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D. Peter Maus wrote:
The Japs put millions of people on Motorcycles who might otherwise not have had the inclination. And they did it with tooling, parts, plans and engineers donated by Harley Davidson. The following and thousands more web sites need to be informed of this fact. They all give credit to German and English influences on the design of Japanese vehicles. A few even have the nerve to claim that Harley's two stroke experiences were based on a DKW design, as was the BSA Bantam. http://www.whybike.com/motorcycle97.htm http://www.khulsey.com/motorcycles/v..._kawasaki.html http://tinyurl.com/yboxdtr http://www.autohistory.org/feature_7.html http://tinyurl.com/ycuafu7 (pdf file) http://www.ianchadwick.com/motorcycl...0/history.html http://www.motorcycle.co.uk/Articles...of-Suzuki.aspx http://www.motorcycle.co.uk/Articles...of-Yamaha.aspx http://www.realclassic.co.uk/opinion...n08102400.html http://www.marusholilac.com/ml2.htm http://www.motorcycle.com/manufactur...otorcycle.html As far as I can tell, any country that can make huge ocean going tankers or battleships powered by monster diesels is more than capable of producing mopeds and motorcycles. A great benefit produced by this competition is that Harley and others have had to vastly improve their product line. There is no comparison between the 1975 and 2005 Sportsters I own. Everything from the gaskets to the fasteners has been improved. Rumour has it that a few ex Norton engineers were hired by Harley, resulting in the rubber mounting across the whole range. It's wonderful. mike |
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