Vintage film about the Daytona 200 Motorcycle Race of 1970 featuring the Honda CB750 among others. Enjoy!
Жүктеу.....
Пікірлер: 55
@f4tweet8 ай бұрын
I was so lucky to have attended this race.
@stevebigansky93727 ай бұрын
this was my 2nd Daytona 200, my first In '69 when Dick Mann won on the BSA - I remember riding my Honda CL175 up from West Palm Beach and camping out on the west side campgrounds, watching the race from various parts of the infield-
@tommallon40523 жыл бұрын
Open face helmets, knees tight to the tanks, no stickers and patches slathered all over the bikes and riders. Those were the days.
@bradpotter64018 ай бұрын
The next year Dick Man won the race on a BSA. He was one of those old school American racers that could win on dirt tracks or road courses.
@melodigrand8 жыл бұрын
Memories. There were two AMA national events in my hometown in 1969 and I got to see Nixon, Mann, Markel, locals Castro, Romero, Aldana and the rest. 1970 was the first year the triples and fours could run Daytona under the new all 750 rule. Before that, ohv bikes were limited to 500cc, only the flathead Harleys ran as 750s.
@atomicorang2 жыл бұрын
I was 9. I love the soundtrack and the footage. Classic.
@joblo8808Ай бұрын
I attended and recall afterward that Cycle magazine featured Honda/Mann on its cover---90 HP screamed the headline. Innocent days were they.
@bradpotter6401 Жыл бұрын
As I recollect, the Hondas in that event had problems with the cam chain stretching. Man was smart to take it easy on his bike.
@ccrider8483
Жыл бұрын
I have been told the smoke produced by the Honda in the latter part of the race was due to oil getting by the valve seals. I think it took someone of Mann's experience to bring that bike home as it was not really developed for a race of this distance.
@irvhh143
6 ай бұрын
That 9500rpm redline sounds a bit suspect.
@fourhillsfarm3 жыл бұрын
Back when the racing was why bike week existed.
@user-ks8pf5yk4mАй бұрын
They put massive amounts of money, R&D and the top experts in the world into developing those exotic Honda 750s, then have some tipsy mechanic slop on paint for the numbers and literally paint racing numbers on the leathers! As a former sign painter all I have to say is....whaaaaaa???
@Honkawsuzyamal Жыл бұрын
This was the First ever Formula 750 race. A popular series when the main interest in GP racing was to see who finished runner up to Agostini in the big classes or the interesting 250 and smaller classes
@mikerieck3066 жыл бұрын
"You were smoking a lot on downshifts". "Yeah....that was on purpose" Bullshit. It was those early exhaust guides with no seals that gobbled oil. That engine was 10 minutes from self destructing specifically the cam chain tensioner. I can only imagine what the primary chains looked like.
@rodgerhoffman3078 жыл бұрын
I WAS THERE!
@f4tweet
Жыл бұрын
Me too.
@Ecosse5712 жыл бұрын
loved this... thanks!
@garraper6 жыл бұрын
The riders then where doing it for the love of the sport. Now not so much---no fans!..
@katana2587 жыл бұрын
flash to the 2017 race , its become a 600 club race with no one in the stands .. that's how far it fallen thanks to the ama .. shame
@caribman10
6 жыл бұрын
From "the most important motorcycle race in the world" - which it was - to a more or less ho-hum club race, and from a race that gathered what had to be the deepest well of riding talent at any motorcycle race to one where there's NO international participation worth noting. There were Daytona 200's where there were a half-dozen or more World Champions AND as many AMA National Champions. Then somebody had the bright idea of separating the dirt track and road race parts of the Championship and now we're where we are, which is nowhere. And that's both the dirt track AND the road race arenas. A shame. Oh, and by the way: it also stopped American participation in the World Championship MotoGP races. Nice going!
@fpreston9527
4 жыл бұрын
The usa is not the world
@katana258
4 жыл бұрын
no but it was one good race along with all the others ..now its crap .thanks a.m.a.
@redtobertshateshandles9 ай бұрын
I remember a few years later when an 810 Honda looked slow.
@philhashey96515 жыл бұрын
Short lived glory for Honda, the TZs and OWs were lurking as Yamaha would dominate the next decade plus
@deanadams3099 Жыл бұрын
Bella.
@rickjeren1478 жыл бұрын
great music --- who is it by ?
@paulmurphy99027 жыл бұрын
cool
@thewatcher5271 Жыл бұрын
The Glory Days Of Motorcycle Racing For Sure. Was That Keith Jackson That Interviewed Dick Mann On Victory Lane? Thank You.
@evdallas1236 жыл бұрын
Awesome
@calebfrombigmouth4 ай бұрын
is it possible for you to create the complete the DAYTONA 200 Playlist?
@bigharrykochenbauls45673 жыл бұрын
Dick-Mann kept it rock steady for Honda all day.
@RAYGAZOIL Жыл бұрын
Ce serait bien de trouver quelqu'un pour refaire, au moins, les couleurs de ce film... Merci d'y penser !
@FERRARIDOUG35511 жыл бұрын
There is much more to this than the narrator mentioned, the real hero is Walt Hansen who managed Mann's bike and entry.
@bluesky4591
6 жыл бұрын
Bob Hanson.
@caribman10
6 жыл бұрын
Hansen
@bigharrykochenbauls4567
3 жыл бұрын
Bob Hansen 😉
@caribman106 жыл бұрын
"4 cylinder overhead valve engine..."? The only known footage of the complete Honda team, including the "more experienced" Ralph Bryans (who had never raced a motorcycle larger than 500cc), Tommy Robb (same) and Honda dealership owner Bill Smith, a highly respected semi-pro Honda racer. Dick Mann had been a force-fit into the team, even though he had three 2nd places at Daytona...the full circuit of which none of the three "international" racers had run. Bugsy got a really good read on the flagman at the start, didn't he? By the way, I'm thinking the top end must've accumulated a bit of oil, viz the puff of smoke going into Turn One on lap one. But my real question is..who made this film? American Honda?
@ColdSmokes
4 жыл бұрын
Great insight, thank you. Yes, Honda was responsible for making this film which explains all of the hype from the narrator. Don't think he hardly mentioned any other make or brand, for obvious reasons.
@ColdSmokes7 жыл бұрын
What was Hailwood riding??
@caribman10
6 жыл бұрын
Factory BSA Triple
@mikerieck306
6 жыл бұрын
I always like the fairings on those Daytona BSA's
@jumpfortyfour99653 жыл бұрын
the greatest road race in the world is the isle of man T T races .
@caribman106 жыл бұрын
Hansen at 1:34....
@glengerdes41583 жыл бұрын
On the side lines, Bob was having a argument with Honda management. Bob knew cam chainsaw failure was immenent. He told Bugs to take it easy. Honda did not like it.
@briantherion54644 жыл бұрын
Motorcycle Apaches!!!
@59plexi2 жыл бұрын
i was born in '70!!!
@user-ks8pf5yk4mАй бұрын
Not just about being fast, it's about being fast within the limits of your machine over 200 miles. The old master Mann knew how to get it done. That bike of Mann's was just about to dump the last bits of oil out onto the track and roll or grind to a stop. He barely brought it home. Mann allowing Romero to gain time was a strategy of Mann and crew chief Bob Hansen to hold the bike together. The smart/dumb Honda brass at the track were infuriated at this and terrified Romero would take the lead away. Hansen rightly told them to eat his shorts, or words to that effect--and was fired for making the right choice. Stupid Japanese culture at the time, submission to authority favored over doing the right thing. Hansen and Mann got them the win, though.
@yandelward16344 жыл бұрын
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥 🏁🏁🏁it's a real pleasure to watch🏎️🏎️🏎️ 0:55 🔥💜 👇👇👇👇💛
@gorflunk2 жыл бұрын
In 1970, all Honda did was prove they could spy on Kawasaki and, using their manufacturing prowess, be able to beat the Z1 to market. The CB750 still looked like every other Japanese motorcycle, an oversized scooter. The Z1 looked like a motorcycle should, it kicked everyone's asses and changed the motorcycling world forever.
@arnenelson4495
2 жыл бұрын
I'm an old Honda guy and regret to admit you are right on, Z-1 was THE bike.
@redtobertshateshandles
9 ай бұрын
It was all a Japanese conspiracy to conquer the motorcycle world. They were all friends who divided the market amongst themselves.
@irvhh143
6 ай бұрын
The engineers who did so much innovation in the 1960s were transferred to the car division. Also, Soichiro retired in the 70s and the bike end lost direction. Failed ideas like the cbx6 and V4.
Пікірлер: 55
I was so lucky to have attended this race.
this was my 2nd Daytona 200, my first In '69 when Dick Mann won on the BSA - I remember riding my Honda CL175 up from West Palm Beach and camping out on the west side campgrounds, watching the race from various parts of the infield-
Open face helmets, knees tight to the tanks, no stickers and patches slathered all over the bikes and riders. Those were the days.
The next year Dick Man won the race on a BSA. He was one of those old school American racers that could win on dirt tracks or road courses.
Memories. There were two AMA national events in my hometown in 1969 and I got to see Nixon, Mann, Markel, locals Castro, Romero, Aldana and the rest. 1970 was the first year the triples and fours could run Daytona under the new all 750 rule. Before that, ohv bikes were limited to 500cc, only the flathead Harleys ran as 750s.
I was 9. I love the soundtrack and the footage. Classic.
I attended and recall afterward that Cycle magazine featured Honda/Mann on its cover---90 HP screamed the headline. Innocent days were they.
As I recollect, the Hondas in that event had problems with the cam chain stretching. Man was smart to take it easy on his bike.
@ccrider8483
Жыл бұрын
I have been told the smoke produced by the Honda in the latter part of the race was due to oil getting by the valve seals. I think it took someone of Mann's experience to bring that bike home as it was not really developed for a race of this distance.
@irvhh143
6 ай бұрын
That 9500rpm redline sounds a bit suspect.
Back when the racing was why bike week existed.
They put massive amounts of money, R&D and the top experts in the world into developing those exotic Honda 750s, then have some tipsy mechanic slop on paint for the numbers and literally paint racing numbers on the leathers! As a former sign painter all I have to say is....whaaaaaa???
This was the First ever Formula 750 race. A popular series when the main interest in GP racing was to see who finished runner up to Agostini in the big classes or the interesting 250 and smaller classes
"You were smoking a lot on downshifts". "Yeah....that was on purpose" Bullshit. It was those early exhaust guides with no seals that gobbled oil. That engine was 10 minutes from self destructing specifically the cam chain tensioner. I can only imagine what the primary chains looked like.
I WAS THERE!
@f4tweet
Жыл бұрын
Me too.
loved this... thanks!
The riders then where doing it for the love of the sport. Now not so much---no fans!..
flash to the 2017 race , its become a 600 club race with no one in the stands .. that's how far it fallen thanks to the ama .. shame
@caribman10
6 жыл бұрын
From "the most important motorcycle race in the world" - which it was - to a more or less ho-hum club race, and from a race that gathered what had to be the deepest well of riding talent at any motorcycle race to one where there's NO international participation worth noting. There were Daytona 200's where there were a half-dozen or more World Champions AND as many AMA National Champions. Then somebody had the bright idea of separating the dirt track and road race parts of the Championship and now we're where we are, which is nowhere. And that's both the dirt track AND the road race arenas. A shame. Oh, and by the way: it also stopped American participation in the World Championship MotoGP races. Nice going!
@fpreston9527
4 жыл бұрын
The usa is not the world
@katana258
4 жыл бұрын
no but it was one good race along with all the others ..now its crap .thanks a.m.a.
I remember a few years later when an 810 Honda looked slow.
Short lived glory for Honda, the TZs and OWs were lurking as Yamaha would dominate the next decade plus
Bella.
great music --- who is it by ?
cool
The Glory Days Of Motorcycle Racing For Sure. Was That Keith Jackson That Interviewed Dick Mann On Victory Lane? Thank You.
Awesome
is it possible for you to create the complete the DAYTONA 200 Playlist?
Dick-Mann kept it rock steady for Honda all day.
Ce serait bien de trouver quelqu'un pour refaire, au moins, les couleurs de ce film... Merci d'y penser !
There is much more to this than the narrator mentioned, the real hero is Walt Hansen who managed Mann's bike and entry.
@bluesky4591
6 жыл бұрын
Bob Hanson.
@caribman10
6 жыл бұрын
Hansen
@bigharrykochenbauls4567
3 жыл бұрын
Bob Hansen 😉
"4 cylinder overhead valve engine..."? The only known footage of the complete Honda team, including the "more experienced" Ralph Bryans (who had never raced a motorcycle larger than 500cc), Tommy Robb (same) and Honda dealership owner Bill Smith, a highly respected semi-pro Honda racer. Dick Mann had been a force-fit into the team, even though he had three 2nd places at Daytona...the full circuit of which none of the three "international" racers had run. Bugsy got a really good read on the flagman at the start, didn't he? By the way, I'm thinking the top end must've accumulated a bit of oil, viz the puff of smoke going into Turn One on lap one. But my real question is..who made this film? American Honda?
@ColdSmokes
4 жыл бұрын
Great insight, thank you. Yes, Honda was responsible for making this film which explains all of the hype from the narrator. Don't think he hardly mentioned any other make or brand, for obvious reasons.
What was Hailwood riding??
@caribman10
6 жыл бұрын
Factory BSA Triple
@mikerieck306
6 жыл бұрын
I always like the fairings on those Daytona BSA's
the greatest road race in the world is the isle of man T T races .
Hansen at 1:34....
On the side lines, Bob was having a argument with Honda management. Bob knew cam chainsaw failure was immenent. He told Bugs to take it easy. Honda did not like it.
Motorcycle Apaches!!!
i was born in '70!!!
Not just about being fast, it's about being fast within the limits of your machine over 200 miles. The old master Mann knew how to get it done. That bike of Mann's was just about to dump the last bits of oil out onto the track and roll or grind to a stop. He barely brought it home. Mann allowing Romero to gain time was a strategy of Mann and crew chief Bob Hansen to hold the bike together. The smart/dumb Honda brass at the track were infuriated at this and terrified Romero would take the lead away. Hansen rightly told them to eat his shorts, or words to that effect--and was fired for making the right choice. Stupid Japanese culture at the time, submission to authority favored over doing the right thing. Hansen and Mann got them the win, though.
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥 🏁🏁🏁it's a real pleasure to watch🏎️🏎️🏎️ 0:55 🔥💜 👇👇👇👇💛
In 1970, all Honda did was prove they could spy on Kawasaki and, using their manufacturing prowess, be able to beat the Z1 to market. The CB750 still looked like every other Japanese motorcycle, an oversized scooter. The Z1 looked like a motorcycle should, it kicked everyone's asses and changed the motorcycling world forever.
@arnenelson4495
2 жыл бұрын
I'm an old Honda guy and regret to admit you are right on, Z-1 was THE bike.
@redtobertshateshandles
9 ай бұрын
It was all a Japanese conspiracy to conquer the motorcycle world. They were all friends who divided the market amongst themselves.
@irvhh143
6 ай бұрын
The engineers who did so much innovation in the 1960s were transferred to the car division. Also, Soichiro retired in the 70s and the bike end lost direction. Failed ideas like the cbx6 and V4.