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Пікірлер: 99
@jamesrichmond946628 күн бұрын
Great video! You managed to show the BSA 441 experience exactly as I remember it, particularly the part where it quits and you are pushing it down a lonely country road. I will always have a soft spot in my heart for 441s and I think they are one of the best looking bikes ever made.
@autops227 күн бұрын
I still have the BSA 441 I bought 50 years ago when I was 15. It had a Cheney frame, Italian front forks, girling gas rear shocks, billet clutch, energy transfer ignition and Rickman hubs. It was also 475cc. It now needs a total restore which will start when I retire. I think it was originally an ex-ISDT bike that I bought from a local farmer and MX GP track owner.
@peterholthoffman
5 күн бұрын
Hey, I'm in nearly the same situation as you! My bike is only a vanilla B-50T, but it was my first bike when I was 15 or 16. I was 5'8" and weighed 125#. It had no compression release so starting it was a 'joy'. I sold it and then bought it back a couple of years later as a near-wreck (the new owner had stripped it down to be purely off-road). It's been in storage for decades and, now that I am close enough to retirement, it's going to be pulled out and fixed up.
@snowgorilla97898 күн бұрын
Had the 441 Shooting Star, I remember it being a lot bigger, but back then I was 16 and smaller. The torque was unbelievable mind you so was the vibration
@Desmo-22 күн бұрын
Brings back memories of the 441 I bought, my first street bike it was 1970 the engine was in a cardboard box, the guy said it was coming out of second gear and tore it down. I was 14 yr's old not even a permit, I bent the shift fork and put it back together. I don't remember it ever starting as easy as yours when it kicked back it could leave a bruise. It was a larger bike then any of my friends so it got a lot of attention. Thanks for the memories.
@robertcherieweigand167028 күн бұрын
Bill you bring back memories. In 1974 I was finally tired of my 1970 BSA thunderbolt topping out on rough trails. I drained the oem front fork fluid and changed it for something that a friend who ran Norton's recommended. I'll be damned if I can remember the name of the product. It worked wonders for my bike. Your Victor acted just like mine did. It actually was making the same sounds. It was a easy fix. The rear shocks were adjustable and I think that I had them on the middle setting and the difference was very pleasant. Good luck!
@Duececoupe27 күн бұрын
There's NO school like OLD school! 😎
@goldilocks913
25 күн бұрын
That’s the headmaster 😂
@roddoggity28 күн бұрын
We want more chicken in future videos please bill
@bigtime47427 күн бұрын
I wanted a Victor. Then I became aware of the CCM.! Clews Competition Machine. Too young,sadly to afford either.😢
@alexandra_ford20 күн бұрын
I have a 441 VS and you perfectly captured the essence of it 😂
@wheelhousegarage
13 күн бұрын
Really appreciate you saying so Alexandra! I follow and enjoy your account on Instagram👍
@thatsmrharley2u225 күн бұрын
Lucas electronics...they don't call 'em The Prince of Darkness for nothin'.
@geraldscott4302
19 күн бұрын
Back in those days they were call "electrics". Electronics hadn't been invented yet, and it too bad they ever were. I have a 1966 Triumph Bonneville, and have had very few problems with it, and it is infinitely more fun to ride than anything new.
@transitTrucker12 күн бұрын
No protective clothing. Brave. Road rash central. Great vid by the way. The Beeza handles like a bucking bronco. Cool.
@gwilliamwallace23 күн бұрын
Great video. Brings back memories of 1974 when I had an MT-250 Elsinore and miles of trails to ride. I'd come across all sorts of bikes from yellow 450 Ducati scramblers to metalflake blue Greeves motocross bikes. And yes the occasional 441 Victor. Thanks for the memories.
@stevel.2126
21 күн бұрын
I rode a Greeves 250 ,springer front end, it was awesome...
@peterholthoffman5 күн бұрын
My first bike was in 1973 and it was a 1971 BSA Victor 500 B-50T. This video you've posted is the single best thing I've ever seen for conveying what it's like to ride one. The tractor-like thudding along with a glorious sound, nothing succeeding in even slowing you down, the jars and jolts as the terrain takes its toll directly on you, and then some weird problem killing the rest of the day. That was EXACTLY my experience!
@jackmarks217613 күн бұрын
Ah the memories, growing up my dad had two 650's made by the Birmingham Small Arms Company. I can remember him pushing his home about as many times as he rode it home. But I guess if the people who make bowling balls can make Harley's then a British small arms company can also make a motorcycle..
@jackpoage54193 күн бұрын
That was my dream bike 55 years ago. I rode some European 350cc single cylinder street bikes back then. Light and nimble is what I like in a bike.
@bradpotter640119 күн бұрын
I had one of those as my first British bike. It was a 67 with the Concentric carburetor and full length seat. I used it as a street bike and an off road machine. It could be hard to start but I never had to push it home. Yes, those front forks were stiff in the rocks!
@rickwarda267116 күн бұрын
Ha! Reminds me of the good old days on my Ducati RT450! The 441 came close but the duke was fast in the day ‘71. 😎👍
@jeffreymoorbeck275228 күн бұрын
I could immediately tell the suspension was beating you up. Your conclusion is spot on, use it as a dual sport. Great video as always!
@philhawley1219
28 күн бұрын
Absolutely right. I have spent the last few months resurrecting a '66 B44. Not yet road legal but I rode it on farm tracks last week. New stanchions, springs and bushes in the front and it was hard work. The gearing is for road use so I only used first and second gear, but what a lovely punchy engine. Light weight and lots of torque, I can see involuntary wheelies coming soon !
@Mr39knuck28 күн бұрын
You know what’s amazing? Well, besides this channel and all the great bikes you bust out. Anyway, it’s amazing that I have the exact same T-shirt that you are wearing and I love it 😊 Thanks!
@rooter91427 күн бұрын
Love your videos! You nailed the Victor's limiting factor, "old, heavy, steel suspension". I modified the neck bearing seats, made a new front axle, and swapped in a 1972 BSA B50 alloy front fork on my '69 Victor. Since the mod it takes on everything I throw at it!
@guywolff4 күн бұрын
My first ride was on a bored out BSA 441 made ready for the races at Pepperell MA in 1968 .They had bought it from Ray Brock who was Alice of Alice Resteraunt's Husband and a dirt racer in STockbridge ... Kick starting that high compression could break your ankle if you didnt know what you were doing ... :) It took some work keeping the front wheel on the ground ...
@geoffparkes8 күн бұрын
I really miss my BSA singles. They were great fun (when they worked) but 250, 350, 500 singles back in 1970 to 1978 were infuriatingly annoying for everyday transport. This is why i moved to large Japanese multicylinder bikes in 78. Strangely, i forgot all about this and let my heart rule my head when i purchased another B50SS Gold Star in 2017. I sold it, five agonising years later because it was so unreliable and purchased a real fun Royal Enfield (2020) model 500 trials. Comfortable Reliable Economical Easy to live with But no soul to the exhaust note
@christopherhughes840225 күн бұрын
I had a 125 Vespa Allstate years ago. Every damn time it would run like a top and then suddenly die. If I waited long enough it would start then the exact same thing would happen. No one knew anything about Vespa’s in small town Kansas in the early 90’s. At least no one I could find and eventually sold it. Years later I figured out that the guy I bought it from had, badly, painted the tank and blocked the breather vent on the tank and that was starving the fuel supply. Having KZread and the internet is a godsend for people into old bikes.
@packhams4
20 күн бұрын
That has happened to SOOOOO many people! And so often not readily diagnosed. If you're lucky, you take it to an honest mechanic...... I had an XT500 with a tank bag that kinked the breather tube out of the fuel cap, same syndrome exactly! And a couple of others....
@DJPTEXAS28 күн бұрын
Why'd they paint the gas cap ?
@rcnelson21 күн бұрын
If closing the gas cap kills the engine, maybe the cap isn't allowing air to bleed into the tank.
@The.Real.Timmii28 күн бұрын
I owned a 441 in the 1970's, decent bike.
@Mike40M28 күн бұрын
Bought my first VS new in 1970. Sadly cremated in a barn fire in -83. Now have 2 good running Victor Specials. 5 days ago got a 441 special with Scottish Six Days Trial history. At 230 pounds wet quite nimble. As it has a couple of battle scars, another dent in the tank don't matter. Will have fun with it. With now three 441s, you'll think I'm a BSA nut. Wrong, the Manx Norton is my favourite, but too long time between races so I need bikes that I can ride whenever I want.
@bradsanders6954
27 күн бұрын
230 lbs wet wow! The BSA factory built a titanium framed, titanium everything BSA single for John Banks to race and I doubt they ever got it that light. You got a good one, lighter than a 2024 450 4 stroke racer.
@Mike40M
26 күн бұрын
@@bradsanders6954 Has a modified Husqvarna motocross frame, tiny brakes from a 165 lbs Husqvarna 175cc road bike etc. The 27 hp engine did not need the sturdy chassis as modern high power bike. Compared to the then popular Bultaco Sherpa trial just 11 lbs heavier.
@mikeandrews189925 күн бұрын
I had that same helmet , in 1975 ..... 😳 Riding my SL100 in the cow pasture
@geraldscott4302
19 күн бұрын
I have several similar helmets, but they all have 5 snaps, so you can use a 5 snap flat face shield.
@garyhull561727 күн бұрын
"Teacher,.........Leave them chickens alone!"
@markalton280928 күн бұрын
@8:00, mine does that too! Stops for no reason whatsoever. I had thought it was a Concentric issue, but you're running a Monobloc and get the same thing.
@1ralton1
28 күн бұрын
eyeball eyeball, Hi Mark thought you might be here...
@claycarley920127 күн бұрын
Suspension! Yup... although I'm still working through mine, in the front I've got progressive springs and currently 7.5 weight oil which REALLY helps; I think the manual called for 20 weight which worked OK on the road but really not for anything rough. The rear I'm running Ikon shocks and I will say they actually work so well you don't even worry about the rear end anymore, and unless you know you really can't tell that they aren't factory. Bummer about the fuel/electrical issue man! Boy I've been there and spent waaaay too much time trying to re fire the engine (only on exceptionally hot afternoons of course!).
@kenmorris297428 күн бұрын
Great video Bill! Fix that suspension 😊 Ride on…
@racebiketuner9 күн бұрын
Looks like good fun. Don't forget to wear your Jofa mouth guard! 😉
@lesjones761728 күн бұрын
Stunning! Made me cringe through with no arm protection???????
@jimwhipple978420 күн бұрын
I've got two B50's, two B44's a B40 and a C25 I've got a thing for BSA's Bits Scattered About
@duggdog910228 күн бұрын
I think Racetech make a fork modification for the 441
@tonyrebo986217 күн бұрын
At age 16 1970 or '71, this was the very first English bike I had taken for a ride. Nearly bought it, just couldn't raise the funds.
@mechcavandy98618 күн бұрын
I always wanted one of these in the 60s, but I had to settle for a Maico 400 MC in the 70s! Just vent that gas cap and go for it! And your suspension would be greatly improved if you just put heavier springs on it, keeping the original look. WFO! 🏍️🏍️🏍️🏍️
@gregnowak645015 күн бұрын
Great bike. I rode My 66 441 in Cali and exploring the backroads of Tennessee as well as all over central New York before mistakingly selling it. Had the timing set at Bills BSA in SoCal when I first got it in about 79 and it was a one kick bike from then on. Would trade bikes for the weekend with John Selk from the Walter Eagen band a Norton fast back. Damm I want to go back to those days. You’re bike looks to also be a 66 as well maybe 67 because of the round barrel and the seat doesn’t have the kickup in the back or the grab loop (68) Bang second and ride wheelies through town with a bag of groceries in my lap. Ok I better go before going on and on about my Jack Haitly Triumph. Hopefully we can take our memories with us. 🚬🐔🪓
@ronpage10128 күн бұрын
Send off the fork to Race Tech. Put a pair of gas shocks on the rear, remount the rear fender, should be able to gain a little confidence with those mods.
@inicap24 күн бұрын
Hey Bill, great video as always. I just picked up my T-shirt from the Post Office here in Berlin Germany today. It looks fantastic and fits perfectly. I must wear it while riding my '72 Ducati 450 Scrambler next time :) . Dom
@wheelhousegarage
23 күн бұрын
Fantastic! Thank you so much for supporting this channel all the way from Germany!!!
@jameshisself932428 күн бұрын
Yay vintage! Last week had me worried...
@packhams420 күн бұрын
Looks like beautiful countryside for riding! And a slightly upgraded B44 would be the ideal mount. Good on you!
@Funnyguyroberts14 күн бұрын
No chain guard… front fender support is great. I get mine back next week. The one person saddle seat is mmmeeeehhhh need the muffler guard too just fyi :) just giving you crap. Looks great. Ps. LOVE THE AHRMA sticker on the helmet!! Hi Dave Lambert. Corky Root says hello!!
@wheelhousegarage
13 күн бұрын
haha! Thanks for commenting!
@chrisduffy801828 күн бұрын
Such a cool video, about such a cool bike! By the way, what action cameo you use?
@user-uk4bp8dz8z18 күн бұрын
Carry a business card to clean the oil off the points.
@xt22528 күн бұрын
Back to the Triumph 😊
@micktepolt62766 күн бұрын
i had a 441 lot of low end that's the way bikes were back in the old day
@thomasslayback251728 күн бұрын
Any chance of a 3xl Spitfire Summer Shirt?? Got the others in 3xl and they fit great. I just want to keep supporting your channel. Life's Good, Life's GREAT!
@martincvitkovich72428 күн бұрын
you might want to rubber mount that rear fender
@jayc456221 күн бұрын
That is one bike that I wouldn't ride without leathers. It will eat your lunch in a second. Fun but on a hill it can get nasty. I had a friend with one. I had a 1969 Bonneville at the time.
@geoffparkes8 күн бұрын
It's not a chicken, it's a hen, surely.?😂
@olddirtbiker508827 күн бұрын
My 1968 Shooting Star 441 did the same thing downhill on a dirt road. The gas cap is not too tight so not a venting problem. Could it be the compression release not seating firmly and releasing compression on a bumpy road?
@daveruff4727 күн бұрын
Lucas! Amal? LOL
@skiterbite21 күн бұрын
6v elec magnido ? You May need a Kidney belt with that sweet 441...Nice!
@daveruff4727 күн бұрын
Got your set of Whitworth wrenches???
@nicholasparkin697918 күн бұрын
Warts and all. Thanks Bill. Real life. Nick UK.
@wheelhousegarage
13 күн бұрын
Thanks Nick!
@HorseMalone6 күн бұрын
Had one in 1976..it boffed itself to bits..
@herbieschwartz924627 күн бұрын
How much pressure are you running in the tires. Drop it down to about 12 front and 10 rear.
@UncleWally324 күн бұрын
I remember that bike, it’d blend your kidneys like a smoothie.
@wheelhousegarage
23 күн бұрын
Haha! Thanks for the laugh!
@jeffangstman90433 күн бұрын
One way a 441 was good was as a cheater open class scrambler... much lighter than the 650s, 500s twins. This one in a Rickman frame. When it quit the pits were close by...
@benjigoprotrails391127 күн бұрын
👍👌
@geneahart560728 күн бұрын
Bill, back in the day werent 441's primarily used as ' trials ' bikes?
@jimtitt3571
28 күн бұрын
No, there were MX and Enduro versions (and road bike) but the prefered trials engine was the Cub and the B40 (from which the B44 Victor was developed). The B40's were a good trials engine and cheaply available as military surplus.
@philhawley1219
28 күн бұрын
@@jimtitt3571 The army surplus B40 used the same frame as the B44. The civvy bike shared the C15 frame.
@Boreascorax26 күн бұрын
'70s stuff. What fun would it be if everything went smoothly?
@jonobester58177 күн бұрын
Nothing quite like the sound of a BSA. How much is this baby worth?
@geraldscott430219 күн бұрын
You have to accept the limitations of a bike like that, but they are still a million times more fun than any "modern" bike.
@wheelhousegarage
16 күн бұрын
👍👍
@michaelpauley12528 күн бұрын
Can You Flat Track Dirt Practice Sometime on one of Your Vintage Moto's
@bradsanders695427 күн бұрын
These were horrible bikes on dirt, they got street bike forks from olden days. Shocks that can really shock.. A clanker and a banger. But they look cool! I had a B-50 MX for a while, also an oddball thing to ride. Once it was sideways on smooth ground it was happy. Puked oil every where if ran hard.
@lars2779 күн бұрын
I am not being a smart aleck, but you have fouled the spark plug from lugging the engine at low rpm.
@timheadey298710 күн бұрын
I can't believe you are riding in a short sleeved T shirt and what looks like every day jeans. You could suffer serious injury from the smallest spill.
@peterholthoffman
5 күн бұрын
I rode with a half-dozen friends all through the 1970s and T-shirts, Levi's, and combat boots were our standard riding gear in the summer. In the winter, we wore field jackets and during the spring/fall we had jeans jackets. We caught a little road-rash but not much (I've crashed 1x at ~60 mph, 2x at ~45 mph, and more times than I can count at ~30 mph). The major injuries during that time were one guy with a broken collarbone and two guys with torn ACLs from landing in a sitting position and then somersaulting forward which bent the knee backwards. We tried to roll when we came off.
@bobstupaksvegasworld409815 күн бұрын
When I was able to afford my first bike my father told me to get the 441. I didnt listen but, i wish i would have.
@moore461527 күн бұрын
Very sexy. I'm really digging it. Thanks, bro for sharing.
@andrewhanson594220 күн бұрын
That was awfully easy to kickstart. Are you sure that's not a 250?
@wheelhousegarage
13 күн бұрын
lol. I'm pretty sure😉
@jamesboardman704820 күн бұрын
What did you expect. I restore old cars, and owners always expect them to drive, stop steer , like a new car , its old technology
@rolandrodriguez3854
4 күн бұрын
Try a Greeves.
@Mike-vw7ct27 күн бұрын
3 minutes is a long time for an English anything to run!
Пікірлер: 99
Great video! You managed to show the BSA 441 experience exactly as I remember it, particularly the part where it quits and you are pushing it down a lonely country road. I will always have a soft spot in my heart for 441s and I think they are one of the best looking bikes ever made.
I still have the BSA 441 I bought 50 years ago when I was 15. It had a Cheney frame, Italian front forks, girling gas rear shocks, billet clutch, energy transfer ignition and Rickman hubs. It was also 475cc. It now needs a total restore which will start when I retire. I think it was originally an ex-ISDT bike that I bought from a local farmer and MX GP track owner.
@peterholthoffman
5 күн бұрын
Hey, I'm in nearly the same situation as you! My bike is only a vanilla B-50T, but it was my first bike when I was 15 or 16. I was 5'8" and weighed 125#. It had no compression release so starting it was a 'joy'. I sold it and then bought it back a couple of years later as a near-wreck (the new owner had stripped it down to be purely off-road). It's been in storage for decades and, now that I am close enough to retirement, it's going to be pulled out and fixed up.
Had the 441 Shooting Star, I remember it being a lot bigger, but back then I was 16 and smaller. The torque was unbelievable mind you so was the vibration
Brings back memories of the 441 I bought, my first street bike it was 1970 the engine was in a cardboard box, the guy said it was coming out of second gear and tore it down. I was 14 yr's old not even a permit, I bent the shift fork and put it back together. I don't remember it ever starting as easy as yours when it kicked back it could leave a bruise. It was a larger bike then any of my friends so it got a lot of attention. Thanks for the memories.
Bill you bring back memories. In 1974 I was finally tired of my 1970 BSA thunderbolt topping out on rough trails. I drained the oem front fork fluid and changed it for something that a friend who ran Norton's recommended. I'll be damned if I can remember the name of the product. It worked wonders for my bike. Your Victor acted just like mine did. It actually was making the same sounds. It was a easy fix. The rear shocks were adjustable and I think that I had them on the middle setting and the difference was very pleasant. Good luck!
There's NO school like OLD school! 😎
@goldilocks913
25 күн бұрын
That’s the headmaster 😂
We want more chicken in future videos please bill
I wanted a Victor. Then I became aware of the CCM.! Clews Competition Machine. Too young,sadly to afford either.😢
I have a 441 VS and you perfectly captured the essence of it 😂
@wheelhousegarage
13 күн бұрын
Really appreciate you saying so Alexandra! I follow and enjoy your account on Instagram👍
Lucas electronics...they don't call 'em The Prince of Darkness for nothin'.
@geraldscott4302
19 күн бұрын
Back in those days they were call "electrics". Electronics hadn't been invented yet, and it too bad they ever were. I have a 1966 Triumph Bonneville, and have had very few problems with it, and it is infinitely more fun to ride than anything new.
No protective clothing. Brave. Road rash central. Great vid by the way. The Beeza handles like a bucking bronco. Cool.
Great video. Brings back memories of 1974 when I had an MT-250 Elsinore and miles of trails to ride. I'd come across all sorts of bikes from yellow 450 Ducati scramblers to metalflake blue Greeves motocross bikes. And yes the occasional 441 Victor. Thanks for the memories.
@stevel.2126
21 күн бұрын
I rode a Greeves 250 ,springer front end, it was awesome...
My first bike was in 1973 and it was a 1971 BSA Victor 500 B-50T. This video you've posted is the single best thing I've ever seen for conveying what it's like to ride one. The tractor-like thudding along with a glorious sound, nothing succeeding in even slowing you down, the jars and jolts as the terrain takes its toll directly on you, and then some weird problem killing the rest of the day. That was EXACTLY my experience!
Ah the memories, growing up my dad had two 650's made by the Birmingham Small Arms Company. I can remember him pushing his home about as many times as he rode it home. But I guess if the people who make bowling balls can make Harley's then a British small arms company can also make a motorcycle..
That was my dream bike 55 years ago. I rode some European 350cc single cylinder street bikes back then. Light and nimble is what I like in a bike.
I had one of those as my first British bike. It was a 67 with the Concentric carburetor and full length seat. I used it as a street bike and an off road machine. It could be hard to start but I never had to push it home. Yes, those front forks were stiff in the rocks!
Ha! Reminds me of the good old days on my Ducati RT450! The 441 came close but the duke was fast in the day ‘71. 😎👍
I could immediately tell the suspension was beating you up. Your conclusion is spot on, use it as a dual sport. Great video as always!
@philhawley1219
28 күн бұрын
Absolutely right. I have spent the last few months resurrecting a '66 B44. Not yet road legal but I rode it on farm tracks last week. New stanchions, springs and bushes in the front and it was hard work. The gearing is for road use so I only used first and second gear, but what a lovely punchy engine. Light weight and lots of torque, I can see involuntary wheelies coming soon !
You know what’s amazing? Well, besides this channel and all the great bikes you bust out. Anyway, it’s amazing that I have the exact same T-shirt that you are wearing and I love it 😊 Thanks!
Love your videos! You nailed the Victor's limiting factor, "old, heavy, steel suspension". I modified the neck bearing seats, made a new front axle, and swapped in a 1972 BSA B50 alloy front fork on my '69 Victor. Since the mod it takes on everything I throw at it!
My first ride was on a bored out BSA 441 made ready for the races at Pepperell MA in 1968 .They had bought it from Ray Brock who was Alice of Alice Resteraunt's Husband and a dirt racer in STockbridge ... Kick starting that high compression could break your ankle if you didnt know what you were doing ... :) It took some work keeping the front wheel on the ground ...
I really miss my BSA singles. They were great fun (when they worked) but 250, 350, 500 singles back in 1970 to 1978 were infuriatingly annoying for everyday transport. This is why i moved to large Japanese multicylinder bikes in 78. Strangely, i forgot all about this and let my heart rule my head when i purchased another B50SS Gold Star in 2017. I sold it, five agonising years later because it was so unreliable and purchased a real fun Royal Enfield (2020) model 500 trials. Comfortable Reliable Economical Easy to live with But no soul to the exhaust note
I had a 125 Vespa Allstate years ago. Every damn time it would run like a top and then suddenly die. If I waited long enough it would start then the exact same thing would happen. No one knew anything about Vespa’s in small town Kansas in the early 90’s. At least no one I could find and eventually sold it. Years later I figured out that the guy I bought it from had, badly, painted the tank and blocked the breather vent on the tank and that was starving the fuel supply. Having KZread and the internet is a godsend for people into old bikes.
@packhams4
20 күн бұрын
That has happened to SOOOOO many people! And so often not readily diagnosed. If you're lucky, you take it to an honest mechanic...... I had an XT500 with a tank bag that kinked the breather tube out of the fuel cap, same syndrome exactly! And a couple of others....
Why'd they paint the gas cap ?
If closing the gas cap kills the engine, maybe the cap isn't allowing air to bleed into the tank.
I owned a 441 in the 1970's, decent bike.
Bought my first VS new in 1970. Sadly cremated in a barn fire in -83. Now have 2 good running Victor Specials. 5 days ago got a 441 special with Scottish Six Days Trial history. At 230 pounds wet quite nimble. As it has a couple of battle scars, another dent in the tank don't matter. Will have fun with it. With now three 441s, you'll think I'm a BSA nut. Wrong, the Manx Norton is my favourite, but too long time between races so I need bikes that I can ride whenever I want.
@bradsanders6954
27 күн бұрын
230 lbs wet wow! The BSA factory built a titanium framed, titanium everything BSA single for John Banks to race and I doubt they ever got it that light. You got a good one, lighter than a 2024 450 4 stroke racer.
@Mike40M
26 күн бұрын
@@bradsanders6954 Has a modified Husqvarna motocross frame, tiny brakes from a 165 lbs Husqvarna 175cc road bike etc. The 27 hp engine did not need the sturdy chassis as modern high power bike. Compared to the then popular Bultaco Sherpa trial just 11 lbs heavier.
I had that same helmet , in 1975 ..... 😳 Riding my SL100 in the cow pasture
@geraldscott4302
19 күн бұрын
I have several similar helmets, but they all have 5 snaps, so you can use a 5 snap flat face shield.
"Teacher,.........Leave them chickens alone!"
@8:00, mine does that too! Stops for no reason whatsoever. I had thought it was a Concentric issue, but you're running a Monobloc and get the same thing.
@1ralton1
28 күн бұрын
eyeball eyeball, Hi Mark thought you might be here...
Suspension! Yup... although I'm still working through mine, in the front I've got progressive springs and currently 7.5 weight oil which REALLY helps; I think the manual called for 20 weight which worked OK on the road but really not for anything rough. The rear I'm running Ikon shocks and I will say they actually work so well you don't even worry about the rear end anymore, and unless you know you really can't tell that they aren't factory. Bummer about the fuel/electrical issue man! Boy I've been there and spent waaaay too much time trying to re fire the engine (only on exceptionally hot afternoons of course!).
Great video Bill! Fix that suspension 😊 Ride on…
Looks like good fun. Don't forget to wear your Jofa mouth guard! 😉
Stunning! Made me cringe through with no arm protection???????
I've got two B50's, two B44's a B40 and a C25 I've got a thing for BSA's Bits Scattered About
I think Racetech make a fork modification for the 441
At age 16 1970 or '71, this was the very first English bike I had taken for a ride. Nearly bought it, just couldn't raise the funds.
I always wanted one of these in the 60s, but I had to settle for a Maico 400 MC in the 70s! Just vent that gas cap and go for it! And your suspension would be greatly improved if you just put heavier springs on it, keeping the original look. WFO! 🏍️🏍️🏍️🏍️
Great bike. I rode My 66 441 in Cali and exploring the backroads of Tennessee as well as all over central New York before mistakingly selling it. Had the timing set at Bills BSA in SoCal when I first got it in about 79 and it was a one kick bike from then on. Would trade bikes for the weekend with John Selk from the Walter Eagen band a Norton fast back. Damm I want to go back to those days. You’re bike looks to also be a 66 as well maybe 67 because of the round barrel and the seat doesn’t have the kickup in the back or the grab loop (68) Bang second and ride wheelies through town with a bag of groceries in my lap. Ok I better go before going on and on about my Jack Haitly Triumph. Hopefully we can take our memories with us. 🚬🐔🪓
Send off the fork to Race Tech. Put a pair of gas shocks on the rear, remount the rear fender, should be able to gain a little confidence with those mods.
Hey Bill, great video as always. I just picked up my T-shirt from the Post Office here in Berlin Germany today. It looks fantastic and fits perfectly. I must wear it while riding my '72 Ducati 450 Scrambler next time :) . Dom
@wheelhousegarage
23 күн бұрын
Fantastic! Thank you so much for supporting this channel all the way from Germany!!!
Yay vintage! Last week had me worried...
Looks like beautiful countryside for riding! And a slightly upgraded B44 would be the ideal mount. Good on you!
No chain guard… front fender support is great. I get mine back next week. The one person saddle seat is mmmeeeehhhh need the muffler guard too just fyi :) just giving you crap. Looks great. Ps. LOVE THE AHRMA sticker on the helmet!! Hi Dave Lambert. Corky Root says hello!!
@wheelhousegarage
13 күн бұрын
haha! Thanks for commenting!
Such a cool video, about such a cool bike! By the way, what action cameo you use?
Carry a business card to clean the oil off the points.
Back to the Triumph 😊
i had a 441 lot of low end that's the way bikes were back in the old day
Any chance of a 3xl Spitfire Summer Shirt?? Got the others in 3xl and they fit great. I just want to keep supporting your channel. Life's Good, Life's GREAT!
you might want to rubber mount that rear fender
That is one bike that I wouldn't ride without leathers. It will eat your lunch in a second. Fun but on a hill it can get nasty. I had a friend with one. I had a 1969 Bonneville at the time.
It's not a chicken, it's a hen, surely.?😂
My 1968 Shooting Star 441 did the same thing downhill on a dirt road. The gas cap is not too tight so not a venting problem. Could it be the compression release not seating firmly and releasing compression on a bumpy road?
Lucas! Amal? LOL
6v elec magnido ? You May need a Kidney belt with that sweet 441...Nice!
Got your set of Whitworth wrenches???
Warts and all. Thanks Bill. Real life. Nick UK.
@wheelhousegarage
13 күн бұрын
Thanks Nick!
Had one in 1976..it boffed itself to bits..
How much pressure are you running in the tires. Drop it down to about 12 front and 10 rear.
I remember that bike, it’d blend your kidneys like a smoothie.
@wheelhousegarage
23 күн бұрын
Haha! Thanks for the laugh!
One way a 441 was good was as a cheater open class scrambler... much lighter than the 650s, 500s twins. This one in a Rickman frame. When it quit the pits were close by...
👍👌
Bill, back in the day werent 441's primarily used as ' trials ' bikes?
@jimtitt3571
28 күн бұрын
No, there were MX and Enduro versions (and road bike) but the prefered trials engine was the Cub and the B40 (from which the B44 Victor was developed). The B40's were a good trials engine and cheaply available as military surplus.
@philhawley1219
28 күн бұрын
@@jimtitt3571 The army surplus B40 used the same frame as the B44. The civvy bike shared the C15 frame.
'70s stuff. What fun would it be if everything went smoothly?
Nothing quite like the sound of a BSA. How much is this baby worth?
You have to accept the limitations of a bike like that, but they are still a million times more fun than any "modern" bike.
@wheelhousegarage
16 күн бұрын
👍👍
Can You Flat Track Dirt Practice Sometime on one of Your Vintage Moto's
These were horrible bikes on dirt, they got street bike forks from olden days. Shocks that can really shock.. A clanker and a banger. But they look cool! I had a B-50 MX for a while, also an oddball thing to ride. Once it was sideways on smooth ground it was happy. Puked oil every where if ran hard.
I am not being a smart aleck, but you have fouled the spark plug from lugging the engine at low rpm.
I can't believe you are riding in a short sleeved T shirt and what looks like every day jeans. You could suffer serious injury from the smallest spill.
@peterholthoffman
5 күн бұрын
I rode with a half-dozen friends all through the 1970s and T-shirts, Levi's, and combat boots were our standard riding gear in the summer. In the winter, we wore field jackets and during the spring/fall we had jeans jackets. We caught a little road-rash but not much (I've crashed 1x at ~60 mph, 2x at ~45 mph, and more times than I can count at ~30 mph). The major injuries during that time were one guy with a broken collarbone and two guys with torn ACLs from landing in a sitting position and then somersaulting forward which bent the knee backwards. We tried to roll when we came off.
When I was able to afford my first bike my father told me to get the 441. I didnt listen but, i wish i would have.
Very sexy. I'm really digging it. Thanks, bro for sharing.
That was awfully easy to kickstart. Are you sure that's not a 250?
@wheelhousegarage
13 күн бұрын
lol. I'm pretty sure😉
What did you expect. I restore old cars, and owners always expect them to drive, stop steer , like a new car , its old technology
@rolandrodriguez3854
4 күн бұрын
Try a Greeves.
3 minutes is a long time for an English anything to run!
More chicken, less music.
@wheelhousegarage
16 күн бұрын
Ha!