Stafford classic bike show

Done a "Ewan & Charley"? Been for a fried breakfast and taken pictures? Share the tales of your adventure in here

Moderators: Gromit, Paul, slparry

User avatar
exoticices
Posts: 260
Joined: Sat Jul 21, 2007 5:19 pm
Location: West Midlands

Stafford classic bike show

Postby exoticices » Sat Oct 20, 2012 4:16 pm

Not exactly a ride report, although I did ride there, and back again.

Free admission to the slightly boggy field that they use as a car/bike park, then £12 to get in to the show itself. No complimentary sidestand puck so hope you remembered your own.

Show absolutely rammed. Huge amount of tat, sorry - valuable autojumble, to browse though before you get to the handful of interesting bikes, which to be fair were very interesting. Some nice race bikes, TZs, BSA Rockets, Michael Dunlop's XR69 Suzuki, and others. Curiously fascinating selection of 50cc GP bikes, Kreidlers and the like, unbelievably small, fantastic engineering. Not much in the way of BMWs, though there was a nice K100 race bike.

Cups of tea averaging out at £1.80 per cup, so I went thirsty. Having forked out £12 to get in I would have expected a complimentary cup of tea at the very least, maybe even bone china. But then I also expected tarmacadam to park on.

No marshalling of the bike park so arrived back at the bike packed in with no obvious exit route. Fortunately I arrived back at the same time as the group around me so it didn't deteriorate into a scene from a Norman Wisdom film. Exit out onto a main A-road and no marshalling on the exit and with vision partially obscured by 'car park' signs so you chance your arm joining the traffic with muddy tyres. How I laughed.

Not a bad day out but not really worth the money but I suppose you can say the same about all these shows. I think the combined classic car/bike show at the NEC would be a better option. Having said that, I've seen a better selection of bikes for free at the local VMCC run!

User avatar
slparry
Moderator
Posts: 6598
Joined: Sat Sep 20, 2008 7:19 pm
Location: Wrexham
Contact:

Postby slparry » Sat Oct 20, 2012 4:32 pm

been a couple of times but was disappointed with the levels of tat and the silly prices being asked for it :)
--
Steve Parry


Current fleet: '14 F800GS, '87 R80RS, '03 R1100S BoxerCup, '15 R1200RT LE Dynamic, '90 K1

User avatar
bikemad99
Member
Posts: 1341
Joined: Wed Feb 18, 2004 9:16 am
Location: South Derbyshire

Postby bikemad99 » Sat Oct 20, 2012 10:42 pm

I think that should be moved to the humour section,as I am sure I am not the only old bike enthusiast to find it amusing.
2000 BMW R1100s
1964 Royal Enfield 250cc Crusader
2012 Mazda Mx5 2.0ltr Kuro.
2004 Roller Team Granduca 171.
1992 Jaguar 4ltr Sovereign.
2018 Volvo t3 v40 Cross Country.
Reg & Gwen.

User avatar
Blackal
Posts: 8250
Joined: Fri Jul 29, 2005 7:53 pm

Postby Blackal » Sun Oct 21, 2012 2:09 am

Am I right in thinking that there are two shows - one less of an auto-jumble than the other?

Al :)
If I am ever on life support - Unplug me......
Then plug me back in..........

See if that works .....
:?

User avatar
bikemad99
Member
Posts: 1341
Joined: Wed Feb 18, 2004 9:16 am
Location: South Derbyshire

Postby bikemad99 » Sun Oct 21, 2012 8:31 am

[quote="Blackal"]Am I right in thinking that there are two shows - one less of an auto-jumble than the other?

Al :)[/quote

Yes Al,the show in spring is the original classic show for mainly old british bikes,the autumn show was started a few years back by the Classic Mechanics magazine to cater for later Jap bikes,but both are similar with large auto-jumbles attracting enthusiasts from around the world.
2000 BMW R1100s
1964 Royal Enfield 250cc Crusader
2012 Mazda Mx5 2.0ltr Kuro.
2004 Roller Team Granduca 171.
1992 Jaguar 4ltr Sovereign.
2018 Volvo t3 v40 Cross Country.
Reg & Gwen.

User avatar
Daveg2812
Member
Posts: 1483
Joined: Mon Apr 27, 2009 3:03 pm
Location: Doncaster

Postby Daveg2812 » Sun Oct 21, 2012 12:24 pm

bikemad99 wrote:
Blackal wrote:Am I right in thinking that there are two shows - one less of an auto-jumble than the other?

Al :)[/quote

Yes Al,the show in spring is the original classic show for mainly old british bikes,the autumn show was started a few years back by the Classic Mechanics magazine to cater for later Jap bikes,but both are similar with large auto-jumbles attracting enthusiasts from around the world.


And, judging by the the headline post of this thread, those of a less enthusiastic nature :lol:
This ain't Twitter you know!

2003 R1100S with some bits on.

User avatar
Britisherspy
Posts: 499
Joined: Sat Apr 03, 2010 7:19 pm
Location: Lichfield

Postby Britisherspy » Sun Oct 21, 2012 6:37 pm

Its a good show, I dint go this Autumn but enjoyed the horizontal rain and swamp-like conditions in Easter.


Return to “Ride Reports”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 3 guests