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Autojumble / Re: Villiers 9D engine WANTED
« on: May 02, 2022, 10:11:37 AM »
Hi,
Thanks for the info, but that one it's to expensive.
Paulo
Thanks for the info, but that one it's to expensive.
Paulo
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Does it say WINCO? If so, it's off a bike so rare I can't even find a photo of one. 1920-22 they say, but they didn't advertise in the Motor Cycle or exhibit at the Show.I will try to "clean" the lever a little more. See the new picture attached with a draw of what I can see (white line) and what I think I can see (blue line)
The hand lever is a seperate piece. You can't be sure it is an original part of the whole mechanism. All that trademark identifies is the lever itself. It is not a good indication for who manufactured the rest.
I agree the change is well made and has all the indications of a commercial operation but I see it as an aftermarket accessory and probably nothing to do with any gearbox manufacturer. Eventually one day the information will just fall into your arms but I wouldn't let it distract me from getting the bike back on the road.
We see you have posted a pic elsewhere asking the brand of this lever.
https://i.ibb.co/wh0qwJx/33.jpg
There is probably more vintage (and veteran) expertise here than anywhere else on the planet. !
Lets see if anyone can fathom what this brand may be - its pretty far gone.
SA were fond of putting their mark on their (handchange) levers.
http://www.motomaniastore.com/media/img/parts/1637d33f3641ee979951a4c9b67fff3e.JPG
Who else ??
If not foot change, where does the linkage go??
Leon
If not foot change, where does the linkage go??
Leon
Nicely made, but not by Sturmey Archer, and certainly not in 1928 when foot change was not even common at the Isle of Man TT race! That said, someone has gone to a lot of trouble, and personally I'd keep it as part of the bike's history.
The other option is to convert it back to how it was (worm clutch and hand change).
Leon
Most Sturmeys of that era you'd expect to see a clutch worm to activate the clutch pushrod.
Has yours been changed to something different ?
This is Norton rather than Sturmey, but the concept is the same.
I forgot about this site. www.sturmey-archerheritage.com , it has a useful 1929 illustrated spare parts list you can use. It's a good start.
Can you make this gearbox work with what you have ?
Boxes then didn't have a positive stop mechanism, so someone may have been updating/improvising ?
Does this bike look familiar ? Bit small to see good detail though.
If you zoom in, it looks very much like what you have ?
Or this previous thread
http://classicmotorcycleforum.com/index.php?topic=4832.0