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Who would have thought…?įinally Bultaco made the change from right side shifting, to shifting on the left, with an alloy shift lever that snaked around the countershaft sprocket, and, err, didn’t work all that well, since it flexed like a pole dancer. In fact, the brakes were so good looking, and functional, they found their way onto other machines, namely Choppers and short track bikes. Something Bultaco was sorely lacking since day one. Number three was front and rear brakes that were not only works of art, but actually stopped the motorcycle. If you kept the primary chain adjusted, with clean oil, it would last indefinitely. Number two was a dual row primary chain with a decent tensoner that eliminated the classic Bultaco problem of spitting primary chains through cases, when the chain got old, or out of adjustment. It got rid of the tickler, and was designed with a starting jet, like a Mikuni, that allowed cold starts without soaking your glove with pre-mix. Now the new line of Pursangs got the square-bodied Amal that more resembled a Mikuni both in looks, and performance. Number one was the carburetor Bultaco got rid of the Spanish Amal concentric that plagued riders with sticky, broken slides, and a design that was prone to loading up the lower end with raw gas at a moments notice. Let’s take a look at the Jim Pomeroy replica 360 Pursang, brought out in 1975, that sported some important changes that made it an excellent motorcycle. But by 1975, it was a little too little, too late. Both in the two fifty and three sixty configuration, it seemed Bultaco, at the end its life cycle, put together an excellent machine in the line of Pursang racing dirt bikes.
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One such motorcycle was the 1975 Bultaco Pursang. Things like primary chains, rotten brakes, clutches and bolts made from butter, not guns, wouldn’t be tolerated anymore, period.īut alas, some of the final models from the European factories were fantastic, reliable, lightweight fast motorcycles that were just as good, or better than their Japanese competition. No longer would the average dirt bike buyer put up with having to throw another five bills into a new machine, to make it live under the rigors of competition. The once dominant Euro bike producers were floundering in a sea of red ink, as dealerships and parts availability started drying up, along with sales of motorcycles. First the 1973 CR250M Honda Elsinore stunned the whole off-road motorcycle industry, and it only got better (or worse if you were a European motorcycle manufacturer) from there. By 1975 the Japanese had things pretty much sewed up when it came to competitive out-of-the-box dirt bikes.