For Old Guys Only

GoldenMotor.com

Davideo

Active Member
Feb 25, 2020
171
169
43
87
I imagine that I am qualified to post here because I my advanced years. I discovered gas bikes a few years back, when I turned 80. Mainly attracted by the ridiculously low kit prices, always was a cheapskate at heart. Now I see it as my freedom for when they eventually take my licence away. Since I dislike unwanted attention and know many hate it when they see someone having fun. I decided that hybrid gas/electric/pedals was the answer for me, that way I have a legitimate answer for those probing questions; its an electric bike with a generator. I am now on my third version of my perfect old guy's Beach Cruiser Hybrid and I already know it's not the last.

 
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Davideo

Active Member
Feb 25, 2020
171
169
43
87

5-7HEAVEN

Well-Known Member
Aug 2, 2008
2,661
240
63
Davideo, you're my inspiration.

I'm a few years shy of you.
After I retired in 2004, my wife got me volunteering at her office. Two months later, they put me on the payroll. I made a motorized bike, since wifey stayed late. She retired in 2008, and I'm still riding to work, but not often on a bike.
I've been working off and on for years in creating a twin pocketbike-engined motorized bike that'll weigh under 100 lbs. The frame had to have a multi-speeds and a shift kit, and I finally found one that fit my purpose. There's enough mid-frame space that I'll replace the pb engines for two fast, dependable Tanaka 47R kart engines.

With the proper mounts, I should be able to align the engines into a classic 90-degree "V-twin position" in the midframe.....and still pedal, of course.

I'm still gathering go-kart parts and pocket-bike parts and taking measurements and racking my brain.

Full time work and the pandemic slows my project, as well as finding the energy to teach 3 grandkids to ride their bikes for the first time.

And then I get sidetracked with another project of installing a 212cc Predator thru the gears of an 8-speed comfort bike, using jackshafts and timing belt pulleys.....

I've been married to my only wife for 46 years. As long as she's happy, I can play with my toys, lol.
 

Davideo

Active Member
Feb 25, 2020
171
169
43
87
Davideo, you're my inspiration.

I'm a few years shy of you.
After I retired in 2004, my wife got me volunteering at her office. Two months later, they put me on the payroll. I made a motorized bike, since wifey stayed late. She retired in 2008, and I'm still riding to work, but not often on a bike.
I've been working off and on for years in creating a twin pocketbike-engined motorized bike that'll weigh under 100 lbs. The frame had to have a multi-speeds and a shift kit, and I finally found one that fit my purpose. There's enough mid-frame space that I'll replace the pb engines for two fast, dependable Tanaka 47R kart engines.

With the proper mounts, I should be able to align the engines into a classic 90-degree "V-twin position" in the midframe.....and still pedal, of course.

I'm still gathering go-kart parts and pocket-bike parts and taking measurements and racking my brain.

Full time work and the pandemic slows my project, as well as finding the energy to teach 3 grandkids to ride their bikes for the first time.

And then I get sidetracked with another project of installing a 212cc Predator thru the gears of an 8-speed comfort bike, using jackshafts and timing belt pulleys.....

I've been married to my only wife for 46 years. As long as she's happy, I can play with my toys, lol.
5-7 HEAVEN, I find your story fascinating, you're full of great ideas. Keep on creating
 

5-7HEAVEN

Well-Known Member
Aug 2, 2008
2,661
240
63
Thanks Davideo, and guys,
MB's are great stimulation for body and mind.
Sadly, I had to get rid of my Diamondback Response w/Tanaka 47R engine. It'd always been too tall for my short legs. I'm shrinking and stiffening with age.
So I'm working on a Sixthreezero extended cruiser. Proactive response to an inevitable fall while stopping.
Now I can rest my feet on the ground and not tiptoe!
 

Tom from Rubicon

Well-Known Member
Apr 4, 2016
2,845
6,138
113
Rubicon, Wisconsin

Davideo

Active Member
Feb 25, 2020
171
169
43
87
I was always told they were for keeping the hub shiny, the last bike I had with one was just a piece of leather loop with a rivet to make it hang in place.
When I was a kid everyone had shiny hubs, we fashioned loops from old car inner tubes and tied them loosely around our hubs. When we become bored and wanted to add some excitement to our lives, we got a cloths pin and a playing card and pinned the card to the bike fork and the sound made by the card rubbing on the spokes as we rode was close enough to a motor bike for us.
 

Loop

Active Member
May 27, 2020
127
77
28
49
S.Knoxville
When I was a kid everyone had shiny hubs, we fashioned loops from old car inner tubes and tied them loosely around our hubs. When we become bored and wanted to add some excitement to our lives, we got a cloths pin and a playing card and pinned the card to the bike fork and the sound made by the card rubbing on the spokes as we rode was close enough to a motor bike for us.
I used to snatch those dummy credit cards they would mail out in junk mail for that same reason and since they were plastic they lasted longer.
 

Bikeguy Joe

Godfather of Motorized Bicycles
Jan 8, 2008
11,837
252
63
up north now
Funny, I was just thinking about this.

My dad is 87, and he's at that point where talking to him can be a chore. He either doesn't understand and my step mom has to be his translator, or he will come out of nowhere with vague stories of the very old days, like he's rerunning parts of his childhood.

It's a chore I gladly do when I can.

My mom died 13 years ago. There is SO much I'd ask her now. She used to be a great story teller. We would sit around under the giant willow in the summer with a fire and she'd tell us story after story about the mischief she and her brother would get into, things about my G pa and G ma, and a lot of family stuff.
My 2 sisters, brother and I would ask her anything and everything and she always had an honest answer.
 

indian22

Well-Known Member
Dec 31, 2014
4,734
7,740
113
Oklahoma
what would you guys say to or ask your parents, if they were still around?
Tony,& Joe Saturday was my Dad's birthday 110 years ago. So I spent part of that beautiful morning talking with my parents at their grave site. It was uplifting. Talking with them was always easy and it still is. I mainly laughed but cried a little as well. I remembered our great times and simple things from the past and explained the current familial realities and blessings. I rode out on my Fat electric and the whole experience felt very childlike and innocent. It was a glorious, clean feeling and so worthwhile. I talked and asked about their basic values & pray that those are also instilled in me. I was gifted with wonderful parents that in the past I often took for granted. As a result of my visit I'm better equipped, reassured & confident to face the todays one by one and that's no small matter considering current events.

Old guys now have seen much; our parents endured so much more in the 20th. century and still that generation prospered in most metrics of that which really matters. Yet they weren't perfect either. They did well in order that we can too! So I'm proud of our father's generation & it's contributions laid on the scale of good & evil. Those accomplishments weigh heavily on the side of good. I hope others can truly believe the same of our own & future generations.

Make a positive difference in that which you choose to do.

Rick C.