![]() ![]() “It’s not a real Indian,” Wayne says “but it’s great to ride.”Ī modern-day Indian Chief Dark Horse stands in contrast to all Wayne’s vintage machinery. CAPTION: Wayne’s modern-day Dark Horse takes many design cues from the original Indian machinery. Wayne (the Indian guy) says the new Indians “aren’t real ones” and, not surprisingly, his collection of bikes and bits is almost exclusively pre-1953.Īlmost. The Indian name gave them an instant entree to American motorcycle history and, in 2017, the company gave up on the Victory brand and turned all its two-wheel attention to Indian. Polaris had already made a start in the motorcycle cruiser market with a line of well-made and beautifully finished ‘Victory’ motorcycles, but they could not compete with Harley-Davidson in the showroom. The Indian name subsequently was stuck, painted and bolted onto a whole lot of bikes, from two-stroke Italian-made minibikes to cloned Harleys and rebadged Royal Enfields, until giant American snowmobile manufacturer Polaris bought the Indian name in 2011 and resurrected the brand as a global force. This one of Wayne’s is awaiting restoration. The bike was really an Italian-made Moto Morini, rebadged as an Indian. I didn’t think it was as cool as all my mates’ Honda XR75s and YZ80s, and every time I hit a good-sized bump the Dellorto carby fell off. CAPTION: The first bike I ever owned was a red two stroke Indian 70, exactly the same as this. Indian’s glory days came crashing down after World War II and, in 1953, the company went bust, leaving Harley-Davidson as the only surviving American motorcycle manufacturer. Both model names have been dusted off by Polaris for the 21st Century Indian line. Their two most successful models were the Scout, a smallish (up to 750cc) sports bike used in racing (most famously, perhaps, by Kiwi Burt Munro of The World’s Fastest Indian movie fame), and the Chief which was more of a highway bike with a seriously big engine. George and Oscar sold their first motorcycle to a paying customer in 1902, built their first V-twin in 1906, took out the first three places in the Isle of Man TT in 1911, and by 1913 sold 32,000 bikes in a single year - making Indian the biggest-selling motorcycle company in the world. ![]() CAPTION: Oscar Hedstrom with the first Indian. The 1.75 horsepower single-cylinder engine proved reliable and powerful and, predictably, George and Oscar quickly saw the business potential. In 1901, George hired Swedish-born designer and fellow racer Oscar Hedstrom to build a petrol engine to power a small number of bikes, mostly to be used as pace bikes for bicycle racing. One of those bikes was initially sold as the “American Indian” and, later, just plain “Indian”. Hendee started the Hendee Manufacturing Company, building a range of bicycles. In 1897, an American bicycle racer by the name of George M. People in Western Australia’s vintage and classic bike community know his full name but, if they are talking about him and there’s any doubt, they will say: “You know, the Indian guy.”įor the uninitiated, the Indian Motocycle (no ‘r’) story stretches back to before the dawn of biketime. The man at the centre of this shed is a likeable, softly-spoken guy by the name of Wayne. The private collection of Indian motorcycles and memorabilia is akin to a living museum, because a slow but steady stream of magnificent machines come and go - sometimes because the man who owns the shed has sold one or bought one, and sometimes because people who know him have brought in their incomplete, broken or newly-acquired machines for repair, restoration or modification.Īnd occasionally, a bike comes in the door for some work - but doesn’t leave. THERE’S a shed tucked away in the hills on the outskirts of Perth, Western Australia, where everything old is new again, and everything new is old. His enthusiasm for Indians is contagious and the contents of his shed is to-die-for. His approach to restoration varies from minimal (in the patina department) to major (in the engine rebuild and frame-cutting department). CAPTION: Wayne (the Indian guy) has enough Indians to raid a fort. ![]()
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