I used to think the Ducati 750 sport was the most beautiful bike, but I think the Godet Vincent has to take that honour. This was a very interesting and inspiring video.
In the days when Ducati 750 and 860 bikes were dropping like flies due to oiling failure (frequently the use of the wrong oils), a few of them got given Vincent engines. The engine fits really well, and is a fine alternative to an Egli. They are referred to as a Vincati
I owned the 1st Egli Godet he built (the bue one sent to Bilbao in the Guggenheim Museum we can see in the video), with a genuine 1000 cc engine from a B Rapide , wonderful bike , and Patrick let me test a 1330 Godet with 5 gear box, it was amazing ! what a wonderful bike, I miss him as a friend and as a genious mecanic (sorry for my poor English) They are the most desirable classic motorbikes (thanks to David as well)
"70 to 80 hp is ideal for a machine like this", I couldn't agree more, air cooling keeps it simple, and there's a hell of a lot more to enjoying a motorcycle ride than just trying to get to "point B" as fast as humanly possible. BEAUTIFUL, clean machines, compared to some modern motorcycles that look like full sized plastic toys. My main love was Norton Commandos, but I would have loved one of these if they had been within my means. I did enjoy a "tuber" '97 Buell, which would be the modern (90's) equivalent, that was very satisfying in the Rocky Mountains...Thanks for a very informative and nicely done video.
So many Bike-builders have been inspired by Vincent .The Yamaha TR1 XV1000 was inspired by Vincent , they bought a Vincent , stripped-it and came up with their first big V-twin , it is a great bike to ride and own ,like this one Godet-Egli) it would never have existed but for Vincent . Thanks for a great vid , such beautiful machines. Dave NZ
Thank you so much for posting this video up. It is comforting to know that there are still film makers out in the world, who produce interesting, informative and quality content. Nowadays, when "Television" is catering to the lowest common denomination "Intellect-wise", these video films are an oasis of quality in a desert of dross!
Awesome! So beautiful! Happy to know that one can still buy a “Vincent” ! I don’t think I could afford one but still! I’m happy to know there are craftsman out there building these awesome motorcycles! TY
Thank you guys for putting this insightful video together. It joins up some very significant people and their technical achievements over seven decades; a New Zealander, Phil Irving, in the late '40s through to a very clever Frenchman, M. Godet (RIP). Lovely machines, knowledgeable commentary and raw enthusiam...a great channel!
Thank you for this wonderful video. In my younger days I owned a black and gold Ducati 900SS with Conti exhausts and Dellorto carbs with open bellmouths. That's as close as I got to these beautiful machines. Keep up the good work.
Both my Twins, Yamaha XV920RH and Honda VTR1000F, incorporate the engine as a stressed member inspired by Vincent. I’d love to own any Vincent, however I am very happy with my Twins :)
Great video, you're all obviously knowledgeable bike enthusiasts, l had an early 70,s Ducati 750 which had the idea of the v twin engine as an integral part of the frame, ie supported from the top of the motor,that bike looked very similar in profile and stance to the Godet Vincent, great work people 👍
I've been wanting that bike for 25 years! Thanks for the video because that's the closest I'll ever get to $$$. Thank you very much for the video. it was excellent!
I ran across reference to Vincent motorcycles when I was about 12, late sixties and have only laid hands on a couple, never ridden one. I'm approaching seventy and can only look on from the outside. Thanks for this showcase!
excellent overview of the Godet -Eg;li - Vincent, but leaves us chomping at the bit for the release of 'Speed is Expensive', this surely must be up there with 'films that were longest in production'.
Thanks . This film was a day in shooting , a couple of weeks in edit and twenty minutes long. Davids film has hundreds of hours of archive to edit, he has traveled the world to do interviews and will be the definitive film on the subject, so has been a hugely more time consuming and expensive film to produce. I along with very many others will be delighted to see his mammoth task delivered and we all very much look forward to seeing it. I hope you will enjoy it too?
Thankyou for your comment. It was always the intention to share Patricks genius with the world. We are all looking forward to Davids film too and Im sure it will be well worth the wait.
Every decent engineer knows that the name of the game is a series of artfully made compromises. The ones on these new Vincent's seem particularly well thought out and implemented, so it's a lovely job all round, well done to all involved.
Yes you are correct you have to compromise that is the designers art but you also need a brief tightly defined .I marvel at the outcome but still feel that the initial idea was a bit too heritage led . but what do I know!
I could never realistically afford a Vincent,but was lucky enough to have owned a Cagiva Raptor that appeared a few times in shot,which is incidentally a hybrid of Suzuki SV engine and Cagiva frame.
Fantastic video that has helped with som gaps in my historical knowledge of the Vincent. I too have a Fritz Egli framed motorcycle in the form of a Sachs 650 roadster.
I don't know if someone from the channel reads this, but the engine they are using here; May that be the Aussie made Irving-Vincent? By enthusiast Ken Horner who contacted Phil Irving in retirement down under and got his blessing in further developing this beautiful brute of an engine? Irving-Vincent, which makes their own line of racing motorcycles based on this engine, including a 4 valve 1600cc "Pro-Twin Class" with a whopping 186 Bhp at 7000 rpm(!) - I mean, from an engine conceived around the beginning of WW2, with a flywheel and all, with all the pressure and torque vectors and hoopla going on in there - jeez! The exhaust note must be divine. But I digress, this is about Godet Egli-Vincent - no doubt the most beautiful Cafe Racer ever built.
Hey, yeah, Alex from the channel here. Didn't know about Ken so thanks for sharing that and we've started to look into his work. You know much about what Ken's up to now?
Congratulations on a very interesting video. Also,congratulations on NOT having to include music 'in the background',which inevitably drowns out the narrator.
Had seen a few motor cycle magazines with these in them with interviews,, had a modern take with the electric start and conventional front forks,, great motorcycle such a loss,, any out there now lucky owners ☘️☘️☘️☘️from Northern Ireland great viewing
This was very interesting ! Thank you for sharing! the glaring difference between the Vincent series c and the Egli is the Vincent has what looks like a mono shock…I can’t really tell for sure but that’s what it looks like. Why did Egli go with the dual shock? Also, with shock technology these days, it’s easier then ever to have a back end look like an original Vincent(with the mono shock). Can you speak to how the original rides as a result of the mono-shock ? And if you buy and Egli from the factory, can you say…I want a mono shock look versus the dual shock?
The Series B Vincent rear suspension has two spring boxes, and relies on friction dampers which also support the seat. The Series C models got a hydraulic damper between the springs. It's Vincent's own design, made in their factory. An identical Vicent damper was fitted to the Girdraulic front fork fitted to Series C models. The Girdraulic is a much-developed stiff and strong version of a girder fork, with hydraulic damping, hence the name. It has good and bad features in standard form. Egli tried hard to make his Vincent racers handle well, to modern race standards in the '60s, and was not able to achieve that by developing the stock Vincent chassis. That's why he developed his own. He has recently stated that the current developments in Vincent suspension and spring / damping would have enabled him to achieve what he needed (to race competitively and win) while keeping the main elements of the Vincent. Well, there are some modern spring / damper arrangements which transform the Vincent. Currently you can buy an AVO rear coil-over, and a softer damper designed for the front (the original Vincent Series C dampers were the same front and back). The front suspension development gets a bit more radical. There's a new steering stem which alters the suspension geometry for less anti-dive, and more constant trail. That eliminates the infamous Vincent tank slapper which occasionally strikes.... Mine also has ball bearings in the lower link to eliminate friction. Add a softer set of springs and a hydraulic steering damper, and you get a fine handling bike. No need to toss it away and make a new chassis, just careful detailed development, FWIW all Egli Vincents were dual shock. After the first 20 or so, they were made in England under licence by Slater, who actually got the frames made by Cheney. Later bikes made by Fritz Egli, usually with Japanese engines had space for a monoshock. It passes from the top of the triangulated rear fork, (a lighter version of the Vincent one), and goes to a lug under the tubular oil tank / main frame tube. That's right where the rear cylinder head is on an Egli Vincent V twin. Of course, if you put a Comet engine in your Egli frame, there 's no problem going monoshock. An Egli Comet is a rare bike, mind. Vincent folk also have a habit of putting V twin engines in place of the single. It's nice to be able to swap around.
Pure bliss of a motorcycle fit for heaven. My only complaint, $100K US for a custom motorcycle and you get a mild steal frame? OK, save a few $$ and don't build it in titanium, but you would think they could engineer it in Chrome Alloy, Magnesium Alloy... Maybe its a $3K option, who knows?
My personal opinion is that the single cylinder Vincent was a good bike but the twin was a lot of work to maintain heavy to ride and park and just not realistic as a form of transportation cleaning it was a full time job .I believe the engine was not as robust as many other British bikes .Of course bikes today are rarely used to go to work and have been relegated to setting speed records at Bonneville and the Sunday run to the lakes.
Did anyone else think using a water hose to measure oil flow and oil capacity on a 2020 built motorcycle with a Vincent name doesn't seem or sound like the innovative Vincent of old? A few other things also seemed non-innovative and behind the times on these bikes carrying the great Vincent name for the time period they're suppose to represent.
It isn't a garden hose, FYI, it is engineering grade tubing and please help us all by showing your example of models of bikes that display oil flow and capacity in a single glance? also your details of what wasnt innovative would be welcome?
@@johnbrannan7953 That’s funny. Engineer Tubing. Why not call nuts and bolts “Engineer Fastners” Sorry, but I call things as I see them. And a $0.20 piece of tubing is not innovative. Any hoot, if Philip was alive today he might have incorporated an oil gage to give his customers a sense of value. Something everyone is familiar with and can glance at to see if oil is flowing/moving as it should. What do these bikes sell for again? Otherwise, the bike looks like it hasn’t evolved since it’s conception in the late 40’s.
The side level tube is OK providing it never comes loose, but the top one looks cheap and home made, does not seem to belong to a deluxe 21st century bike; plus you could not see it riding at night so if I had one would replace it with an illuminated pressure gauge or a red idiot light. Otherwise a superb machine.
a stock vincent black shadow is a good machine on the road, and valuable as an artifact of its day. but there are better engines today, if you want to build a super machine. it's seems a waste to wrap a gee whiz frame around a ho hum engine.
@@johnbrannan7953 ..ruining the asthetic part of the bike , conventional tube type would look fab !!!😥😥...adore the race brake drums though !!!😍😍glad they didnt go for the disk setup.👍👍
So heartening to find a detailed, well considered and detailed production on UA-cam! Well done - I look forward to the movie.
Hi Chris, thanks for your kind words, glad you enjoyed the video!
I used to think the Ducati 750 sport was the most beautiful bike, but I think the Godet Vincent has to take that honour. This was a very interesting and inspiring video.
In the days when Ducati 750 and 860 bikes were dropping like flies due to oiling failure (frequently the use of the wrong oils), a few of them got given Vincent engines. The engine fits really well, and is a fine alternative to an Egli. They are referred to as a Vincati
I owned the 1st Egli Godet he built (the bue one sent to Bilbao in the Guggenheim Museum we can see in the video), with a genuine 1000 cc engine from a B Rapide , wonderful bike , and Patrick let me test a 1330 Godet with 5 gear box, it was amazing ! what a wonderful bike, I miss him as a friend and as a genious mecanic (sorry for my poor English) They are the most desirable classic motorbikes (thanks to David as well)
Thanks for your comments Dominique, that’s very interesting, I’m sure other people will be interested too.
@@TheClassicMotorcycleChannel thank you (I wrote some correction)
No problem, all makes perfect sense and is very clear :)
Thank you for your comments Dominique.
"70 to 80 hp is ideal for a machine like this", I couldn't agree more, air cooling keeps it simple, and there's a hell of a lot more to enjoying a motorcycle ride than just trying to get to "point B" as fast as humanly possible. BEAUTIFUL, clean machines, compared to some modern motorcycles that look like full sized plastic toys. My main love was Norton Commandos, but I would have loved one of these if they had been within my means. I did enjoy a "tuber" '97 Buell, which would be the modern (90's) equivalent, that was very satisfying in the Rocky Mountains...Thanks for a very informative and nicely done video.
So many Bike-builders have been inspired by Vincent .The Yamaha TR1 XV1000 was inspired by Vincent , they bought a Vincent , stripped-it and came up with their first big V-twin , it is a great bike to ride and own ,like this one Godet-Egli) it would never have existed but for Vincent . Thanks for a great vid , such beautiful machines. Dave NZ
Thank you so much for posting this video up. It is comforting to know that there are still film makers out in the world, who produce interesting, informative and quality content. Nowadays, when "Television" is catering to the lowest common denomination "Intellect-wise", these video films are an oasis of quality in a desert of dross!
Losing Patrick Godet was a huge blow to the classic motorcycle world. Thanks for a great review. Dean in Oxfordshire.
Very true Dean, his legend lives on eh!
Patrick was a true gentleman, such a pleasure to have made his acquaintance, albeit so briefly. RIP Patrick.
That was a courageous line through that first blind bend!
Awesome! So beautiful! Happy to know that one can still buy a “Vincent” ! I don’t think I could afford one but still! I’m happy to know there are craftsman out there building these awesome motorcycles! TY
Thank you guys for putting this insightful video together. It joins up some very significant people and their technical achievements over seven decades; a New Zealander, Phil Irving, in the late '40s through to a very clever Frenchman, M. Godet (RIP). Lovely machines, knowledgeable commentary and raw enthusiam...a great channel!
Hey Andy, thank you for your kind words. Lot of people involved in this project and they all really pulled together. Glad you enjoyed the video!
Phil Irving was Australian.
Born in Victoria
Thank you for this wonderful video.
In my younger days I owned a black and gold Ducati 900SS with Conti exhausts and Dellorto carbs with open bellmouths.
That's as close as I got to these beautiful machines.
Keep up the good work.
Wow what a fabulous video you have made here, a credit to all involved.
They are indeed beautiful machines.
Hey Doug, thank you for you kind words, much appreciated! Glad you enjoyed the video.
Thankyou. Glad you enjoyed it.
Both my Twins, Yamaha XV920RH and Honda VTR1000F, incorporate the engine as a stressed member inspired by Vincent. I’d love to own any Vincent, however I am very happy with my Twins :)
This channel deserves a million subscribers already !
Comment of the day, thank you Yogaraj, spoken like a true fan of the Vincent :)
Great video, you're all obviously knowledgeable bike enthusiasts, l had an early 70,s Ducati 750 which had the idea of the v twin engine as an integral part of the frame, ie supported from the top of the motor,that bike looked very similar in profile and stance to the Godet Vincent, great work people 👍
I've been wanting that bike for 25 years! Thanks for the video because that's the closest I'll ever get to $$$. Thank you very much for the video. it was excellent!
Two-wheeled jewelry.
To quote "Fiddler on the Roof" - "If I were a Rich Man" , I would own a couple of these beautiful motorcycles..
I ran across reference to Vincent motorcycles when I was about 12, late sixties and have only laid hands on a couple, never ridden one. I'm approaching seventy and can only look on from the outside. Thanks for this showcase!
I think this is a fantastic idea. Especially using a replica vincent engine. Bravo!! Keep em coming. Looking forward to the movie.
excellent overview of the Godet -Eg;li - Vincent, but leaves us chomping at the bit for the release of 'Speed is Expensive', this surely must be up there with 'films that were longest in production'.
Hey, too right, we can't wait for it to come out!
Thanks . This film was a day in shooting , a couple of weeks in edit and twenty minutes long. Davids film has hundreds of hours of archive to edit, he has traveled the world to do interviews and will be the definitive film on the subject, so has been a hugely more time consuming and expensive film to produce. I along with very many others will be delighted to see his mammoth task delivered and we all very much look forward to seeing it. I hope you will enjoy it too?
Thank you very much for a really interesting and enjoyable video. Best wishes with the movie. Can't wait to see it.
Thanks Mike! Check out The Mighty Garage channel guys, Highly recommended!
Thankyou for your comment. It was always the intention to share Patricks genius with the world. We are all looking forward to Davids film too and Im sure it will be well worth the wait.
Every decent engineer knows that the name of the game is a series of artfully made compromises. The ones on these new Vincent's seem particularly well thought out and implemented, so it's a lovely job all round, well done to all involved.
Yes you are correct you have to compromise that is the designers art but you also need a brief tightly defined .I marvel at the outcome but still feel that the initial idea was a bit too heritage led . but what do I know!
Superb machine and wonderfully knowledgeable experts 👍👌
Nice to see a Moto Morini lurking in the background.
I owned 3 of them. Super little machines.
Great one John! Now I know all about the Godet. EEEE AWWW!!!
I could never realistically afford a Vincent,but was lucky enough to have owned a Cagiva Raptor that appeared a few times in shot,which is incidentally a hybrid of Suzuki SV engine and Cagiva frame.
Thanks, the raptor is top fun too and ,did you notice my Morini in the background? Bit of a vtwin thing going on here!
John Brannan That’s great,I have three Morini,you can see them on my UA-cam channel.
It's the modern improvements which takes it to the next level of a Vincent dream bike, old look with new styling.
So true :)
Couldn't agree more , Thanks for your comment.
Wow my club had the pleasure of 2 Godet Vincent's at our Berry bike show .they were then raced at IoM one a twin the other a single
Art and poetry on wheels! 😎😍
What a machine! Just amazing ...
Fantastic video that has helped with som gaps in my historical knowledge of the Vincent. I too have a Fritz Egli framed motorcycle in the form of a Sachs 650 roadster.
I don't know if someone from the channel reads this, but the engine they are using here; May that be the Aussie made Irving-Vincent? By enthusiast Ken Horner who contacted Phil Irving in retirement down under and got his blessing in further developing this beautiful brute of an engine? Irving-Vincent, which makes their own line of racing motorcycles based on this engine, including a 4 valve 1600cc "Pro-Twin Class" with a whopping 186 Bhp at 7000 rpm(!) - I mean, from an engine conceived around the beginning of WW2, with a flywheel and all, with all the pressure and torque vectors and hoopla going on in there - jeez!
The exhaust note must be divine. But I digress, this is about Godet Egli-Vincent - no doubt the most beautiful Cafe Racer ever built.
Hey, yeah, Alex from the channel here. Didn't know about Ken so thanks for sharing that and we've started to look into his work. You know much about what Ken's up to now?
Congratulations on a very interesting video. Also,congratulations on NOT having to include music 'in the background',which inevitably drowns out the narrator.
Thanks for the nice comments Graham, glad you enjoyed the video :)
A magnificent machine!
Glad you like it Paul!
This machine and the MV Agusta 750s are just about my dream bikes, if I win the lottery...
Nice video, nice motorcycle!! Thank you from Hungary!!
Cheers for your nice comments!
Very interesting.
Thank you... so much !
Thank you for your lovely photos :)
Thank you, glad you enjoyed it.
@@johnbrannan7953 Thanks
I would pay to work in a factory like that, and go to work with just a mouthfull of hot gravel for breakfast 👍
Yes but apparently the job specification requires spreading gasket sealant with a naked finger.
I love it too. Thank you for the video
Beautiful, fantastic, awesome 😎 love every part absolutely a gem, thank you from N.Z.😎👍🇳🇿🌈😎KIWI PIP 😎👍🇳🇿🌈😎
The pinacle of all motorcycles, as far as i am concerned😊
Had seen a few motor cycle magazines with these in them with interviews,, had a modern take with the electric start and conventional front forks,, great motorcycle such a loss,, any out there now lucky owners ☘️☘️☘️☘️from Northern Ireland great viewing
Thanks for your nice comments Cecil!
Should have more riding scenes, in my opinion.
This was very interesting ! Thank you for sharing! the glaring difference between the Vincent series c and the Egli is the Vincent has what looks like a mono shock…I can’t really tell for sure but that’s what it looks like. Why did Egli go with the dual shock? Also, with shock technology these days, it’s easier then ever to have a back end look like an original Vincent(with the mono shock). Can you speak to how the original rides as a result of the mono-shock ? And if you buy and Egli from the factory, can you say…I want a mono shock look versus the dual shock?
The Series B Vincent rear suspension has two spring boxes, and relies on friction dampers which also support the seat. The Series C models got a hydraulic damper between the springs. It's Vincent's own design, made in their factory. An identical Vicent damper was fitted to the Girdraulic front fork fitted to Series C models. The Girdraulic is a much-developed stiff and strong version of a girder fork, with hydraulic damping, hence the name. It has good and bad features in standard form.
Egli tried hard to make his Vincent racers handle well, to modern race standards in the '60s, and was not able to achieve that by developing the stock Vincent chassis. That's why he developed his own. He has recently stated that the current developments in Vincent suspension and spring / damping would have enabled him to achieve what he needed (to race competitively and win) while keeping the main elements of the Vincent.
Well, there are some modern spring / damper arrangements which transform the Vincent. Currently you can buy an AVO rear coil-over, and a softer damper designed for the front (the original Vincent Series C dampers were the same front and back). The front suspension development gets a bit more radical. There's a new steering stem which alters the suspension geometry for less anti-dive, and more constant trail. That eliminates the infamous Vincent tank slapper which occasionally strikes.... Mine also has ball bearings in the lower link to eliminate friction. Add a softer set of springs and a hydraulic steering damper, and you get a fine handling bike. No need to toss it away and make a new chassis, just careful detailed development,
FWIW all Egli Vincents were dual shock. After the first 20 or so, they were made in England under licence by Slater, who actually got the frames made by Cheney. Later bikes made by Fritz Egli, usually with Japanese engines had space for a monoshock. It passes from the top of the triangulated rear fork, (a lighter version of the Vincent one), and goes to a lug under the tubular oil tank / main frame tube. That's right where the rear cylinder head is on an Egli Vincent V twin. Of course, if you put a Comet engine in your Egli frame, there 's no problem going monoshock. An Egli Comet is a rare bike, mind. Vincent folk also have a habit of putting V twin engines in place of the single. It's nice to be able to swap around.
@@pashakdescilly7517 this was an amazing m, informative and detailed response ! TY!
@@garyb2392 well, you asked an intelligent question....
Beautiful motorcycle! When can I buy one.
Search Vincent Godet on Google, they make these bespoke bikes in France, try this www.godet-motorcycles.fr/
Great video!! 🇨🇭
Thank you Martin!
I wish i was a millionaire every time i see a vincent. Especially the Egli's.
I know a billionaire, but he just collects Ferraris and McLarens.
Stunner! If only we could dump those huge yellow plates on the back of our bikes.
I keep the yellow plates, as it draws questions from the innocents!
Pure bliss of a motorcycle fit for heaven. My only complaint, $100K US for a custom motorcycle and you get a mild steal frame? OK, save a few $$ and don't build it in titanium, but you would think they could engineer it in Chrome Alloy, Magnesium Alloy... Maybe its a $3K option, who knows?
What would the cost of a new one with shipping to New York state in America I wonder?
WoW I did not know this, what is the cost?
Are these still available?
Inverted forks, discs & mono shock ?
The pinacle of all motorcycles,i will ride my thruxton and just dream away about the egli Goddard vincent....😢
My personal opinion is that the single cylinder Vincent was a good bike but the twin was a lot of work to maintain heavy to ride and park and just not realistic as a form of transportation cleaning it was a full time job .I believe the engine was not as robust as many other British bikes .Of course bikes today are rarely used to go to work and have been relegated to setting speed records at Bonneville and the Sunday run to the lakes.
She is sooo pretty... got to start saving my pennies !
Egli did a 900 Duc as well I thought,
I've heard rumors that the Australian air force used some Vincent engines in their target drones in the late 50s, any truth in that ??!!
inspirational machines. my first loves are at the other end of the spectrum: the flathead indians of the forties.
Ahhhh .... the two-litre Vitesse in the shed !!
Combien ?
Why on earth would anyone vote this video down? 🤔
Did anyone else think using a water hose to measure oil flow and oil capacity on a 2020 built motorcycle with a Vincent name doesn't seem or sound like the innovative Vincent of old?
A few other things also seemed non-innovative and behind the times on these bikes carrying the great Vincent name for the time period they're suppose to represent.
He lost me as I saw the carburators and no Katalytic Konverter. You have no chance to get a number plate for it here in Germany
It isn't a garden hose, FYI, it is engineering grade tubing and please help us all by showing your example of models of bikes that display oil flow and capacity in a single glance? also your details of what wasnt innovative would be welcome?
@@johnbrannan7953 That’s funny. Engineer Tubing. Why not call nuts and bolts “Engineer Fastners” Sorry, but I call things as I see them. And a $0.20 piece of tubing is not innovative. Any hoot, if Philip was alive today he might have incorporated an oil gage to give his customers a sense of value. Something everyone is familiar with and can glance at to see if oil is flowing/moving as it should. What do these bikes sell for again?
Otherwise, the bike looks like it hasn’t evolved since it’s conception in the late 40’s.
The side level tube is OK providing it never comes loose, but the top one looks cheap and home made, does not seem to belong to a deluxe 21st century bike; plus you could not see it riding at night so if I had one would replace it with an illuminated pressure gauge or a red idiot light. Otherwise a superb machine.
👍👍👍🇦🇺
a stock vincent black shadow is a good machine on the road, and valuable as an artifact of its day.
but there are better engines today, if you want to build a super machine. it's seems a waste to wrap a gee whiz frame around a ho hum engine.
Hand squeezing silicone in the vicinity of oil galleries is a heresy.
Any rice burner will run rings around these old bikes.
Absolutely uncomfortable and hard suspension, everything vibrated like hell in hi speed.(and low too)
..box type swing arm is big mistake !!! Ruining all the efforts !!😥😥
why?
@@johnbrannan7953 ..ruining the asthetic part of the bike , conventional tube type would look fab !!!😥😥...adore the race brake drums though !!!😍😍glad they didnt go for the disk setup.👍👍