![]() This is such a cool aspect, and for those of you who know me will know by now that this is old school at its best … kick-starting a Super Stock pan-head Harley – or any bike for that matter – is so ‘my thing’. ![]() Even the mirror is an exact replica and only good enough for looking at the bugs in your teeth.īut what really separates this from many of the other tribute machines that are available is the lack of an electric starter. The studs on the seat are correct US Air Force dress uniform buttons, chromed as the original. Special attention was paid to small details such as the hooter and ‘mouse trap’ clutch mechanism. This example has kept to the original formula in so many ways, with its front forks that stretch out in front of you at the same 42-degree angle, the higher-than-shoulder-height ‘ape hanger’ handlebars (which I believe are illegal in the USA today), super-high sissy bar and, just like with the original, no front brake and a pathetic excuse of a rear brake. The original Captain America was constructed with no regard for handling or safety, but rather “it was all about the aesthetics” claims Fonda. The tribute machine featured here is on loan to FMM by a private individual who commissioned the bike and it is a nut-and-bolt copy of the real machine, right down to the last millimetre. However, what is undeniable is that both Captain America and Billy Bike started their lives as 1964 Harley-Davidson pan-head police-issue motorcycles – “another dig at the man” as they would say – and are probably the most famous motorcycles in the world today, especially Captain America. To this day, there is still controversy as to just who was the true creator of Captain America and the Billy Bike. Two of the names associated with building the choppers are Clifford Vaughs and Ben Hardy, but it is not mentioned if they were ever part of the mystery seven. Fonda was quoted as saying that he used seven chaps from Watts, a suburb of southern Los Angeles, to build them, and if you study American history you will find that Watts was a very unsettled place back in the Sixties and not the place you would expect Hollywood to be building motorcycles. The more famous of the choppers was nicknamed Captain America, the other known as the Billy Bike, and both were custom built just for the movie.Įasy Rider’s ‘free soul’, anti-establishment theme was even carried over in the building of both bikes. Although not all may remember the full extent of the story line, boy oh boy do they remember the two motorcycles – choppers, to be more precise – that were used in the making of what became a landmark movie. ![]() However, for most there is one that stands out above the rest – Easy Rider, released in 1969 and starring Peter Fonda, Dennis Hopper and Jack Nicholson. Many people will have an iconic biker movie, be it The Wild One, Mad Max, On Any Sunday or Silver Dream Racer. FMM curator Wayne Harley is a self-confessed motorcycle enthusiast and this month he goes cruisin’ with Fonda and Hopper… ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |