Topica Loopframe_Guzzi Archive


Subject: Re: New addition to the fleet - Long

Author: paul linn

Date: Jun 14, 2003, 9:01 PM

Post ID: 1713392373



Nothing beats a free bike. Good luck on the newest family member.

Paul



----- Original Message -----
From: Charlie Mullendore <li-@loopframe.com>
Date: Saturday, June 14, 2003 11:41 pm
Subject: New addition to the fleet - Long

 Hi All,

This morning my buddy and I drove down to Fairfax, VA and picked
up
another Ambassador, this one a '72. The previous owner, "Andy",
had
called me to ask if I could work on it for him. After talking for
a
while he decided it would be better to get rid of the bike as he
has two
small children he wanted to spend more time with and a demanding
job
with Northrop-Grumman. That and his wife was tired of the kids
stepping
in the oil it leaked and tracking it through the house! He also
didn't
have time to ride the Sportster he already has, much less another
bike.
So, "would I want it?" he asked. "Sure, how much?" I asked,
thinking
around $500 would be right from his description and hoping it
wasn't
more because my funding is still tapped out from the V7 Sport my
bro'
brought me home from CA and from buying parts to rebuild the top-
end on
the '69 Ambo. Well, when he says "you can just have it - come and
haul
it away" I nearly fell off my chair! As if he needs to convince me
to
come and get a free Guzzi, he tells me the seat has been
recovered, the
tank cleaned and lined inside and that it has a new wiring
harness,
ignition switch, headlight/horn switch and starter relay.

When I get there something looks outta' whack. Andy said it was a
'71
but it has the Eldo style "waffle" engine case, deep sump rear
drive and
Bosch generator and starter. I look at the tag on the front and it
says
Oct.'71 production date - ah ha! The title says '72! Neat, I don't
have
one of those yet! The bike is a roller with several containers of
parts
removed and looks to be in fairly good shape. I learned a long
time ago
not to "look a gift horse in the mouth", so it could have been a
rusted,
rotting hulk and I'd have been happy! Andy calls from work and
says
he'll have to mail me the missing rear fender as it's at a
friend's
house and to enjoy the old beast. What a guy! I left a check with
his
wife to cover the shipping cost plus some extra.

After we get back to my shop and unload, I have lunch and then
plan on
mowing grass the rest of the afternoon. Mother Nature has other
ideas
though and a pretty severe thunderstorm rolls through and dumps a
bunch
of rain. Okay, plan "B" - do a quicky reassembly of the Ambo so I
won't
have boxes of parts laying around. Two hours later it looks like a
complete bike again minus the rear fender and mufflers. I make up
a
(surprisingly short) list of what it needs to be a runner and pull
a few
parts out of my stash that are missing. Doesn't look like it will
be too
big of a task, but it will have to wait until other projects are
finished first. In the meantime, I'll post some pics as soon as I
get a
chance. Cheers,

Charlie

p.s. - Ian, the frame and engine numbers are 26330.

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