Showing posts with label custom trikes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label custom trikes. Show all posts

12.22.2013

Some Linda McDowell sets from the 70's




Not sure where these were originally published- looks like maybe Chopper or Iron Horse.
Linda McDowell was a tall, trim strawberry blond popular from early to mid 70s. She posed for numerous magazines, often anonymously or with fictitious name, and later starred in several softcore and hardcore films.


 



 




10.23.2011

Gary Littlejohn



Hells Angels on Wheels (1967). The Savage Seven (1968). Speedway (1968). The Cycle Savages (1969). Angels Die Hard (1970). C.C. and Company (1970). Angels Hard as They Come (1971). Bury Me an Angel (1971).



For any fan of the late 1960's - early 70's "bikesploitation" Roger Corman inspired film genre, Gary Littlejohn's name may not stand out immediately but his face should. And his bikes definitely should. He didn't just act in almost all of those movies alongside heavies like Peter Fonda, Jack Nicholson and Bruce Dern, he did a lot of their stunts and built a number of the bikes themselves.
I mentioned his Cinderella Cart in the trikes article, but he definitely deserves more space in this blog: he's right up there with the other artists who inspired the cult of the chopper.









 Gary Littlejohn was born in Vermont in 1946. After what can generally be described as a rough childhood in the Northeastern US - cycling between farm work and State homes- Littlejohn joined the Navy at 17 then headed out to California in the 1960's to get in on the custom bike and car scene that was booming there. An expert welder, painter and fabricator who already had experience building hot rods, he soon made a name for himself alongside the other icons of that era such as Ed Roth and Von Dutch. When Roth ran an article on him in Choppers Magazine in 1968 he had a paint and custom shop going in Van Nuys, but by 1974 he'd opened a shop in Tujunga just north of LA dedicated to fabricating custom tanks and boxes.



Custom Chopper Magazine, October 1973

 "When I first got to California, I got into a body shop doing car stuff. I always loved motorcycles. One of the guys had a bike. We went to Hanson Dam and I brought a dirt bike. Riding it around I thought, "Man, that was easy." Then it stalled at the railroad tracks. Traffic was backing up behind me, so I gave it a healthy twist of throttle after restarting it and wheelied to get out of traffic. My buddy says to me, "I thought you didn't know how to ride."


Littlejohn's personal custom panhead. Got pipe?

Custom triumph pre unit


His paint work had introduced him to a number of people in the Hollywood crowd; when an AIP producer saw an article on some of his bikes -he was getting a lot of print coverage at the time and in fact became the custom editor for Motor Cyclist Magazine- they called him in to help coordinate the bikes in Roger Corman's Wild Angels and again in Devil's Angels to supply the bikes and teach actor John Cassavetes how to ride. He was soon pulling regular parts and stunt work as well as supplying bikes and finding extras: for the next decade he would build and coordinate machines for almost every biker movie done by American International Pictures. Since then he's been credited for stunts in at least 57 movies and has acted in 23 including Badlands and Caged Heat, and has worked on over 300 films in various capacities.







"I used to go down to LAPD with my friend Mike the mechanic. We'd pick up cop Harleys for $300 apiece, then chop them and sell them for $10,000. What was nice about California was there were chrome platers, coaters, and upholsterers on every street. You could make a complete custom for nothing. Now it's ridiculous. I like the older choppers much better."




1974 Custom Choppers Magazine article

The Cinderella cart, more pics in Whacked Out Trikes

Littlejohn and his partner Peter Murphy got a request to build a BMX frame in 1973, and by 1975 he had a full line of BMX bikes ranging from mono-shocks to rigids along with forks and sidehacks (a sidecar-mounted BMX bike): he is credited as the first manufacturer of a rigid BMX frame. He also sponsored early BMX riders such as Billy Wouda and Bill McIntyre. In 1976, much to the heckling of the industry, he made and advertised a 26 inch "Ballooner" (later to be dubbed a "Cruiser")--three years before BMXers would ever consider racing "beach cruisers."



Gary Littlejohn currently lives in Vermont and has continued his work as a professional stunt coordinator for the film industry. He still builds custom bikes and hot rods.



References:

Renaissance Man Gary Littlejohn - Street Chopper Magazine, October 2010
nostalgiaonwheels.blogspot.com- October 2009
nostalgiaonwheels.blogspot.com -January 2010
Wild beyond belief!: interviews with exploitation filmmakers of the 1960s - Brian Albright

9.18.2011

Whacked-out Trikes


An often overlooked aspect of motorcycle history -and indeed automotive history in general- is the Trike. It was an integral step in the development of motorcycles as we know them today, making that first move away from a bulky four wheeled wagon to a more lightweight frame and consequently lighter engines that were necessary to power the two wheeled designs. Many, if not most, of the historical motorcycle manufacturers either started with trike designs or at least experimented with them.

Full sized pedal trikes date back to at least the 1600's, but possibly the earliest trike with an engine was patented by L. Hardaker in 1880 in Britain.
Karl Benz, (who later founded Mercedes-Benz) took out a patent on April 28th, 1886 for The Benz Patent-Motorwagen, a two seat trike with a Benz 954 cc single-cylinder four-stroke engine. In fact, this is widely considered to be the first automobile: i.e., the first vehicle specifically designed to be propelled by an engine.
1886 Benz Patent Motorwagen

1900 De Dion Bouton Tricycle
Plenty of manufacturers soon followed suite; Léon Bollée introduced his 3 wheeled Voiturette to an approving Le Mans audience in 1895, and in 1896 the De Dion Bouton Tricycle hit the European market with a 137 cc single cylinder engine: in trials it hit an unheard of 3500 rpm. In 1898 Louis Renault had a De Dion-Bouton trike modified with fixed drive shaft and ring and pinion gear, creating what was probably the first "hot rod" in history.

But the three wheeled configuration lacked the stability of its four wheeled counterpart, and it couldn't compete with the sporting configuration of the new "motorized bicycles" that were becoming popular by the early 20th century and could easily be modified with a sidecar. Instead it settled into something of a niche market as a service vehicle, where it still managed to prove useful with an economic advantage over bulkier vehicles and the ability to carry more cargo than a motorcycle.

1915 Harley Davidson "Motorcycle Truck"
The Harley Trikes

Harley Davidson can probably be credited with much of the design of today's trikes.
In 1913 the company introduced The Motorcycle Truck, which was essentially a cart with a wooden box  mounted in front of a Model 9 565cc. motorcycle; originally designed for use by the Postal Service, it could carry up to 550 lbs. of cargo and soon became popular with commercial clients. But sidecar configurations proved more adaptable and the "truck" was short lived.

1932 Servicar demo for Automotive Service Centers


As the 1930's dawned in the era of the Great Depression, Harley-Davidson was desperate to increase sales. Their solution was the 1932 introduction of their first "true" trike, the ServiCar.
The Servicar had a 45 cubic inch flathead from their R model and indeed most of the front end and gearbox came straight off that bike. But the frame was an actual tricycle, with a two-wheel rear end and a load-carrying box.
The Servicar was "Intended primarily for use by garages and services stations in the pickup and delivery of customer's cars." The trike was fitted with a towbar on the front, so one rider could go out to the customer and then tow the trike back to the shop (or conversely deliver the automobile and ride the trike back).

The Servi-Car soon gained  popularity as a utility vehicle for small businesses and mobile vendors as well as police departments, some of which still used Servi-Cars into the 1990s. Production ran from its introduction in 1932 right up to 1973.





As noted in my previous article on Vintage Choppers , most sources reference the movie Easy Rider as the start of the custom chopper boom and national news stories on the antics of the Hells Angels in Altamont certainly had the image of the biker outlaw already fixed in the public’s eye. Ed "Big Daddy" Roth (An (un)Holy Trinity of Custom Culture- Part 2, Ed Roth) quickly jumped into the fray producing some highly customized chopper themed trikes. Through the '60s and '70s the trike exploded back onto the scene in some incredible configurations: a three wheeled frame was perfectly suited to lightweight fiberglass bodies and there was plenty of room to use larger engines.










 Several of Ed Roth's custom trikes, above: from top, "Mailbox", 1967: "Candywagon" 1965(?),  "Asphalt Angel", 1985 (two paint versions): "American Beetle", 1968, "Great Speckled Bird", 1976 and "Rubber Ducky" 1995

 






Gary Littlejohn's Cinderella Cart

Built in 1969 by the man who pretty much invented Coffin Tanks (look for an article on him here in the near future), this one made the cover of Roth's Choppers Magazine in July 1969.
The trike features a Corvair engine, J.D. Springers front end and an inverted transaxle.
This machine seems to have dropped out of sight these days, (most likely in a private collection somewhere) but Gary's daughter has posted on several other blogs trying to locate it if anyone has recent info on its whereabouts: it's a hard machine to miss in a crowd.









no, they ain't photoshopped. Original shoot from 1969.


In modern times sidecar usage has declined considerable (in fact they're almost nonexistent on anything besides Urals/Dneprs/Changs or vintage machines) and trikes have made something of a comeback; they're especially popular with older or handicapped riders, but many of the current bike builders are also using them to experiment with larger engine capacities.  Harley has introduced a new trike model in 2011 very similar to the old Servicar, and a multitude of specialty conversion companies have sprung up.




fuckyeah METALFLAKE!




Russell Mitchell (EXILE) trike, 2005







http://users.senet.com.au/~mitchell/misc/html/tricycle.htm
http://www.myspace.com/motorcycletouring/blog/459900041
http://streetchopper.automotive.com/146881/1009-stcp-renaissance-man-gary-littlejohn/index.html