Classic Dirt Bike

Holiday time

Due to one thing and another cropping up at various times, my own collection of dirt bikes has been neglected a little recently. Like most enthusiasts I’ve a few bikes in the shed and they’re there for reasons which will be familiar to a lot of readers. Longest standing member of what has been referred to as ‘my fleet’ is the 250 Bultaco Sherpa T I’ve had from new and it was the subject of a rebuild series itself 20 or more issues back. The newest machine – as in new to me not ‘new’ new – is a TY250 Mono Yamaha, similar to the one I had in the Eighties and in between there are a scattering of British and European machines with one thing in common… they all need a bit of spannering.

Problems I’m facing include grumbling main bearings, leaking fork seals, worn gearchange shaft splines and a clutch needing strong hands to operate the lever. Actually this last one is also the tech feature here and involved the help of someone with more engineering ability than me to do the

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Classic Dirt Bike

Classic Dirt Bike11 min read
An Individual Approach
We’ve all jumped on a bike belonging to someone else and thought: “Ooh, I couldn’t ride this with the ’bars set there,” or “Those footrests feel like my feet are up around my ears…” and if the bike was ours we’d have to alter it so it felt better to
Classic Dirt Bike2 min read
Top Tiddler
As 214 riders gathered in Edinburgh to weigh in their machines for the 1970 SSDT they anxiously scanned the weather reports which were predicting all sorts of horrendous conditions, including torrential rain and snow, for the week ahead. Yet, as can
Classic Dirt Bike4 min read
Past Investment
Now, I know that we are all in this motorcycle lark ‘for the good of the sport’ and naturally we accumulate – beg, borrow, buy or steal – our bikes not because of what they are ‘worth’ but because of what they ‘are.’ But come on, admit it, in idle mo

Related Books & Audiobooks