The XS1100 is finally mine. After buying it off a clueless millennial who had managed to lose all useful paperwork associated with the bike, I've been able to re-establish ownership. Here's how you do it:
In order to reconnect continuity of ownership you need to get a signed affidavit from a legal notary. Your local town government will have a notary on hand that can sign, stamp and date your declaration of ownership (they'll offer this as a service). I stopped in at the Centre Wellington Town Offices in Elora and explained the situation (clueless kid was previous owner, etc). I showed them the ownership history the MTO had printed out for me (all six pages of it!), and the letter of sale from the previous owner. I also said I'd made repeated attempts to find the last legal owner (I suspect he's deceased).
The county clerk (who is a notary) signed, dated and stamped the affidavit I provided (that's it above), and I took it back to the MTO office the next day. In just a couple of minutes I paid the taxes on the sale price and the bike was attached to my name and a new ownership was printed out. They keep all the relevant paperwork, including the affidavit.
It's a bit of a pain in the neck to reestablish ownership, but it's not particularly expensive (twenty bucks to get it signed) and just takes a bit of leg work by the new owner. I'd argue a hundred bucks off the price for your time and costs to get the bike sorted - more if the previous owner is a tool (which they probably are if they lost all their paperwork).
Sunday, 17 April 2016
Riding The Tiger
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| When you want to start riding in April in Canada you need to take precautions! |
I stopped in Kirkwall, by the kirk, for a stretch and to remove the balaclava. By the time I got down to Ancaster for an educational conference it was warming up nicely.
I was out of the conference about 2pm. By that time the temperature was pretty much perfect for a ride. I took the main road into Ancaster and then up Sulfur Springs and Mineral Springs Roads, doing a loop before heading back north.
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| A cold start. |
There were dozens of other bikes out and about in the warm weather. The Tiger got a lot of double takes. I know it shouldn't matter but in a couple of days of riding I've already had more compliments than I did in a year of riding on the Concours. Halfway home I was thinking I could leave for Ushuaia immediately on this fine machine.
Once home I checked over the fluids. The Tiger barely used any gas, and the oil and coolant was right where I'd left them. I've got an air filter on hand (the previous owner said, "air filter?" when I asked if it had been done recently), but I don't want to miss a ride while I'm doing it now that the weather's good. I'm hoping a mid-week after work change will give me the time to get it done. To do the air filter means pulling the gas tank - it's not as easy as it's been on previous bikes.
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| A short stop in Kirkwall got the balaclava off (t made the helmet uncomfortably tight) |
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| The twisty road sign is in short supply in Southwestern Ontario - Sulphur Springs Road & Mineral Springs Road are exceptions. |
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| Riding a Tiger really is a magical experience! |
Friday, 15 April 2016
Triumph Tiger History
| First gen Tiger from the late '30s |
Tigers followed the steady evolution in motorbike technology throughout the Twentieth Century, and also followed some rather silly styling trends, like shrouding the mechanicals in 1950s aero inspired nonsense.
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| '69 Tiger made in the UK the same year I was! Nice high pipes! |
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| Pam Anderson riding a Tiger! |
It's one of the best examples of British manufacturing rising out of the ashes of old money and old ideas and embracing a more effective approach to manufacturing. Without the conservative establishments of aristocratic ownership and unionized labour Bloor was able to reignite British engineering and give it chance to shine again. You might think that it isn't properly British if it isn't mired in limited social mobility and the kind of Kafka-esque bureaucracy that makes building something well next to impossible, but that was only a moment in Twentieth Century British history and doesn't speak to the engineering prowess of our little island.

After Triumph rebooted in the early '90s, the Tiger reappeared in '93 during the second wave of model introductions. An early example of what came to be known as adventure bikes, the Tiger was a tall, long suspension, multi-purpose machine running a three cylinder engine.
Tigers have been around, in one form or another, since before World War Two. I'm looking forward to getting to know the one I found this month.
TigerLinks:
http://www.motorcyclenews.com/news/2013/march/mar1113-triumph-tifer-timeline/
http://www.classic-british-motorcycles.com/1969-triumph-tr6.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triumph_TR6_Trophy
http://www.triumphworld.co.uk/pages/triumph-enthusiasts/all-things-triumph/tiger-history.htm
http://www.rat-pack.com/TriumphHistory.php
http://www.gregwilliams.ca/?p=1693
http://www.ianchadwick.com/motorcycles/triumph/time03.html
Monday, 11 April 2016
Tiger Tales in a Never Ending Winter
| It's been an icy, crappy spring, but it looks like the end is nigh! |
After another round of freezing rain last night we were up to ten degrees today. Over the next few days it looks like riding season will start officially. The Tiger is at my local mechanic getting saftied. I should be on the road and ready to go by
Wednesday, the day everything starts to get better. In the meantime, while waiting for the ice age to end, I've been playing with some digital imaging:
Tigertester
by timking17
on Sketchfab - a 3d model of the Tiger
Soon enough I'll be able to stop looking at it and starting to ride it!
Variations on a garage photo:
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| 3d printed Triumph logo |
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| I backed the Tiger out while trying to get the carbs sorted on the Concours - 2 hours later is was a white out out here. |
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| 3d printed Triumph logo |
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| Triumph logo 3d printed |
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| Dremel 3d printer doing the business |
| I scanned the Tiger with a Structure Sensor and then printed the 3d model on the Dremel 3d printer - not just a model of a bike, but an exact scale model of my bike! |
Sunday, 10 April 2016
on the Verge of the Future
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| Sunday morning with a 3d printer - I get a kick out of making things work. |
One of the best parts of my job is that I get to lay my hands on leading edge technology in order to figure it out so I can teach it. I've always been an early adopter, if no no else has it I'm interested - more so if everyone else is afraid of it. When most people didn't know that TVs had alternate inputs I had a home computer with a printer. When everyone was crying about how fuel injection meant no one could customize their vehicles any more I was hacking the on-board computer and using it for diagnostics and more horsepower.Nowadays it's all about how digital tools are making micro/bespoke manufacturing more possible. Where once you needed an engineer, some machinists and a couple of hundred thousand dollars to build complex components, now you need twenty grand and a willingness to pick up some very easy to manage software. The entry into machining your own, custom components has become much easier.
Not only are digital tools handing back basic production to individuals, they are also allowing companies to explore levels of precision in manufacturing that seem almost science fictional:
I suspect the wedding-cake style melting-plastic-through-an-extruder 3d printer is an evolutionary dead end (there is only so much you can do to speed up a printing process that works around cooling plastic). Fortunately, the next step has already happened:
Another building tool I'd like to try is a digital laser cutter. Like other manufacturing tools, digital laser cutters have been tumbling in price. Coming out this year is a desktop laser cutter called the Glowforge that'll introduce laser cutting, etching and fabrication to many more people. At only about $4000, this undercuts previous industrial units by tens of thousands of dollars.
With this kind of technology available to many more people, I get the sense that the garage of the future will allow us to build things that only get churned out by factories at the moment. When I'm at the point that I can custom manufacture and laser etch bespoke motorcycle hard parts and print my own fairings, I'll feel like my garage can keep up with my imagination.
A good guess might be the garage scene from Big Hero 6:
| Recent advances in processing power and optics mean VR is finally (after decades of promise) arriving at a consumer level. |
From a motorcycling perspective, an immersive simulation of the MotoGP circuit on Valentino's bike would offer fans a new level of appreciation for the sport. Preparing for an overseas ride by tasting the trip virtually first offer opportunities for safety preparation that simply don't exist right now, especially if you're trying to wrap you head around new signs and riding on the wrong side of the road.
We're on the verge of the future, and I get another taste next week, I can't wait!
3D printing
motorcycle 3d printing: http://3dprintingindustry.com/2015/08/03/motorcycle-3d-printing-picking-speed/
https://3dprint.com/65937/3d-printed-motorcycle/
http://www.stratasys.com/resources/case-studies/automotive/klock-werks
https://all3dp.com/3d-printed-motorcycles-know/
https://grabcad.com/library/128705
Virtual Reality
https://youtu.be/-Sd3wXNjLtk
http://motorbikewriter.com/victory-motorcycle-virtual-reality/
http://www.lifebuzz.com/virtual-motorcycle/
http://mashable.com/2015/03/13/oculus-victory-motorcycles-sturgis/
http://www.cnet.com/roadshow/news/skully-opens-pre-orders-for-high-tech-helmet/
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