Firefighters, the Future, and a few Photos…

This is my hero and good friend Chuck, a firefighter/paramedic on the Huey medevac helicopter based right here at Brackett Airfield.   I grabbed this shot of Chuck yesterday on a red California Scooter.   The bike is awesome.   It has our Greaser model’s red wheels, and it’s amazing how just that one change can make such a dramatic difference in the bike’s appearance.  

I had a lot of fun shooting this photo, because I used an ultra-wide 12mm lens, and its tendency to exaggerate things makes the bike’s front end really reach out. 

fcs1

Yesterday wasn’t the first time I met Chuck.   Well, maybe I should more accurately say it wasn’t the first time he met me.  The first time our paths crossed I was actually one of Chuck’s customers, and I was unconscious during the experience.  Yep, these guys airlifted yours truly to a Level 1 Trauma Center as the result of pretty serious traffic accident (I was not on a California Scooter when it happened, though).  You are looking at one of the guys who literally saved my life, but that’s another story for another time.   Chuck, a heartfelt thanks from me to you and the rest of your team!

On to other topics, and this one’s a Duesy…California Scooter is doing something completely unique in the motorcycle industry, and completely unique in the marketing and engineering world.   (Come to think of it, this company is so innovative the words “completely unique” could be our motto.)   Rather than rely on marketing surveys, focus groups, and a bunch of other hit-or-miss techniques, the owners of your favorite motorcycle company decided to go right to the source for one of its next new products.   California Scooter is sponsoring a design competition for a new motorcycle.   Rather than try to guess at what today’s younger crowd wants, we are asking them to design it themselves.  Wow, is this ever going to be fun! 

Take a look at these next two photos, showing Steve answering motorcycle design questions from a group of Cal Poly Pomona engineering students.   This group of great young folks will be the designers of one of our next bikes.   We’re not guessing at what the next generation of new riders wants…we’re letting them design it!

fcs1 (2)

 fcs1 (1)

Back to my friend Chuck…California Scooter Company is donating that red Classic you saw in the first photo to the LA County Firefighter’s Cancer Support Network.  This great group is going to have a raffle for the bike, and we hope they raise a ton of money in the process.

fcs1 (3)

While I was grabbing a few photos of the Firefighters’ red Classic, Michael stopped in to get a Pro-One rear-view mirror for his sleek-and-slammed Harley Softail Deuce.   Michael’s Deuce is an ’05, the last year Harley made these beautiful motorcycles.  After I took this photo, Michael wandered over to the red Classic raffle bike in the background, and I grabbed another shot. 

fcs1 (5)

I could tell Michael loves his Harley, but I think there may be a California Scooter in his future, too!

fcs1 (6)

And while we’re on the subject of future California Scooter riders, take a look at this shot of Chuck and his son, Nathan…you don’t have to be clairvoyant to know what Nathan is thinking…

fcs1 (7)

Well, guys, I have a cool day in front of me.   Steve and the boys are down in Costa Mesa at a Good Guys Rod and Custom Association show, and he gave a couple of free passes to me.  My Nikon’s battery is fully charged, and so am I.   I’ll get a few photos and have a report for you in the next day or so!

Posted in California Scooter Company | Comments Off on Firefighters, the Future, and a few Photos…

Big Kids and Little Kids…

What can I say, folks…we had another gorgeous day here in sunny So Cal…and what better way to spend it than hanging around the California Scooter Company, meeting some really interesting people, and making chicken strips disappear up on Glendora Ridge Road…  

Yep, we took a couple of bikes out for the same ride as we did last week….hey, why not?

I knew that Jim Petitti, the owner of Raceway Services up in Salem, Oregon, was in town to pick up seven new California Scooters, and I was I was really looking forward to meeting him.  I had chatted with Jim a bit on the phone, hearing about his shop and the awesome restoration work he does, and his enthusiasm is infectious.   I knew I wanted to meet Jim in person.  After that initial phone call, I learned that Jim actually wrote a book on camshafts and optimizing small engine performance.  

My morning started out great, with Jim giving me a signed copy of his book.  It takes a lot (a whole lot) of work to write a book, and Jim’s is a great one.   Jim is the “go-to” guy in the high performance small engine field.  Jim’s working very closely with us and I can’t wait to get some of the parts he’s  developing into a California Scooter.   Here’s a shot of Steve listening carefully to Jim’s ideas…

13MayGRRRide

Jim drove down from Salem with his young friend TJ.   TJ’s a great guy, too, and I grabbed this shot of him securing Raceway Services’ new California Scooters in the back of Jim’s truck.   TJ just got back from serving a tour of duty in Iraq.    TJ, we salute your service!

13MayGRRRide (1)

Our good friend Robert is doing some very important work with us, and Robert knows motorcycles.   Steve told Robert and me to grab a couple of bikes and go out for lunch and a ride.   With the weather we had today that could only mean a return to Glendora Ridge Road…so off we went!

Here’s a shot of my ride, a black California Scooter Classic, up in the San Gabriel Mountains…

13MayGRRRide (2)

And here’s one of Robert, who was piloting the Van Halen bike…

13MayGRRRide (3)

Sandy’s design on the Van Halen bike sure looks good…but so does a stock California Scooter…

13MayGRRRide (4)

We hardly ever see cars on Glendora Ridge Road, and because of the surrounding mountains and the road’s serpentine nature, you can hear things coming for a long time before you see them.   We heard what we thought was a motorcycle and Robert and I were trying to guess what it was when this cool little Beetle rolled into view…

13MayGRRRide (5)

When we reached the western end of Glendora Ridge Road, as is usually the case we found a few guys on sports bikes taking a break.  This is always a cool scene.  Picture this…ultra-exotic, ultra-high-performance motorcycles (today’s take was two RC-51 Honda L-twin roadburners, and a 998 Ducati), with young guys in full leathers suddenly losing all interest in their bikes as they check out the California Scooters.   I love it!

13MayGRRRide (6)

13MayGRRRide (7)

One of the sport bike riders hamming it up for my Nikon while checking out the lean angle on a California Scooter…

13MayGRRRide (8)

And speaking of lean angles…I’ve written before in this blog about how the California Scooter’s 12-inch wheels and short wheel base make for a great-handling bike.   You can really crank these little puppies through the twisties…and we’ve got the chicken strips to prove it!  Chicken strips are the unused edges of a motorcycle tire’s tread area.  The harder you push a bike through the twisties, the more you lean it, and this means you use more tread at the tire’s extreme edges.  Serious riders don’t waste any time listening to war stories…they just look at a bike’s chicken strips.  Check out how narrow they are on the bikes Robert and I rode today…

13MayGRRRide (9)

Back at the plant after our afternoon ride, I met three great guys in our factory showroom.   Allow me to introduce Ed, Andrew, and Will…

13MayGRRRide (10)

That’s Ed on Steve’s ’53 Mustang Pony, with his grandsons Andrew and Will taking a photo.  Ed saw our recent ad in Popular Mechanics, and the ad’s tag line (“inspired by the legendary Mustang”) caught his eye.   Ed used to own a Mustang, so he and his two grandsons decided to swing by for a visit.   I asked Ed if he wanted to take one of our California Scooters out for a ride, and he was suddenly as excited as his grandkids.  He sure didn’t need to be talked into it!

13MayGRRRide (11)

These three kids were having such a great time I had to get one more photo…

13MayGRRRide (12)

Tomorrow’s going to be fun, too…we’re having a bunch of young engineers from Cal Poly Pomona visit the California Scooter Company to participate in an exciting new design competition…but that’s a story for another blog entry, so like I always say….stay tuned!

Posted in California Scooter Company | Comments Off on Big Kids and Little Kids…

Good Food, Glendora Ridge Road, and the Cannonball!

If you’re a gearhead in southern California, the title of this blog entry says it all.  Glendora Ridge Road is oneGlendoraRigeRoad of those secret roads that not too many people know about…mostly because there’s no real reason for it to exist other than to bring lots of smiles to folks who enjoy a twisty mountain trail.  It runs behind the first ridge of the San Gabriel mountains, just out of sight of the Pomona and San Gabriel valleys.   Folks who ride it for the first time are amazed that a road this desolate and this lightly traveled is so close to a major population center.  I’ve been riding it for years, and it is literally minutes away from my front door.  

Steve and everyone else at California Scooter have heard me talking about Glendora Ridge Road for months, and how the CSC bikes would be perfect for a ride through its twisties.  Yesterday, Steve asked Tony to put some gas in a couple of bikes, and he said to me “let’s go ride Glendora Ridge Road.”    He sure didn’t have to ask me twice.  The weather was perfect, and even though the phones are ringing off the hooks with folks calling about buying new Scooters, it’s not a good idea to say no when the boss wants to go for a ride (that’s Steve in the photo to the right).   Come to think of it, it’s not a good idea to say no when anyone wants to go for a motorcycle ride…

Tony fired up the Van Halen bike for Steve (it’s a custom bike designed by Sandy), and I grabbed a brand new black Classic with only 4 miles on the clock. 

We first wound our way up to Padua, which is a very cool little town nestled in the foothills.   Padua has a great dinner theatre, and I had to stop to grab a few photos for you.   This is the black Classic Tony set up for me.  It’s bone stock, and it is a runner!

GlendoraRigeRoad (1)

Here’s Steve’s Van Halen custom in front of the theatre entrance…

GlendoraRigeRoad (2)

After Padua, we headed up Shinn Road for the long climb to Mt. Baldy Village.    The single-cylinder CSC engines were earning their pay as we climbed into the San Gabriels.   There are a couple of tunnels the WPA guys cut through the mountains during the Great Depression…here’s a shot I grabbed going through one of them, beeping my horn to hear it reverberate off the tunnel walls…hey, it was a great day and I was on a great bike…why not be a little kid again?

GlendoraRigeRoad (3)

Steve and I stopped for lunch at the Mt. Baldy Lodge.    Rustic to an exponent, this is a nice place to grab a bite.  We both opted for the tuna melt.   Have you ever noticed that everything tastes better on a motorcycle ride?   The psychologists have a term for it (I think it’s called pleasure transferrance or something), but whatever it is, that sandwich was good!  Maybe it was because I knew we were only a few hundred feet from the start of Glendora Ridge Road, maybe it was because the weather was so nice, or maybe it was because I was on a new California Scooter.  Or maybe it was the nice lady who waited on us.  Whatever was going on, it was all good.  The Mt. Baldy Lodge is where a lot of motorcyclists stop before riding Glendora Ridge Road, and our California Scooters looked right at home parked out front.

GlendoraRigeRoad (4)

We fired up the Scooters’ 150cc engines, and we were on our way! 

I really like this next photo.   This is what Glendora Ridge Road is all about…the road follows a ridge, and the guys who cut it didn’t try to follow a straight line.  Folks talk about the Dragon back east and how many curves it has…but I’ll bet this road has it beat! 

GlendoraRigeRoad (5)

Look at those twisties up ahead!  I’ll tell you, it felt like Glendora Ridge Road was designed with California Scooter Company motorcycles in mind.   The bikes’ power and handling match the road perfectly.   Steve can scoot along pretty well, too.  I was in front for a little while, and to borrow a line from my good friend Bob, I told Steve if I was going too fast he could just pass me.  Which he did…

You see all kinds of interesting bikes up on Glendora Ridge Road.   Here’s a guy playing supermoto on a Yamaha…

GlendoraRigeRoad (6)

And here’s a cool shot of a Honda CBX I grabbed on an earlier visit…these are interesting machines that Honda made from 1979 to 1982.   This one is either a ’79 or an ’80.    The Honda CBX bikes had 6 cylinders, 6 carbs, lots of weight, and tons of complexity.  I had an ’82 that I liked a lot, but it didn’t handle nearly as well as the California Scooters.   I’ve had both machines on this road, and the California Scooter gets through the twisties waaay better.

GlendoraRigeRoad (7)

Speaking of which, here’s a shot I grabbed of the black Classic (with the San Gabriel mountains as a backdrop) along Glendora Ridge Road…

GlendoraRigeRoad (8)

And here’s another that Steve shot of me…that smile’s real, folks…this was fun!

GlendoraRigeRoad (9)

You see a fair amount of bikes of all kinds up on Glendora Ridge Road…here’s a hot dogger on a Honda sports bike…

GlendoraRigeRoad (10)

Glendora Ridge Road ends way up in the mountains where it intersects with the East Fork Road (which drops down to Azusa) and Glendora Mountain Road (which winds its way down to Glendora).   There’s a wide spot in the road here in the wilderness, and it’s a place where riders stop to chat.   Our California Scooters got a warm reception.    We’re the newest thing, and even guys on high end, liter-class sports bikes came over and wanted to know what these California Scooters are all about…

GlendoraRigeRoad (11)

GlendoraRigeRoad (12)

I asked one of the liter-bike pilots if I could get a shot of his helmet…this is fancy headgear, guys!

GlendoraRigeRoad (15)

And this is Natalie, a very nice young lady we met on Glendora Ridge Road.  She asked if she could sit on the Van Halen bike (the California Scooters just have that effect on people).  I told her she could if I could get a smile and a photo, and here’s the result……

GlendoraRigeRoad (13)

I chatted with Natalie for a while.  It’s part of my job.  Hey, riding motorcycles on Glendora Ridge Road, meeting folks like Natalie, taking pictures…it’s a tough job, but somebody’s got to do it! 

Steve and I took Glendora Mountain Road back down to the Pomona Valley…and I chased him all the way down trying to get a decent photo…here’s the best I could do…

GlendoraRigeRoad (16)

We had a great time, and a great ride…but there’s a lot more to come, folks. 

You’re probably wondering…could it get any better?

Well, yes, it can.  

Ever hear of the Cannonball Rally?   The coast-to-coast Cannonball Rally?  Oh, this is gonna be a good one…stayed tuned, Blog Readers, ’cause California Scooter is gonna be in it!

Posted in California Scooter Company | Comments Off on Good Food, Glendora Ridge Road, and the Cannonball!

The Devil’s In The Details…

That’s certainly a true saying…and we want every detail on every California Scooter to be perfect.   That’s where Lupe enters the picture…she’s been with Pro-One and California Scooter for a little more than 4 years, and Lupe’s job is the same as everyone else’s:  Making sure every bike that leaves the facility is perfect.

Details2

You might think we measure how good our bikes are by how well Lupe does her job, but we don’t.  We measure how good we are by how little Lupe has to do to each bike.   Every bike builder is focused on doing things right the first time, and our quality philosophy is not to have someone at the end of the line point out what we’ve done wrong.  Our approach is to “get it right” in production.   Lupe’s job consists primarily of cleaning the bikes and making them glisten after production, the road test, our intense final inspection, and before they ship.   She does it well, too!

Check out this red Classic with with the Greaser’s gangster whitewalls.  Along with a CSC performance exhaust, the whitewalls are the only departure from an otherwise completely stock bike.   It looks great!

Details1

Posted in California Scooter Company | Comments Off on The Devil’s In The Details…

Jim’s Vintage Photos…

Jim1I mentioned in our blog on the Hansen Dam vintage bike meet that my new friend Jim shared some photos with me just before we left.  I struck up a conversation with Jim about his beautiful dog, and when I asked, he told me that it was a Staffordshire Bull Terrier.  The dog was magnificent.   Jim admired the California Scooters we brought with us, and I was taken with his show dog. 

Jim is from Scotland, he’s maybe a year or two older than me, he wanted to know all about the California Scooters, and he told me about some of the vintage bikes he’s owned.   He used to ride and race in the United Kingdom.    It was fascinating stuff, and soon Jim was showing me photos of himself and his friends from the 1950s and 1960s.   I love seeing old photos, and I told Jim about our blog.  I asked if he had the photos in digital format because I wanted to post them here for you to see.   Jim simply handed me all of his photos, and he asked me to mail them back to him when I was done.   I guess trust is a character trait in Scotland, or maybe I just look like an honest guy.   I don’t have all of the details, but several of Jim’s photos had writing on the back….so here we go.   These are Jim’s photos with his captions…

Jim2

BSA Shooting Star at Brassie...1958

 

Croy Shore, L to R, Ewart Paton, Knapp, Scoular, Candlish, Archie

Croy Shore, L to R, Ewart Paton, Knapp, Scoular, Candlish, Archie

 
Another hard day at the office...judging by the muck on us, we weren't in front!!!

Another hard day at the office...judging by the muck on us, we weren't in front!!!

 

At Symington 1963 (remember the Cotton?)

At Symington 1963 (remember the Cotton?)

 

Symington (check who is pushing my bike in the background)

Symington (check who is pushing my bike in the background)

 

Far Right - "Rocket Man!"

Far Right - "Rocket Man!"

 

Matchless CSR650 1962 (check the crazy driver)

Matchless CSR650 1962 (check the crazy driver)

 

Irvine Merry Mass Moto X 1963 - Jock 3rd from right No. 130 - Myself next to him No. 126

Irvine Merry Mass Moto X 1963 - Jock 3rd from right No. 130 - Myself next to him No. 126

 

My First "Big" Bike - 1956 T100

My First "Big" Bike - 1956 T100

 

2nd T100 - 1959

2nd T100 - 1959

 

Linlithgow Scramble 1964 - from left Jock, his cousin, myself, and Liz supervising

Linlithgow Scramble 1964 - from left Jock, his cousin, myself, and Liz supervising

Jim, thanks very much for sharing these photos with us.  This is really cool stuff.   Please stop by and visit us the next time you are in La Verne – we’d love to get a photo of you on one of our bikes!

Posted in California Scooter Company | Comments Off on Jim’s Vintage Photos…

Too Cool Custom California Scooters…

We’ve had a great week here at the California Scooter Company, and as I promised a day or two ago, we have a couple of really special bikes to show you.

I stopped by on Tuesday morning and met John.   John is a real artist…he’s the man who does our custom paint work.   John showed us a tank he was preparing for Alvin’s bike (more on this in a second), and even though it hadn’t been clear coated yet, it was awesome.   Alvin wanted an orange bike, and he wanted the Mustang logo on the tank.   Wow, did John ever come through!  Folks, what you see below is not a decal…it’s hand-painted!  John, your work is incredible.

AlvinDon1

John wanted to make sure Steve was satisfied with his work before he applied the clear coat.   I was blown away.  I kept thinking about that tank all day long.  I wish I had that kind of talent.

So, that was Tuesday.  Thursday morning I stopped by again, and Carlos and Tony had just saddled up to put a couple of Greasers through their production test ride.   Those lucky guys.  They told me they’d be taking bikes out most of the morning. 

AlvinDon2

Every California Scooter gets a thorough road test before it ships.   I asked the guys what kinds of things they evaluate, and the answer was “everything…handling, braking, acceleration, shifting, turn signals, suspension, lights, brake lights, the horn, starting, the works…”  In short, they’re making sure your bike is perfect.   I asked the guys what kinds of problems they typically find on these test rides, and both guys told me they very seldom find anything.   The production process is dialed in, and when the bikes come off the line, they’re good.   Our guys just want to make sure that’s the case.   Plus, they get to ride motorcycles for a living!

Earlier in the week, Carlos mentioned to me that we had a special order for red Classic with the Greaser model’s red wheels.  As soon as he said that, I knew it would be slick.   Carlos was eager to build it, because he, too, knew it would be special.   I think he was right.  What do you think?

AlvinDon3

This bike is going to our good friend Don, and it is a dazzler.  It looked good in the shop, but when we pushed it out into the sunlight, it stopped traffic.  Literally.  People driving by saw it and stopped to get a better look.  Don’s bike has the red Greaser wheels, a CSC performance exhaust system, and a chrome luggage rack.  It’s stunning.

The guys were calling Don’s bike the Radio Flyer because of its red paint scheme, and I thought that was pretty neat, but I had forgotten about Alvin’s bike.   When I saw it, I was blown away all over again…take a look at this, folks!

AlvinDon4

Like every California Scooter, this is a very special motorcycle.  After taking a few photos, I asked the guys to push Steve’s ’53 Pony (the very bike that inspired creation of the California Scooter Company) outside.  I wanted to grab a side-by-side shot…

AlvinDon5

This is really cool stuff, and it was made even cooler when I had a chance to chat with Alvin.   He’s a very interesting guy who told me that he used to deliver newspapers on an original Mustang in the 1940s.   Alvin, my guess is you are at a position in life where you’re not delivering newspapers anymore, but if you ever wanted to, your new California Scooter would help you deliver the goods in style!

Posted in California Scooter Company | 1 Comment

How Many Is Too Many?

I stopped by the California Scooter manufacturing facility this morning to photograph a couple of beautiful new Classics (Alvin and Don, you will be more than pleased!).   I’m going to wait until tomorrow to post their photos, mostly because Steve told me about a couple of photos he grabbed of several Australia-bound Pro-One bikes the day before, and I thought I’d show them to you first.  

Pro-One, California Scooter’s sister company, finished six new performance V-twins for Magnum Performance in Victoria, Australia.   Magnum Performance has been a great Pro-One distributor and dealer for years, and we know their lucky customers will be blown away by these motorcycles.  Ian, we appreciate your business!

Take a look at some of the most exotic motorcycles in the world… 

ProOneAustralia1

ProOneAustralia2

The Pro-One bikes have huge V-twin engines (114, 121, and 124 cubic inches), and Steve tells me they really rock.  Tony gets to test ride each bike (what a job!).  I’ve been waiting to find one with the keys still in the ignition when the boss isn’t around, but so far, no luck.   It’s probably a good thing.  If I rode one I’d have to start talking to my other boss about buying a Pro-One.  She’s already told me there are enough motorcycles in the garage (but I always thought the right number was one more than what I already own…).

Ian, your customers in Australia are going to love these motorcycles.   They’re shipping in the  next day or so.  When you get them, if you notice one has a few more miles on it than the rest…it wasn’t me!

Posted in California Scooter Company | Comments Off on How Many Is Too Many?

CSC Classics Meeting Other Classics…

Steve, Joe, Ben, and I took several California Scooters to the BSA Owners Club Hansen Dam meet Sunday.    The weather was perfect, and giving the California Scooters a chance to mix it up with classic British, Italian, German, and US bikes was a great way to spend the morning.   We arrived early, but interest was high as soon as we took the bikes out of Steve’s trailer. 

HansenDamApr10

This is what the event is all about…classic BSA 650 twins made in England.  The one in the foreground is one of the last Beezers made in the early 1970s, with the oil-in-the-frame configuration.  The one behind it is from the 1960s.  I love those big chrome tank panels.

HansenDamApr10 (1)

I caught a bit of shade under the EZ-up and watched the crowd checking out all of the vintage bikes… 

HansenDamApr10 (2)

I had a lot of fun watching folks discovering the California Scooters.  The bikes were barely off the trailer when people had their cameras out snapping photos of these unique machines.

HansenDamApr10 (3)

 HansenDamApr10 (4)

While folks were taking pictures of our bikes, I wandered around a bit and grabbed a few photos of the vintage machines…here’s one of a Vincent, which was the fastest motorcycle in the world in its day…

HansenDamApr10 (5)

Take a look at this gorgeous, fully-faired Norton twin…this bike is 50 years old, but it looks brand new…

HansenDamApr10 (6)

 And here’s a Velocette, a big single-cylinder performance bike from the 1950s and 1960s…

HansenDamApr10 (7)

I didn’t want to stray too far from the California Scooter area, mostly because I enjoyed watching folks’ reactions to these modern classics.   This fellow asked if he could sit on a CSC Greaser, and he really lit up when Steve told him to fire it up and take it for a spin (which he did)…

HansenDamApr10 (8)

Then another Vincent parked right next to us.   These are very cool, very exotic high performance machines.  Check out the size of the speedometer, just above the headlight…that thing probably serves as a fairing!

HansenDamApr10 (9)

Another California Scooter test rider on a CSC Classic…just think…in another 50 years people will be bringing California Scooters to events like these!

HansenDamApr10 (10)

I took a break and watched the folks taking it all in…that red California Scooter Classic looks right at home in this ritzy neighborhood, doesn’t it ?

HansenDamApr10 (11)

And yet another Vincent…and this one I knew I’d seen before at one of the earlier Hansen Dam events.   Check out the airbrush painting on the tank… 

HansenDamApr10 (12)

Rollie Free set the motorcycle land speed record on the Bonneville salt flats on a Vincent back in the day at a cool 150 mph…he stripped down to a bathing suit and rode the bike stretched out in the prone position to do it, too…just like this Vincent’s tank art shows… 

HansenDamApr10 (13)

If you’ve seen the movie, “The World’s Fastest Indian,” there’s a scene in which a guy comes up to Anthony Hopkins at Bonneville and offers to help him.   He introduced himself as Rollie Free.   I thought it was a nice touch in that movie, which is one of my favorites.  I’ll bet less than 1% of the folks who watched that outstanding movie realized the significance of that name, but I’ll bet quite a few of the people reading this blog know exactly who Rollie Free was.

You know, the feat was duplicated on a Mustang that hit 100 mph at Rosemont Dry Lake, piloted by Walt Fulton.  There’s a fascinating history behind the Mustang ‘s racing adventures.   Don Cook, of the Mustang Motorcycle Club of America, was kind enough to send this photo to us of Walt setting the Mustang record…

100mph

We’ll come back to the Mustang’s racing lineage in another post, but when I saw that airbrushed Vincent tank, Walt Fulton’s 100 mph record was the first thing I thought of, and I wanted to let you all see the photo Don provided. 

So, back to 2010…here’s another cool vintage bike at Hansen Dam, a British Norton…

HansenDamApr10 (14)

More folks checking out the California Scooters…

HansenDamApr10 (15)

I kept drifting back to that red Norton.  A sleek Matchless parked right next to it.   Matchless was another British bike.   This one is a big single.

HansenDamApr10 (16)

Cindy from Century Cycles wanted to check out the blue Classic.  She looks good on it!

HansenDamApr10 (17)

Another Hansen Dam rider on the blue Classic…

HansenDamApr10 (18)

A couple of riders rolled in on Indians.   This one is a bike that Royal Enfield (in the UK) actually made for Indian, and Indian rebadged it near the end of their company’s existence.   During World War II, the Army told Harley and Indian that they had to focus all of their production on meeting the military’s needs.  Indian did so.  Harley didn’t, and they kept making civilian bikes along with their military bikes.  Indian lost most of their civilian customers, and they never fully regained their place in the market.

HansenDamApr10 (19)

I grabbed this shot of another Matchless as it rolled by…

HansenDamApr10 (20)

This one was of the more stunning vintage bikes at the show…a Norton configured as one of the original cafe racers…

HansenDamApr10 (21)

Here’s an Italian Moto Guzzi with a sidecar.  Its rider demonstrated his ability to “lift the chair” (get the sidecar off the ground) making tight turns in the parking lot, but I wasn’t fast enough to catch it with my camera…

HansenDamApr10 (22)

And finally, more people checking out that beautiful bright red California Scooter Classic at Hansen Dam.  I told this young lady she already had the leathers to match the bike, too…

HansenDamApr10 (23)

The Southern California Norton Owners Club hosts a Hansen Dam vintage bike event in November, and the BSA Owners Club does the same thing in April.   The meet starts around 8:30 or so, and then the vintage bikes roll out for a ride through the San Gabriel Mountains.  We stayed until the vintage iron left (an impressive departure!), and then we headed back to La Verne.  We had a great day, and I hope you enjoy viewing these photos as much as I enjoyed taking them. 

Oh, one more thing…I met a very interesting guy from Scotland (my new friend Jim) who was admiring the California Scooters.   As we were leaving, Jim showed me a bunch of black-and-white photos of his riding adventures in the 1960s in the UK.  I asked Jim if he had the photos in digital form, and I told him I wanted to share them with the fine motorcycle enthusiasts who read our blog.   To my surprise, Jim gave me the photos, asked me to scan them, and he’s trusting me to mail them back to him (which I will).   So, keep an eye on your California Scooter blog, because I’ll post Jim’s incredible photos here for you to enjoy in the next week or so…

Posted in California Scooter Company | 2 Comments

A California Scooter KLR?

I spent a good portion of the day yesterday working with Carlos building a new CSC Classic, and after lunch, I fired up my old KLR 650.  I hadn’t been on the KLR in several months, and when I took it back to the plant I was amazed at the similarity between it and the California Scooters.  They’re both torquey singles, and they’re both a lot of fun to ride. 

Last night I found this video of Lee Ermey talking about the Marine Corps’ version of the KLR.   I’m a big fan of Lee Ermey, and I’ve always been interested in military motorcycles.   This is a pretty cool video…take a look and see if you agree…  

I spent a couple of days last week in the factory to learn more about the California Scooters manufacturing process.  I wanted to see how the bikes are built and my good friend Carlos was just the guy to show me.  Carlos usually handles the company’s outside processing and purchasing activities, but the rest of the guys are very busy building production bikes and Carlos graciously agreed to walk me through the build cycle.  He’s a patient teacher who answered all of my questions. 

Here’s a shot of Carlos in action…

Carlos1

Carlos has been with California Scooter and Pro-One Performance for an incredible 19 years.  The man is a motorcycle professional and a genuine nice guy, and I sure learned a lot hanging around with him yesterday.  I was so focused on what Carlos was teaching me, I didn’t notice the customizing my KLR was undergoing…

CaScooterKLR

That California Scooter logo dresses up the KLR nicely, don’t you think?  I like it!

Tomorrow we’re going to have a great time at the Hansen Dam vintage British bike meet…and we’ll have some photos for you of the classic motorcycle crowd checking out our modern Classics.  This event attracts BSAs, Triumphs, Nortons, Vincents, Velocettes, Moto Guzzis, and now, California Scooters.   It’s going to be fun.

Ride safe.

Posted in California Scooter Company | Comments Off on A California Scooter KLR?

Vespas, Mustangs, and the Springfield Mile…

I just saw this video, and I thought I would share it with you…it’s another cool trials video, this time with a Vespa scooter.   You have to check it out.

And speaking of checking things out, I came across a few photos on my hard drive from the Springfield Mile a short while ago.  My good friends Dave and Bob took me to Springfield, and while we were there, Dave grabbed this very cool shot of a restored Mustang…

SpringfieldMustang

After admiring Dave’s Mustang photo, I started looking at some of the photos I grabbed that weekend.  If you’ve never been to the Springfield Mile, it’s something you need to do.  I love flat track racing (I grew up when Gary Nixon and Bart Markel dominated the sport).  Dave and Bob told me Springfield was special, but I had no idea.  On a half -mile dirt oval (the kind I used to see when I was a kid), the bikes get around pretty good, but on a mile track…well, that’s something altogether different.   On the big mile, the bikes hit 140 mph on the straights, and in the corners they slide along together, sideways, bumping shoulders at around 100 mph.  It’s an incredible sight.

Here are a few of the Springfield boys barreling out of Turn 4 on their way up to 140 mph in front of the stands…

Springfield1

And here’s a bunch more in Turns 1 and 2.   These guys are awesome.   My camera has a feature that lets it track moving objects and adjust the autofocus to account for the range change, but these boys were flying so fast my Nikon couldn’t keep up with them.  I put the camera on manual focus, picked a spot and focused on it, and then pulled the trigger when the pack entered the field of view…

Springfield2

After just a lap or two, Kenny Coolbeth and Chris Carr were so far out in front they had the track to themselves.   These guys are the best of the best.  They’re sliding sideways at over 100 mph in this shot.

Springfield3

These photos are cool, but they don’t really convey the thunder and lightning that accompanies a race like this.   It’s incredible racing, and it’s a lot of fun to watch.

We’re off to the Hansen Dam British Bike Meet here in southern California this weekend, so watch for photos of some cool vintage iron early next week.   We’re bringing a bunch of California Scooters, and if you can make the event, stop by and we’ll let you fire one up…but no sliding around sideways at 100 mph…at least not until we come out with our Springfield model!

Posted in California Scooter Company | Comments Off on Vespas, Mustangs, and the Springfield Mile…