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Building Budget Brits - wBW
Book Review
Building Budget Brits
A Practical Guide for Refurbishing BSA and Triumph Unit Twins
by Mike Brown
ISBN: 978-1-884313-62-2
Whitehorse Press 2009
175 pages, B&W photos and illustrations.
List Price: $24.95
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webBikeWorld.com Book Review by Rick K.
There are two things I have to do before I lower the
side-stand for the last time.
First, I have to own a Moto Guzzi. Second, I
have to re-visit my youth while I still can with a
vintage BSA or Triumph. Sounds nutty, I know, but
that's me.
I'm not sure where the Guzzi jones came from?
Probably my natural affinity for the somewhat
obscure. Anyone can buy a Honda; not everyone owns
a Moto Guzzi.
So maybe the Moto Guzzi or BSA names aren't
unfamiliar to webBikeWorlders, but let's face it -- ride
an 850T to the Freezy Cone on Saturday night in
July, and the kids (and most of the adults) won't have a
clue. To them, a motorcycle is a Harley. You
mean there are other brands?
When I first went to college (it took me 19 years of
on and off study before I finally graduated), a guy
living next door owned a Bonneville. I think it
was a 650, partly chopped. I wasn't into choppers
-- never was -- but every time he pulled the thing out
of the shed and start
it up I'd get that feeling in the pit of my gut.
But, Triumphs were expensive back then, so I bought, of all things, a 1968 Bultaco Metralla for
$250.00. It was propped against a wall in a
garage, covered in two-stroke oil. The owner said
he raced it in a 250 cc class with other bikes and he
mentioned a word that I heard for the very first time: "Ducati".
I pushed it home, cleaned it and gassed it, read the
owner's manual and practiced in the parking lot next
door. I can't remember -- I think it had either a
1st-down shifter or the shifter was on the right or
something strange.
Anyway, it was cool, but a two-stroke was a poor
substitute for the booming sound of that Bonnie.
It's haunted me ever since, so one day that itch will be
scratched.
And I don't mean a modern Triumph either.
Nothing wrong with 'em -- I owned two in the last 5
years, but there's something about those old Bonnies
(and BSAs and Nortons) that does it for/to me.
So when I'm ready to resurrect one, Building Budget
Brits will be my primary resource.
Mike Brown is well-known to Britbike restorers and
armchair dreamers like me for his tips and tricks
columns in Old Bike Journal and Walneck's Cycle Trader.
He's been wrenching for over 20 years and I believe this
is his first book.
When Building Budget Brits arrived, I figured it was
another one of those dry reprints, written by some old
and cranky character with a wall full of Whitworth
spanners. Surprise! It's as modern as a
Hinckley built Thunderbird.
This book has a couplathree things that any of the
other Britbike restoration books don't. It's new
-- fresh off the press in 2009 -- so it uses modern language and
up-to-date references and sources for parts and tools. It's
also written in an
easy-to-understand and down-home style; and, best of
all, it's about putting together a BSA or Triumph on a
budget.
That's right -- none of the cost-no-object,
micro-finish, museum-quality standards here. This
is down to earth advice for finding and restoring a junker
without breaking the bank, yet making it as safe and reliable as
possible using modern parts and technologies.
Anybody that has no qualms about buying a rolling
chassis and dropping in a $75.00 engine is a man after
my own heart!
Brown starts by helping you choose your basket case,
and that's what really piqued my interest. He explains the
pros and cons of choosing a BSA or a Triumph for
restoration and I learned more in a few paragraphs about
these two bikes than I could imagine.
The book is full of practical advice and I'd even
suggest that anyone interested in learning about how
motorcycles work could benefit by reading the tips and
tricks described here. The format is simple and
easy to read, with two columns per page and plenty of
photos, just like a shop manual -- but much more fun to
read.
Brown guides us through everything from wheel building to
Amal carb
revival techniques to seat covering tricks, and I bet youngsters and rookies will be
amazed at how those old bikes can be ripped apart right
down to the last washer and bolt and put back together
again better than
new. Definitely better than new, with all of our
modern technologies.
Building Budget Brits is no doubt the best British
bike restoration manual I've found, and it's resurrected
my long-smoldering desire to roll up my sleeves and get
going. If you're at all interested in restoring a
vintage BSA or Triumph, or just want to see what it
takes, this is the book to have.
Review Date: March 2009.
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