I've long wore out my '75 T160, but I just rode my '72 T100R Daytona Sunday. I was looking for a Norton Commando or 650/750 Bonny 30 years ago and came across it (the 500) at a Kawasaki dealership. It needed rescued. Rings, solid state rectifier, and some plug wires and I haven't had to touch the motor in 25 years. NOTHING sounds like a 360 degree vertical twin. :-) Beautiful bikes, Angus. I have to say I'm a bit jealous. cheers from Oklahoma, USA
I was with a friend in June, 1972 who looked at and purchased a used gray frame, 1971 Lightning in the bronze color. There was no yellow stripe on the tank, the stripe was the same bronze color as the rest of the tank. This was in the Great Lakes area of the USA. It was a very nice bike, just needed a general tune up and cleaning. We used to trade off bikes and this was what lured me into British bikes. Thanks for the memories.
Thanks Lori for the interest, comment and anecdote. There were a number of deviations from the official the paint scheme that have come to light so not surprised at what you describe.
I like that these early classics have full size shiny mudguards! Mudguards which actually keep the mud and crud off the bike and rider. What a novel idea!
Thank you Jimbo - most kind. I hope the facts are correct but I'm human so not infallible by any means, e.g. the titanium framed works scramblers were 1965/66 -the later ones were nickel plated Reynolds 531 - so a little earlier than I had thought. Always learning.
@@BSAPowerSet Thanks for the reply. as to the "Always Learning" I have a 68 Firebird and its really frustrating to get information on the production and specs. Having said that I do realise if you want an uncomplicated life do not get into old British bikes.
Thank you for the explanation of dove grey frames - US only and small 1971 window of manufacture - I rescued mine (June '71 b25SS) from a grain shed in Wisconsin - fortunately the mixture of grain dust coating the bike preserved the colour to allow restoration...
Thanks Andrew. FYI the dove grey frames were not US only - they were across what was termed the Home/General Export market as well. However, a grey framed Rocket Three with the original bread bin tank is very very rare to see now but they did exist. Similarly the A65 twins had a larger tank for the home market which spoiled the lean look of the bike - a view held by Brad Jones in his books too. You might notice on my A70 that the front reflectors under the headstok are mounted on an extension bracket - this was to clear the larger tank if fitted, which it never was on the A70, but certainly was on the A65.
@@frankmarkovcijr5459 Actually the P50 Norton or BSA was in a Fury/Bandit frame but as you say, fitted with the Isolastics from the Commando. It’s a very pretty bike, and you can only wonder about what if...... Especially when you think about the success Yamaha would get only a few years later with the SR 500 single.
I have been following Angus' channel for some time, how nice to see the set out in the open and to hear him talk in some detail about them as a collection.
Funny I had a 1971 oil in the frame 650 lighting, in black. I actually painted it Horse trailer grey, my buddy was painting a horse trailer at the time. I never knew they had grey frames. I am in Canada and wish I still had my old BSA. 47 years later and still riding, unfortunately not a BSA, but a Harley. Thanks for sharing.
A family friend owned a triumph trident version of the rocket three 750 when I was about 13 yrs old. I remember sitting on it and the stiff feeling of the clutch and other controls. It seemed massive to me. Couldn’t imagine ever being able to ride something like that. Wanted an AJS or Norton. Ended up riding Japanese dirt bikes instead. If I had been 3 or 4 years older when I got the urge to ride, I may have had each of those, but before waiting to being licensed I chose to ride dirt bikes and, though I like flat track, motocross was easier to participate in for me, a city boy at the time. A fond memory. I still ride, still on the dirt, and I still want each of the them.
Well done Angus so good to see that the Old BSA have been kept alive. Here in Aus i owned two of the 650 1 gold flash and then called the Police special. Great to ride and bot with high Miles had never let me down in the Mechanical section. Loved the adjustable swing are so very so yet stable as well. Keep up the great work look forward to your next time. Aussie.
I had actually heard about the Bandit/Fury bikes back in the '70's when they were first announced, and would love to have seen them. It was a shame that the industry collapsed as it did, seemingly from poor management. I ended up buying a Yamaha TX500 new, and I liked it, but sold it to a friend after only a year to buy a house. Shortly after that I was lucky enough to buy a BMW R25 250 Barn Find, which I had for many years, and I have ridden BMW's ever since. Currently I have a 1974 R75/5. I was very pleased to see Triumph making a comeback with the Hinckley bikes, very good machines from all accounts.
I had a 64 triumph 650, and a BSA 441 in the seventies, sold them, and really miss them. I had a Yamaha 650 in the 80's, that was very nice, sold it, and now drool over the ones I see and don't have. Still have a nice Harley chopper, but miss the great handling and comfort of these bikes. Never paid more than a few hundred, had seven basket case Yami 650's, and sold them all. Now I really miss them because they were so easy to find, and keep running for a song. Those are some real beauties, I really enjoyed this video, except for the pain, lol. Must be getting old!
These were my dream bikes! Always just beyond my pocket though. After my moped, I cut my motorcycling teeth on a grey framed '71 B25SS Gold Star. To my eyes it was a thing of beauty, but mechanically it was clapped out so it became my first re-build. It took me ages to stop it breaking down (until I got the rebuild right), but when it did it was a wonderful, simple, rewarding machine to ride. They have a terrible reputation for unreliability, but put together better in the first place they could've been great.
Many of my older friends who are now in their 80's, did not believe me when I told them that the 250/350 Fury's/Bandits existed, I'm now as a 63 year old, proved to be correct and I am over the moon, my friends are amazed and very happy with my discovery/proof of the models honesty and eveidence.
I had cash in hand in 71, waiting and lusting for a Fury! Was heartbroken when they didn't make them... So I bought a used 66 Lightning.., later a Spitfire MkII.
Back in 1971 in Lethbridge, Canada, the BSA Fury was one I'd kind of decided to buy as my first road bike. But, only the sales literature ever arrived. Ah well. Went to a Suzuki T250J instead, and on the story went.
Suzuki T250 J was my first new bike but I already had a Honda CB 175 and a Grey framed BSA rocket 3 with the Orange tank and panels fantastic bike sounded awesome sadly all gone
My friend went to Small Heath school. She was 16 when these were made. She did A levels so was there at that age. My dad had an A65. Colleen remembers the bikes leaving the factory.
Thanks for posting this, I seem to remember MCN doing an article on the upcoming Bandit/Fury and touting this engine as a revolution that would reinvigorate BSA Triumph and I'm sure that they stated that it would be horizontally split. From memory I think that the article showed an artist's impression of the engine, not an assembled unit.
Cycle Guides Bob Braverman rode a 350cc twin BSA or Triumph, can't remember which. The biggest negative he had to say about the bikes was they used the old fashioned, dated 360° crankshaft with no center main bearing, and the crankcase were designed with a vertical split, instead of horizontally split cases like Japanese manufacturers used 😳 🤔
@@tombryan1 I bought a 750 Bonnie this spring, just couldn't stand it any longer. I take it out for a ride most every day. I think I paid 700 for my 650 back in 76, and almost six grand this year for my 78, but that's all right, in the wind is beautiful.
The problems at BSA went very deep. The fact that they were trying to compete with a company obsessed with perfection made matters that much worse. I was a young mechanic at a Triumph/BSA dealer back in the 70s. Build quality was abysmal but what's worse, the components the bikes were built with also suffered from quality control. By the time 1971 rolled around BSA was just struggling under it's own weight. By the way, the Rocket Three is a lovely bike .
Build quality : In the early 70's I heard of someone who bought a new Triumph that constantly wanted to pull to the left. After much to-ing and fro-ing, and resistance from the dealer Triumph said that if he took it to the factory they'd check it over and correct any fault they found. So he rode the bike to the factory, where someone took it out on the road, came back and confirmed that the bike did indeed pull to the left. "Leave it with us and come back tomorrow" he was told, expecting them to replace the frame or at least use their jigs to straighten it. Next day he returned and was told the bike was fine now, but he couldn't see what had been done and was ushered away with no explanation. The bike no longer pulled to the left, but being a little suspicious he went over it thoroughly and found that Triumph's "cure" for the misaligned frame had simply been to lift the left side of the seat with a bit of packing so that *he* leaned to the right ! The opposite: Early 70's. Someone went into the local Honda dealership to order a new crankshaft to replace one that had broken on a bike that was about 5 years old and long out of guarantee. The dealer was surprised as he'd never had to replace a Honda crankshaft, and he warned the customer that it would be *expensive* but duly sent in the order to Honda UK, who promptly insisted on providing one for free because "Our crankshafts don't break !" (I only wish Honda had been equally willing to replace the shock absorbers on my CB400T Super Dream when they began leaking within weeks of my buying it brand new !)
BSA at one time the biggest motor cycle producer in the world, and for good reason. Pity the profits weren't ploughed back into the business they might still be with us now. They made some really good bikes.
I started biking in the early 1970s. For a learner, there were no new British motorcycles for sale. The smallest bike was a Triumph Daytona 500. Attracting new, young riders to a brand is important to develope brand loyalty. I went down the Suzuki road....
My story is similar to yours, early 70s dirt bike. I remember all the Ossas and Pentons and Bultacos and even a few Montessas but no BSAs. I started on Honda XRs and found them to be bulletproof. My current project bike is a Yamaha XS650b 75 vintage. It was designed to better the British twin and did so very well!
Once again Angus you have done a stunning job with these power set bikes. But I have often wondered where and why the Fury and Bandit was going to fit into BSA's new range of bikes that where under development at Umberslade Hall. These bikes starting with the 200/250 model and rising all the way 1000/1250 would share many parts, did the Fury share any parts with the new range? Also most people including myself up until recently don't understand what happened in 1971 when BSA missed the all import but very shout USA selling season resulting in a major cash flow problem, and the subsequent and bizarre chain of events that would lead to BSA's demise in 73
Many thanks for the interest. The Fury/Bandit were I think intended to be a stop gap until Bert Hopwood's modular designs on the drawing board at the time in '71 came to fruition. The short term goal I think was to: a) demonstrate that BSA/Triumph could compete with the Japanese re modern design approaches; and, b) capture some share of the huge 350 market in North America. It's reported that Honda sold 2 million or so CB/CL 350s and derivatives in the end - definitely worth trying to take a slice.
I made the mistake of buying an A65 new in the early 70s. Compared to my 15yr old A10 it was rubbish, the dealer stripped the engine twice with no improvement, so I sold it at a large loss. Now you can make a good bike out of one, with numerous upgrades available eg. oil pumps etc, but of course none of these were available then. The unit Beezers were released without adequate development, by a factory that was going under, I doubt if anything could have saved the company except a complete re-launch.
wonderful doco about these bikes I'm a BSA fan. From what he showed of the Bandit series whether or not it was produced is irrelevant, vertically split cases is a recipe for oil leaks, they should've known better and an optional electric start whereas the Honda's is standard and Honda has a solid reputation to get around it was very much a proven product
Our BSA/Suzuki/Kawasaki shop in the suburbs of N.Y.C. was eagerly waiting for the 350 twins. We did sell several gray framed 650 twins and the owner took a new Rocket III which looked identical to the one in this video. He did later repaint the tank a dark metallic blue, not sure why, perhaps it was already fading.
There was a motorcycle show here in NZ in 1971 where they had the whole new range of both BSA and Triumph, including the Bandit and the Fury. Shortly after that of course, we heard the news about the financial trouble. I don't know if the Bandit and Fury stayed out here or went home, or whether they had any works inside the cases or not. They also had the Triumph 250 Blazer SS, a rebadged version of the BSA 250, and a couple of years afterwards I ended up owning one. Quite possibly the same one that had been at the show as there never were many here. The only other one I ever saw here much later had been imported from the USA. Mine was a nice bike to ride but not terribly reliable.
The Bandit certainly stayed in NZ for some time and ended up in a transport museum there until purchased by Sammy Miller and brought back to the UK for his museum. It has no internals. I wasn't aware of the Fury over there though. That might be worth some research. Thanks for the interest and comment.
@@BSAPowerSet Well, it is some time ago and my memory could be faulty, but I do seem to recall that the full range of both marques was there. The show I recall was in Masterton, a few of us rode up from Wellington for the day to see it. Masterton is a small town so I suppose they would have been shown in other places too. I think really they should have been releasing the Bandit and Fury about ten years earlier. That conical twin leading shoe brake was excellent on my 250, but I suspect it might not really have been enough for the 750's. The frame on the 250 was excellent, with needle rollers in the swing arm and tapered rollers in the steering head plus snail cam type adjusters for the chain.
Nice enduro bike from the early 70s, BSA got it right with the styling of both the B25 and B50. They could have sold well throughout the 70s and 80s if the crisis 0f 71 had never happened.
They also had the Edward Turner designed 250 twin 4 stroke scooter engine. All alloy, wet sump and gear primary drive with a duplex final drive in a cast alloy swinging arm which pivoted around the gearbox sprocket so there was no variation in chain tension. It had a number of faults including an inadequate oil pump and puny mainshaft clutch but it could have been developed into a really good engine. BSA's management like the other British manufacturers were appallingly incompetent.
Great explaination of the gray frame. I did not like the styling at the time(1971) and felt it a gimmick, psychedelic culture marketing for an old design. Made my attraction to buy Norton Commando(black roadster) very easy. The gray frame appeared unfinished. Good video 👍 🇺🇲
I immigrated to Colombia in 2018 and I tried to find a British bike to ride. There were none but there are tens of thousands of small capacity bikes here (
I remember seeing a couple of Bandits at Vale-Onslow's half a century ago. I was intrigued but I was interested in buying a very expensive Bell full-face helmet (which was new at the time). Very narrow opening in that helmet and so snug that I had to get my head sized (7 1/4" UK, 7 3/8" US).
I am selling my 2 Tridents and 2 Bonis. It is a sad time for me. To old to maintain. At least I am still able to ride. Difficulty in Kick starting. I am keeping my Thunderbolt though. Mounted to a Jawa side car it will be tolerable for an old guy! Fine work you do. I have heartbreak when I think what could of been. I remember lusting over the 350 adds in American mc magazines.
I've owned A65L O8194 since 1977,3rd owner,1st or 2d painted frame black, I'm running triumph 4gal tank,no tach, speedo,or signals,67 b.s.a. tail light,73 triumph front fender,slash cut mufflers ,runs and lôôks good,every day transportation, bought & sold over a dozen brit bikes,this the only one I kept ...
I had a 1971 BSA Firebird Scrambler 650 CC with the high pipes in 1972. The first thing I did was paint the frame black. The second thing I did was sell it & buy a new 1973 Honda 4. I always thought BSA was copying the looks of Honda. They ran good & handled well but I wasn't keen on the looks.
The guys in the race shops r and d as such had the ideas but no support from bosses and shareholders. They pulled the plug on the bandit and fury. The weak crank oiling was never fixed on the a65s. But everyone knew of the problem and was simple to fix. I had a grey framed a65s. Three engine rebuilds one new engine in a period of three years
Bikes that changed BSA's history: 1969 Honda CB 350 Twin, 1969 Honda 750 4. After those bikes, BSA history was over and done, except for a brief but futile rocket into the past at a time when bikers were meeting the nicest people on Hondas and riding into the future on them. BSA should have stuck to small arms.
Very very very interesting man 👍 he no is stuff British stuff people like him make this country what it great we built the world and then sold it thankyou very much for the history please do more videos about great Britain please I'm from the black country were all these thing were made and my family all work in the factory were all these thing were made thankyou for keeping these bikes for British history for youg people to no God bless you and God bless this England top man
Back in the 70s I owned a bunch of BSA's B-33-DBD 500 Goldies [several] - 69 Rocket 3- 50's A 10s & A7 -C11-B44-B50-70 Lighting -B34 -C15 -B25 on and on! A friend of mine had one of the A75 twins that I got to try out. I was amazed much smoother the engine was compaired to my A65 or any other A65s I had ridden. And seem to have a very noticeable increase in power particularly in the mid to higher revs. My biggest complaint was the wet frame's taller seating and at 5-11" I am not particularly short. I think a winner with a disk front brake if only they could of held on a few more years. I also owned Ariel SQ 4 -Vincent Black Shadow -Several Velocettes KSS-Venom clubman -MAC -Scrambler- Matchless-Nortons 750& 850 Commandos [Interstate- Fastback-Roadster -P-11 -ES-2 ] and a M120 Panther outfit ! You might say I loved my British bikes!!
A management team from Britt Industry went on a fact finding visit to Honda. While on a tour of a very large factory complex, they asked to visit the R&D dept, only to be told, This is R&D. In their UK factory R&D was a few blokes in a corner, probably discussing new paint schemes 😢. It was the same in the Car and Aircraft industries, I recàll a Mgr at BAe Filton telling me that it wasnt necessary to know anything about Aircraft to be a Mgr 😢
I recall reading at the time the Bandit/Fury overheated as the engine and gearbox centres were too close to each other. They sold off frames and swinging arms quite cheap after the collapse, apparently they made a lot of them. May have been Pride and Clark selling them, most oddball stuff went to them.
Watching this as a royal enfield himalayan owner... today's range of enfields decades later are so similar apart from modern brakes etc etc ...how different would the British bike industry have been with better management
Could not agree more. The trouble is that the lack of foresight and product strategy went back to the beginning of the 60's. Bert Hopwoods book emphasises rightly this as a major topic but you can't help wondering why it still stagnated if he was aware of the fundamental problem.
BSA/ Triumph probably spent more money in promotions than engineering on these new models. They were a classy look at the time but would have been mechanical nightmares for owners. The Honda CB /CL 450 predated these twins and was already a far better option.
@@fiveowaf454 I am talking about the 1970s cb500t not the modern CB500T which is a really good bike, My old 500t was a horrible bike to ride compared to my earlier cb450, the useless front disc and vibes between 60-80 mph limited its use, had Honda over bored the 450 instead of stroking the engine it would have been a good bike, I ended up using mine as a sidecar tug.
I agree with those who have said how good it is to hear someone who really knows what they are taking about. What l would say is that disc brakes didn't appear on Japanese middleweights until '74 or.'75 at the earliest. The 1973 Kawasaki S1 250 l bought a year later and the S2 350 l bought in 75 both had drum front brakes, so I don't think BSA & Triumph were behind the door there.
@@milojanis4901 l bow to your superior knowledge on that one, however, all the original versions of every Suzuki in the early '70s had a drum brake, from the GT250 to the 380,, 550 & 750 plus the T500. As did the RD200, 250 & 350. Honda followed suit with the CB200, 250 & 350. You can also include the first H1 500 Kwak. Bike magazine tested 250s in January 1973 and all three had drum brakes.
The 350's look amazing, but quick-fade paint, leaking crankcases and a high-maintenance front brake wouldn't have stood up against the Hondas. My current bike has vertically split crankcases and it's the devil's own job keeping the oil on the inside.
The Honda's had similar twin leading shoe drum brakes, which weren't worse than the terrible swing arm single piston caliper design disk brake that came after.
How times have changed. I started riding at 14 in 73. Bonnies were the best cornering, Tridents were faster but fragile, Nortons were quite fast but shook themselves to bits. Everything else British was obsolete. Anything Italian was expensive & exotic. BMW were expensive, boring, old man's bikes. Honda CB 750 & 500 was the death sentence for NVT & Kawasaki Z1 the executioner. I love my Hinkley built Street Triple but my next bike will be a Bonnie Scrambler.
Hi Russ - I started at 15 in '72 and my first Brit was a '68 A65L in 1976 so I just missed the final days of BSA. I used to ride that bike to school when in the 6th form - that was a real puller and I don't mean acceleration.
These grey frames looked odd but they have grown on me. Have to consider that as a show bike they look great but as a normally used bike getting dirty may have looked differently.
I was in my late teens in 1970/71. I was riding a £50 1962 BSA C15. I remember these BSA 350's being publicised here in the UK. I thought they were beautiful. In retrospect, I don't think they would have sold much in the UK ( yes, I understand that USA was the primary market ). Learners here were limited to 250cc. Those who passed their test, with some money, moved on to something with substantially more performance. And I just don't think there was a very great unexploited market for a new 350cc twin. ( Even though, I thought an acquaintance's 1966 Triumph Tiger 90, in orange and black was the bees knees ). The BSA 350, all just too late , the BSA owners sat on their hands in the good years, took the profits, didn't re-invest sufficiently, and took insufficient notice of what Japanese manufacturers were doing.
It would have been easy to drop the displacement down to 250cc therefore giving BSA 4 bikes out of one 350 street & scrambler and 250 street and scrambler.
@@jahiol2579 Maybe, perhaps. BSA had taken the 250cc singles about as far they could go. The 250cc Starfires were so highly tuned they were just about hand grenades ready to go off, if I recall correctly. The comment in the video about BSA buying surplus frames from the MOD really does illustrate the state they were in, though.
That was the paint not the frame and speaking of the frame the frame is the chassis on a motorcycle and British frames were better than anything the Japanese produced that is why the Trident/Rocket 3 was light fast and handled well, in fact it was the fastest bike still in production up until the Kawasaki 900z but it would still out handle the big kawasaki
@@JH-nb1de Yes I know what the frame/chassis is on a motorcycle. I obviously misunderstood what was said about the paint. As I recall from back then, British bike frames were generally decent, rather than wonderful ( see Tritons). The Rob North designs improved things a lot for racing. The big engined Kawasakis were notorious for their poor handling, while the Kawasaki H1 500 triple cylinder 2 stroke was almost lethal.
@@andrewpreston4127 Why I gave the example of a chassis is just like a car you can have the best engine in the world but unless the chassis can cope with the power output then it is of little use. It is always the case when people compare British bikes against their Japanese counterparts they take the best attributes of the Japanese the engine against the worst attributes of the British bike also the engine. But there is no getting away from the fact that British bikes strongest point was there ability to handle well. But like you said yourself with the two examples you have given this was Japanese bikes weakest area.
Yes that's correct. All marketing material had been published but they never made it to the market. Even some parts books and owners manuals were also published.
When bsa finally closed the doors and American company of auctioneers came in to sell all the machinery. They looked about and said they have invited the wrong customers. They should have invited museums.
Hello. I need a cluch endcover assembly #19-7801 or 57-3705 do you have this part, what is the price? or do you hnow who can sell it to me? Thank you very much. I live in Spain.