The Vintagent Classics: God Speed You! Black Emperor
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I'm a bad boy.
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Royal Enfield Photo of the Week
Click on the image to see it full size. FOR SALE in Boston, Mass. 2022 Classic 350. 400 miles. $4,000.
CO 2011 scrambler
CO 2011 bobber
CA 1999 Bullet 350
FL 2020 Trials Works Replica
MA 1959 Trailblazer
IL 500 Custom
CA 1956 Trailblazer
TX 1959 Patrol Car
Women racing for Royal Enfield
2026 Build Train Race applications are open for spots on the women's racing series in road racing and flat track. RideApart
UT 2017 GT 535
New Scram 440 vs. the Scram 411
Royal Enfields were Indians in '50s
For sale on eBay: ads from the 1950s show Royal Enfields being marketed as U.S. Indian motorcycles. eBay
Classic Vs. Classic, 350 Vs. 650 twin
Can he start it? Bullet idle 6 years
Paul Henshaw pulls a 350 Royal Enfield out of the shed and tries to start it. Can he? Watch: YouTube
PA 1970 Interceptor
Dan Holmes DRS racer for sale
Friday, September 4, 2009
Kick starting your Enfield adds drama to life
Kick starting a Royal Enfield or any motorcycle is a dramatic motion that (hopefully) ends with the motorcycle roaring to life. Few things in life say "Let's Roll!" with more emphasis.
This has been reinforced on television and in the movies, where a kick start typically provides delicious punctuation to any scene including a motorcycle. Americans of my generation watched the television show Then Came Bronson. Motorcyclist Jim Bronson (in the video snippet above) was portrayed as a bit of a drifter, looking for the meaning of life, and repeatedly meeting pretty girls along the way.
Somehow, he never seemed to think any of them were somehow tied up in the meaning of life. When things got gooey, Jim would throw a leg over his Harley-Davidson, give the girl one last lingering look, and swing into action.
I've read that actor Michael Parks actually thumbed an electric starter button as he kicked. I don't know if that is true and I don't see why it would have been necessary. Hollywood has complete control over sound, so it wouldn't have mattered in filming if the motorcycle started, as long as it wasn't immediately supposed to drive off.
A director who did biker movies once commented that one of the most difficult scenes to photograph was the inevitable moment when the gang members charge out of the clubhouse, mount their bikes, kick start and roar off to avenge some wrong or save a buddy.
"The bikes would never start," he said in a documentary on his work.
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I've ridden English and now Indian 500 singles for forty years. Enfields are easy to start. Period. I'm thinking of posting the nearly obligatory "Look! I can start my own motorcycle!" video on YouTube. Barefoot.
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