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The Worlds Fastest Indian (Southland) Traditional Cache

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Hidden : 1/5/2012
Difficulty:
1.5 out of 5
Terrain:
1.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   small (small)

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Geocache Description:


The Worlds Fastest Indian Legend

Burt Munro was born on the 25th March 1899 at Edendale, a country town 30km’s north of Invercargill, New Zealand.

Burt bought the Indian motorbike new in 1920 as a standard model Indian Scout which had a side valve engine of 600cc capacity. The price was £120 with acetylene lighting although he could have bought an electric lighting model but it was quite a bit more expensive at the time. The engine number was 50R627.

The Indian Scout was very advanced for it’s time as it had a helical gear transmission and a mechanical oil pump working on a total loss system.

The top speed was in the region of 60mph.

In the 1920's Burt started tuning the bike for speed and ultimately he had it exceeding 90mph in side valve form. In the mid 1930s Burt made patterns for an overhead valve engine conversion but initially he was quite disappointed as it was no faster than the original side valve.

However, with Burt’s determination he persisted with the tuning and in 1940 he gained the New Zealand Motorcycle speed record at a speed of 120.8mph. At this stage Burt found the original con-rods would not stand up to the strain and he started manufacturing his own out of old Ford truck axles. Burt had very little equipment as far as machining was concerned and there was a lot of handwork associated with the manufacturing.

After overcoming the con-rod failures Burt then experienced engine big-end failure. As the lubrication was achieved by a total loss system, which had no direct feed to the big-ends and crank pin, with the result that the rollers often came out blued and fused to the big-end cage. Eventually Burt made new fly wheels and increased the diameter of the crank pin which was bored to feed oil direct to the big-ends. He also fitted an Indian Chief oil pump and in doing so changed it to a dry sump lubrication system.

Over the years Burt gradually increased the bore and stroke which enlarged the engine to just on 1000cc capacity.

Burt cast his own pistons using a large kerosene blow lamp and casting dies he made himself. Another modification was to the primary transmission. He made sprockets for this and fitted a triplex chain on the primary drive in place of helical gears as this was more efficient. The clutch is basically standard with extra springs fitted to cope with the extra power the engine was developing. In order to get closer ratios in the gear box Burt cut the layshaft and welded two pinions from an Indian Chief onto this Scout layshaft in order to get closer ratios on the three speed gear box.

Originally the Indian Scouts had only two cams and this limited the valve timing so Burt changed this to a four cam system which allowed him to alter the valve timing on both the inlet and exhaust valves.

Burt built four different streamline shells for the Indian Scout over the years.

On his first trip to Bonneville with the Indian on 20th August 1962 Burt achieved a speed of 179mph, a speed that people attending “Speed Week” found absolutely unbelievable considering the age of both the bike and the rider.

On the 26th August 1967 Burt claimed the World Record Class S-A 1000cc – with an average speed of 183.586mph (one way 190.07mph). This record still stands to this very day.

Burt died on 6th January 1978 – aged 78 – of natural causes.

To achieve 60mph to 200mph was the most remarkable achievement that motorcycling has ever seen, hence The Legend

The cache is a 200ml sistema container

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

haqre pbapergr oybpx orfvqr pnoontr gerr

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)