« Reply #18 on: January 10, 2013, 03:17:15 pm »
While I was doing the supermarket shopping this morning I started thinking about the HL's place in VMX. To me HL's, C&J's and other Evo aftermarket bikes are really just a seventies version of what started with the Rickman Metisse in the sixties. Back in the sixties the Metisse was seen as some exotic dream bike that really did change the way motocross was played. Unfortunately only the wealthy or sponsored racers could afford them and the majority of racers used standard based equipment. It was the same in the seventies, the exotica like HL and C&J were rich guys playthings that only existed in overseas magazines to us Aussies. There were many more aftermarket framed bikes racing in the USA and UK than we had here because of the restrictive import levy that was in force at the time.
Today with the help of eBay and other outlets we can race the bikes we dreamed of as kids. Ross makes the point that "I don't believe these hack-abouts or other bogus bitzas represent anything" but I think they represent what many of us wished we could have had at the time. The "bogus bitza" was a part of fifties and sixties motocross when we built our own bikes from left over shit. When the lightweight frames became available, the 'bitza' gained some respectability.
I respect and understand a racers need to restore and race the bikes he raced during his golden days but I also respect those who find that they can now build the bikes they wish they could have had back in the day. I've restored concourse original bikes and built all out aftermarket framed hot rods and reckon that there's room for both schools of thought in our sport. It'd be pretty ordinary if we all raced the same old stuff. After a while one restored YZ400D looks just like another blokes YZ400D.
« Last Edit: January 10, 2013, 03:53:26 pm by firko »
Logged
'68 Yamaha DT1 enduro, '69 Yamaha 'DT1 from Hell' '69 DT1'Dunger from Hell, '69 Cheney Yamaha 360, 70 Maico 350 (2 off), '68 Hindall Ducati 250, Hindall RT2MX, Hindall YZ250a , Cycle Factory RT2MX flat tracker, Yamaha 1T250J, Maico 250 trials, '71, Boyd and Stellings TM400, Shell OW72,750 Yamaha