How Indian beat Harley at their own game

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  • čas přidán 15. 09. 2022
  • Indian came back to Flat Track racing in 2017 with the FTR750, a purpose built racebike. Since then they have dominated the sport in a way no company has since Harley with their XR750. Here's how it all happened
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  • Auta a dopravní prostředky

Komentáře • 715

  • @johnfry9010
    @johnfry9010 Před rokem +120

    When the sport changes to a manufacturer series it takes all interest out of the sport . Flat track in it's hay day had many Privateers riding all kinds of bikes and it was a hell of a lot more interesting to watch .

    • @senatorjosephmccarthy2720
      @senatorjosephmccarthy2720 Před rokem +6

      Same story about stock car racing. The local tracks had many different cars with many different size engines.
      And USAC Championship cars were of many chasi and engines.

    • @dee3368
      @dee3368 Před rokem +3

      80's into 90's for me was the golden era of flat track

    • @dukecraig2402
      @dukecraig2402 Před rokem +2

      Why is it less interesting to watch now? The bikes are just as fast and the racing is just as competitive.
      Apparently the creator of this video and most everyone who is commenting doesn't know the history of flat track racing and audience attendance.
      From it's creation and all the way throughout most of the 70's AMA Grand National flat track was THE form of motorcycle racing in America, just watch the 1976 movie The Bad News Bears, Jackie Earl Haley's character Kelly Leek at one point has a T-shirt on that says "Flat Tracker" on it, all that started to change in the late 70's and especially in 1980 when Marty Moates won the USGP motorcross race at Carlsbad California, he beat the best European motorcross racers who'd always dominated the sport even when they'd come over here to America, but when Moates beat them he became the hero of every teenage boy in America who dreamed about motorcycle's and racing them, then just a few years later supercross became popular and the flat track stands drained with everyone going to watch motorcross and supercross, suddenly the idols of teenage boys went from Mert Lawill and Jay Springsteen to Bob "The Hurricane" Hannah and Marty Moates, and that's because young boys too young to ride a street bike could goad their parents into buying them a dirt bike with hopes that they could get on a track and go somewhere, compared to motorcycle flat track and road racing which took more money than any kid could get out of his parents to get into, overnight motorcross racers were the new heroes and the flat track stands emptied.
      Scotty Parker won his 9 Grand National championships in the 80's and early 90's at a time when Harley pretty much dominated the sport and the stands were empty, the creator of this video makes it sound like they're empty nowadays because of Harley but the fact is they've been empty for 40 years now even when Harley was dominating the sport, it's not their fault it's just that motorcross and supercross took over as the big spectator sport for motorcycle racing in America 40 years ago.

    • @seebarry4068
      @seebarry4068 Před rokem

      Oh flat track is speedway. I never knew.

    • @MickH60
      @MickH60 Před rokem

      @@dukecraig2402 Blah blah blah, one eyed rubbish....

  • @dwendt44
    @dwendt44 Před rokem +83

    AMA has a long history of favoring Harley. They are doing it again; each time there's a better product and another brand starts winning races, new rules are right around the corner.

    • @mikeskidmore6754
      @mikeskidmore6754 Před rokem +1

      The Indian has been so Dominate that they have now restricted the intake size on the Indian .. and don't allow as much wheel weights on the Indain ..
      The Indians are so throttled back now that Yamaha has won a couple of races...
      The idea was to keep costs down requiring Production based bikes... The Problem is that it can cost more to build a Yamaha FZ-07 Framer than to buy a Brand New Indian for $42,000.00
      In the Production engine class the FG-750 has won a few races beating the Yamaha's and Kawasakis..

    • @dukecraig2402
      @dukecraig2402 Před rokem +2

      First off no they haven't, people from Europe, England in particular are always crying and saying that in the 60's for Harley's sake the AMA limited OHV engine's to 500cc, that's a bunch of malarkey, that rule was enacted in 1932 when no European bikes raced flat track and there was over 150 motorcycle manufacturers in America.
      The AMA has NEVER done anything to "favor Harley", the AMA has always set rules like limiting displacement on OHV engines back in 1932 and later limiting displacement on 4V engines because their policy has always been that one manufacturer shouldn't have a huge advantage over others because they wanted it to be about the most talented rider's and not the richest company, the idea was to keep one company from being able to price out your average racer by charging so much for one of their bikes, after the Great Depression and WW2 and Indian went out of business in the early 50's Harley was the only manufacturer making a bottom end that favored flat track racing, the knife in fork flywheel type bottom end that everyone rags on just so happens to be what works so well on a flat track, if it was a matter of just making a more powerful engine of the same displacement and type Harley would have been dethroned a long time ago, but since no one else built a bottom end the way American motorcycle's were made back in the day, which is what flat track racing evolved around they lost, all through the 70's after the AMA lifted the displacement limiting for OHV engines every other bike could and did run 750cc OHV engines, but Harley dominated the sport then because no one else built a heavy flywheel type bottom end, that's what keeps the rear wheel from breaking traction so badly when it's skipping along going around the corner on an uneven dirt track.
      Harley won so much throughout those years simply because they had years more experience at what they were doing and because of their "outdated" bottom end that just so happens to work well in that type of racing, now that other manufacturers have gotten years of experience at it and realized why Harley's worked so well they started making flat track racing engines with external changeable different weight flywheels, now they're winning, it's simply a matter of their experience caught up when back in the 70's Harley had 50 years experience and everyone else was trying to figure out what they knew.
      The AMA has never favored Harley despite everyone that's always crying that, they've NEVER wanted a manufacturer to make the difference, that's the way their rules have ALWAYS been set up long before European and Japanese motorcycle's started competing in American flat track racing.

    • @leviminton3320
      @leviminton3320 Před 11 měsíci +2

      The government has done the same. Tbh the only reason their primitive bikes are still around is all the rules and regulations and laws that have saved the company time and time again. Whether it was saving it from losing races or saving it from going bankrupt. It’s sad that they can’t just keep up with everyone else so they cry for help and they always get it so here we are where they’re so technologically behind everyone else. Although they are finally trying to catch up at least some

    • @dukecraig2402
      @dukecraig2402 Před 11 měsíci

      @@leviminton3320
      Nonsense, first off read my comment above your's to learn the truth behind the displacement ruling about OHV engine's being limited to 500cc's until the 70's, that rule WAS NOT enacted in the 60's to cripple European bikes as everyone claims, it was enacted in 1932 when no foreign bikes raced American flat track and there was over 150 motorcycle manufacturers in America with some making OHV engine's.
      And as far as the ONE TIME for just A FEW YEARS that a tax was put on large displacement import bikes to help level the financial playing field to keep Harley from going out of business SO WHAT?
      Are you really that toxic of a person that you'd like to have seen the last American motorcycle manufacturer who makes the kind of bikes you obviously have no interest in anyways go out of business?
      Wow, nice guy, the fact is Harley was the only motorcycle manufacturer that wasn't backed by a multi billion dollar corporation, Honda, Yamaha, Kawasaki and Suzuki are all divisions of that are a fraction of their parent corporations, not only does someone like Honda have engineering and engineers from their much more profitable automotive division that their motorcycle division can benefit from but more importantly all those companies could afford to flood the American market with bikes they were actually losing money on in order to drive Harley out of business, Harley doesn't have a multi billion dollar corporation backing it that can throw all kinds of money into them, so what if they make motorcycle's you have no interest in anyway, you'd rather see them go bankrupt and the people who like them have lost the one source that makes what they like? No, you're not a spiteful person, what happened did a Harley rider run over your puppy when you were a little kid that you feel it so necessary to spit venom at their motorcycle's and the people who ride them?
      I've owned motorcycle's from just about every motorcycle manufacturer at one point or the other and I've loved every one of them, that's because I'm a motorcyclist, and I wouldn't want to see any of the motorcycle manufacturer's go out of business, I really don't care what someone else rides, it's their money they're spending so it's none of my business what they buy and ride around on, whatever it is I hope it makes them happy because that's what motorcycling is supposed to be about.

    • @edwardroberts5660
      @edwardroberts5660 Před 9 měsíci +2

      exactly ask Honda remember when the AMA drove them out

  • @alexnutcasio936
    @alexnutcasio936 Před rokem +85

    04:00. If we’re going to be accurate , Kenny Roberts Yamaha bike destroyed the XR750 but was outlawed / banned because of its success.

    • @joseaklx300r6
      @joseaklx300r6 Před rokem +13

      The only reazon hd dominate is banning other brands most of the classes you pretty mutch can race minibike super moto and everything else is hd crap

    • @teemlee51
      @teemlee51 Před rokem +9

      It was banned because KR said it was a death machine!

    • @swoopswoop7311
      @swoopswoop7311 Před rokem +8

      Honda stopped stomped the shit out of Harley and the early eighties Ricky Graham Bubba showbirt any harly win after the rule changes by the ama suck.

    • @robr5786
      @robr5786 Před rokem +1

      Partially true,it only won one race,but it was to dangerous

    • @dukecraig2402
      @dukecraig2402 Před rokem +5

      They banned it because it was a 2 stroke engine, the rules for Superbike don't allow for 2 stroke engine's do they? Or are you going to try blaming that on Harley to?
      The truth is they shouldn't even have allowed that bike to race that day, the only reason they did was because the AMA didn't have a rule specifically denying 2 stroke engine's in Grand National racing simply because no one had ever done it.
      Yamaha developed that bike in Japan in complete secret because they knew if the AMA even caught wind of it they'd have immediately made a rule banning 2 stroke engine's, then after developing it in total secret they shipped it to Springfield and uncrated it the day of the race, the fact is the AMA should have banned it from even going on the track that day.
      When 4 stroke dirt bikes started racing in motorcross they were allowed somewhere around twice the displacement of 2 strokes in the same class weren't they? And that's for the same reason that Yamaha should only have been allowed to run a 2 stroke bike on a Grand National track with half the displacement of the other bikes, the only reason that thing even got on the track was Yamaha pulling a sneaky trick getting around a rule that hadn't been written simply because it was a given with everyone that Grand National bikes are 4 stroke.
      So they pulled their dirty trick and snuck up on everyone and got their win that day then that night the AMA passed a rule that only 4 strokes can compete in flat track, something that was already a given with any bike that'd been on a flat track including Triumph, BSA, Honda and just about any other manufacturer you can think of and they were all behind the ban.

  • @joelaugustin6407
    @joelaugustin6407 Před rokem +87

    I didn't even know about flat track when I started shopping for my first bike and the FTR was the one bike that caught my eye at the Indian dealership. It was out of my budget but my god was it beautiful.

    • @bartmotorcycle
      @bartmotorcycle  Před rokem +8

      Agreed!

    • @jordanjoestar8839
      @jordanjoestar8839 Před rokem +5

      Thr FTR is a God Tier naked ripper. Only bikes like them are Italian machines costing double. Even then, the FTR1200 typically wipes the podium with 1st, 2nd AND 3rd.

    • @AST4EVER
      @AST4EVER Před rokem +2

      it is....

    • @G58
      @G58 Před rokem +1

      Saw my first FTR Carbon at the dealership in Bridgend in Wales at the end of August 2020 and was immediately impressed. It’s too heavy and silly money, but impossible to ignore, unlike virtually every Harley since 1976.
      Peace

    • @jeffrykopis5468
      @jeffrykopis5468 Před rokem +2

      There is a street version? I'm not a huge bike guy, so I had never heard of the FTR til I saw this video. But I like it!

  • @mikeskidmore6754
    @mikeskidmore6754 Před rokem +50

    Harley got the AMA to restrict British bikes to 500 cc's while Harleys were 750'cc's .. and the British bikes still won so they restricted compression ratios and Carburetor sizes too.

    • @senatorjosephmccarthy2720
      @senatorjosephmccarthy2720 Před rokem +2

      The AMA officials recieved extensive
      training in Russia.

    • @adotintheshark4848
      @adotintheshark4848 Před rokem +2

      They should have Harley-only race classes. It's the only way they're going to win.

    • @robr5786
      @robr5786 Před rokem +2

      500cc overhead valves vs 750 side valves,I believe in 69 they updated the rules to allow 750 ohv engines race.routt made the big bore kits for Triumph while BSA stroked theirs- the A70 model,many of the brit bikes you see racing in the old vids are on factory frames and 650 cc,Triumph gamed the rules too as they had to have a factory stamp,they went to a fabricator and asked them to build a frame and Triumph would stamp a Part number,the company became Trackmaster, probably the most famous of the old dirt track race frames

    • @dukecraig2402
      @dukecraig2402 Před rokem +2

      They were allowed to run 750cc engine's after Harley released the XR750, what happened after that? What's their excuse then?

    • @greghall9410
      @greghall9410 Před 9 měsíci

      Harley 883 racing was a Harley only class. @@adotintheshark4848

  • @watchyMCFCwatchy
    @watchyMCFCwatchy Před rokem +119

    Harley, yesterdays technology at todays prices. Nuff said.

    • @hillbilly4christ638
      @hillbilly4christ638 Před rokem

      😆😅😂

    • @gregorsamsa1364
      @gregorsamsa1364 Před rokem +13

      *tomorrow's prices

    • @oneofmany1087
      @oneofmany1087 Před rokem +2

      The price of parts for Harley is out of this world. I have had more fun on my SR 500 Yamaha than I will ever have on my 200 sportster or my SS350 Aermacchi Harley.

    • @chorinzen
      @chorinzen Před rokem +2

      You have said what ,I have been trying to get people ,(at least what I think are people 😂) to see for as long as I remember.

    • @krisholden5365
      @krisholden5365 Před rokem +3

      @@gregorsamsa1364 dude you beat me to it! I read that comment and literally chuckled as I thought about how funny my reply was gonna be. Then I opened the replies and realized that, there’s at least one other person besides me that has a similar sense of humor! Nice work!

  • @SickGirlRocks
    @SickGirlRocks Před rokem +14

    Agree with you wholeheartedly! Be better! If you don’t like loosing do better. And I’m a Harley rider of 27 years. It’s all I’ve ever ridden and it’s all I ever will but I agree

  • @NBSV1
    @NBSV1 Před rokem +48

    Harley doesn’t really care about innovating. At this point they’re basically an apparel and accessory company that sells motorcycles on the side.

    • @khaccanhle1930
      @khaccanhle1930 Před rokem

      Old fart dress up cosplay as pirates.

    • @greghall9410
      @greghall9410 Před 9 měsíci

      T shirts and Jackets are made in China

    • @RT22-pb2pp
      @RT22-pb2pp Před 8 měsíci

      yep basically same bike for decades just more shitty crap hanging on it

    • @davidleonard8369
      @davidleonard8369 Před 7 měsíci

      @@RT22-pb2ppthey have sold adventure touring bikes for decades?

    • @sergeantmasson3669
      @sergeantmasson3669 Před 7 měsíci

      @@RT22-pb2pp WRONG.

  • @browngreen933
    @browngreen933 Před rokem +23

    No, flat track racing came about as an evolution of horse track racing. Board track racing was separate and evolved from bicycle velodrome racing.

    • @LukeDraleaus
      @LukeDraleaus Před rokem +1

      This is true, but it really started gaining popularity after board track racing was banned

    • @browngreen933
      @browngreen933 Před rokem +5

      @@LukeDraleaus
      Board track racing was never banned. Flat track racing was always popular going back to the beginning. But it exploded in popularity after 1933 when the AMA Instituted Class C racing, where ordinary riders could compete on their own machines. Some of the films shown here are Class C events.

    • @dukecraig2402
      @dukecraig2402 Před rokem +1

      @@LukeDraleaus
      Board track racing wasn't banned everyone just grew enough brains to stop doing it.
      About a mile and a half from my house in southwestern Pa about 50 miles south of Pittsburgh was a board track that was the most famous in the world in it's day, the richest most important people in America and royalty from Europe used to come here to watch races at it, the reason it was so popular and prestigious was because one of the owners was the guy who owned Universal Movie Studios, he'd have highlights of races at the track shown in the movie theaters he owned in between the feature films, so everyone in America knew about the place because it had the most exposure in an era before TV's and the internet.
      Like most board tracks it was shut down because of a bad accident that killed non racers, those board tracks were dangerous enough for the racers but half the time there was an accident a car would wind up taking out spectators or people on the crews in the pits.
      Motorcycle racing on board tracks was particularly dangerous because if you fell of a bike at 110+ MPH and went sliding down the track a splinter could catch you and peel up into a giant spike you'd be impaled on, most people watching a race that saw some guy get a wooden spike up his ass that came out his mouth probably wouldn't bring the family back next week to see the races.

    • @leehaelters6182
      @leehaelters6182 Před rokem +1

      @@dukecraig2402, thanks for this color and insight to a bygone era. I had known about the danger to riders, but not the skinny about Universal Studios and the opportunity it presented for publicity.

    • @dukecraig2402
      @dukecraig2402 Před rokem +1

      @@leehaelters6182
      Look up the Wikipedia page on "Uniontown Speedway", it was the board track about a half mile up the road from my house.
      It was shut down sometime in the 1920's because of an accident that got down into the pits and killed some mechanics, the county fathers said "Enough of that", look at the championship race results from it, none other than Louis Chevrolet himself won the first championship race there and Duesenberg's ruled most of the time.
      After WW2 it was reopened as a dirt track but was shut down again by the 50's or 60's, by the time I was a kid in the 70's it was a golf ball driving range and I used to whack golf balls there all the time growing up absolutely clueless to what had been there before.

  • @Iowa599
    @Iowa599 Před rokem +7

    Flat track racing started on the tracks that were already built at every county fairgrounds. Horse tracks.

  • @robbchastain3036
    @robbchastain3036 Před rokem +7

    Flat track got glorious coverage in On Any Sunday, who didn't want to ride like Mert Lawwill after seeing that? I know us kids on our Sting-Rays were sliding through corners like him--or at least pretending and trying our best. Same with jumping like Evel Knievel. And now, if it is an Indian show, so be it, they spent the money and evidently Harley and others aren't willing to pony up for better horses. And I recall Harley having success in desert racing for a time and it would've been cool if that had translated into something greater for them and all the dirt-crazy enthusiasts of the '70s. And I even got to meet and have dinner with Rocket Rex Staten in Frankfurt, West Germany in '76 when he was on a promotional tour for the Harley MX bike he was campaigning. And that was a thrill for me as I was a teenage military dependent over there and was invited by a local Maico dealer, Herr Mueller, who was an influential member of an MX club which hosted the gathering with Rocket Rex. And I still have a two-page fold-out from Cycle Guide magazine of Rex airborne on his Harley, signed by him that evening.

    • @dukecraig2402
      @dukecraig2402 Před rokem +1

      Yep, flat track was still THE form of motorcycle racing in America throughout most of the 70's, it was motorcross and supercross that drained the stands of flat track venues starting in the late 70's.
      When Marty Moates won the USGP at Carlsbad California in 1980 beating the best motorcross racers in the world from Europe that for 10 years had been coming to America and dominating the sport he became the hero of every teenage boy in America, and motorcross was a type of racing that didn't take a truck full of money and you didn't even need a driver's license to get one and start practicing, all of the sudden there was a kind of motorcycle racing teenage boys dreamed they could get into if only they could goad their parents into buying them a dirt bike, and you sure stood a better chance of getting them to buy you one of them than a road racing or flat track bike unless your dad was a millionaire, it was motorcross and supercross is what drained the stands at flat track events, not whether or not Harley was winning races like the creator of this video makes it sound like, flat track bleachers have been empty for 40 years ever since motorcross blew up.

    • @robbchastain3036
      @robbchastain3036 Před rokem

      @@dukecraig2402 I really appreciate your thoughts and I agree, this vid does seem to say that flat track would be big again if only Harley could win everything again. And I think, sadly, that Harley lost out half a century ago by not offering a variety of high-performance motorcycles for riders of all persuasions. And I tried, really I did, with an SX-175 which I bought used in Frankfurt in '76 just before I turned 17 and could ride street-legal on it then, something over 50cc. And that motorcycle was a big disappointment, more street than dirt, and it would've been perfect for a ride around town with a girlfriend but I was a motocross-infected teen ready for the GP circuit, lol. The Harley was totally forgettable and I'm not even sure how my Dad got for it when he sold it after my return to the States when I graduated from high school in '77. But then again, he also sold my '73 250 Maico and same story, but those were the days, no? Bikes were everywhere and used bikes were dirt cheap as the Maico cost me 200-bucks from a classmate and i had an after-school job at the commissary to fund my motorcycle pursuits. (And another classmate drove a used Porsche 911 and was innovative with some sort of exporting pursuit, epic.) And I sure had fun when I bought a used 50cc Honda Dax in '75 and, because I was 15, could join other American teens on their street-legal 50s, a concession to American teen military dependents and it was a kick to ride that little Honda with a friend who had a 50cc Yamaha through the woods and even on road trips to other cities, my favorite ride with him being a run to Darmstadt and back in late August of '75, the day after we both competed in a USO- and 7-Up-sponsored bicycle road race in downtown Frankfurt. And in June '76, i got to see Marty Smith race the 125 German GP and talk about epic, we got there early and Marty had camped out in a tent at the track and he was just enjoying the scene as fans arrived and mechanics prepared the machines. And wow, to go from reading all about his wins in the pages of the monthly motorcycle magazines--all the popular ones were available at the local PX magazine stand--to chatting with him like it was a camping trip was mind-blowing. And he was such a nice guy, the perfect ambassador of the sport and Honda and all of it. And in '78, when I was happily doing overnight radio at a Top-40 station in Canton, Ohio, I bought two used 125 Elsinores and lived out my motocross dreams, except for the GP part. And I grin as it was all fun, all a win, and I got to experience high-performance road riding in '79 when I worked radio in the San Francisco Bay Area and my Dad gave me free reign on his BMW R100RS, one of the first in the country as he had just brought it over from West Germany. And I did get pulled over once by a Kawasaki-mounted CHIP, but he was cool. He asked me why I was doing 85 and I explained that I was just trying to put a little distance between me and all the cars on my tail on the Bayshore Freeway in San Jose. And it was the truth and I thought he said, "Well, I'm gonna give you a ticket." And I hung my head and stared at the tank. Then he walked down the freeway to his bike--the BMW had better brakes, I guess--and he rode off. And I couldn't believe it, thanks, California Highway Patrolman. And ironically, after that good year on my Dad's BMW, my motorcycle-riding days came to a gentle conclusion and I returned to getting my two-wheeled kicks on all sorts of high-performance bicycles. But I would like to get another motorcycle or two and I see that Honda is bringing back the Dax as a 125, original design with discs and that larger engine. And these days I'm an all-season, year-around bicycle commuter, so I still have my riding chops. All I need is that little Honda to ride like a chopper. 😀

    • @dukecraig2402
      @dukecraig2402 Před rokem +1

      @@robbchastain3036
      The stands have been empty for flat track racing since before most of these people who make videos about it and leave comments were even born.
      From the beginning of the sport until the late 70's it was the biggest form of motorcycle racing in America, the stands were full and the riders were heroes, then motorcross and a few years later supercross blew up and took over as the big motorcycle racing events, I've been following the sport and going to the races for years, the guy who made this video makes it sound like since Indian has been winning people have quit going, nothing could be further from the truth, people who attend flat track races ultimately don't go because of who's winning, 20 years ago when the Harley fad was at it's height the stands were half full at best, most of the people who jumped on the bandwagon and bought a Harley when it became a fad didn't even know flat track racing exists, it's just been that way for years, in the 80's when Scotty Parker was on the factory Harley team and he won 9 Grand National titles the stands were empty.

    • @savage22bolt32
      @savage22bolt32 Před rokem +1

      @@robbchastain3036 thanks for sharing your story.

  • @user-se7vt5ow4e
    @user-se7vt5ow4e Před rokem +36

    Harley and the AMA killed flat track.
    They chased the other manufacturers out. If they hadn’t stacked the deck against the other manufacturers you would be able to walk into a Honda, Yamaha, Kawasaki or Suzuki dealership and buy a flat track ready race bike just like you can buy a motocross or enduro racer today.

    • @rickbecker683
      @rickbecker683 Před rokem +4

      And now they are doing the exact same thing to Indian as they did to Honda.

    • @toomanybears_
      @toomanybears_ Před rokem +6

      The only reason Indian hasn't been banned outright is because it is an American brand.

  • @9233267
    @9233267 Před rokem +7

    I love how such an icon of 'freedom' has been kept on life support by protectionist policies. No hate for the bikes, it's just funny.

    • @leighmcqueeney9848
      @leighmcqueeney9848 Před rokem

      It is extraordinary that Harley got 2 billion dollars during the GFC. Rewarding their incompetence

    • @9233267
      @9233267 Před rokem +1

      @@leighmcqueeney9848 I wasn't aware of that. That kind of protectionism pretty much guarantees a company won't innovate. As fearful as the US is of socialism, you'd think they'd at least identify this as... well... it's not capitalism.

    • @leighmcqueeney9848
      @leighmcqueeney9848 Před rokem

      @@9233267 they took on debt to prop up their share price, which was starting to tank due to the failure of HD to modernise. They are doing the same thing now. Tragic

  • @my2cents395
    @my2cents395 Před rokem +25

    I would like to see a street version of the 750. Maybe even a super motard or adventure bike.

    • @impalaSS65
      @impalaSS65 Před rokem +2

      Light, fast, dangerous. 80hp for reliability and 150kg max. Not for Sunday riders like literally every other bike already is. Kickstarter and no battery.

    • @randydewees7338
      @randydewees7338 Před rokem +1

      @@impalaSS65 Oh ha ha - 150kg, let's just have it cost 50K too. A battery is mandated for street legal. And it needs electric start, who cares about 10 pounds more. I do agree about the 80 RWHP. Should be doable in the 190kg +- range. It won't be cheap even then.

    • @impalaSS65
      @impalaSS65 Před rokem +1

      @@randydewees7338 Anyone interested in performance and handling cares about an easy way to shave off a hefty weight with a tall COG, without going into exotic materials.
      I have/had three bikes under 130kg and no battery that were street legal. KLX650R, TTR600, 610TE. The 610 was 117kg
      Getting a 750 to 150 kg is only because I want it to withstand jumping at 140mph.

    • @alexnutcasio936
      @alexnutcasio936 Před rokem +4

      @@randydewees7338 a battery not required if it runs lights off a magneto.

    • @brianstearns3692
      @brianstearns3692 Před rokem

      @randy dewees
      Just get a KTM 690 SMC and do bolt ons. You will be there. I'd like it to have a twin also, but this is what you get. Otherwise go Aprilia RSV if you need the twin. The KTM will be better and more fun.

  • @nicolasbauman1514
    @nicolasbauman1514 Před rokem +5

    Listening to my uncle talk about how they're favoring Yamaha now, I didn't realize they only allowed other bikes to have traction control and abs

  • @Rollin_L
    @Rollin_L Před rokem +11

    Amazing to see how things have changed since I saw my last flat track race. (It's been a while!) I used to go to virtually every event at Ascot, two half-miles and a TT every season. Then we'd try to make most of the San Jose and Sacramento Miles as well, plus I'd go to Daytona where the Short Track series opened the season, just as the Speedway opened the AMA roadracing series each year. I saw Scotty Parker win his first championship, clinching it at Sacramento, after ten years in the sport, and then he dominated for years after. Saw the Honda team start with the Sidewinder effort before they built their own, original motor to compete with Harley. Strange to think it's all Indian now, a name we never thought we'd see again. Ascot Park has been gone over 30 years, yet I can still see the place in my mind like I was there yesterday.

    • @goosenotmaverick1156
      @goosenotmaverick1156 Před rokem +1

      My uncle flat track raced in the Sacramento area, sometime I would guess in the late 70s through some of the 80's and a couple times in the 90s that I recall. Wonder if y'all ever raced lol

    • @goosenotmaverick1156
      @goosenotmaverick1156 Před rokem

      Or rather if you watched him race ever haha

    • @dukecraig2402
      @dukecraig2402 Před rokem +1

      Wow, has Ascot been gone that long? Man I'm getting old.

    • @Rollin_L
      @Rollin_L Před rokem +1

      @@dukecraig2402 Yup, the last half mile race there was in the Fall of 1990. and it was a very sad day. You're not alone in feeling old, lol.

  • @pinslayer4579
    @pinslayer4579 Před rokem +11

    The AMA catered to Hardly Dependable kissed their ass and passed weight rules and carburetor restrictions against Honda in particular and they still beat HD. American flat track saved the series . If they could only get Dave Dispain back

    • @mikeskidmore6754
      @mikeskidmore6754 Před rokem

      Dave Dispain is retired and Scotty Duebler does a great job..

  • @ericalger5003
    @ericalger5003 Před rokem +13

    GREAT VIDEO! I especially liked the dig at Harley at the end. Harley lost to Indian at the bagger road racing series!! Harley rolled over and has played dead for sure in Flattrack. Harley will not spend the money on racing. There's no profit in racing only expense. 90 percent of Harley customers do not give a rats ass about racing, AT ALL.

    • @andrewlindley4865
      @andrewlindley4865 Před rokem +3

      Harley's also going broke. They don't even have the money to spend if they wanted to

    • @tokyosmash
      @tokyosmash Před rokem

      @@andrewlindley4865 they absolutely do considering the rumored budget for their King Of The Baggers program last year was 6 million.

    • @bonesrhodes3762
      @bonesrhodes3762 Před rokem +2

      " Harley lost to Indian at the bagger road racing series!! "
      ----- because Travis fell down in the rain and Kyle wasn't allowed to restart at Brainerd

    • @ericalger5003
      @ericalger5003 Před rokem +1

      @@tokyosmash That 6 million would've been better spent developing bikes that aren't ugly and slow piles of shit.

    • @tokyosmash
      @tokyosmash Před rokem

      @@ericalger5003 I don’t disagree with you at all, however, it is what it is.

  • @mytube2959
    @mytube2959 Před rokem +6

    Very cool, British speedways first race was in 1928, very similar, but on a smaller oval. Great looking bikes, especially the Indian (No 51)

    • @dukecraig2402
      @dukecraig2402 Před rokem

      They're still Speedway racing over there, but the real lunatics race at the Isle of Mann, that race is just insane.

  • @michaelgillett5477
    @michaelgillett5477 Před rokem +5

    In England the Indian motorcycle not only for Flat track racing but Brooklyn’s Isle of Man TT and various other competitions would’ve won the most serious competitors that we’ve ever had just very very beautifully prepared and maintained engines Harley-Davidson always seemed yes the XR 750 was a nice bike but if you look back in the early days the Indians always wear a better motorcycle looking another world of motorcycles from England enjoy your program Michael

  • @richardgreen7811
    @richardgreen7811 Před rokem +12

    Really ... In 1968 I rode against my buddy Bart Markel who was a factory rider for Harley. He was sponsored in the 250 cc Class with a Sprint on the 1/4 mile in Flint, Michigan and an XLCH (I think a 650 cc) on the mile at many places, notably DRC (Detroit Race Course). He could hit 125 mph on the straight while peeking under the handle bar and holding the shock tower in his left hand. He held more Grand National Championships that any other rider of the day. "Me" ??? I could consistently finish second in any race where there were two bikes running. Also ... I don't remember any Indians.

    • @savage22bolt32
      @savage22bolt32 Před rokem +1

      Richard, were you part of the pack chasing Bart, Mert, Dick, Gene, etc on the flattracks in that Bruce Brown movie we all saw in '72?
      That was a golden era!

    • @bryanwhitton1784
      @bryanwhitton1784 Před 10 měsíci +2

      I just want to make a couple of corrections. But in 1968 Bart raced a KR750 and his Sprint was a CRS 250. My uncle is Sam Arena (RIP) and he owned Sam Arena's Harley Davidson in San Jose, CA. My father was the service manager and was the tech that measured the bore and stroke of the winning HDs if they placed in the top three, back then the top three finishers were measure at the track, and I worked there from 1973 to 75 or so. When the Harley Race team came to town for the San Jose 1/2 or 1 miles nationals they all stopped by at my uncle's shop. I got to meet Mart Lawwill and Mark Brelsford.
      I raced from 1970 to 76 and I raced Harleys until Mert Lawwill answered my question of how to make my ERS 350 more competitive. He simply said get a Yamaha. ;-) In my opinion these years through the mid 80's were the best years of flattrack racing.

    • @richardgreen7811
      @richardgreen7811 Před 10 měsíci

      @@bryanwhitton1784 It was an experience. As I said, I raced against Bart in 1968, along with another local celebrity who used the track name "Charlie Chapel" (actually William Chapel) whom I attended high school with. Charlie rode a Yamaha and he was the only real competition for Bart. I need to point out that we called him "Black Bart" because even though he was diminutive (140 lbs at his heaviest), he had the competitive streak of a giant. That nature would present itself in feature events where one of his favorite tricks was to come inside you in turn 3 and bump your rear tire. Most of the time not enough to spill you, just increase your pucker-factor while he would slide by. Another thing he would do for the fans was come out of turn 4 aiming almost straight at the wall. The front tire would hit and climb the wall about 2 feet, making it look like a crash at first. He was a very talented man. I watched him several times at a practice track in Grand Blanc, MI replete with moguls. He was the only rider I ever saw do steep wheelies "down" a hill.

    • @bryanwhitton1784
      @bryanwhitton1784 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@richardgreen7811 That's funny. The bumping trick is something I have used myself. It get slower people out of the way nicely. 😉 I remember one story about him and his KR from his early days. They were traveling between races and they wanted to test his bike, not sure what that meant, so they unloaded it in the middle of nowhere and pulled out Freddie Nix's bike and raced them down the freeway to compare. They were shocked at how much slower his bike was yet he was winning consistently on it. Says a lot about his corner speed.
      Those days were great fun. I remember when it was time to renew my pro license the last time. I was sitting in the living room and looked at my financials and my new baby daughter and wife and had to decide what was more important. My daughter and wife won. I couldn't afford racing and being a husband and father. I just sat there on the floor and cried. I packed everything into a box and sold my racing equipment to my brother and walked away. I knew I wasn't going to worry KR that I was on the track and I couldn't justify the cost. But man was it fun. To my wife's credit, she never once asked me to quit. She supported me completely which actually made the decision easier. Man those days were fun!

    • @greghall9410
      @greghall9410 Před 9 měsíci

      I owned a 1974 XLCH and it was 1000cc. In 1968 the CH was 900cc.

  • @chrismoody1342
    @chrismoody1342 Před rokem +4

    I got to say it; the NHRA has also created classes just for Harley. They couldn’t compete with the other brands, so they handicapped them, so Harley can use bigger displacement while slowing the others etc.

  • @telejazz5160
    @telejazz5160 Před rokem

    Thanks Bart , I love these informative vids .

  • @lpd1snipe
    @lpd1snipe Před rokem +1

    Here living in my part of Florida we have former Grand National AMA racer # 23 Kevin Atherton. He literally has one of his old XR750 race bikes set up and legally registered for the street. He carries a small backpack around with a starter and a battery in it to start it everywhere it goes when he stops. It is one badass motorcycle!

  • @robertadair6612
    @robertadair6612 Před rokem +4

    A great documentary, well done!!

  • @jimrhea5484
    @jimrhea5484 Před 11 měsíci +1

    A mention of Kenny Roberts and Yamaha making a go with the TZ750 2 stroke should have been included as the first serious Japanese manufacture to contest Harley's 45deg twin. It was a super historical watershed moment for flattracking. That was the moment 2 strokes became unsuited for flattrack. Great vid though. Ty.

  • @tokyosmash
    @tokyosmash Před rokem +4

    Having Jared Mees who is one of the greatest dirt trackers of all time certainly hasn’t hurt for Indian.
    Also worth noting, the FTR750 isn’t a production bike nor does it have a production engine. The XR750 was a production based engine, as is the XG750R. They aren’t in Production Twins because they aren’t eligible, and production twins is being dominated by… a Harley and is a better comparison of what companies can bring to the table, be it Harley, Yamaha, Royal Enfield, Kawasaki or KTM.
    The production twins bikes are getting really close to where Supertwins are at performance wise.

    • @Hustler9g
      @Hustler9g Před rokem

      they basically made the production class to give everyone especially HD a chance. So ya now they dont compete in the same class because they cant

    • @tokyosmash
      @tokyosmash Před rokem

      @@Hustler9g you really should reference championship points before making such a claim

    • @Hustler9g
      @Hustler9g Před rokem

      @@tokyosmash you mean the super twins points where Indian still won the Championship 1,2 ahead of the Yamaha even after they've neutered the shit out of the ftr? Ya man production twins was made to give everyone else a place to win.

  • @grumpygnome9316
    @grumpygnome9316 Před rokem +4

    Leveling the playing field is another way to keep things the same

  • @krisswegemer1163
    @krisswegemer1163 Před rokem +28

    Yeah, changing the rules so slow bikes can win.... That won't work this time. When flat track was way more popular, and the rules were being changed to protect Harley against foreign competition, that pretty much worked. Changing the rules to cripple an American brand, that won't work. The old school fans won't like the action against an American company. Newer fans don't want a sport tailored for slow bikes. This will kill flat track.

    • @aka_pierre
      @aka_pierre Před rokem +6

      Have you met Harley fanboys? They'll tell you Indian isn't a real American brand.

    • @krisswegemer1163
      @krisswegemer1163 Před rokem +4

      @@aka_pierre No, I really don't know any. Somehow not surprised to hear that, though.

    • @khaccanhle1930
      @khaccanhle1930 Před rokem +13

      Well, HD has been ruining the motorcycle scene in the USA since the 1970s. What's new?

    • @dukecraig2402
      @dukecraig2402 Před rokem +1

      @@khaccanhle1930
      They have?
      Here's a news flash for you junior, Harley was the ONLY motorcycle manufacturer in the USA in the 70's, and apparently you and the guy who made this video don't realize that if it wasn't for Harley Davidson the new incarnation of Indian wouldn't exist, that's right, Indian didn't wasn't reborn making 4 cylinder inline racing bikes were they? No, they were reborn making bikes for the nostalgia cruiser market, the very thing that Harley invented and made into something so big that even the Japanese motorcycle companies designed bikes specifically to enter the market with, and the bikes they designed for that weren't imitations of old British or German or Italian bikes were they? No, they were imitations of Harley's and the nostalgia market they created and if it wasn't for that there wouldn't be a new Indian company in the first place.
      The maker of this video can praise Indian and rag on Harley all he wants but the fact is Indian created a race bike to compete in a type of racing that there was only one company that ran in it, it's not like they designed a Moto GP bike and had to compete against 5 or 6 other companies with cutting edge technology that have the financial backing of an automotive division that sells millions of cars a year, Honda, or the financial backing of a billion dollar heavy industries corporation, Kawasaki, or any of the other Moto GP racers who are either a division of a huge corporation or are owned by a huge automotive conglomerate, yea, look into who owns those Italian motorcycle companies, BMW or Fiat or whoever it is that's the latest owner of them and dumps truck loads of money and tech into them, Harley isn't owned by GM or Ford, they pretty much go about it themselves and when they do have engineering done by an outside source they have to pay through the nose for it, even Plymouth had the luxury of having an engineer from Chrysler's missile division have to report to them to work out the aerodynamics for the Superbird, Indian didn't go racing in a world that's run by multi billion dollar corporations and started winning every race they entered, they went racing in a world that the big competition has a yearly profit that's less than the money any of those companies that race moto GP spend in advertising.
      Something else he fails to realize that he even mentions in the video is the fact that Indian had a huge European automobile conglomerate design that engine, it's not like the guy's at Indian's headquarters sat down and did it, they contracted it out.
      So basically Indian went racing in a sport that the only real competition is a company that sells a fraction of the vehicles and has a fraction of the money that those high tech Moto GP racers make.
      So what, they beat Harley Davidson, if they were out there beating Honda and Ducati and all those other companies that have multi billion dollar backing at their racing game that might be something to brag about.
      And the half empty stands at flat track events that he mentions in this video have been half empty since the late 70's/early 80's, that seismic shift happened back then because motorcycle racing interests in America went to motorcross then even more a few years later to supercross racing, that's what took over as the big spectator sport in America when it comes to motorcycle racing, when Marty Moates beat the best European motorcross racers in the 1980 USGP at Carlsbad California he became a national hero and the idol of every motorcycle loving teenage boy in America, and made every one of them that dreamed about motorcycle racing think that motorcross was a form of motorcycle racing they could possibly get into, that's what drained the stands at the flat track event's, teenage boys motorcycle heroes went from flat track racers like Mert Lawill and Jay Springsteen to motorcross racers like Bob "The Hurricane" Hannah and Marty Moates, when Scotty Parker won 9 Grand National flat track championship's throughout the 80's and early 90's the stands were empty, and he got all of them on a Harley, so no one can blame Harley losing to Indian as why the stands are half empty, they've been that way for 40 years because starting in the early 80's in a few short years flat track racing became a forgotten sport, even though Harley won the title almost every year during that decade.

    • @DennisMerwood-xk8wp
      @DennisMerwood-xk8wp Před 11 měsíci

      @@dukecraig2402 Great post duke my friend. The truth is not welcome by Harley Davidson bashers and haters here.
      You know the "clothing and T-shirt company" making motorcycles on the side since 1903 with all Chinese parts. GMAFB!
      Like "Victory", how long before "Indian" becomes just another brand flopping and failing to compete in Harley Davidson's marker segment?
      How many Yamaha Star cruisers have lasted on showroom floors for more than 5-years before disappearing from the catalog?
      Or Suzuki and Kawasaki rip-off cruiser HD clones with their dohc wonder engines that nobody can work on without a computer.
      How many proud Americans like this rider made good money on their Harley Davidson stocks for many years, and provided jobs for Americans
      Casting our pearls before swine I know. Take care duke.

  • @damonschilowsky8965
    @damonschilowsky8965 Před rokem

    Your videos are cool. Very easy to listen to and entertaining. Good job.

  • @RevQuads
    @RevQuads Před rokem +8

    Harley overpriced themselves right out of business. It's the last wheeze of the most overpriced motorcycle company in the world.

  • @brettgl21
    @brettgl21 Před 16 dny

    As a kid, I loved watching my Uncle Lou's Triumphs run off and leave the Harley's. What a great time in Dirt Track.

  • @gtsrig
    @gtsrig Před 9 měsíci +1

    In my day (1970 - 76) at the local Northern Calif. short flat tracks it was the Bultaco Pursang that dominated.

  • @jiyushugi1085
    @jiyushugi1085 Před rokem +1

    On a typical Friday night at Ascot back in the day, there'd be Harleys, Triumphs, BSAs, Nortons, Yamahas, and even, from time to time a Suzuki 500 and a Benelli 650! Those were the days.....

  • @rickbecker683
    @rickbecker683 Před rokem +2

    Suzuki is not doing everything wrong in fact they are have very good sales. They are simply the first to realize that winning on sunday and selling on monday doesnt work anymore. As all forms of motor sports are losing popularity and the ROI simply isnt there.

  • @landonmurray3814
    @landonmurray3814 Před 6 měsíci

    Flat track drivers are incredibly badass. The descendants of the most ballsy riders of all time

  • @fearsomename4517
    @fearsomename4517 Před rokem +1

    I had the privilege to ride an Indian Scout and it was fast. I've also seen Triumph win in the vintage class at two major swap meets. I bought my '50 Triumph Thunderbird project from a guy that put brakes on his Harley XR750 and told me he rode it full throttle and would get pulled over the majority of the time. I agree, Harley needs to up their game.

  • @curtn7076
    @curtn7076 Před rokem +3

    Harley has been dropping the ball for a while. The HD Street is VERY tame.

  • @dennymoore4219
    @dennymoore4219 Před rokem +3

    I'm thinking there will be a new dirt tracker out of the new sportster s and nightster engine platforms. I like to see them all out there competing

  • @cebril812
    @cebril812 Před 8 měsíci

    A lot of people don't know that the Sturgis motorcycle rally was actually started by an Indian dealer who started a club and a flat track race there to improve sales. The rest as they say is history.

  • @jaredmoss7403
    @jaredmoss7403 Před rokem

    Awesome video, very insightful.

  • @gullyfoyle-uf6fr
    @gullyfoyle-uf6fr Před rokem +10

    Don't litigate, innovate!!!

  • @llamamanism
    @llamamanism Před rokem +6

    I’m afraid Harley might be dead by 2030, their customer base is shrinking and their technology is stagnant. They are locked into a situation where the big V twin is their best and worst asset at the same time

    • @user-tm9ho3bm4v
      @user-tm9ho3bm4v Před rokem +1

      I don't think it's ever going to die, it may have a small but definitely dedicated customer base. As for new customers though? New models are unreliable and way too expensive.

  • @Mr.Avuncular
    @Mr.Avuncular Před rokem

    Dude... Elk city, Oregon
    Dirt track at its best back in the late 60's early 70's I know I was there as a kid ...yep same place sometimes a great notion was filmed😎good times my friend!!

  • @williambassakyros201
    @williambassakyros201 Před rokem

    I watched Road-Racing & Flat-track since I was in my teens, and guys like Calvin Rayborn II was my favorite riding a Harley-Davidson 750cc. His ability to outride others on the infields was amazing, but he was always out done on the banked ovals on track like Daytona where Yamaha's & Suzuki's flew by him. It was the lack of power that made him move and accept an offer to ride for the Suzuki Team. He went from a 4 stroke to a 2 stroke engine and seizures happen quit frequently, especially when you are full throttle, and that is what killed him. He was, I believe, the best rider HD ever had. RIP Cal!

  • @aretardridesmotard6128
    @aretardridesmotard6128 Před rokem +1

    It reminds me a little of the 550sxv from Aprilia. Gorgeous bikes, the 1200FTRs.

    • @bennyb.1742
      @bennyb.1742 Před rokem

      I've always wanted to build a framer (custom purpose built FT bike) out of an SXV!

    • @francescoporcari8597
      @francescoporcari8597 Před rokem

      The Aprilia was an incredible bike! It was built for racing, and, in its optimized version, it delivered 85 hp

  • @themikew7
    @themikew7 Před rokem +1

    Enjoy your commentary Bart. Couldn't agree with you more. Hopefully HD will step up to the plate once again and sharpen their pencils and design something more competitive.

    • @Embargoman
      @Embargoman Před 10 měsíci

      What if Hyundai buys Harley-Davidson and Harley-Davidson becomes the winner in all areas including GP?

  • @PATRICKJLM
    @PATRICKJLM Před rokem +66

    Indians were from the beginning much better motorcycles than HD. The only reason Harley survived the great dispersion (and not only), was because it had the right connections to get contracts from the army and the police.

    • @browngreen933
      @browngreen933 Před rokem +3

      Not true. Harley gained over Indian because they were more robust and heavy duty on the road when Indian was still building glorified motor bicycles. Indian did win a lot of early races though.

    • @alexnutcasio936
      @alexnutcasio936 Před rokem +4

      Great dispersion? Who got spread around?

    • @browngreen933
      @browngreen933 Před rokem +1

      @@alexnutcasio936
      The OP is spreading bullshit, lol.

    • @257796
      @257796 Před rokem +8

      If you're smart, Indians have always been better bikes. Harley is powered by nostalgia and machismo. Not performance, race numbers, weight or tech. And if you go to bring up police and army you might as well bring up Reagan. That company would have died long ago if you didn't lock out the Japanese. Good work by the way Japanese bikes have been failing ever since. On my side HD stands for "hopefully dead?". That goes for your crashes too, start waving to people

    • @bccycle1
      @bccycle1 Před rokem +1

      Indian sold army and police bikes

  • @DieselMech
    @DieselMech Před rokem

    would you do a kind of the baggers videos and show people what’s different between a street indian/harley and a race bike. Thanks 🙏

  • @kylejohnson423
    @kylejohnson423 Před rokem +3

    I think it was JFK that once said "We choose to [do these things] not because they are easy, but because they are hard..." It seems like Harley is fine with just rolling over and accepting the easy money, rather than investing in the future of motorcycle riders.

  • @teemlee51
    @teemlee51 Před rokem

    This was very well done!!!

  • @camrongoodall
    @camrongoodall Před rokem

    Another banger video thanks

  • @rickyism1576
    @rickyism1576 Před 11 měsíci

    Beat them so good, they pulled out of the sport themselves. Hard being an AFT fan sometimes.

  • @sergn8409
    @sergn8409 Před rokem

    ello Bart, wht is your opinion on the 22 Indian FTR R Carbon?

  • @natanpierce495
    @natanpierce495 Před rokem

    Good video- Love the XR- I have a XR1200, which is a homage to the XR750. Go Indian go...but let's get back at it HD!

  • @thenexthobby
    @thenexthobby Před rokem +19

    Excellent video, as always.
    H-D deserves condemnation, not that they'd care about any criticism. They only compete when no one shows up. They are great at emptying the pockets of dentists wishing to cosplay in leather, and yeah those bikes are great in that niche. As for AFT, I have little interest in watching a "sport" filled with artificial competition only designed to cater to morons who think a variety of nameplates must mean they're competitive.

    • @khaccanhle1930
      @khaccanhle1930 Před rokem

      Aaarrrgh, it's the leather clad Haaarrrley pirates! Shiver me timbers, or would it be, "YMCA"!
      The company is just as fake as its biggest fans.

    • @dalewyatt1321
      @dalewyatt1321 Před rokem +3

      That dentist comment ............ GOLD

    • @rickbecker683
      @rickbecker683 Před rokem +3

      You sir are the problem!

    • @omarsalgado9715
      @omarsalgado9715 Před rokem

      Excellent video? That guy is highly biased. Time and time again.

    • @dukecraig2402
      @dukecraig2402 Před rokem +1

      You should go out there and race then, if the sports that non competitive you shouldn't have any problems winning ace.

  • @waroark1
    @waroark1 Před rokem +4

    I loved the Victory Octane when it came out pushing advancement in racing. It was crushing to see Victory pull the plug so that Indians could have all the attention. But I knew that eventually that learned advancement would come out in some Indian package. So I really welcome the Indian FTR.

  • @jay1st1st
    @jay1st1st Před rokem +3

    You need to check the european flat trak, the bikes are amazing !!!

    • @DukeOfTwist
      @DukeOfTwist Před rokem +1

      100% they're on methanol, no brakes & probably weight a third of an FTR

  • @jbradkilpatrick
    @jbradkilpatrick Před rokem

    Nailed it! All the Harley fans act like HD is a victim because they were supposedly told that flat track was going to production based engines. Step up to the plate! You’re the biggest motorcycle manufacturer on the planet!

  • @blackfyre3149
    @blackfyre3149 Před rokem +1

    Can you do a documentry style video on Indian like you did on RE interceptor.

  • @andrewmcewan8081
    @andrewmcewan8081 Před 9 měsíci

    flat/grass track and speedway were big in britain and europe up to the 80s , speedway was televised till the late 80s that i remember possibly later

  • @daffyduck9901
    @daffyduck9901 Před rokem +2

    Kenny Roberts Yamaha TZ750 two stroke. One bad ass ride brotha.👍

    • @yassassin6425
      @yassassin6425 Před rokem

      "They don't pay me enough money to ride that thing"

    • @Hustler9g
      @Hustler9g Před rokem +1

      4 cylinder* but ya one of the most insane ft bikes

  • @miniminamanmina3715
    @miniminamanmina3715 Před rokem

    Harley knows one thing only Harley Riders know . Harleys are the only motorcycle , everything else is two wheels with a motor. That comes from being an Icon . And knowing when everyone says motorcycle the first thing that comes to mind is the name and form of harley.

  • @alexnutcasio936
    @alexnutcasio936 Před rokem +3

    The best riders all came from flat track. Kenny Roberts and Jay Springsteen were untouchable and better than anyone now. The riders aren’t better now, only the bikes are faster.

  • @alternator7893
    @alternator7893 Před rokem +1

    Im probably going to buy a motorcycle later today, this is a great way to start the day.

    • @trippontwowheels
      @trippontwowheels Před rokem

      Which bike you going to buy?

    • @alternator7893
      @alternator7893 Před rokem

      @@trippontwowheels wow dude im one of your subs!, I’m buying an old AJP motorcycle, not sure what model it is tho.

  • @racebiketuner
    @racebiketuner Před 3 měsíci

    I'm really learning a lot today. I never knew there was an AMA grand title.

  • @stephenzimmerman5517
    @stephenzimmerman5517 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Hardly Abelson has always been reticent to break away from obsolete technology. It's distressing that they've focused on implementing regulations to hamstring the Indians rather than directing their efforts toward becoming compettitive again.

  • @BlueSquatchproductions
    @BlueSquatchproductions Před 8 měsíci

    I wish they would sell a 750 tuned down for those of us who enjoy smaller bikes and seeing how fast they can go

  • @VashSpiegel
    @VashSpiegel Před rokem +1

    Yeah, innovation has to be just enough to not be restricted/regulated to be "fair".
    Most every iconic race car was regulated out of the sport. Even modern F1 has a few new break throughs, that get regulated for next season.
    The Yamaha TX350 was the epic 2 stroke of the 70s, guess what killed it?

  • @normasnockers323
    @normasnockers323 Před rokem

    love this dude

  • @rayrayray4116
    @rayrayray4116 Před rokem +1

    Indian has Kenny Tolbert to thank.
    Look him up. He’s one of The Best!

  • @dmitrijr7065
    @dmitrijr7065 Před rokem

    Would love to see a street version of the scout ftr 750

  • @goinhot1
    @goinhot1 Před rokem +5

    Sorry my friend but I have to disagree Indian motorcycles, dominated flat track history and races during the 1930s into the 40s with riders like Ted Evans and Ed (Iron Man) Kretz and of course Jimmy Kelly!!! If you would like to know more contact me because my father is Ted Evans being a factory Indian Rider

  • @comontoshi
    @comontoshi Před rokem +1

    If the baggers race was extended to 15 - 20 laps the Harley’s would be dropping like flys . . . 😂😂😂😂

  • @rickyism1576
    @rickyism1576 Před 11 měsíci

    Premiere class is the singles RN, twins are a mess. There is so much talent coming in I hope AFT can figure it out.

  • @deevier
    @deevier Před rokem

    Great video Bart! While I'm commenting here: Spite from YN now has his own channel! Search for "Spite's corner"! Sadly he was sacked by YN. Go support him!

  • @stelleratorsuprise8185

    Win on Sunday sell on Monday ... Indian should build a 750cc Sportster like Harley did.
    The competition on the race track should lead to a street worthy bike that resembles their sport bike.
    And a light 750/1000 with 50/80 hp would be enough to be street worthy

  • @billmoran3219
    @billmoran3219 Před rokem +3

    AFT... it’s pretty sad when you have to have bikes from the support and junior class line up at the back of the grid to make a full field in the main event class. AMA slowly put a strangle hold in favor HD and now AFT & The France group is trying to turn it into stockcar racing which is just spec racing, cookie cutter classes.

  • @sergeantmasson3669
    @sergeantmasson3669 Před 7 měsíci

    Indian motorcycles ended after 1953. Several ownerships later, now owned by Polaris since mid 2000's.

    • @bultacowally
      @bultacowally Před 6 měsíci +1

      Yeah it's the same thing with the new Triumph...same name, same logo, entirely different company with very little in common with the original.

  • @KevinButler816
    @KevinButler816 Před rokem

    The reason why no other manufacturers are putting the money into flat track racing is it's not cost effective. All the manufacturers were told they were going to production based bikes but changed their mind.

  • @AST4EVER
    @AST4EVER Před rokem +1

    yeah.... the motto they all must NOT forget should be.... "Get Along or Get Lost" ....

  • @adoreslaurel
    @adoreslaurel Před rokem +1

    Yes Australia introduced dirt track racing into England back in the 20's. One Guy even took a heavily modified 125 BSA Bantam to England and competed against 500 cc bikes.

    • @DukeOfTwist
      @DukeOfTwist Před rokem

      As a teenager I loved watching Phil Crump in Mildura on those wicked methanol burning no brakes Speedway bikes. I wonder how'd the Indian FTR's would fair against FIM Speedway bikes?

    • @adoreslaurel
      @adoreslaurel Před rokem +1

      @@DukeOfTwist As a kid in the 40's and 50's ,. a friend of mines father was a former speedway competitor with a mate hanging out of the outfit on tracks like Tracys speedway and the Showgrounds in Melbourne, he had retired but still had an interest in all forms of motor bike racing, we, as kids got to be taken to a few events and saw some pretty spectacular stuff, also taken to hill climbs and watched competitors doing crazy things like racing up steep slopes and sometimes falling over backwards. Safety seemed to be pretty haphazard in those days, His father at one stage had a Vincent HRD Black Shadow, I bet they wish the family still had it today.

    • @DukeOfTwist
      @DukeOfTwist Před rokem

      @@adoreslaurel A Vincent wow, I just have 3x Aprilia Tuono's

    • @adoreslaurel
      @adoreslaurel Před rokem

      @@DukeOfTwist Well he had some financial restraints at the time so the bike had to go early unfortunately.

    • @DukeOfTwist
      @DukeOfTwist Před rokem

      @@adoreslaurel Yeah, I owned an immaculate 1967 XR GT Falcon 30 years ago. But you can only sell it once lol

  • @antoniom.andersen6704

    Would be cool to see a manufacturer like KTM or Husquarna build a flat track bike, they both build good dirt bikes and I'd for one like to see them get into the sport. If not flat track then speedway here in the EU and then maybe go from there.
    Good vid.

    • @DennisMerwood-xk8wp
      @DennisMerwood-xk8wp Před 11 měsíci

      KTM flat track bikes have been built.

    • @antoniom.andersen6704
      @antoniom.andersen6704 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@DennisMerwood-xk8wp I did not know that. Thanks for that... guess I should do my research before running my mouth 🤦‍♂😅

    • @DennisMerwood-xk8wp
      @DennisMerwood-xk8wp Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@antoniom.andersen6704 Dave Walters from Waters Auto Body Racing: “On a trip to Daytona I got my imagination running wild after I saw KTM’s new LC8 power plant. I purchased a new KTM Super Enduro to steal its engine.”
      “My goal was to take a standard production bike and convert it relatively
      inexpensively to a flat tracker. The project took approximately four months to do from start to finish and was race ready with a minimal cost.”
      The official Waters Auto Body Racing KTM debut was in round two of the AMA Grand National Twins Series at Vernon Downs, New York May 31, 2008.
      In May 2016 Shawn Baer rode the KTM LC8 950 to 10th place in the Sacramento Mile, AMA Pro Flat Track Race in Sacramento, California using a 100-percent stock motor.
      There were no AMA Flat track wins for bikes with the Austrian Companies engines in 2017.
      In 2018 Shawn Bear tried the KTM LC08 engined bike again. He made it into the main event twice. In the Arizona and Sacramento miles. Finishing 15th and 16th respectively.

    • @bultacowally
      @bultacowally Před 6 měsíci +1

      Harley was the only motorcycle manufacturer to build a FT specific model with the XR750R. All others were road or MX bikes converted to FT racing. Been that way forever. OH!!! Correction I forgot the most awesome short track FT bike the Bultaco Astro... My bad

  • @racebiketuner
    @racebiketuner Před 3 měsíci

    I believe you meant to say heat dissipation. The heat of displacement is the heat change when one mole of metal is displaced from its salt solution by a more reactive metal.

  • @benjaminwilliams3568
    @benjaminwilliams3568 Před rokem

    I agree Strongly, Indians Flat Track Bike Innovation and Technology Should Not be dumbed down At All.
    It's up to each manufacturer to keep up with advancing technology's, research and development. Harley Get with the Times Up your bike game.

  • @tonyciriello6872
    @tonyciriello6872 Před rokem +1

    Have my XR1000 highly modified with Storz and Jerry Branch parts so it actually looks and goes like an XR750. And now (2019) an FTR1200. Guess I'm a flat track fan.

    • @dukecraig2402
      @dukecraig2402 Před rokem +1

      Nice, 83 or 84?

    • @tonyciriello6872
      @tonyciriello6872 Před rokem

      @@dukecraig2402 84, but I think they were all manufactured in 83 with just paint changes. Less than 1800 total. Correct me if I'm wrong.

    • @dukecraig2402
      @dukecraig2402 Před rokem

      @@tonyciriello6872
      I don't know about that, if they were all assembled in 83 I'd think they'd all be titled as 83's, like all the Corvettes that were sold in 83 were titled as 82's because that's when they were built because the Corvette plant shut down in 83 to retool for the new 84's, they simply built enough in 82 to sell all the way through the end of the 83 model year but they were all titled as 82's, once a VIN is stamped on a vehicle that's it's date and year of manufacture, that's why you can tell all the way down to the day and date when a vehicle was manufactured by the VIN, by law they couldn't have assembled a vehicle in 1983 and then waited to title it in 1984, the VIN number year and date codes for it's assembly wouldn't jive with the title year.
      I do know that the XR1000's weren't built on the regular assembly line, the were assembled by the racing department under the supervision of it's head Dick O'Brian and that all the heads were sent to Branch Flowmetrics to be worked over by them.

    • @tonyciriello6872
      @tonyciriello6872 Před rokem +1

      @@dukecraig2402 Yes. I have a poster of Dick O'Brian on the wall of my cave right in front of me as I type. I sent the heads to Branch to do even more work as part of a performance hop up I read about in Cycle World. Work of art. Also have his flatslide carbs with matching manifolds that matched the intake ports. Just beautiful. From Storz have upsidedown forks, tank and seat combo, works performance shocks, custom lower braced aluminum swingarm built by Cal-fab. I think you would like this bike.

    • @dukecraig2402
      @dukecraig2402 Před rokem +2

      @@tonyciriello6872
      Yea, it's safe to say I'd like it.
      I have an 03 R model, the one's that are painted like the factory flat track racing bikes.
      I converted it to 1200, I was going to put inverted forks and every other bell and whistle on it but decided instead to make it a sleeper, I put a huge set of Red Shift cams in it but figured out how to keep the stock non collapsible push rod tubes with adjustable push rods and travel limiters in the lifters so anyone who looked at it would think it has bolt in cams at best, 44mm Screamin Eagle CV carb that looks like stock, did the ports myself modeled after the one's I've sent to Branch from my shop, figured out how to balance the pressed together flywheels myself and set the balance factor at 52% for high revs, Race Tech emulator valves in the front forks and slid the triple trees as far down the forks as possible without the front fender smashing into the voltage regulator if the forks bottom out, that makes it turn faster, with the rear shocks there really wasn't much I could do that would keep a stock appearance but most everyone has aftermarket shocks on the back anyways and a Kerker 2 into 1 upswept exhaust just as a nod to the 80's.
      It exceeds 65 MPH in first gear which a lot of guys say is impossible and will even do the math thinking that they're proving it, then I tell them to reconfigure the math for an Andrews close ratio first gear and they'll see that at 7,500 RPM's my speedometer is just sweeping past 65 MPH, I didn't put that first gear in it just to exceed 65 MPH in first gear that's just a byproduct, I did it so when I shift into first on the winding mountain roads where I live the revs don't go through the roof and cause the rear tire to break traction, when coming out of a hairpin turn the revs are right up in the power and it slingshots right out.
      I've got a bunch of other little tricks in it that are hidden like an aluminum front pulley that doesn't suck up nearly as much power as the heavy stock cast iron pulley and a windage tray and flywheel scraper I put in the bottom end.
      It's deceiving to look at, guy's who think they know what they're looking at figure it's got bolt in cams and stock forks on the front, a set of Avon Cobra Chrome tires makes it go around corners like it's on rails, guy's who figure they know what it is get a real big surprise when I get them out on the road.

  • @dopey006969
    @dopey006969 Před rokem

    Love flat track racing also speedway

  • @bobwalsh3751
    @bobwalsh3751 Před rokem +1

    13:00 HOLD UP when was this?!

  • @benjiboy2372
    @benjiboy2372 Před rokem +1

    I didn’t know fluump had a motorcycle channel

  • @williametanner412
    @williametanner412 Před rokem

    AFT is fantastic and all this talk of the 750's in the Premier Class, which is superb....BUT.....the "competitive" class is the AFT Singles class. Give THOSE guys (AND my girl Shayna!!) a gander!!

  • @legitrides8261
    @legitrides8261 Před rokem +1

    I love Bart days! I hope you take the motorcycle history niche and run the f#$k away with it. Great job.

  • @Heritagejim5339
    @Heritagejim5339 Před rokem +1

    I’m hoping with the Revolution Max engine, they’ll build a flat tracker that rivals Indian. Some other history, when HD introduced the VROD to NHRA the other companies complained about their dominance. They made new rules, had the VRODS add weight as well as a host of other changes. So as you said racing is a competitive sport. Nice video 😎

  • @jesus2400
    @jesus2400 Před 8 měsíci

    Amazing history of Flat Track racing Indian is killing it, while HD is slowly trying to appeal to a younger generation.

  • @sbsb4995
    @sbsb4995 Před rokem +2

    Indian is super cool and awesome.

  • @born2grill86
    @born2grill86 Před 8 měsíci

    They were also the bike to be on in board track through the 20's

  • @troydavenport9244
    @troydavenport9244 Před rokem

    Thanks bart

  • @biscuitbum1482
    @biscuitbum1482 Před rokem

    We've had speedway in Britain and Europe for 100 years. Smaller tracks and lighter bikes, but essentially the same.

  • @btcurry1
    @btcurry1 Před rokem +2

    Harley Davidson was so dominate by the simple fact it was always being given benefits, 1st against the Brits, then the Japanese cycles. To dominate as long as they did speaks volumes to the politics of HD & the AMA.
    Now Indians back in the game HD is attempting to catch up.
    The innovations of Indian have put a wrench in HD's dominance. Love it.
    BTW besides my 750 Bonneville, Street bikes were always HD's.
    Seems as if HD got arrogant and that's why they're playing catch up now.
    A friend had a XR750 that'd run mid to high 7 sec. 1/4 mile. If he weighed 160lbs I'd be shocked but it was wild that'd run that fast without launch control and all the crap the put on these new mc's

    • @browngreen933
      @browngreen933 Před rokem +1

      What special benefits did HD get against Brit bikes? Didn't they all follow the same AMA Rules and Regulations handbook?

    • @leeonardodienfield402
      @leeonardodienfield402 Před rokem +1

      @@browngreen933 AMA restricted brits to 500cc

    • @browngreen933
      @browngreen933 Před rokem

      @@leeonardodienfield402
      That's a myth. The 500cc/OHV & 750cc/SV limits were instituted long before English bikes were a factor in American racing.

    • @leeonardodienfield402
      @leeonardodienfield402 Před rokem +1

      @@browngreen933 Wrong.

    • @browngreen933
      @browngreen933 Před rokem

      @@leeonardodienfield402
      Okay, keep believing a lie. The rule was about engine efficiency, not about the country a bike came from.

  • @hawktuner11
    @hawktuner11 Před měsícem

    Loyal Harley owner but I love my Indian FTR 1200

  • @savage22bolt32
    @savage22bolt32 Před rokem

    I've been an AMA member since 1971.
    Their unabashed support for H-D makes me feel like quitting AMA.