1914 model 10C

I just got this little 10C single cylinder with two speed rear hub. She was restored in the early 1990’s in Yorkshire at a time when reproduction parts were not so readily available. It was also pre-internet so if parts were missing from a machine and the owner didn’t have access to another model or a reference book, it was very difficult to know what the correct parts looked like.

But of course the owners needed to get their bikes running and often fabricated some quite imaginative solutions. The magneto control on this bike is such an example, cleverly constructed but overly complicated. Should it stay on the bike for the sake of history and ‘quirkiness’ or should it be corrected? Other linkages are wrong and some of the parts are for the wrong year model. The more you look the more you see. But the first job is to fit new tyres and tubes and get her running.

 

Knuckle knews

I haven’t looked at a teens bike since before Christmas; I’ve just been so busy with other things. I’ve been buying and selling bikes and parts to ‘fund the habit’ and have been working on this pair of knuckles.

 

I will be selling the 9B soon and am looking for an interesting 1914 model. The 9B is my ride-around bike and runs very well, I will post some photos when the sun comes out.