Posts Tagged ‘English iron’

My Fair Lady

Monday, May 16th, 2011

For some reason, it has only just come to our atention that the Datsun Roadster series of cars are an extremely pretty collection of open top sportsters.

These sunny sundays we’ve been blessed with of late have been great for classic car spotting. The English summer sun has a habit of teasing out blooms that spend at the dark, colder months locked up in storage.

This weekend we caught a fleeting glance of a pod of Datsun Roadsters burbling prettily along a country lane. At least one of our party reckoned that they’re “like MGB roadsters, only prettier and, somehow, cooler”.

We couldn’t agree more. And in fact, you can’t help thinking that the Datsun corpor­ation must have been inspired by MG to produce an entry level sports car to compete with the tweedier, stuffier Morris — partic­u­larly in North America.

Strange loungecore movie featuring a Datsun Roadster here.

The Cult of the Café Racer

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

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Ok, I know. A true café racer shouldn’t have anything as preten­tious as a French accent anywhere near it. And alright, I know as well that at least the engine on a true ‘Caff’ racer should have been milled in the greasy environs of the West Midlands. But there was something about this image of a German man on his caffed up Honda CB500, liberated from a US-​​based enthu­siasts’ site , that summed up what my idea of a customised street racer out of the classic mould should be.

The whole idea of a café racer, of course, comes from the fifties, when greasers lathered up into a frenzy by Gene Vincent records from a transport café’s jukebox, would race from round­about to round­about for kicks. The obvious need to stay clear of alcoholic beverages meaning that a nice cuppa char served in your average transport café by the side of a British A-​​road was much more conducive as a meeting point than a local hostelry.

The classic café racer was a bike that had been modded for quickness surf-​​footedness — fifties and sixties examples aped the homologated road racers of the time. Long, flat stripped or chrome fuel tanks and small, one man seat right at the back of the frame were the most visible leitmotifs, along with dropped, ‘clip-​​on’ handlebars. The defin­itive machine in the early years was a hybridised beauty that was the progeny of a Norton frame and Triumph engined machine called “The Triton” (Triumph and Norton, geddit?).

The café racer cult has since the days when they were simply stripped-​​down mods, become a scene in itself, and acolytes of the scene fetishise all that is utilit­arian – even though it is often filtered through the lens of youth cult and the fashion business. Whatever the roots and the rhymes and the reasons, there’s something about the classic set up that brings us out in the need for English iron and unadul­terated grease.

Stay tuned for a fleshed out feature on our favourite sort of motorbike.

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