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Joined: Aug 2001
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This is one way the A65 coils are mounted. If assembling from a box of parts, of note is the frequently missing special small spacers (thick washers) shown in the clamp closure. Those are key to prevent the clamps from closing too tight and crushing the Lucas coils. (note that in these photos, smaller 6V aftermarket coils are being used) And when those are NOT in the clamp, the clamp bolt will not prevent the coils from dropping down on to the engine case.
Down to ‘69 T120R now a Tr6R tribute bike ‘70 TR6C “happy in the hills” ‘67 A65LA (now single carb) ‘93 K1100RS heavy metal (should be gone, still here…)
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Gary E, BrizzoBrit, Rich B, kevin |
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Joined: Dec 2013
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DOPE
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DOPE
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watermelons, and turnips, and a contaminator
and other stuff
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Joined: Aug 2001
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Britbike forum member
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Britbike forum member
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See also my reply on the "British Bikes in General" forum: KC's set up is also quite different from a '66 or a '67 (the only two I'm intimately familiar with).
Mark Z
'65(lower)/'66(upper, wheels, front end, controls)/'67(seat, exhaust, fuel tank, headlamp)/'70(frame) A65 Bitsa. 2007 Triumph Bonneville Black
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Britbike forum member
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Britbike forum member
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If I remember right, which I sometimes do, KC's mountings came in 1968, together with the Concentrics. The funny thing is, the brackets disappeared from the parts book that year, not to be listed until 1970. Regards.
There are no bosses in a technical discussion (Doug Hele, 1919 - 2001)
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Allan G |
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It's all in the thread title.
1967 BSA Wasp 1967 BSA Hornet (West Coast Model) 1967 BSA Hornet (East Coast Model) 1968 BSA Firebird Scrambler 1968 BSA Spitfire Mark IV 1965 BSA Cyclone Competition Build 1965 BSA Spitfire Hornet Build
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Joined: Oct 2001
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Britbike forum member
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There are no bosses in a technical discussion (Doug Hele, 1919 - 2001)
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Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 5,386 Likes: 174
Britbike forum member
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It's all in the thread title. Hah! Thank You Allan G! My original post was not titled with the years as this thread now shows. Good help!
Down to ‘69 T120R now a Tr6R tribute bike ‘70 TR6C “happy in the hills” ‘67 A65LA (now single carb) ‘93 K1100RS heavy metal (should be gone, still here…)
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Joined: May 2013
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Britbike forum member
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Britbike forum member
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Twas Gary,
But all the same, Thankyou for sharing it here. I will mark it as a sticky as mentioned.
Life is stressful enough without getting upset over the little things...
Now lets all have a beer!
68’ A65 Lightning “clubman” 71’ A65 823 Thunderbolt (now rebuilt) 67’ D10 sportsman (undergoing restoration) 68’ D14 trials (undergoing transformation)
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Joined: May 2013
Posts: 9,219 Likes: 342
Britbike forum member
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Britbike forum member
Joined: May 2013
Posts: 9,219 Likes: 342 |
If I remember right, which I sometimes do, KC's mountings came in 1968, together with the Concentrics. The funny thing is, the brackets disappeared from the parts book that year, not to be listed until 1970. Regards. From memory the 68-70 parts book still show the twin carb mountings the same as used to to 67. Despite these being the type As used from 68-70 on all twin carb bikes.
Life is stressful enough without getting upset over the little things...
Now lets all have a beer!
68’ A65 Lightning “clubman” 71’ A65 823 Thunderbolt (now rebuilt) 67’ D10 sportsman (undergoing restoration) 68’ D14 trials (undergoing transformation)
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Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 7,926 Likes: 220
Britbike forum member
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Britbike forum member
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Hah! Thank You Allan G! My original post was not titled with the years as this thread now shows. Good help! It was I who changed the title for accuracy.
Jon W.
1957 6T Thunderbird 650 1968 T100R Daytona 500 1971 TR6R Tiger 650 1970 BSA A65F 650 1955 Tiger 100 - Project 1971 BSA A65 650 - Project 1972 Norton Commando 750 "Combat"
"Charlie don't surf"
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Joined: Sep 2021
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Britbike forum member
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Britbike forum member
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All I know is that's the first I've seen of that bracket, and it looks more substantial than the way I have them mounted. Would they interfere on a T-bolt? The alignment of the coils, carb and rocker feed caused many threads to be read a couple years ago. I never had to ask that question because EVERYBODY (edit: everybody building an a65 they didn't take apart) asks it. Still never seen that bracket before Thanks! So what is the part number?
Last edited by DAMadd; 02/01/23 2:32 am.
Dave 65 TR6R 68A65T 69 B44VS. 74 T150V 65 A65 D L/R 19 Chieftain
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Joined: May 2013
Posts: 9,219 Likes: 342
Britbike forum member
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Britbike forum member
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Hah! Thank You Allan G! My original post was not titled with the years as this thread now shows. Good help! It was I who changed the title for accuracy. I haven’t been on much with working away, just assumed KC thought it was myself who was highlighting the years, didn’t know it had been changed 😅 your just too stealthy Jon 😅
Life is stressful enough without getting upset over the little things...
Now lets all have a beer!
68’ A65 Lightning “clubman” 71’ A65 823 Thunderbolt (now rebuilt) 67’ D10 sportsman (undergoing restoration) 68’ D14 trials (undergoing transformation)
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Joined: Mar 2011
Posts: 602 Likes: 77
Britbike forum member
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KC, your photos got a real belly laugh out of me. I only wish I had them about 5 years ago when I put my '68 Spitfire together, things would haave been much easier. I bought my Spitfire from the estate of a guy who died of cancer. He had occupied himself before the end by taking every nut and bolt and washer and spacer apart from every other one, and stashing them all in a series of random boxes and coffee cans, and doing the same with the parts that were thus undone--no rhyme nor reason to anything, just nuts, bolts, washers and parts in random boxes, and to make it worse he mixed in some A50 parts, and some stuff that I think came from a lawnmower, and some car parts. Everything randomly stashed in boxes. I am a cancer survivor myself, and so I understood what the guy was going through at the end, and I had a lot of compassion for him, so no hard feelings at all, although I found myself thinking how much easier it would have been if he had simply removed a part and put the corresponding bracket and bolt, nut, bolt and washer and spacer back through the hole it came out of and gave the nut a twist. But HA! nobody ever does that. The resulting random detached bits thus made for a big three dimensional jigsaw puzzle or logic test or something, and it was fun and a challenge to get every odd length bolt and every bracket and their corresponding parts into the right place, and by the end of the day I got it all right--and believe it or not I had everything but just a couple bolts --almost nothing missing. But since I am a Triumph guy, I didn't immediately recognize some BSA stuff. And the absolute most challenging and mysterious thing to figure out was--you guessed it--the 1968 coil mounts and their attending brackets and spacers. None of this stuff was well imaged in the parts manual, or in the BSA restoration books. I ended up sitting out in the garage for couple evenings, holding a bracket and some spacers and bolts I was left with, turning them this way and that way, trying to imagine how it all went together, with like a big phantom question mark floating over my head LOL. Man, if I'd only had your series of photos it would have been much easier and taken half an hour to get the right pieces in the right place right away. KC, you have done a real service to BSA-dom here!
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MarcB |
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