A great pic of the bike when it was newer, and your father in his riding regalia.
A word of advice to your son would be to ditch the Jack Purcell footware, and to only use boots to kickstart a motorcycle. One good kickback from a V-twin and you've got broken metatarsals in that foot, and they take a long time to heal. Maybe a 50 cc two-stroke you can risk using sneakers, but anything like a Harley-Davidson, Indian, or Vincent, "boots, please!"
A word of advice to your son would be to ditch the Jack Purcell footware, and to only use boots to kickstart a motorcycle. One good kickback from a V-twin and you've got broken metatarsals in that foot, and they take a long time to heal. Maybe a 50 cc two-stroke you can risk using sneakers, but anything like a Harley-Davidson, Indian, or Vincent, "boots, please!"
So yes, I am making sure that the 36 stays in the family. Being the first year and the EL model to boot it's in big demand. They made the standard E model which was 7 to 1 compression with a 3 speed and the EL was the performance model at 7.5 to 1 and a four speed.
I have a standing offer from a local Harley guy for 30,000 and all he wants is the motor and tranny only...
The photo of me and my Dad was taken in 1959. No shortage of photos since he was a professional photog for the Portland Or, Rose City Harley club.
The first photo is my Dad long before I was born. This is what it looked like in 1941 when he bought it used for 325.00 I still have the receipt and original title.
My son just started ridin two years ago (Ducati Monster) the second photo is me about a month ago teachin him how to prime, choke, retard the timing and get the old guy down the road. It's actually quite an experience! You feel a bit like Captain America ridin the thing.