki when i was 14 and i thought that was the coolest thing. Seeing the Honda 750-4s took me on the wayback when i was younger that was the first time i saw disk breaks on a bike. Now I ride a Goldwing ... or as my brother calls it a Geezer Glide , cause I am 58, but I have had some super bikes in my day ,Gsxr,fzr,and my favorite was a Vrf, love my hondas , but as long as you are riding , lets go. On my bucket list is to come to the TT . Thanks from West Virginia , if you ever come to the states ,lets ride ,
Thanks for the tour Lee and to the owner for letting you show us around the most fantastic collection. Great to see such a wide variety of machinery and as someone who started riding in the mid 1970s there 's a lot of stuff there that really connects. Great vlog - keep them coming.
This just emphasizes how important and cool history is. Vintage/Classics, beats current modern & new, all day, every day imo. You could walk into a privately owned dealership/showroom/current day bike collection, twice the size of this, and it wouldn’t even come close, to invoking the feelings you get, with this collection. So much character, and so much history, in this room. It’s beyond cool and absolutely mind-boggling.
Wonderful array of bikes well preserved, but I'm ' old skool ' and the two bikes that made me smile most were the F.S.1.E and the LC250 !! 😁
I purchased that very DJ rep helmet in 2000 after returning from that years TT. Still have it in perfect condition.
Neil my mechanic has the one David wore 👌🏻
Wow. Pretty much every bike I ever wanted is in that collection. Would love a go on a few of them. Thanks man. Thanks Christie. I think Joey was the best too.
I know there is everything anyone would ever want in that room
Probably wouldn't mind that purple kawasaki kh750 or h1 whichever it is.
Superb collection, and very pleased he had a little Yamaha AS1 125cc two-stroke twin. My first proper bike 😀👌
Bought back so many memories for me, thank you Lee and the owner of this beautiful collection!
What happened to just "open the saying nothing "Lee
The white Triumph scrambler in your vid is a 1966 650cc Twin Triumph T120 TT, colours are Alaskan White and Grenadier Red and the rest of the parts are black, around just 1300 bikes made in 66 for the US market and the C or later named TT was only made from 63-67. I restored one a few years back for myself and there is a vid on my page if you would like to hear how nice they sound.
Thanks for this mate mega info 👍🏻
No probs Lee, Su n me gave up sports bikes a few years back but still follow the bike racing as it's in our blood lol just the old Triumphs now, we have 8 in total and ride them all as much as we can. Have a great year and can't wait for the first races of the year to start :-)
Wow, what an amazing collection! I spotted the Honda ss50. That was my first bike but the 4 speed version lol. Bought it for £25. Seen them going for £5k now ! Grew up watching those TZ Yamahas. Best era ever!
Unbelievable, you could spend all day in there. And never get board. Thankyou Lee, and your wife for the nice music. And your friend who owns it. 🤪🤪🤪🤪🤪👍👍👍
Nice one Lee! I saw quite a few of my old bikes in there too! Best wishes from the Belfast Castlereagh hills.
It’s hard to write a comment without swearing. Thank you for showing us this!
🤣🤣
Thank you Lee, great video. Lot of memories there, I started my motorcycling life in 1976, so I remember most of those in the video. What quality!
So many beautiful bikes bring back so many great memories! Thanks for sharing !
Nice bikes, my first street bike (back in 1981) was a 1973 Honda 750four. I like the warm headwear your sporting!
Man you just walked passed the most iconic bike of all the kawasaki z1 900 if it wasn't for this bike all those other bikes wouldn't of surfaced for 30yrs that's how advanced it was for its year, and I have had 3 of them and still by fat the favourite of all time and I think most people who know all about it would agree great video by the way👍cheers mate🍻
All from a time when we truly knew how to live! Well done Lee and thanks to the mystery owner for allowing us to share in this!! Brilliant!!
We know how to live.. The powers that be won't allow it anymore. Never had all these 20 zones when I started riding. I never got any trouble for speed despite probably never going the limit. And so many people are trying to use mobile phones wile driving now it's not very safe out there.
@@chrishart8548 yes, agreed. Side swiped 2 years ago, car shot across Junction, wrong side of road, crossed chevrons, didn't brake. Broken spine L5, compression C5, both knees fukked. Still trying to claim..........
FastLaneD 😲👍💸💸🏆♥️♥️
Great no BS vlogs Lee, nice tour of the collection with genuine reactions. Better than a cold fact filled tour. Good luck for the coming season and keep the videos coming.
Couldn’t help but get excited lol
Your enthusiasm shone through Lee, best vid I've watched in a while, tugged the old heart strings. About to watch it again right now, cheers 😉
To see a truly impressive display...the world's largest motorcycle collection is in Birmingham, Alabama at the Barber Museum. More than 1,600 bikes on 5 floors.
Yea the guys from red torpedo have been I would love to go one day
thank you Lee! The BSA with chromed and grey painted tank is a Silverstar of 1938, very closed to the Goldstar!
This is one of those times its good to be lets say mad on bikes since the mid sixties. Thanks so much for doing your best to show us this collection, a hard task in 22 minutes! Strange thing just occured to me, I now have a new royal enfield and a vintage or `classic` 650 yamaha. (42 years old)
There’s a few Bob sitting there. Phenomenal collection. Thanks.
Thanks for watching
Lee, there I was, a little despondent, stumbled upon your excellent & good natured video. Loved the Suzuki triples, having owned seven, still got two (380 & 750).
Not only did you cheer me up, but you prompted me to think ahead to the TT! Four months or so away….good luck in training and in the run up to the best road race in the world.
Thank you, Lee :)
If my lottery numbers ever come up, this is exactly what I'd end up with! Amazing collection, cheers Lee 👍
And a lone TY175 trials bike from the early 70's.
What an amazing display!
Thank the fella for letting us see his stuff with you ☺️ from northern Ireland ☘️☘️😃,, I'll justify my lottery ticket purchase price 👍👍👍👍👍
Will do mate
Absolutely stunning, thanks lee.👏🏻
Your welcome
That’s a superb collection, thanks for letting us see it…..The Yamsel…is a Yamaha in a Seeley chassis….the Black one you couldn’t t pronounce, is an Excelsior…..said …. Ex-sel-see-or…..👍🇮🇲
Thanks so much for this info so yea that’s what I thought it was a Yamaha in a Seely frame
@@Leejohnston totally mind blowing , everywhere you look , there’s an iconic bike….FairPlay to the guy for having the insight to collect , what where everyday models back in the day, but are so much rarer to see now……👍🇮🇲
What a fantastic collection.
You can never have too many bikes 🏍 😀
Thanks for sharing this, and yes your taste in bikes is different than mine but but I creak in the morning getting out of bed. Love the vintage stuff and Sammy Miller's museum is on my bucket list. If I ever make it to England again. Thanks again
Unbelievable, hard to take it all in and everything is set out so well and presented so beautifully. Thank you for sharing this with us all Lee, a real privilege and hopefully you can pass our thanks onto the owner.
I'll second that. Thanks for sharing it with us to the owner. Will be an important collection in the future, no doubt. Hope it stays together.
What a collection! Started riding in 1969 and have ridden quite a few models displayed, right up to the current bike I own, a Yamaha MT01 (shown in 2nd row.)
Love that race R7 and the original R1 in red white. Always wanted that bike!
Thanks Lee, really enjoyed the tour… incredible collection…
Thanks Lee for the tour taking me back down memory lane what a collection 👍
Thank you to the owner for letting you film this wonderful collection.
Very cool indeed. Would love to visit there. Love all the stuff in that collection. Not sure how you can notice an R7 and a yzf 750 with a fast orange paint job but totally miss an original mint OW01 though🤣. Saying that there's soooo much cool stuff there you'd forgiven for missing the odd one in a 20min tour. What an amazing place that is!!!
Wow lovely collection!
Lovely collection and brilliantly displayed.
I'll have the blue/white GSXR-400 please.
Please make more of these, amazing video! Thanks Lee and Christie
Would love to if people suggest more places like this
@@Leejohnston I'm not a youtube wizard but I think the best would be, if time allows, making a shorter (around 5 mins) walkaround video without commentary first and Christie doing editing magic and then making a longer one with you talking about anything that comes to mind while walking around. I think there's a high demand for rambling Lee!
Fabulous tour of an amazing collection. Thank you for taking us along, love the channel 🙏
Thank you Lee and Christie
Wow how many memories has that brought back
Two stroke heaven in the 70's
Thank you so much
And the King of the roads bikes !
Respect.
Thanks that’s what it’s all about
I rode my bike down to Maggie Valley North Carolina 5 years ago. There's a museum there called Wheels Through Time. Dale Walksler owned it. He passed away a couple years ago. He has probably the rarest collections of bikes going back to the beginning. If you live in the states or plan to visit the East Coast, you should not miss it. I was absolutely blown away at the amount of rare bikes he has.
Including the well known Traub, found behind an old wall of a house. Rarest bike in the world.
Thanks for the tour Lee. And thank the owner. He is doing the good work!
Saw a couple of bikes I owned... in much better condition!
Thanks Lee for showing us an amazing collection.
That was the best 20 mins of youtube in a long time, thank you Lee, from The FS1E to the GSXR 1000K1 and a host of bikes in-between it was a road map of my biking history. Some memory's of the two stroke 70?/80s bikes when freedom was the smell of castor R :) 😃
Thanks for watching
Thank you Lee. I love the fact that you are a bike enthusiast first and foremost, so engaging. Its a shame the collection is not open to the masses - obviously I understand why but that collection puts the motorcycle museum in the shade. Bloody love it. Power to the force of 100 to the owner.
Crikey this is amazing, some astonishing stuff there. Joey was just the best.
Big thanks to you Lee and the owner for sharing his passion, amazing!
Our pleasure
Cracking video, mate. To see so many of joey's bikes in one place is unreal.
Did i just spot Ronnies magic roundabout lid ? Brilliant
Omg what a collection. If only we won the lottery
I have followed your career for years from the periphery, a bit like I've done with Warwick Davis, and I have been enjoying your vlogging very much Lee!
Thanks really appreciate that
@@Leejohnston FYI I reckon you're a bit taller than Warwick too! - I don't think you'd find a better displayed collection of bikes in a more impressive environment. Love the Yer Maun wall art work. Funny old world when someone has all this, and of course they can spend their own wealth on anything of their own choosing, but others can't even afford to put the heating on. Does it smell of bikes, rubber and oil in there?
I had a UK spec (not import like 99% of them are) NC30 in the 90's. Only had it about two weeks though before it was stolen, and insurance refused to pay out. Still grieves me to this day, and if I could find another, I'd buy it immediately. I've had a lot of 400's from the 90's and this was one of the best, almost as good as the NC35.
Excelsior.....(X sell see ur) mate......'Bout as old as me that one...lol....Passed my test on an Enfield Crusader Sport in 1966 and moved straight on to a 650 6T Triumph Thunderbird uprated to T110 spec.......Looked like a really nice T120 Bonneville next to that Triumph scrambler you mentioned....Fabulous collection Lee, thanks for letting us in on it, great to bring so many memories back for an old fart like myself.....Thank you....Malc
Wow ! just an amazing collection - a fantastic mixture of the old and new - great to see the yellow S type Norton Commando 750 in there and the sports motorcycles Ducati. The red Benelli is a 650 Tornado ( vertical twin ), and heads up for the CB1300 Honda, a big beast of a machine .... brilliant bikes, all of them 👌
If you’re ever in the USA stop by the Barber Motorsports Museum. It’s the largest working collection I believe. Nestled next to its own race track.
Cannot put the words I said when you opened that door!! What an incredible collection.
Haha I know exactly wear you mean
thanks Lee, the 80s-90s Suzuki's, in particular the RGV 250s and Honda VFRs are just gorgeous
Wow, full to the brim of fantastic motorbikes. Many many iconic 2 wheeled beauties....
The Motor France R7 is painted like the one that won the Bol d’Or 2000. Don’t know if it’s the real thing though. Massive thanks for sharing this Lee.
What an absolute pleasure it was to watch this video :) Thank you
Our pleasure
Thats an awesome collection mate! Those little 250 two strokes are so sweet and want i really wanted as a teen, i'll take the Pepsi RGV and the Rothmans NSR please!!! 😍
Stunning collection, so many dream bikes, 2 stroke heaven, thanks for sharing
I know I loved it
Fantastic Lee those classics tz race bikes are stunning and you are correct yamsel seeley framed👍🏻
The first Ducati race bike reminds me of when I used to work for Xerox UK and the race team brought their bikes to the car park for a good burn-up and look round. James Toseland and Neil Hodgeson did the honours and were both welcome guests. We had a race bike in the reception area for the long period when Xerox were the main sponsor, though unfortunately for us nerds without most of the electronics and sensors. Of course, I looked.. However the frame identification plate by the headstock was definitely from the Bologna Factory.
I bought a brand new NSR50 as my practice bike back in 2010. Was never run before. Joined a mini-moto race series and what a blast I had on it! Now they are worth big bucks I guess. Quite a collection there Lee! Thank you so much for sharing
Thanks for sharing Lee...truly an Awesome collection.
What a stunning collection, I loved the British section, especially Triumph, and then the Yamaha FS-1E, I had the FS-1E-DX with the front disc brake back In 1976, My first bike (moped). My next bike was when I got into Trials with a Montesa Cota 348, then Speedway with a Weslake.
Oh my word! That’s a stunning collection, thanks for sharing that Lee.
I was getting worried that I hadn’t seen an H2, but there it is in Purple nasty colours and in front of the Kettle as is right and proper! 😉
I’d rather ride the Kettle over 40 miles than the Kwak. Shorter distances, the purple meanie wins hands down!
Brilliant, lucky you Lee!!
This is absolutely
Mental. If I was going to have a collection it would look something like this. Thanks very very much for sharing this with us all Lee.
Glad you enjoyed it! I certainly did 👍🏻
@@Leejohnston you're living the dream mate. Keep doing what your doing the content you are pushing out is top notch!
@@Leejohnston 🇺🇸😁👍🏆♥️♥️♥️😍👍
Thanks for showing this amazing collection, I must admit I remember them 40 years ago (or more likely 50+). I raced a Honda CX500B in the club endurance event at RAF West Rarnham against Yamahas LC350 in the 80's even picking up 6th in class! Later years I have toured Scotland on various types of BWW GS's 600 singles 800 twins + the boxer lump, all have which given me great fun, different type of riding but still finding fun.
My first bike was a Honda SS50 in 1977 when I was 16 green like the 0ne in the vid, used to get left behind
By the fizzies and suz AP50s
Had bikes ever since and still riding today, great vid lee👍
Always a bit mind-boggling, seeing how much money, some of the 1% have lol. Let’s be honest, someone with a collection like this, probably isn’t living in a flat, or a modest home. They probably aren’t driving your every day grocery getter car either. It reminds me of something my Aunt told me. She has her own gardening company on Long Island, NY and has been featured in a few magazines. She has clients, with multi multi multi million dollar homes, that she works at their home, that have a $300,000 annual “garden budget”!! Keep in mind, that doesn’t include landscaping, or vegetable gardens. That is just flower gardens, and flower boxes. Imagine spending $300,000 a year, just on your flower gardens, on your property. 🤯
Thanks Lee for showing us somewhere that we would never get to see it is a fantastic collection we really appreciate things you do not only on the racing side of things but you go above and beyond I think you just showed us motorcyclists and motorcycle fans what heaven is like 👍 cheers mate 😀
Thanks for post this amazing place ,you can tell its a large building as your voice has got that hollow echo sound its a truly mind blowing
Hope I did it justice
Of course did . As always an amazing video , please keep them coming . Best wishes to you and your family xxx
Great collection. Lucky you getting to see it close up