History Of Motorcycles
Motorcycles have come along way from when they were first created by
doing nothing more than adding an engine to a bicycle. Now
motorcycles are some of the most technical machines out there. Here
we have gathered some information and put it together to give you a
brief history on the motorcycle.
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How It Started
Not long after the first bicycle was introduced at the end of the
nineteenth century, a few inspired individuals felt it was just not
fast enough and strapped on an engine and started the motorcycle
craze. Experiments by two individuals would set the tone for what
motorcycle building was all about. These two men went by the names
of William S. Harley and Arthur Davidson. Unless you have been stuck
in a cage for the last century, I am sure you know who I am talking
about. In 1903, they started what back then was nothing but an up
and coming company known as The Harley-Davidson Motor Company. Now
Harley-Davidson is world renowned for their line of motorcycles. You
will not find a more respected motorcycle than the Harley-Davidson.
But back then Harley-Davidson where not the only ones meddling
around with motorcycles. In 1902, a year before The Motor Company
(what Harley-Davidson is known as), Triumph Cycle, Co.Ltd. of
England started producing bikes of their own.
During the early 1900's, many other companies started appearing
offering a motorcycle of their own design. People were now becoming
more and more attracted to the motorcycle as transportation due to
its relatively low cost. Cars were still too expensive for the
general public to own so naturally they bought the motorcycles.
However, with just like every other craze, it all comes to the
survival of the fittest. Many companies came out to try to compete
with each other but after the invention of the affordable car, many
companies went bankrupt. It was more convenient to carry the whole
family in an affordable Ford Model T than a motorcycle. Then after
the Great Depression, most of the companies that survived the last
crisis came to the same fate as their competition.
Imports
During the 1950's American and British motorcycles
were in control of the motorcycle market. The only downside to this
was that in order to drive a motorcycle during this time, you had to
know how a motorcycle worked inside and out. It was very difficult
to own a motorcycle during this time if you were not mechanically
inclined. Just starting a motorcycle was a mission on its own.
Advancements in designs of motorcycles were at a near stand still
because there was really no competition to force new technology.
Then came the Japanese.
Japan had been suffering like every other country that was involved
in the war. The only difference with Japan is that their completely
manufacturing infrastructure had been destroyed. Therefore, instead
of rebuilding how it was before, they decided to look into the
future and build towards that. Like most other countries building
motorcycles after the war, they were primarily concerned with
providing cheap transportation for their citizens. Japanese
motorcycles were not popular in the US since no one here had the
need for a bicycle with an engine in it.
As the late 1950's rolled around, Japanese motorcycles started
evolving into bigger and better motorcycles. They started slowly
making their way to Europe and soon enough they were in the US. They
had come from small slow mopeds to reliable, attractive, fast, and
most importantly affordable motorcycles. The Japanese made several
advancements that were lacking from American companies. One of the
most noticed advancements was the introduction of the electric start
system. A kick-start was no longer needed to start your bike.
Since the Japanese were mostly concerned with making small
motorcycles, none of the other major motorcycle manufacturers
considered them a threat. They were in a different league and were
not considered competition. This proved to be a fatal mistake. As
the 1960's progressed, Japanese bikes were getting bigger and faster
but no one paid attention until Honda introduced their CD450. This
bike was nothing anyone had ever seen before. This bike was good
looking, affordable and could outrun any stock Harley-Davidson with
more than twice the engine size time and time again without breaking
down like the Harley tended to do.
Finally other motorcycle companies took notice to Japan and started
creating ways to compete with the Japanese bikes. Several companies
incorporated new technology to their classic line of bikes but this
proved to bee too little too late. When Honda introduced its new
four cylinder CB750, there was no doubt Japanese motorcycles were
here to stay. There is nothing that can be said about this bike to
overstate it; this bike's introduction was incomparable to any other
in the world. It was like a new car company making a car that could
perform as well as the top of the line Mercedes-Benz for the price
of a Hyundai. Now people could have the fastest most reliable
motorcycle and pay only a fraction of the price.
Fallout
As is with all good things, they all must end.
During the baby-boomers period, everyone had purchased a motorcycle.
It was the generation that wanted speed and reliability and they
found it in the Japanese motorcycles. But during the late 70's when
baby-boomers were concentrating on starting families and getting
jobs that required most of their times, motorcycles started loosing
their appeal. American distributors found themselves with a surplus
of Japanese motorcycles that no one wanted to buy. They were forced
to sell their left over stock at half of what their cost was. This
drove many companies out of business.
Rise Again
After this latest disaster to hit the
motorcycle industry, they were in need of something to bring them
back from the dead. This time it was up to the most unlikely company
to revive the old hogs. Harley-Davidson had the reputation of not
being reliable largely because they simply were not. You had to be a
mechanic to own one so it was not for the public. In 1981,
Harley-Davidson was able to separate itself from its parent company
AMF (American Machine and Foundry) and start working on a new
engine. The introduction of the Evolution engine brought a
completely new market to Harley-Davidson.
With the new Evo engine, Harley's now became the reliable
motorcycles that people had been looking for. Now anyone was able to
own a classic Harley and not have to be a worried about it breaking
down in the middle of the night. Nowadays Harley-Davidson is at top
of sales in the United States. Every bike Harley makes is already
sold before it leaves the factory. Their dedication to motorcycles
is why they are at the top once again. Now there are several big
companies that make good motorcycles. You can find a motorcycle for
just about anyone. Whether you like them big or small, there is
someone out there that makes the bike for you.
Ride Safe
-Team Mxdirtrider
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