RealClassic

CLASSIC TECHNIQUES

You’ve enamelled the frame, built and polished that 100-point restoration motor, now gleaming on the bench, and just collected the paintwork. But that tatty old seat? It’s clearly going to let the side down. Something has to be done.

Seats don’t receive much in the way of preventative or restorative maintenance in their hard lives. They get squashed, bungee’d with goods various, left out in the rain, occasionally protected by a ripped-open Tesco bag or similar. Only the lucky few received a faux-leopard skin stretch cover for inclement days. Most of the other cycle parts on old clunkers are resistant to rust, maybe due to the film of lubricant spread uniformly over them, but seat bases are victims to the water-retaining properties of the foam and slowly rust away, out of sight.

My BSA 441 seat looked superficially OK and felt quite comfy, but when I removed the faded cover it was a

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from RealClassic

RealClassic10 min read
Tales From The Shed
Bikes are for riding, apparently, as well as for providing endless ways of passing the time agreeably in sheds throughout the lands, especially when winter arrives. It was a wet, windy and very dull day, perfect for an afternoon's jovial spannering,
RealClassic8 min read
Too old to ROCK ‘n’ ROLL
Our story starts several years ago with a family friend, Alan, who knew that I rode motorcycles. On one visit, he opened his rather damp and dilapidated garden shed, moved some of the detritus of years and revealed a sorry-looking and very rusty moto
RealClassic10 min read
Golden Bronze!
Even after a truly depressingly number of years spent messing about with old bikes, I am still unsure why it is that I get along so well with iron-head engines. Why should a cylinder head cast in iron make for a more pleasant engine than an otherwise

Related