NMM ride a bike

by

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Rachael Clegg gets some advice from a fellow rider before taking control of one of the bikes

Riders in the stormDespite rain and the threat of snow, the NMMโ€™s training day went ahead as planned.

Words: Rachael Clegg Photographs: Dean Atkins

ALMOST four years ago National Motorcycle Museum director James Hewing said: โ€œWe have tremendous plans over the next few years to make the National Motorcycle Museum a truly dynamic resource for everyone who loves old motorcycles.โ€

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And boy, has he stuck to his words โ€“ museums donโ€™t get much more โ€˜dynamicโ€™ than the NMM. This is, after all an institution which allows its members to ride its collection โ€“ both on the open road and in its own grounds. Indeed, you canโ€™t get much closer to dynamism than blasting off on a 650cc Ariel Cyclone.

But then, this is the NMM: unique, quirky, unusual and so profoundly loyal to its founderโ€™s passion for motorcycles that it even allows its members to test ride its collection. In a world of guarded, โ€˜play it safeโ€™ Kafkaesque institutions, this is a welcome rarity.

The opportunity to ride the NMMโ€™s machines is open to any member of its โ€˜Friendsโ€™ scheme โ€“ a membership scheme which costs ยฃ29.95 to join. Friends then pay ยฃ10 to attend a โ€˜Ride a Classic Bikeโ€™ session, at which an array of machines is available to ride.

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Today is one such day. And Iโ€™m here to give it a whirlโ€ฆ

But there was one major set back: I had barely ridden a motorcycle since my test in December 2015. And that was on an all-singing, all-dancing BMW with heated grips, a far cry from a hand-change Sunbeam.

Needless to say, I was utterly nervous, so nervous that I was wishing the rumours of snow would come to light and the whole thing would be cancelled. Far from being excited about spending half a day bobbing around on priceless motorcycles, all I could envisage was me dropping a Velocette and driving back to Sheffield with a restoration bill the size of a modern mortgage.

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Luckily, there were tasks to do before we even stepped on the NMMโ€™s makeshift โ€˜trackโ€™.

I managed to stretch out putting my gear on for more then 10 minutes, my signing-on form read like War and Peace (I got at least 15 minutes out of that one) and luckily, I already knew some of the โ€˜Friendsโ€™ through other motorcycle endeavours. These encounters help put off the inevitable โ€˜Velocette dropโ€™ that big longer.

Then there was the briefing from museum director James Hewing, whose jovial style was reassuring. โ€œWe have a brilliant restoration team so we can fix things. These bikes were made to be ridden, so donโ€™t worry. Just take it steady and have fun. Try to imagine that these bikes donโ€™t have any brakes at all,โ€ he said, โ€œItโ€™s all about slow control and the back brake.โ€

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Gulp. โ€˜Slow controlโ€™ was never my forte. Visions of โ€˜figure of eightsโ€™ and vagrant traffic cones came rushing back.

But after chatting almost everyone to death โ€“ my time was up. I had to get on a machine. And the 1959 BSA B31 was there, waiting.

โ€œJust jump on and give it some welly,โ€ said Tracey Messer, one of the many encouraging NMM Friends attending the session. โ€œYouโ€™ll be absolutely fine, youโ€™ll have a great time.โ€

That was it. If Tracey โ€“ all of 5ft 2in but one of the smoothest riders of the session โ€“ said so, then it was so.

And how right she was.

Of course, there were some initial awkward introductions between myself and the BSA B31.

The clutch was very tricky โ€“ with an extremely high biting point, and of course the gears were on the right. But once I was off, it was fine. After two laps of the NMMโ€™s carefully marked-out โ€˜circuitโ€™ I was at ease. More importantly, however, I was enjoying it, Iโ€™d got into a comfortable groove with the four-speed machine.

It doesnโ€™t surprise me that this machine was referred to in its day as a โ€˜dependable middleweightโ€™โ€“indeed, this was the motorcycle of choice for the police force, the fire brigade and, even more sensible, the Home Office.

The B31 was launched in 1945, a derivative of BSAโ€™s prewar B-series overhead valve singles, which made it comfortably capable of speeds of up to 60mph. This model represents one of the very last of its run: after 1959 BSA stopped producing B31s.

But it was clear from riding the B31 that this was a machine meant for domestic plodding and cruising. The 348cc engine ran well: it was happy(ish) in first gear without feeling it was going to spit me off, a welcome feature for a classic bike novice. And its handling was solid.

The trickiest part was dismounting the machine while keeping it running in neutral. Where the hell was neutral? I went up, down, up again, down again with my right foot but couldnโ€™t find it for love nor money. Eventually, with some help from the NMMโ€™s father and son restoration team Wes and Kyle Wall, we sorted it.

And now Iโ€™d (sort of) found neutral, I was on a rollโ€ฆ

Next up was the 500cc 1939 Tiger 100, a delightful looking machine resplendent in pearly-toned โ€˜silver sheenโ€™ paint.

Now this was an entirely different beast altogether โ€“ certainly not one for the Home Office.

 

Read more in the June issue of TCM โ€“ on sale now!


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