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British Bikes / Re: Coventry Eagle 1932
« Last post by ramwing7 on June 20, 2026, 02:58:31 PM »
Thanks folks.  You have to love the vintage motorcycle community.  No matter how unusual the bike is or how strange the problem, somebody out there has ideas and tips they are willing to share.
I'm off pursuing some of these now.
Thanks.
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British Bikes / Re: Coventry Eagle 1932
« Last post by R on June 20, 2026, 03:38:59 AM »
'The Vintage Motorcyclists' Workshop" by Radco contains a full double page photo

Split across 2 pages it must be noted. The manifold is slap bang in the page join !
All the online scans are awful in the picture dept, they must have scanned a photocopy

I've done some lost wax casting.
Doing a curly plaster central core of the actual gas pathway and coating it with wax to a suitable depth and then coating the whole
shebang in more fireproof plaster is possibly the simplest method ?  You'd have to find a foundry that does this type of casting.
Simpler than it sounds, and cheaper as a one off than making moulds and core moulds.
The cast metal very accurately replicates the finish on the wax - so you could inscribe your image on it !
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British Bikes / Re: Coventry Eagle 1932
« Last post by 33d6 on June 19, 2026, 02:58:03 AM »
If you want a really good picture of an original manifold, 'The Vintage Motorcyclists' Workshop" by Radco contains a full double page photo of his restoration of the same model. Pages 180 and 181 to be precise. Its a photo of the timing side so gives you a good view of the manifold.
Radco also wrote a fairly extensive article on restoring the engine for the Vintage Motor Cycle Club Journal. This would be back in the late 70's. early 80's as his book was published in 1986 and was mainly a compendium of all the restoration articles he had written for the Journal over the years.
He wasn't complimentary about the engine but I think anyone trying to beat Villiers at their own game back in the early 30's would have had a tough job. In the end Cov Eagle came back to the Villiers fold. They made a better and cheaper product.
All that aside I think looking at 3D printing is the way to go. I've made one batch of inlet manifolds. Made the patterns, got them cast and then machined the result. It is not as simple as it looks. Making a pattern the foundry was happy with was a learning curve in itself but the big pain was making a range of jigs and fixtures to hold the castings so I could machine them afterwards. Not as simple as it looks. I realised early on that making a batch was no harder nor dearer than making one so a batch it was. No one was interested in my efforts nor wished to help nor put money in until I appeared with the completed batch when desperate owners needing one just appeared out of the woodwork. All the extras went amazingly quickly.
It's 3D printing for me nowadays and that is more involved than you expect.
Have fun.
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British Bikes / Re: Excelsior - or even Waratah - around 1924
« Last post by 33d6 on June 19, 2026, 02:17:57 AM »
This may be helpful searching for commercial catalogues or not but our State Library has also improved its website and search function so you can really drill down and hunt out really obscure stuff. Its surprising what they have.
They also give lots of info on where stuff is held elsewhere and occasionally you can access it through their site.
Most old motorcycle stuff is now held off site and may take up to five business days to arrive. This is absolutely no problem as they run a 'click and collect' service. Order what you want from home, they acknowledge the order, then text you when its arrived to look at. They will hold it for five days before returning it to the archives and will hold it longer if you ask. They really make it easy.
As you can gather I'm a big fan. Have a browse.
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British Bikes / Girls In Your Town - No Selfie - Anonymous Casual Dating
« Last post by expatriot on June 18, 2026, 09:04:58 PM »
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British Bikes / Re: Coventry Eagle 1932
« Last post by ramwing7 on June 17, 2026, 07:54:23 PM »
You guys are spot on with the pics.  I expect I'll have to fabricate one.  Might go so far as to try fabricating a model and the sandcasting one.  Although welding one up is starting to appeal to me as well.  Expecting a few false starts, but that's why we work on these old things.  Right?
But, if you have one around and have some time for measuring, I would appreciate any help I could get.
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British Bikes / Re: Excelsior - or even Waratah - around 1924
« Last post by cardan on June 17, 2026, 05:00:09 AM »
Thanks 33d6. I suspect that unless you had one of these bikes you'd know nothing about it! Even if the bike was at a rally, I doubt anyone would notice the double rails under the tank. I'm certain the bike is Excelsior, so time to scrape off the glossy powdercoat on the top left of the head lug to look for an Excelsior-style frame number. It will be there.

There is a reason Excelsior had so many frame variations. In the later teens they were bought out by their long-term lug suppliers R. Walker and Son. As well as making and selling bikes, the company carried on making frame lugs and parts for other makers. These parts were often somewhat different from those used in Excelsiors, but are recognisable none-the-less. In the 269 Villiers era, there are a number of Australian bikes (Elliott, for example) that are almost indistinguishable from the 1919 Excelsior Villiers, even though the Excelsior design went off in other directions - wedge tank - at the same time.

It turns out that the gearbox lug used by big Excelsiors from 1921 is one of the more popular gearbox lugs for Australian bikes using the Sturmey Archer CS, and in Adelaide lots of bikes used so many RW&S parts that their parentage in Excelsior is quite obvious. It wouldn't surprise me if many of the parts we associate with AG Healing & Co in Melbourne in fact came - at least originally - from RW&S. I have a few adverts for R Walker & Son frame sets, but I'd dearly love some commercial catalogues!

Jealous about time spent in the State Library - fond memories of the reading room, and librarians bringing crusty volumes from the stacks... amazing place.

Leon

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British Bikes / Re: Coventry Eagle 1932
« Last post by cardan on June 17, 2026, 04:28:13 AM »
Yes I think it might be complicated, not helped by the fact that the 147 and 196 used different inlet manifolds. https://www.barnstormers.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/Coventry-Manual.pdf

If there's room, the bike would probably run with a "stub" manifold and the carb hanging out the side. This could be made pretty easily. But in the meantime you need a good illustration and some measurements of the correct part so you can show people what you are looking for. I have a couple of unidentified cast 2-strake inlet manifolds in my junk box, but I have no idea what they are off. Now that I've looked, not 1932 CE, I think!

Cheers

Leon
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British Bikes / Re: Coventry Eagle 1932
« Last post by R on June 16, 2026, 11:59:30 PM »
Or does it have one of those curly-whurly alloy thingies - to the other side ??
That makes it somewhat more  complicated ...
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British Bikes / Re: Coventry Eagle 1932
« Last post by R on June 16, 2026, 10:39:56 PM »
A simple tubular stub - to suit the carb, and a 2 bolt plate welded on would about do it. ?

You might need to carefully consider the angle of the inclined cylinder,
best so that the carb is quite horizontal.
And the weld likely needs to be gas-tight.  Well within the skill set of most welders...
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