
Everything about the motorcycle and sidecar looked wonderfully made, and Chambers was interrupted in his cleaning task by many people with questions.

There were other mysteries, too, like the gear shift hand lever on the left. There is a clutch lever on the left-hand grip. So how does the rider use the clutch lever and move the gear shift with the same hand?
He doesn't. Chambers pointed to a foot clutch pedal on the left of the bike; that's what you use when you want to shift!

The Nimbus often came from the factory with sidecar attached. It served with the Danish Army, police and postal service. Design changes were few, production was slowed during World War II, and few were ever exported. All had 750cc motors and were not fast.
Note the handy air pump attached to the left side of the motorcycle.
Chambers was happy he made it to the show. He nearly didn't.
"When I was trying to push it onto my truck the ramp slipped and (the clutch lever) busted my sunglasses."
Lots of spectators were happy he persevered.

There are currently two guys circumnavigating the globe on Nimbus sidecar combinations. THey are calling their trip "The Dumb Way Round" as a play on the title of the Charlie and Ewan trip "The Long Way Round." They left Norway in the spring and I think they are currently in Vermont. Here's their website, where the whole journey is documented on a blog:
ReplyDeletehttp://kccd.no/home_en.html
Keep posting stuff like this i really like it
ReplyDeleteIt's not a 1937 - it's a late 1938 or 1939. The brakes are wrong. In 1937 they still had the small brake drums.
ReplyDeleteWrong. It is a 1937 and I have 3” notebook of its matching numbers and its provenance to prove it. For SAFETY reasons intelligent Nimbus 1937 owners replaced the minuscule and unsafe 1937 front drum brake with the much larger and safer diameter brake drum from newer models.
ReplyDeleteOwner