Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 2,748 Threads: 31
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95
Location: Auckland, NZ
I find my inherited Jazz a pain on narrow metalled roads. The enormous windscren is a worry. Unlike the Seven and later the wheels are at the full width, which, combined with width, takes up as much road room as a light truck. Over the decades I have had a few incidents where keeping extreme left my car has started to slip down the edge camber; with rwd can power out but with fwd less control.
The original baked enamel thick seemingly high carbon Seven guards resist brushes, but with moderns the merest touch leaves a crease in the tinfoil.
For fifty years , several times a year, in my ancient conveyances, I have travelled 360 mile up and down NI and hunted out all not too indirect alternative routes. Grass growing in the centre is a good sign but now hard to find, and near everything has succumbed to large bulldozers, there being no ancient walls or bridges or buidings to obstruct.
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 639 Threads: 29
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7
Is that a BSA ? Someone had one near where I lived around 1970-1, I once saw it with another chassis strapped to the side.Never got to meet its owner,or what happened to it.
What are they like to drive ?
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 1,986 Threads: 90
Reputation:
17
Location: Ripon
A few of the trials boys fitted bearers to carry tractor weights or an ammunition box full of tools to help the fwd traction.
At last year’s National rally I was able to leave the ride-out party standing when an open lane presented itself. I haven’t weighed my trike but it’s considerably lighter than a standard trike and with twin Amals I managed an indicated 70mph before discretion beat valour! There was more left to go but…