Despite being sorely tested, my parents finally capitulated and agreed I could have a real motorcycle. Over the next couple of years, I acquired a side-valve Indian, a ’56 Matchless, a DKW, a Velocette, a ’34 and a ’35 single Royal Enfield, and the bones of a highly prized Grey Flash Vincent.
The Vincent’s tank and forks needed painting and I was confident I could achieve a baked enamel finish by doing the job myself. I rose early one morning, carefully heated an aerosol can of paint on the kitchen stove, and, when the paint was warm enough I gave the can a vigorous shake. BOOOOOM!
The arse blew clean out of the can, spraying grey paint all over my mother’s newly decorated kitchen. The blast woke the family — in fact most of our neighbours. My ears rang like a smithy’s anvil. Mum took one look at the chaos, burst into tears and ran back to the bedroom, leaving Dad and me to clean up the mess.
My Mum, bless her, soon forgave me and suggested I learn a trade. I had to agree. It made sense for me, as an avid collector of motorcycle junk, to become a mechanic. But my appetite for thrill-seeking continued unabated. Before long, I was trying my hand at trials riding, scrambles and beach and road racing. On one occasion, like a fool, I sped across Murewai beach with my right leg in plaster — the result of a recent crash. By the end of the day, the sodden cast had disintegrated. I wasn’t game to go back to the hospital and admit to what I’d been up to, so I took the philosophical approach: if my broken ankle hadn’t healed by now it probably never would.
My mate Grant ‘Hickey’ Innes and I excelled at falling off bikes and acting like clowns. While whistling and showing off to a group of schoolgirls one day, Grant spun the back wheel of his 500cc BSA and the two of us flew over the handlebars, landing in an embarrassing heap in front of the girls. They fell about laughing at our display of machismo, and laughed even harder when we offered them our autographs.
By the age of 21, I was a certified diesel mechanic and had met my future wife. Happily, Lynne shared my love of motorcycles, which was just as well, as my idea of a night out was to roar around the speedway circuit astride a Vincent sidecar, then have my date push-start my old Fordson van so I could take her home. Whether it was the sight of me in tight leathers, or the smell of racing fuel, that had Lynne smitten, I don’t know, but six weeks after our first date we married.
Eventually I outgrew racing, being attracted more towards vintage motorcycles. Over the years, I painstakingly restored a 1924 single and a 1922 800cc V-twin AJS, adding a sidecar to the larger bike for family holidays and regional rallies, and a 1970 Kawasaki H1 Triple, the fastest motorcycle of its time.
I also rebuilt a 1950 Norman motorcycle for Lynne. On the first outing her bell-bottom trousers tangled in the chain, bringing the bike to an abrupt stop at the traffic lights. Mortified, she tried to drag the bike — still attached to her leg — away from eyeshot of bemused motorists. With the assistance of a bystander who had raced inside for a breadknife, she extricated herself from the chain and rode home with one trouser leg hacked off at the knee. It was some time before I could persuade her to ride on her own again.
A customer of the garage where I worked stopped by one day and was quite taken when he saw me tinkering with my AJS and sidecar.
‘I have the remains of an old four-cylinder motorcycle I rescued from a disused sawmill,’ he said. ‘I don’t know what it is, but, from the looks of your splendid restoration of this one, I reckon you could do something with it. Would you be interested in coming around and taking a look?’
Four-cylinder machines were rare and my interest was piqued. Most of the bike was missing, but I accepted the challenge and promised to let my benefactor know when I had identified the bike.
Only after I’d loaded the rusty engine and cradle into the car did I consider Lynne’s reaction to another pile of junk being added to my growing collection. With all the sensitivity of a new-age man, I stopped off on the way home to buy a box of her favourite chocolates.
2
The Dream
Initially, the marque of the bike had me stumped. I’d never seen a configuration like it. Only the letters FN stamped on the magneto offered a clue. I leafed through old motorcycle magazines to find that the engine and frame I had acquired belonged to a Belgian 4-cylinder, inlet-over exhaust, shaft-drive Fabrique Nationale (FN). I pinpointed the year of manufacture to 1910. FN Belgium was established in 1899 to make arms and ammunition, and from 1901 to 1967 the company also produced motorcycles. Beginning in 1905 it was the first manufacturer of in-line, 4-cylinder machines.
I told the previous owner of my findings, boasting, ‘I’m riding the bike back to Belgium for its centenary’. He looked dubious. I was then 26 years old. Had I known that I would be 68 before I’d attempt such a feat, I might not have been so cocky.
An article I found in the archives of New Zealand’s Ashburton Guardian newspaper, told me the 1910 model had taken the world by storm, and that 400 FNs had been ordered by the New Zealand agency. As far as I could gather, only one other, also unrestored, was still in the country.
The frame and engine languished in the garage for many years. Only when we moved to Australia did I write to the FN factory asking for information. I was thrilled to receive a parts manual, in French, and photos, taken at the 1910 Paris Motor show, of lefthand and righthand views of that year’s model.
With a renewed sense of purpose, I spent evenings working on a 1940s flat-belt Colchester lathe making replacements for damaged or missing parts. I scaled them from the photographs. The parts included the hand controls, fuel gauge, fuel and oil caps, fuel filter, oil pump and dripper.
The pedal chain was made using old racing pushbike chains of the same style but of narrower design. I machined the rear brake drum from a solid block of steel. Kevin, a skilled machinist in Tasmania, replicated the crown wheel from the badly broken sample. The bike frame was repaired using Reynolds tubing.
Leon, a fellow enthusiast from South Australia, supplied the front forks, and I made all-new sliding links to suit. Rims were bought as blanks and a tool was made to dimple and drill them. I used a cardboard template for the pattern of the oil tank and then formed it from a sheet of brass.
Leather tool bags and the seat were crafted by hand. I reconditioned engine parts and replaced the original cast-iron pistons with aluminium because modern rings would prove more efficient and easier to obtain.
The process of accurately replicating the parts was painfully slow, and several years passed before the bike started to look like one.
Meanwhile, two Honda motorcycles — a beautiful 1976 LTD GoldWing and a brand-new CX500 — were added to our stable of machines. Lynne, having erased the Norman from her memory, now wanted a bike of her own. The bright red V-twin fitted the bill perfectly.
Our son Mark raced motocross bikes, and at times I joined him on the track. I never gained a podium finish, but I did share in the exhilaration of clearing the jumps. No matter what style of riding I try, I love them all.
When our youngsters left home, Lynne and I set off on a new adventure. We rode from Alaska to Brazil on the GoldWing, a camper trailer in tow. In three years, we covered 200,000 kilometres and passed through 21 countries. That journey instilled in us a love of travel, and it taught us a great deal about the grit required to commit to such ventures. It also strengthened my resolve to ride the FN back to Belgium.
Over the years, as I studied the bike’s history I became fascinated with such a marvel of engineering. In 1905, when other manufacturers were using twisted rawhide drive belts, FN began fitting a far superior beveled drive to the