Extremely saddened by the passing of one of the greatest scooter racers in British history after a long battle with cancer. R.I.P Dave Webster.
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Seeking some inspiration to ride beyond your current boundaries? You might consider a visit to Overland Magazine's weekend camping Event in June. It takes place at: The Black Horse, Aylesbury Road, Great Missenden, HP16 9AX Over the weekend many top adventure authors will be providing audio-visual presentations on their previous journeys using everything from BMWs (yawn) to Honda C90s. Amongst the machines on display will be a certain DRZ-powered Maicoletta scooter ridden by Tracy in Frankenstein Scooters to Dracula's Castle. With all the best will in the world I should be freshly returned from my Twin Town Courier ride to Ukraine by Lambretta. Obviously what I'll be most looking forward to after 8,000 miles of spine-pounding, arse-mangling scootering will be to spend a couple of nights under canvass on an air matress... Here's an example of the work of other authors who will be presenting at the event. Austin Vince's excellent video proves that you don't need to be mauled by Mothra in Mongolia to have an adventure... Thanks to Sam Manicom for the suggestion, I contacted my local radio station - BBC Coventry and Warks - about my forthcoming Twin Town Courier trip.
I'm scheduled for a noon interview with scooter fan Vic (Victoria) Minett on 29th of April. You will be able to listen via the internet to her show on this link: BBC Cov & Warks. Yes, I know the top box is fugly, but I need good, lockable and removable storage so the fully loaded Givi will serve a purpose. Same goes for the hideous seat - function over form.
Continental Tyres have kindly offered to support this jaunt, along with Putoline Oil. I'm also testing a TSR Evo pipe - not bad power and lovely sound but not sure about the unsupported rear muffler. Eastern Europe beckons so further updates will follow as I get the spec sorted for the trip... Details here. Random quote: ‘these lot were higher than a giraffe’s eyebrows’ In true vintage motorcycle style you need to give this book time to warm up before you get the best out of it. You tickle the carburettor on Scott’s early passion for bikes but it takes a while to kickstart into the world of despatch riding where the stories start to race like an urgent organ transplant delivery.
I’m too young to have ridden anything in the 70s that didn’t have pedals, so the reading detailed sections on a string of mostly-quite-crap-in-retrospect motorbikes feels very much like an apprenticeship. Reading that is an initiation before you get to the good stuff, but even from the start Scott's style is witty and engaging. The book really takes off when Chris – ever the adventurer – discovers psychedelic drugs. By the 1980s he is living in various London squats, despatch riding in the week, enduro riding at weekends and planning winter off-road sojourns to the Sahara. All this is set against a backdrop of Thatcher-era politics in the capitalistic Yuppie-Capital that is vividly described in all its rotten-core glory. Boring bikes like Honda Benly’s aside, the second half of the book contains some beautifully spun yarns that could only be from the ‘80s: the last festivals at Stonehenge before Thatcher’s crackdown on the ‘hippy’ convoys, and Chris acting as a getaway driver for Class War anarchists. Maybe this book means more to me because I rode those same streets at the same time, and even plied the same reckless trade at the end of the decade. Gasoline gaucho by day and space cadet at weekends. You don’t need to have ridden for a living to enjoy this book though. Simply having an interest in two wheels and surviving the 1980s is enough connection to get a lot out of it. Hell, there’s even mention of the riots at Keswick scooter rally in 1981. I'm not the only one who enjoyed it. Ride Magazine have already awarded it Book of the Year, which is not bad going for February… Review by stickyfeatures.co.uk Price £8.99 ISBN: 978-0-9930465-1-3 http://adventuresinmotorcycling.com/ Leaving Turkey and the WWI Gallipoli memorials for Greece... A dawn scooter ride around Istanbul... How do you store data from video and camera cards while on the road, without the use of a laptop? With Kingston's MobileLite app you can back-up SD cards to any USB drive ADVENTURE TRAVEL DATA HANDLING: MY WAY How do you store data from video and camera cards while on the road, without the use of a laptop? For anyone touring on two wheels and looking to travel light this is a really big question. It’s all very well shooting video of your ride but that HD video chews through memory cards quicker than a fat film fan munches popcorn. The traditional way is to back up the cards to a laptop, but that’s a slow and laborious process that itself needs external power and is at the mercy of the hard drive space and ruggedness of your laptop. While we have mobile phones that in themselves are powerful computers, taking a laptop seems a bit, well, excessive really. So what are your options?
The way I found to do the job involves a clever bit of lightweight tech called a Kingston MobileLite (now £13.97) which allows you to load any SD card (or MicroSD via an adaptor card) and dump the data to any hard drive connected to the built in USB port. You can buy portable 2TB hard drives for around £60 which makes this by far the cheapest option. I’ve used this method on the road and if you have a secondary source of USB power (from your bike battery or an external source) then this will work anywhere. HOW DOES IT WORK? The MobileLite was really designed as a Wi-Fi media server, allowing you to stream data from drives to several connected devices. It contains a small built-in battery allowing it to operate autonomously. However the MobileLite app also allows you to view the folders on the SD card and to dump them to the drive connected to the USB port. Best of all, you can start this process on your phone and then wander off out of range and the process will carry on until it is completed. Brilliant. How do you know that the transfer is complete? If your portable hard drive has a data LED it should stop flashing once the transfer is complete. Once you reconnect your phone to the MobileLite’s own Wi-Fi network (which you can ‘piggy back’ to another Wi-Fi network so you can maintain internet connection where available) you can view images or movies on either the card or USB device and stream or copy to your phone. FAILINGS The first issue is that the inbuilt battery in the MobileLite is pretty small and spinning the drive inside a portable HDD soon sucks up the juice. The good news is that you can separately power the MobileLite (via a microUSB recharge port) while it is working, and/or you can use an HDD cable with a split cable allowing the hard drive to be powered externally. Both together will allow you to keep everything powered long enough for the biggest file transfer. The second issue is a failing of the Kingston app and the slow pace of Wi-Fi connections in that it is difficult to tell which incomplete SD card folders have been backed up. For instance within my Canon SD card I’ll get folders called Canon_100, Canon_101 etc. If you’ve already backed up a half-full folder to HDD then when you next connect the app you might have Canon_101 showing in both SD and USB folders on your phone, however there may be new data on the camera card if you’ve shot more photos. The app makes it difficult to select only the new photos to transfer to HDD for back-up. The solution is simply to copy the whole of the Canon_101 to the HDD again, which is easy enough to do. This overwrites the old data on the HDD - so be careful if you've edited anything and not renamed it. DOES IT WORK? Yes, like a charm. I used this system in while riding a vintage scooter around Eastern Europe and Turkey (see my Frankenstein Scooters... book) to back up both camera (SD) and helmet cam (microSD) cards to a 1TB portable HDD. These drives are still mechanical so need to be treated with some care, but they are reasonably rugged too. Kingston has recently updated their device to the new Kingston G2 MobileLite Wireless Reader (available for £25) which I have not tested but I presume will do the same trick. Alternatively the older and smaller MobileLite for £14 is a bargain. Review by StickyFeatures.co.uk
Excellent book about Michael Marriott and his wife riding overland from England to Oz on an NSU Prima scooter in the mid-50s. A fascinating insight into how far the world has moved since the immediate post-war decade, and yet in many ways has changed so little. You don't see many of these come up for sale, so it'll be worth grabbing a copy. Link is here.
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February 2024
AuthorSticky is the world's only full-time freelance scooter journalist. Categories |