Ads
related to: rigid frame choppers for sale
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
A chopper is a type of custom motorcycle which emerged in the US state of California in the late 1950s. A chopper employs modified steering angles and lengthened forks for a stretched-out appearance. They can be built from an original motorcycle which is modified ("chopped") or built from scratch.
Orange County Choppers bikes are motorcycles featured on the television series American Chopper built by Orange County Choppers (OCC) for a specific corporate or celebrity customer. Theme bikes are motorcycles in which the theme of the motorcycle takes priority over everything else, influencing the frame dimensions, paint scheme, and overall ...
This is a list of motorcycles produced by the James Cycle Co. 98cc ... Commodore; 125cc. M.L. (1945–1948) Cadet 125 (Rigid-frame, J5, and J6) 150cc
Indian Larry was born Lawrence DeSmedt in Cornwall-on-Hudson, New York on April 28, 1949. He grew up in the Newburgh, New York area including the town of New Windsor. [1] [2] The oldest of three children, with two younger sisters, Diane and Tina, Larry was described by his mother, Dorothy, as "a good boy, but mischievous."
The 1st Norton Model 77 Dominator was a 500 cc all iron vertical twin rigid framed Norton motorcycle manufactured by Norton Motors Ltd from 1950 to 1952. All 237 examples were exported to Australia. Very little publicity surrounded this model - so much so that it was denied that they existed for some decades.
A rigid framed version of the Model 7, supplied only to the Australian market. Model 77: 596cc 1957–1958 Built mainly for sidecar use Dominator 88: 497cc 1952–1966 Same engine as a model 7 but in a featherbed frame Dominator 99: 596cc 1956–1962 Nomad: 497cc & 596cc 1958–1960 US on/off-road model Norton Jubilee: 250cc 1958–1966 ...
1 Comet J1 / J3 / J10 rigid frame. 2 Comet J11. 3 Comet L1. 4 See also. 5 References. ... List of motorcycles of the 1940s; List of motorcycles of the 1950s; References
A softail (shortened form of soft tail) motorcycle intentionally looks like vintage motorcycles with a rigid hard-tail frame that has a triangle of steel tubes at the rear axle, as on a bicycle frame, but on a Softail these tubes are actually a triangular swingarm, with the shock absorber(s) hidden, as opposed to clearly visible regular twin ...