5 Classic British 350cc Motorcycles of the 1950s

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  • Опубликовано: 17 окт 2024

Комментарии • 116

  • @upsidedowndog1256
    @upsidedowndog1256 Год назад +8

    As a 53 year old American I have heard of almost all of these bikes but never seen them. I read all of the magazines from 1980-2010 and they always talked about old Britbikes but never showed them (it was all about the new stuff I guess). Every writer seemed to have the perfect one in a state of restoration and once running got bit by something. Seeing them here makes them real. They are all beautiful and interesting bikes! Thanks for doing these. As an aircraft mechanic in GA, these are my forte' of mechanics. Old school. Kevin Cameron of Cycle World taught me more about aircraft engines than almost anybody except a few departed souls. One last Friday. RIP William Hale! God speed, brother.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      Reading the wrong magazines it seems
      Seen em all and ridden a couple, the go surprisingly well although they slow after 60mph / 100kph

  • @31wdriley
    @31wdriley Год назад +3

    I enjoyed the show. I had a 350 Matchless in the early1970's. I had a '54 MAC as well and swapped the Matchless for a '54MSS. I still have the MAC and MSS 50 years later and the remain one year younger than me. Easy bikes to fall in love with.

  • @andrewjohnson6633
    @andrewjohnson6633 Год назад +2

    It was nice to see a Velocette 350 here. I know my late father had one which he wrote off just before I was born in 1956. My guess is that it was probably the type you showed as I wouldn't have thought he was able to afford a fairly new Viper at the time.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +3

      Almost certainly would have been exactly like that
      Most people didn’t bother with sporting models back then
      They were more about transport and less of a leisure toy back then

  • @timw4030
    @timw4030 6 месяцев назад

    A lovely history lesson. Beautiful machines

  • @Jayaramnamburi
    @Jayaramnamburi 2 месяца назад

    That AAX 2293 bike was mine it’s 1956 model Royal Enfield Bullet 350…. The bike has so many original missing parts !! But I have sourced all the parts from England. Very soon I’ll restore my bike with factory specs. Thank you for posting my bike video !!!

  • @pauloakes5718
    @pauloakes5718 Год назад +1

    I’m confused got a Daytona and want to go somewhere else had it for eight years and loved it.Time to go back!

  • @mrh8854
    @mrh8854 Год назад +2

    Another great presentation....

  • @Davidwright-du5el
    @Davidwright-du5el Год назад +1

    Thank you for yet again another brilliant video on a range of bikes that were mostly overlooked back in the day. Once you passed your test on a 250 it was straight to a 500 or 650 completely bypassing the 350 range. Thanks for a great insight into a range of bikes I have little knowledge of👍

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      Well no they weren’t really because in their day there was no 250 learner law
      350 class was extremely popular up until the beginning of the 60s and the 250 law

  • @johnscotcher9753
    @johnscotcher9753 Год назад +1

    I bought a rough Triumph Twenty One exactly the same colour as the one in the video in 1973 for the princely sum of £20 as the owner thought the main bearings had gone. I knew it was actually just a loose alternator rotor on the end of the crankshaft and once tightened up, it ran OK and I used it for a while over a winter before selling it at a profit of £5.......all that use and a profit at the end of it - how things have changed!

  • @dereksmith5019
    @dereksmith5019 9 месяцев назад

    I like the video and look forward to the A.M.C. video on AJS and Matchless . I have a '65 AJS 16 restored professionally . Robert Smith , moto-journalist , wrote about it in the American publication
    "Motorcycle Classics" a few years ago .

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  9 месяцев назад

      That would be some of epic
      With a sad ending
      Passion
      War
      Not much romance however 😂

    • @dereksmith5019
      @dereksmith5019 9 месяцев назад

      I agree , after thinking about your answer for a bit , here in southern B.C. Canada , both AJS and Matchless are rare brands to see , and rarer to own . When the AJ found me , i could hardly believe my eyes . It had not ran in years , so i took it to the only English bike shop in B.C. that i could i find . I enjoy riding it , on sunny warm Sunday mornings , and
      my son will inherit it , in the near future .@@bikerdood1100

  • @IanLawrie-l9q
    @IanLawrie-l9q Год назад +2

    Excellent selection 👍👏👌

  • @christopherbutler7115
    @christopherbutler7115 Год назад +1

    Great again !!
    Brilliant.. Many thanks.

  • @richardwilson6392
    @richardwilson6392 Год назад +2

    I think I saw my old ES 1 MZ Trophy during the 3 TA bit

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      Cool we are just getting an old TS125 back on the road at the moment

  • @hatchetjack1031
    @hatchetjack1031 Год назад +2

    Wanted a Royal Enfield since I was 15yo, am 72 now. Just got a beautiful Bullet 500 w/ only 5000 miles. Babied it for 500 wonderful miles before the transmission took a crap in my driveway. Now I have to drive 100 miles to find a mechanic who wants to charge like it's a Lamborghini. If I was in India, could get a new transmission delivered to my house for a bag of rice.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      Not just wet sumped through the primary
      Seriously is likely easier to get a second hand box
      Depending on what has actually happened

  • @aceofspades5786
    @aceofspades5786 Год назад

    Was always drawn to the Velo fishtail, great video thank you

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      There is something about them
      Originally called the Brooklands can because. As the track was next to houses races were obligated to fit them to compete there
      A real style icon

  • @derekp2674
    @derekp2674 Год назад

    Thanks, some cracking classics there.

  • @highdownmartin
    @highdownmartin Год назад

    To my eyes a rigid B31( or 33: hard to tell) is an absolutely gorgeous looking bike. The Velo is handsome but the Beeza is aesthetically perfect.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      The early post war bikes are the most attractive for sure

  • @Aubury
    @Aubury Год назад

    Some old faces here. The bathtub Triumph l owned. A long stroke, docile machine, and oil leaks. Nostalgia makes forgiving there failings easier..

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      Why did Triumph use external push rod tubes till the end 🤔

  • @russcattell955i
    @russcattell955i Год назад

    At 14 years old (early 70's) I learned to ride on a stripped Red Hunter 350 on fields. My dad had restored a Tiger 90 which I'd secretly (I think) ride too when he was at work. The Tiger seemed so fast at the time.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      My wife’s first big ish bike was a tiger 90
      Lovely little bikes but above 60mph very buzzy

  • @billmcclean6986
    @billmcclean6986 8 месяцев назад

    Brilliant bikerdood thanks again

  • @paulscofield8506
    @paulscofield8506 Год назад

    The viper gave me one of the biggest shocks I’ve had in biking. I parked up my then ultra modern cb250 k4 Honda outside a friend of a friends house . He had a very scruffy viper on the drive which he described as nippy bike and offered me a go . I thought this should be a laugh I bet it’ll hardly pull away . I couldn’t believe it, not only was it decidedly “ nippy “ I knew it would take my Honda even though the bhp was the same ,or claimed . The triumph 21 (had one and rode another) was the most asthmatic motorcycle I have ever ridden .my mates Enfield 250 crusader would have destroyed it in every department ( possibly excepting reliability.)

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      Well of course the viper made good torque and velocette are rather more honest about their bike’s performance than some of the later Japanese companies

  • @johnjones4621
    @johnjones4621 Год назад

    My old man has a B31 in the early 70s and while he was always knocking if my YDS7 i was left to ride he’s B31 but i came to enjoy that bike a lot it had a lot of character and was extremely comfortable shame about the brakes 😊

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      Well given how awful rads were in the 40s and 50s and the wooden tyres
      Powerful breaks would not have been such a great thing
      Bikes like these prove that it ain’t all about how fast it goes

  • @pedrothewise2584
    @pedrothewise2584 Год назад

    i had a 58 bathtub..much to the dissmay of the old guy i bought it from i semi chopped it with 4inch overs nice paint job was a sweetie.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      Ooo
      Ouch I can feel for the old guy
      I would dumpy the body work though to be honest

    • @pedrothewise2584
      @pedrothewise2584 Год назад

      @@bikerdood1100 me too now, nearly 50 yrs ago

  • @brockett
    @brockett Год назад

    I bought a 1954 B31 and it came with a box containing a 500 barrel, head and flywheels. Easy conversion to 500 and all new bearings, rebuilt crank, valves springs etc. I then hitched it to a Watsonion single seat sidecar. It says much for the frame and forks that it was a superb chariot assisted maybe by me having 16 inch alloy rims laced to the hubs. Although I renewed the clutch plates the gearbox was never touched apart from fresh oil now and then. For three years it was my everyday transport and only an expanding family forced me into the world of Reliants and cars. Ah! if only I had had the space to store it for a few years.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      As you can see in the video we strapped out Bullet 350 to a chair
      Did surprisingly well on holidays in Wales

    • @highdownmartin
      @highdownmartin Год назад

      I had an m33 for 30 years from 1990 to 2013. Would have taken the head off and I had four original head bolts but the ones in it just twisted a bit( torque wind up) and sprung back. So I never tried too hard as I thought if I don’t need to, why bother? I’d only end up with studs snapping in the head and spark erosion required etc etc. never let me down had a light chair on it for a few years and enjoyed an outfit. Big end knocked a little but never got worse. 1948 it was and I regretted getting rid of it so much I bought a 49 m33 last week. Perfect restoration but the bloke hadn’t ridden in the ten years he’d had it. That’s gonna change!
      Beautiful bikes

    • @brockett
      @brockett Год назад

      @@highdownmartin M33 frame already had the sidecar lugs or so I believe. Was it also a rigid rear end?

    • @highdownmartin
      @highdownmartin Год назад

      @@brockett it did Dave. And yess it was a rigid. Basically an m20 with a stronger motor ,never changed a sprocket and it may have been on chair gearing as it wasn’t long legged but solo would leave me average in his car well behind at lights. Paid five hundred quid for it and it was sort of chopped with six in overs on it and lots of chrome bits, pri case engine plates yokes toolbox etc. bought off a woman in south west London. She described it as a “ good birds bike” lo seat height and not too massive.

  • @jobucklandbuckland8031
    @jobucklandbuckland8031 Год назад +2

    another great video ,

  • @kellypaws
    @kellypaws Год назад +3

    A neutral finder? Say what you like, that's a feature every bike ought to have.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      It’s brilliant. Really good in heavy traffic and saves the clutch from getting hot
      Works every time too
      They can keep the TFT screen it’s far more useful

  • @thorsten3558
    @thorsten3558 Год назад

    Always nice to look at

  • @kerryburns6041
    @kerryburns6041 Год назад

    I started with a ´57 BSA B31, a great bike. Ariel Hubs were a good addition and I fitted a Triumph clutch which was much better. Norton Roadholder fork stanchions stiffened up the front end, and I uprated it to 12 volts with a regulator from a tractor, and a coil from a Morris 1000. I added an oil filter and fitted a Goldie "Touring" cam.
    Yes, a great "original" bike.
    Sold it to a Swiss guy who was going to turn it into a Gold Star.
    Fame at last ...

  • @rickh8380
    @rickh8380 Год назад +1

    I really love the old British, German, and Italian bikes. But they always sound like they desperately need a valve adjust. Guess that's my OCD kicking in. 😄 I love the content on this channel. Look forward to new videos being posted. Thanks for sharing. Cheers

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      No they sound just right

    • @rickh8380
      @rickh8380 Год назад

      @@bikerdood1100 Lol. Yeah you're right. So used to the Japanese bikes. Cheers

    • @kasperkjrsgaard1447
      @kasperkjrsgaard1447 Год назад

      When I bought my Triumph Trident T160 after years of owning japanese bikes, it took me weeks to get used to the sound of the pushrods and valves. They were so noisy 😂

    • @rickh8380
      @rickh8380 Год назад

      @@kasperkjrsgaard1447 First time I heard them I cringed. Must have been my OCD kicking in. Let me adjust those for you 😄

  • @chrisweeks6973
    @chrisweeks6973 Год назад

    Back in '63 I borrowed a mate's BSA B31 for my 150-mile weekend commute, with a view to buying it from him. I found that it was little, if anything, improved on my Jawa 250, so the deal didn't happen. Later, in '65/6 I use to borrow a 3TA from a local in Borneo; whilst ok on the road, it was a real handful on jungle tracks!

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      Can’t imagine a 3Ta as a jungle bike

    • @chrisweeks6973
      @chrisweeks6973 Год назад

      @@bikerdood1100 Yes, it was pretty crap. On the other hand, a little Suzuki 90 that I used to borrow there handled the jungle tracks with ease.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      @@chrisweeks6973 that’s because it wade bugger all

  • @ducatobeing
    @ducatobeing Год назад

    As a boy I saw all of these all over the place, a neighbour had a B31 identical to the one in the video. The 350s tend to get overlooked, which is a shame. They were good practical machines that didn't break the bank.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      In reality it’s what most people actually brought
      Everyone fantasies about Bonnies but a lot em never actually owned one
      The 350 was the two wheeled family cat of the 50s

  • @michaelvincent-it9ls
    @michaelvincent-it9ls Год назад

    I bought a 68 tiger in the 80s for very cheep. Nice lil bike. I had a 1955 Harley Davidson 45inch flathead I was building. As a friend of the dirt bike Enduro yes!!!! So I took her up in the woods got used to the weight it's size in a day o was flying around like I owned the place. I took her out on the trials trails muddy rocky let's say she did very well I mean I could not believe how well this bike did in the woods. If I had a few bucks I wood make a scrambler out of a tiger.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      Well of course back in the day that’s exactly what the Tiger was intended for

  • @edstobbs9478
    @edstobbs9478 8 месяцев назад

    B31 actually had alternator/coil system by 1959- at least mine did!

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  8 месяцев назад

      Well that was the very last models and definitely not the case in the model shown here
      Hard to understand why BSA bothered because the market for 350 singles was shrinking by 59
      It was produced with an alternator not by 59 but only in 59 incidentally

  • @vorrdegard2176
    @vorrdegard2176 Год назад

    5:12 the emotion of Indian motorcyclist the good old BULLET
    The bike that I clicked for 😁

  • @PurityVendetta
    @PurityVendetta Год назад +4

    I have to say I find your channel infinity more engaging and informative than the pretty awful 'classic motorcycle' channel. You clearly take the time to research and assemble an entertaining video. I wish you and the channel all the best for the future.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      Thanks very much
      They just do their thing differently
      Wish I had access to as many bikes as they do I have to say

  • @barrymedd6859
    @barrymedd6859 6 месяцев назад

    I would like you to do the early Hondas of the 60s , the whole import range .
    My favourite would be the Honda c.b. 92 125 sport.

  • @Patshes
    @Patshes Год назад +1

    Sharp sharp dude🤙!

  • @charliepatterson9321
    @charliepatterson9321 Год назад

    Oooooh my gawd 😍 all so beautiful . Not one ugly girl at this party .
    You brought up a neutral finder . Be aware I don't know much about what I'm about to say . I don't know which company or bike actually implemented the 1 down 4 up that is now used on almost all bikes today ?
    I think that neutral was always at the bottom in the past yet someone found that concept dangerous because if you were stopped and a car was coming up too fast behind you it was quicker to kick the shifter down than it was to shift up .
    So the industry went to the 1 down and 4 up pattern for safety reasons .
    It would be interesting to see the bikes with neutral at the bottom and then a presentation of the very first 1 down 4 up bike .
    Like I said , I don't know much about what I was saying.
    I would enjoy seeing a history lesson regarding shift patterns .
    The bikes in this video are absolutely amazing. They stole my heart ❤

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      It was never at the very bottom on British bikes, that would the r the Japanese machines of the 60s and 70s
      GP bikes are still that way round incidentally so you can change up well cranked over, and Triumph were always up for up
      I switch between the two all the time and you get used to it very quickly

  • @williamnethercott4364
    @williamnethercott4364 Год назад +1

    A good selection of 350s although a little disappointing that you didn't include AJS/Matchless. I owned a 3TA many years ago, without the bathtub, it ran very smoothly at speeds up to 55mph and it handled very well.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      Already did a full video on the AMC bikes but I will of course be putting them in a later video

    • @williamnethercott4364
      @williamnethercott4364 Год назад

      @@bikerdood1100 I must have missed the 350s. I've seen the 250s and the AJS Model 18. I'll look out.

  • @skippmclovan1135
    @skippmclovan1135 Год назад +1

    AJS and Matchless 350 badging clones were enormously popular in the fifties in NZ. Were they somewhat less so in their home country of origin? Were they the budget working man's choice possibly?
    Seem to remember they were rated at 16hp, and the 500 versions at 22hp. They were famed in the mid-fifties for their rear 'jampots' and, for a pressed metal primary chain-case and cover that could never be effectively sealed by a clamped enormous rubber band provided in apparent hope by the manufacturer, because properly machined faces to seal together were just not present. Topping up the oil level in the primary chain-case was a daily maintenance necessity, however sufficient oil would fly backwards in service to keep the secondary chain permanently fully lubricated as a presumably unintended consequence. 1955 saw a magneto automatic advance/retard feature making starting slightly easier. The ball race bottom ends of these bikes with heavy dual pressed flywheels were enormously strong and were never known to break. They were substantial bikes presenting quite stable smooth handling. I had three of them all up, the last one a 1950 G80 500 requiring a carefully de-compressed TDC power stroke for starting with. The 350's could just be kicked over, still with quite some effort, without de-compression. The 350's were a tad easier to live with by comparison as everyday rides, they were a little lighter, and a little more agile, so one could say the 1955 G3LS 350 was my favourite bike for those days.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      I intend to put them in another collection, I did do a video on them talking about how they essentially failed because they remained in production way to long and lost a tonne of money.
      Very good bikes though

  • @Phiyedough
    @Phiyedough Год назад

    If Lucas had stopped making magnetos, what did Velocette use on the Viper?

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      Now your asking
      AMC went to a alternator
      As a low volume producer they switched manufacturers in 62 and were able to burn through stock on the shelf
      BSA & AMC built in too big a numbers
      To carry on

    • @chrisweeks6973
      @chrisweeks6973 Год назад

      @@bikerdood1100 I could well be wrong, but from hazy memory, I think they used a Wipac unit.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      @@chrisweeks6973 they moved to Lucas after Wipac stopped I believe
      Probably used what was available by the end

  • @Luppy-v8f
    @Luppy-v8f 3 месяца назад +1

    How about small companies like Excelsior and Ambassador ect

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  3 месяца назад +1

      @@Luppy-v8f good suggestion. I’ll look into that. Currently touring the US so won’t be doing anything new for a couple of months

  • @marsoelflaco5722
    @marsoelflaco5722 Год назад

    Royal Enfield bikes are sugar sweet!😊

  • @jonathansimmonds5784
    @jonathansimmonds5784 5 месяцев назад

    You should have made it 6, the Norton Navigator.

  • @albion2742
    @albion2742 Год назад

    That non bath tub Triumph 21 has the wrong front mudguard.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      Oh my god I’ll call the geek police immediately 😂😂

  • @AndyAndy-bg7mv
    @AndyAndy-bg7mv Год назад

    my mate had a 3ta and it pissed oil out of the right exhaust he now has a xs650 and that pisses oil out of the right exhaust

  • @motsigman
    @motsigman Год назад

    Sad to think just how sloth like the management were, Bikes and cars 1930's tech in the 60's

    • @georgejohnson7591
      @georgejohnson7591 Год назад

      Yep, lack of foresight, lack of planning, lack of funding. They though they could sit on their laurels and keep churning out the same old guff. Then the Japanese arrived and wiped the floor with them!

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      Check your history and not the edited version
      That’s not actually how it happened

    • @motsigman
      @motsigman Год назад

      @@bikerdood1100 I was there, I watched it happen...lol

  • @clangerbasher
    @clangerbasher Год назад +2

    No AJS!!!!! NO AJS!!!!!! Where is the AJS???????
    I know. Next time....😄

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      5 bikes only
      Theme the rules
      Obviously I’m planning another, and I did do a whole video on them

    • @clangerbasher
      @clangerbasher Год назад

      @@bikerdood1100 I know!