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Posted

you are right i call them girls in jest

 

attachment.php?attachmentid=84620&stc=1&d=1401028696

 

attachment.php?attachmentid=84621&stc=1&d=1401028696

 

have embarest a lot of sport bike riders lol so figerd i would worn them

made them out of a block of aluminum

Posted (edited)
I'll wager no one here had this motorcycle as a kid.

 

attachment.php?attachmentid=84619&stc=1&d=1401028453

 

Looks like a Sears & Roebucks :thumbsup2: The 1914 Sears Deluxe motorcycle was the retail giant Sears and Roebuck's entry into the highly popular motorcycle market of the early 20th Century.

Motorcycle Image Gallery

In the early catalogs from Sears and Roebuck, you could order almost anything -- including a house. And in the 1912 catalog, Sears offered its first motorcycle.

This 1914 Magneto Model, complete with the 35-cubic-inch Deluxe "Big Five" engine, sold for $197.50 and was claimed to have nearly the same power as larger twin-cylinder motorcycles. These single-cylinder versions were available with batteries or a Bosch magneto.

Two twin-cylinder motorcycles were also offered, one producing seven horsepower, the other nine. The engines in all Sears machines were manufactured by Spake, which sold them to a variety of builders.

As with most makers of motorcycles in this period, Sears claimed high quality and proven performance for its models.

The handlebars of the 1914 Sears Deluxe motorcycle were made of double-reinforced tubing and the fuel tank was formed out of anti-rust material.

A trailing-link fork with leaf spring handled suspension chores in front, but a seat mounted on coil springs made do in the rear.

Sears sold these early motorcycles until 1916, when they were removed from the catalog. But Sears returned to motorcycle retailing between 1953 and 1963, when it offered a line of cycles manufactured by Puch under the Sears-Allstate moniker.

For more pictures of the 1914 Sears Deluxe motorcycle

Edited by Brake Pad
Posted
you are right i call them girls in jest

 

attachment.php?attachmentid=84620&stc=1&d=1401028696

 

attachment.php?attachmentid=84621&stc=1&d=1401028696

 

have embarest a lot of sport bike riders lol so figerd i would worn them

made them out of a block of aluminum

 

You really should not play with those, you could hurt yourself:stirthepot:

Posted

Coker Tire Company is a Chattanooga, Tennessee-based company that manufactures and sells vintage-style Michelin, Firestone, BF Goodrich and Uniroyal bias-ply and radial whitewall tires for collector automobiles. Applications include: restored classic vehicles, Brass Era vehicles, Hot Rods, Muscle Cars, Modern Muscle Cars, Vintage Trucks, Military Vehicles, Vintage Motorcycles, European Sports Cars, Micro Cars, Scooters, Vintage Airplanes, among many others

 

I'm going after at 1960's replica Bike, of an early model, like the 1914 or the 1917 model. the 9 Horse Powered engine:thumbsup2:

Posted
1913 Sears....Plum Crazy color...

 

And we have a winner! Neil found the exact pic and identified the bike. Good show, Canuck. Sorry, Brake Pad. You were on the right track.

 

OK Neil, what's your offering?

 

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-Lg2X8tkriJw/Uau5uEbXBnI/AAAAAAACkJM/9J_9ltpDuGY/s1600/1913_sears_motorcycle_brochure_03.jpg

Posted
Looks like a Sears & Roebucks :thumbsup2: The 1914 Sears Deluxe motorcycle was the retail giant Sears and Roebuck's entry into the highly popular motorcycle market of the early 20th Century.

Motorcycle Image Gallery

In the early catalogs from Sears and Roebuck, you could order almost anything -- including a house. And in the 1912 catalog, Sears offered its first motorcycle.

This 1914 Magneto Model, complete with the 35-cubic-inch Deluxe "Big Five" engine, sold for $197.50 and was claimed to have nearly the same power as larger twin-cylinder motorcycles. These single-cylinder versions were available with batteries or a Bosch magneto.

Two twin-cylinder motorcycles were also offered, one producing seven horsepower, the other nine. The engines in all Sears machines were manufactured by Spake, which sold them to a variety of builders.

As with most makers of motorcycles in this period, Sears claimed high quality and proven performance for its models.

The handlebars of the 1914 Sears Deluxe motorcycle were made of double-reinforced tubing and the fuel tank was formed out of anti-rust material.

A trailing-link fork with leaf spring handled suspension chores in front, but a seat mounted on coil springs made do in the rear.

Sears sold these early motorcycles until 1916, when they were removed from the catalog. But Sears returned to motorcycle retailing between 1953 and 1963, when it offered a line of cycles manufactured by Puch under the Sears-Allstate moniker.

For more pictures of the 1914 Sears Deluxe motorcycle

 

You were SOOOOOOO close. If you could only have come up with the original pic and an exact year.

Thank you for playing.

What have you to offer for us to find?

Posted (edited)

ANNICE MOTORS INDUSTRY Brazil CG or EMCOR, INC. Skygo Motorcycle WIZARD 125 or Chian chongqing cheap 150cc motorcycle

http://hlmotor.en.alibaba.com/product/1540639302-220039443/2014_SOUTH_AMERICAN_CG_SPOKE_WHEEL_125CC_150CC_SPORT_125_alloy_wheel_TITAN_VINCE_MOTORCYCLE.html

2014 SOUTH AMERICAN CG SPOKE WHEEL 125CC 150CC SPORT 125 alloy wheel TITAN VINCE MOTORCYCLE

 

 

It is some Chinese 125/150cc. Honda CG125 knockoff. Various names.

 

 

2014 Hongli 150 Brazil/Titan Vince

http://hlmotor.en.alibaba.com/product/1540639302-220039443/2014_SOUTH_AMERICAN_CG_SPOKE_WHEEL_125CC_150CC_SPORT_125_alloy_wheel_TITAN_VINCE_MOTORCYCLE.html#

 

http://i01.i.aliimg.com/img/pb/945/771/847/847771945_191.jpg

Edited by Prairiehammer

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