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Looking :: for a decent priced Bultaco for a project in Arizona. Just a stretch asking here. Ambassador is the bike I had to leave behind. Looking for something for the dirt that I could feel the steel and ride to death.
Have you spent any time riding a Bultaco? I ask, because if not and you're romanticizing them, you'll be disappointed. They're badass and a real hoot if you're into eclectic vintage rides, but they're nothing like 'modern'. In the desert, you can figure a crank and cylinder rebuild yearly, unless you ride dunes and then all bets are off. Clutches are a nuisance but workable if you find an old guy who knows.
Old Bultacos are cool , and in their day were as good as it got . As Guzzistajohn stated his Sherpa T's are wonderful . However , if you really want to beat on something , maybe a more modern dirt bike would be a better choice , even a ten year old 225 Yamaha or a 20 year old XR 250 is likely a better beater (pun intended) than a 1972 Bultaco . Dusty
True, I have $2800.00 in my 2010 KTM EXC it's like riding a lazy boy in comparison and runs like a banshee electric start, 4 stroke, water cooled, rocket ship. But trials on a BUL? or Montessa? maybe OSSA? nothing like it. When you ride a section just right and get that power to hook up to the dirt it's just like..............p oetry in motion.
When I was in my teens I really wanted a Metralla. They were fast, light and very pretty (to my eye). Last year (some 50 years later) I was browsing the bikes-for-sale on-line and there was one. They are NEVER advertised. I decided it was a "sign". I made the 600km each way trip to look at it. It was in pretty good nick, so I had a ride. Mistake. It was loud, rough, had an unworkable powerband, etc. It killed all my preconceived ideas about how wonderful they were. I told the guy, "thanks, it's a great example, but it's not for me".So, my (revised) take on the Bultys is that they were good in their day, but now there are so many better choices. Fine if you want to look and reminisce, but not if you want to ride.Gonzo
All of those Spanish brand trials bikes were amazing , at least after Sammy Miller got his hands on that Bultaco . Mick Andrews the same with Ossa , and whoever helped with the Cota ? The modern trials bikes are just too weird for this old guy , probably get me killed . Now I want a Sherpa T dangit Dusty
We need to get mine poppin' and lay out some sections down at Les's
What does it need ? I would probably just fall off in some wildly embarrassing way , end up in a creek bottom with the Bul on top of me , pinned down wondering what-in-hell just happened . Still , it sounds like fun doesn't it ? Dusty
Thanx for the website Guzzistajohn. Looks to be many followers.In another week or 2 I'll be going through that part of NYS. I tried to talk Hugh into building a racer for me; 20+ years ago. Couldn't get him interested enough to make it happen. The killer was, he knew I'd put it on the street. It wasn't well known at the time, but certain states will register a late model 2 stroke for the street. I enjoy rolling into a MA DMV on a 2 stroke. Some times it is as gross as; wtf izzat? R3~
I have two actually have two, '72 & '76 they just need the regular stuff, carbs cleaned, fresh gas, spark plug. kick kick kick pop pop pop pop
Here I am on my 200 Matador trying to become the first 200 ever to climb Flying Hoosiers Hill near Bloomington, Indiana. It's 1965, I think. If I had known how to ride, I'd have done it, ridden that Bultaco over the top, but as you can see, my weight was in the wrong place. I was just asking to have my bike flip over backwards...and it did. This is one of the few moments in my life that I wish I could do over. I also wish I had the bike back.