It’s not on a regular basis you could bid on museum-caliber bikes, and Mecum’s upcoming public sale on the Nationwide Bike Museum in Anamosa, Iowa, is stuffed with heavy hitters. The gathering hits the market from the property of John Parham, who based J&P Cycles together with his spouse Jill in 1979. Having amassing among the best personal motorbike collections within the nation, John sadly handed away in 2017, and 300 of his bikes will probably be discovering new houses.
With the whole lot from road-racing Harleys, hill climb bikes and trick European racers within the assortment, there’s lots to see. Mecum is internet hosting the sale September sixth by the ninth, and if you happen to’re within the midwest, do us a favor and convey one of many following bikes dwelling—ideally the XRTT.
1971 Harley-Davidson XRTT The XRTT 750 is essentially the most stunning road-going Harley ever constructed, that’s a scientific truth. Okay, it’s extra like an informed opinion backed by sources, however I welcome your challenges within the remark part. A road-racing model of the wildly profitable XR750 flat tracker, the XRTT is a shocking, purpose-built piece of Milwaukee iron.
Harley’s KR750 was a dominant power in flat monitor racing, so why wouldn’t it work on pavement? Again within the Nineteen Sixties, you might modify your KR for asphalt by HD’s elements catalog, or purchase a factory-built KRTT and go racing in AMA Class C.
New guidelines from the AMA in 1969 leveled the taking part in area for British marques, and despatched Harley again to the drafting board after seeing the KR750 battle to compete. Hasty growth of an XR750 racing engine based mostly on the 900 cc Sportster, resulted in an iron-head mill that went into nuclear meltdown often, till a brand new prime finish was developed for ’72.
The brand new alloy XRTT (and a few irons as effectively) gave European makes a run for his or her cash in ’72, particularly within the Transatlantic Match Races, however that’s one other story altogether. This 1971 XRTT was piloted by Ohio’s George Roeder, who got here inside inches of a Grand Nationwide Championship in 1963 and 1967. The XRTT is powered by the up to date alloy-head 750 engine, and is sporting a gorgeous restoration with timeless HD orange and black paint and Roeder’s No. 94. Mecum estimates Lot S142 will deliver between $40,000 and $48,000.
1949 Vincent Black Shadow The enduring Vincent Black Shadow is without-a-doubt among the best bikes ever constructed. It was light-weight and well-designed with the 998 cc engine as a careworn member, and naturally, it went like stink. The air-cooled, 50-degree twin was good for 55 hp, and propelled the Black Shadow to 125 mph in inventory trim. Off the showroom flooring or on the salt flats, the Black Shadow was certainly the world’s quickest motorbike.
The Black Shadow would stay a pace freak favourite for years after manufacturing resulted in 1955, and a number of other American tuners perfected the bike for drag use. Minnesota-based Invoice Lehmann was among the best, and his supercharged fuel-burning Black Shadow drag bike is actually one of many highlights of the Parham Assortment.
Lehmann’s Shadow was based mostly on a customized inflexible chassis with a brief Hagon inverted fork, a Harley clutch and a Burkhardt Engineering transmission. Engine output was maximized by pushing the V-twin to 1,200 cc, and putting in uncommon Vincent Black Lightning heads. A nitromethane/alcohol mix was drawn by the SU CV carburetor and force-fed by a belt-driven supercharger from a small British automotive.
Rad by any definition, Lehmann’s ’49 Black Shadow is a drag racing time capsule, and one of many wildest Vincents in existence. Mecum estimates Lot F48 will promote for between $50,000 and $60,000.
1937 Brough Superior SS80 Strolling out in your father’s motorbike enterprise to start out your individual proper down the road is unquestionably a cheeky transfer. Much more so if you happen to take his identify, and add ‘Superior’ to the tip. But when your intention is to construct the very best motorbike on the market, George Brough did certainly have a superior method of doing issues.
Brough went out on his personal in 1919, and his Brough Superior bikes price almost as a lot as the typical particular person made in a yr. On your sizable funding, you acquired a motorcycle that was tailor-made to your private style and specification, and every Superior was totally assembled, after which disassembled for paint and plating. Brough would personally assure that every bike carried out because it ought to, and within the case of the SS80, that meant it will obtain a prime pace of no less than 80 mph.
The SS80 was one among Brough’s earliest successes, with manufacturing beginning in 1922, and ending with the outbreak of WWII in 1939. Initially, the SS80 was powered by a side-valve J.A.P. engine, and Brough turned the primary particular person to prime 100 mph at Brooklands on a side-valve with one among these machines. From 1935 on, Brough used 982 cc V-twins from Matchless with modified backside ends for the SS80.
Outfitted with an excellent alloy gasoline tank with knee pads, the Brough Superior SS80 is a superb instance of basic pre-war British bike design. Mecum expects Lot S131 from the Parham Assortment to deliver as a lot as $120,000.
1954 NSU Sportmax Sporting a large silver-bullet fairing and a brilliant complicated little 250 engine, this 1952 NSU Sportmax may be essentially the most quintessentially German motorbike ever constructed. Evocative of streamlined Mercedes and Auto Union race vehicles of the Thirties and ’40s, this NSU brings us again to an period when aerodynamics had been limitless in highway racing.
BMW reigns king of the German motorbike producers at present, however for a few years that title belonged to NSU. Neckarsulmer Motorrad began constructing bikes in 1901, and so they provided bikes to the German military in World Warfare I and II. The truth is, NSU manufactured these goofy half-track bikes with a single steer wheel out entrance, known as the Kettenkrad. Within the Thirties and mid ’50s, NSU constructed extra bikes than anybody on the earth.
The NSU Racemax was the manufacturing unit’s works machine for 125 and 250 cc highway racing, immediately recognizable for its huge aluminum ‘mud bin’ fairing. The works bikes had been very difficult and impractical for privateers, so NSU made a small variety of Sportmax bikes accessible that had been based mostly on Max and Tremendous Max fashions.
The 247 cc OHV four-stroke used within the Sportmax employed a pair of rods, much like connecting rods, to function the valvetrain—expertise Bentley used within the ’20s. 250-class Sportmax bikes weren’t tuned as scorching because the works bikes, however had been good for as a lot as 20 hp.
These streamlined NSUs had been fairly profitable in Grand Prix racing, with notable pilots like John Surtees and Mike Hailwood within the saddle, and NSU took dwelling a World Championship in 1954. Sadly, the sanctioning our bodies concerned later banned massive fairings after a nasty expertise with crosswinds. From then on, entrance fairings had been to not enclose the entrance wheel.
The 1954 NSU Sportmax within the Parham Assortment is an superior piece of highway racing historical past, however it’s value noting that this explicit bike is listed by the Nationwide Bike Museum as a reproduction. As such, Mecum estimates Lot S15 will deliver between $6,000 and $7,200.
1951 Sunbeam S7 Admittedly, we discover ourselves most attracted to chill customs, or bikes with notable competitors historical past, however typically it’s onerous to disregard a motorcycle that’s fascinating, or simply plain bizarre. I wouldn’t name the Sunbeam S7 bizarre, however it’s positively distinctive. I imply, take a look at that longitudinally-mounted twin and balloon tires?
John Marston began Sunbeam Cycles again in 1887 with a give attention to high-quality bicycles. He began experimenting with motorized bicycles round 1903, however it didn’t go effectively, and apparently somebody was really killed. Marston dabbled with cars afterward (utterly separate from Sunbeam Motor Automobile Firm), however reluctantly returned to bikes round 1912.
Marston’s Sunbeam bikes match the usual for British bike designs of the period, and boasted modest efficiency (understandably so), and Marston marketed his bikes as ‘The Gentleman’s Machine.’ Marston handed away in 1918, however the manufacturing of Sunbeam bikes continued on.
Sunbeam is finest recognized for its S fashions, which had been manufactured between 1949 and 1956, and that’s the place issues begin to get a bit unusual. Sunbeam was acquired by BSA, and BSA had acquired the design of the BMW R75 in reparations after WWII. However the Brits had been frightened in regards to the bike wanting too German, so the boxer needed to go.
A longitudinally-mounted 500 cc twin took its place, and propelled the S7 by way of shaft drive. Early bikes suffered severely from engine vibration, and the bronze worm gears within the shaft drive might strip from nothing greater than extreme throttle. Sunbeam’s answer was nothing greater than detuning the engine!
Regardless of these design faults, the early S7 mannequin instructions a premium over the S7 Deluxe and S8 fashions at present. If the S7 from the Parham Assortment is certainly one among these early fashions, Lot F51 might be a cut price on the estimated $7,000 to $8,400. [Mecum]