Hi Guys
I will admit I haven't tried Elk yet, only realised I had the problem 3-4 days back!
I doubt they will have anything this early, but you never know.......
There are also a couple of guys that I've heard of in the UK that specialise in girders, Jake Robbins and Jess Ryles - but I've no experience of their skills/competence.
I believe I've seen somewhere that Jake was constructing replica Webbs for Triumphs and/or maybe Castle forks for Broughs?
I probably won't take modifying on myself, as I'm not set up for checking square/parallelism etc. A good adjustable jig/framework will help enormously. Although I can make spindles, links, steering column/head.
The side profile is the same between the 2 different models, but the 3hp version is wider (frontal), and hence pulls in more for the top spindle tube.
If I do go down that route, at least I have a pair on the standard bike to check for correct geometry.
I believe the petrol tanks are original, mainly due to the attached fittings (the petrol taps are a work of art, being the full depth of the tank, complete with mesh filters). I'll pop a photo up on the site shortly. The oil tank is similar. They've been repainted, and one tank has a small patch to the underside where it has no doubt been cut to give access for de-denting. The side mounted sight glass has a nickel plated top, with "Davisons" stamped in - Davisons were advertising their tanks and fittings in the magazines of the time.
Shame that v twin motor went, I couldwould have been interested in that - even 1/2 a world away (recently had a set of New Hudson Druids sent over from New Zealand). Same goes for the 60 degree Bosch mag, they're like hen's teeth now. The shaft driven version fits the road bike, but the prototype/racer has a rather interesting (and scarey) chain drive. Still, my 2 lads are grown now, and I don't have a need to add to the world's population any further!
I should have been into this game a bit earlier, instead of Lego (mind you, the internet is a wonderful thing for putting people and parts together).
Cheers Keith