Hi,
I thought I'd add some photos of my 1960 A7 Shooting Star.
I bought it twelve years ago today. Back then it was looking a little tired but was running albeit with very loud knocking from the bottom end. I thought I'd take 6 months or so to restore it.
How wrong I was!! In between then and now I've been married, divorced, moved house five times and changed job twice. But finally I've now got it restored and run-in.
At the six year point I had it running and MoT'd for a brief period. With only about twenty miles on the clocks, I was on a fettling run. The A7 lost power on one cylinder and I tried to nurse the bike home. In the end, I dropped it crossing a ford and when I lifted it and pushed her out the engine was seized and wouldn't kick over at all, never mind start. I pushed it six miles home, swearing and cursing all the way. When I stripped it down I found that the crank had snapped in half.
It took a further few years to summon up the enthusiasm to get back to the job. Having been brought up on japanese bikes and never having ridden an old Brit motorcycle, it was just really stubborness that made me insit on finishing the job.
But now, its been running since about June this year and suddenly a grownup's meccano set has actually turned into a motorcycle. I'm delighted, and a little surprised, that it is actually a really sweet bike and I'm really enjoying riding it.
Last month, I wanted to get some miles on the engine to finish the running in before winter and road salt came along. I did a 350 mile round trip, to Ardnamurchan point, the most westerly part of the UK. Given most it was on single track roads, I spent nine hours in the saddle, with only a couple of brief tea stops. That would pretty much have crippled me on any of my previous bikes, but I was comfortable at the end and the A7 didn't miss a stroke the whole time. I'm well impressed.
Plans for the winter include some new wheel rims and improving the braking. I've got a TLS to fit to the front and with some info from NickSR on the forum here, I'm going to try the rear brake rod conversion.
Maybe this will inspire someone else out there to keep going with their own project

Andy