Saturday, May 23, 2026

Moto Major


 The Moto Major was built in 1948. Designed at an aerodynamic research facility, it was a carry over from the 1930s streamline styling trend. There was a single and a twin planned, the single was the only one built. The longitudinally oriented crankshaft facilitated shaft drive.  Unfortunately, it never went into production.  The whole story (lots of detail) here at the Vintagent.



Friday, May 22, 2026

Know your lead acid battery

 Back in the day when batteries were rebuildable. Outside connectors for each cell, this is where this weird cell tester might be used for diagnosis.

 

BSA for 1971

Totally redesigned for 1971. It was not good, maybe the least appealing of any of the BSA twins.
 

Thursday, May 21, 2026

Shop Tips


 Hey, that's actually a good idea!

 Hours of reading... one of a million or so "shop tips" from Popular Mechanics- BTW that was uhhh... 60 years ago. 



Better living through radioactivity


 The atomic age is upon us, let's try radioactive piston rings. What could go wrong?

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Innovation from Alcoa


 Aluminum beer cans were introduced in 1958, this ad predates Ermal Fraze's invention of the ring pull tab.

J N Lapointe broaching machines

When I was about 14 years old, the female spline in the rear hub of our old Allis Chalmers B wore to nothing and that was hay mowing done for that day. I pulled the wheel hub and visited a local machine shop who tried to explain why they couldn't help (especially at the price we could afford...)

Putting new steel in where it was needed seemed simple enough to a guy who had no idea how the spline had been accomplished in the first place. When the broaching process was explained to me, I realized that it was an integral part of manufacturing, though I'm not sure I've ever seen an actual machine. Simply explained, a lathe removes metal by chiseling it away in a rotational motion, broaching chisels linearly.  No news to many of the audience, I know, but a broach is effectively a collection of single-point cutting tools arrayed in sequence, cutting one after the other.  Broaching was developed during the 1850s as the need for accurate keyways in shafts, pulleys and gears developed. in the mid 1890s, Joseph Napoleon Lapointe, originally from Ste. Hyacinthe, Québec, invented a much improved broaching process and left Pratt and Whitney to start his own company. That company, Lapointe Machine Tool, struggled along for awhile till J N was forced out in 1911. He and his son immediately started the J N Lapointe Company, making broaching machines like the ones in this post in direct competition to his former company. The original Lapointe Machine Tool company is still around.  J N died in 1928 and the son Francis shows up later in Ann Arbor at the American Broach Co. which served the automotive companies and  munitions industry, especially during WW2. It is also still active today under different ownership.

 As for that struggling, sunburnt teenager in the hayfield, he ultimately got a used hub at a wrecking yard, first experience with that world, and the haymowing resumed.

 

                     Cyclopedia of Modern Shop Practice, American Technical Society Vol III, 1919



Monday, May 18, 2026

Planes in formation, Vampires


 

Advances in visors


 We've all seen this before, I'm sure.... But every time I see it, I am always amazed that an engineering/marketing team thought it would sell...