25 YEARS AGO MARCH, 1970
My response to pulling this issue from Cycle World's dusty, musty archives?
“Hey, that's exactly what I'm looking for!" It was the cover bike, a 1970 Yamaha XS650, tested here for the first time anywhere. More precisely, it was the front brake worn by that bike. Then, the XS650 was a ground-breaking bike for Yamaha. Now it’s the donor of the Hot Tip front brake-a trick, double-leadingshoe item-for the vintage racebike that languishes in my garage.
• Another road test in this month’s issue involved the Honda CT70 Trail Mini, not only every child’s dream, but also the putt-putt runabout most likely to grace the rear of a motorhome. “Stands tall among its competitors,” we said then. Who would have guessed that 25 years later, the bike still would be in Honda’s current model line?
• On the next page past that road test, a cool advertisement: A shop called Steen’s, in Alhambra, California, advertised Rickman frame kits and eight-valve Triumph engine conversions. Talk about your vintage-racebike heaven.
• Twingles—spirt-cylinder twostrokes featuring two pistons sharing a cylinder/combustion chamber shaped like an inverted U-were also explained here. Among the weird bikes I’ve owned was a Puch 250, a fine little piece, complete with interchangeable wheels and a terrific suspension system, that was powered by a Twingle. I kinda wish I still had it.
Jon F. Thompson