Words: Steve Wilson Photographs: Gary Chapman
In 1951, when Wiltshireman Cyril Griffin was called up for National Service, he bought a 1950 Triumph Speed Twin for trips home on leaveย weekends.
Being stationed at Epsom with the Experimental Mobile Column, an early part of the Civil Defence organisation, meant a 160-mile round trip. The sprung hub 500 handled the regular journeys with no major problems. Once a cable broke, but Cyril improvised and got home. The only real incident came when the petrol tank developed a split en route. But Cyril, prudently, had joined the AA, and in less than half an hour a patrol on a yellow BSA outfit had stopped, looked at the problem, gone away and returned shortly with a bar of soap that, once moistened, sealed the tank effectively enough to get Cyril home.
โOtherwise it was a reliable bike,โ said Cyril, โand that impressed me.โ But after de-mob in 1953, his next set of wheels was a 1954 Mk.1 Ford Consul. It would be another 40-odd years before, with family grown, he was able to get back to motorcycling. Cyril is now a well-respected Wilts VMCC member and a meticulous restorer of mainly prewar machines; his immaculate 1930s BSA G14 side-valve V-twin in particular had my mouth watering. As an agricultural engineer by trade (and still much in demand locally), with the old bikes โI do everything myself,โ he confirmed โ and that includes not just engine work, welding and paint, but fabrication work on petrol tanks โ so now he could have fixed that 5Tโs tank himself.
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