Silver Ghost Restoration, 1975 BMW R75/6-Part 1 Getting Started

My first BMW, a 1975 R75/6, was purchased for cash 34 years ago in 1975 at BMW of Denver  from the then owner, Clem Cykowski.

The Grey Ghost - Starting a Restoration

The Silver Ghost – Starting a Restoration

I’ve ridden this bike 103,000 miles so far and in 2005, I received a BWW 100,000 mile award.  Although you can get the award riding multiple bikes, it was my goal from the day I bought the bike to ride it 100,000 miles.  In the 34 years since I bought it, I’ve had many adventures and two minor accidents.

Brook (on the right) Getting BMW 100,000 Mile Award in 2005

Brook (on the right) Getting BMW 100,000 Mile Award in 2005

I raced it for a season (accident #1 was in my first race, but I still finished 2nd). It has a few engine modifications including titanium push rods [I bent the original push rods in the 1st race.  I acquired a lot of  “wisdom” that day  🙂 ], a lightened fly wheel and a drilled air cleaner case to let it the engine breath a little easier.

In 1984, I took a month off for mental health reasons (the job was way too stressful) and spent most of that month in my garage doing a “freshen up”.  The original paint was cracking and I wanted to upgrade the supsension, exhaust and put a new Windjammer IV faring on it.  I loved the R90-S Smoke Silver paint scheme and had it repainted Smoke Silver (or at least a decent approximation).  I took off the stock exhaust and mufflers and added a Luftmiester black chrome two into one exhaust with a little “throat” to it (aka, louder).  I put on a “snow flake” cast front rim, braided steel brake line, /7 series black valve covers and spot painted the dings in the frame.  I also replaced the handle bars which had a tweak from accident #1.  The opportunity to just work at my own pace and think things through when I needed to without any time pressures was very relaxing.  At the end of the month, both the Silver Ghost and I were refreshed.

Several years later in the late 1980’s, I didn’t stop quick enough in traffic (accident #2) and rear ended the car in front of me.  I wasn’t hurt and the car couldn’t have cared less, but I did shorten up the wheel base a tad.  The bad news was the steering head was bent and likely the  fork tubes as well.  The good news was the bike was even more nimble with quicker steering in the corners and until now, I just let it go.

“So, why restore it?”, I’ve been asked.  I don’t have a logical answer.  It just feels like the right thing to do.  It’s a machine that has been in my garage or under my butt a large part of my life.  I’ve learned a lot about motorcycles, and some about myself since I’ve owned it.  Not to anthropomorphize about this, but “the Silver Ghost” is a good friend of mine and investing in a restoration seems like a logical next step in our relationship.

Recently, I’ve been reading books and blogs about reconnecting the mind with the body and the brain research that demonstrates the intimate link between “hands-on” tinkering. brain plasticity and a sense of well being.  Okay, I haven’t done much hands on for quite awhile.  It’s time to do some tinkering and see how much plasticity this brain has left.

Clem, is still working on BMW’s and is still part of BMW of Denver.  He sold the company several years ago, but is working in the shop on the classic and vintage machines as “Heritage Model Specialist”.  I’ve talked to him about the bike and had him look it over.   We have a plan of attack.

Step one is to get the frame straightened and the fork tubes checked, and likely replaced.  This Sunday, I went to Home Depot and bought an electric space heater so I would be a bit warmer in the garage since winter was making a visit with cold temperatures and snow flurries outside.  I spent some time taking off the Windjammer IV fairing, front fender and  rear luggage rack.  I took some before pictures.  This coming Saturday, Holloween, I’ll take it over to Clem to pull the fork tubes to see if they can be straightened, get the steering head and frame straightened, and install new steering head bearings, new fork tube seals and the new fork gaiters I bought.

In the meantime, I’ve been pricing parts, looking at other restorations for ideas, and dithering about trying to paint it myself or, like the last time, pay a professional paint shop to repaint it.

My youngest son, Branden, is interested in helping out and getting his hands dirty.  I’m looking forward to the company and the opportunity to share what knowledge I have and learning what I don’t know, which is considerable I’m sure.

The Plastic Brain

I’ve been fascinated by research in learning and the brain for sometime.  I recently wrote a blog posting summarizing various authors who have written about learning and education.  A common thread was the value of “tinkering” in learning and the loss of tacit knowledge as the new world order glorifies being a “knowledge worker” and we optimize the education system for fact retention while ignoring “hands-on” learning and tacit knowledge.  What they point out is various trades focused on fixing things are very intensely “knowledge” based and the practitioners have in fact reached the pinnacle of knowledge workers, although they are not recognized for this and in fact made fun of (or is it made the “butt” of jokes as is the case with plumbers 🙂 ).  Their conclusion is the intellectual capacity of a good mechanic is beyond reproach in the world of knowledge workers and we need to recognize that fact not denigrate it.

The articles also point out that schools need to provide more hands-on “tinkering” to facilitate self-developed knowledge or what is sometimes called being a “life-long learner”.  The skills a learner acquires through tinkering are commonly those many companies and disciplines claim are largely missing in the highly educated knowledge workers they interview for jobs.  Spending more time in front of a TV is an ominous trend.  Playing video games, which does deeply engage the hand and brain and does deeply involve problems and solutions, doesn’t include the complexity and cussedness of the real world, real materials and real frustrations of making “things” do what your vision requires.  Games often create the illusion of tacit knowledge about the world, but in fact, they don’t provide it.  There is a lot to value in getting your knuckles cracked, seeing wood splinter, metal bend when it shouldn’t and paint not adhere where you wanted.  Those are “cussedness problems” and they can teach very important skills for living a full life.

This lead me to more content that discussed techniques to correct learning disabilities.  A friend, Phil Kastelic, and I had tea one afternoon and got onto this topic.  He provided me a link to Frank Wilson who is a neurologist and an internationally respected authority on the neurological basis of skilled hand use for over two decades. He is the author of “The Hand: How its use shapes the brain, language, and human culture“, published in 1998 by Pantheon books and nominated that year for a Pulitzer Prize for nonfiction.  And here’s a video of a PBS interview with him by David Gergen in 1998.  This confirms the strong relationship between body and mind, and suggests that tacit knowledge requires the two to interact for knowledge to be developed.  One technique relied on physical restraint and manual manipulation of the body to overcome learning problems.  The implication in this work is that the brain and the limbs are tightly coupled in the learning process.  That was very interesting as it strongly suggests the dualism of mind and body is suspect at some level (perhaps at every level?).  There is a correlation between lack of fluid body movement, learning trauma and lack of fluid thinking, and that struck me as a very significant finding.  It reinforces the connection between hands-on work and tacit knowledge.  It makes the “nature vs nurture” question and all debates about it irrelevant.  It’s not an OR that’s going on here, it’s an AND with the brain’s plasticity providing the new element in the learning equation.

My son Devin’s fiancee, Rachel, provided me a copy of  a very interesting and well written book, “The Brain That Changes Itself: Stories of Personal Triumph From the Frontiers of Brain Science” by Norman Doidge.  Well, that provided a nice foundation for overthrowing a lot of orthodoxy and substituting a new framework for “learning how to learn”.  There are some TED talks by two of the researchers mentioned in Doidge’s book, Vilayaner Ramachandran and Michael Merzenich which provide some color on their work and thinking.  Ramachandran has a striking story about vision and phantom limbs.  And, he shows how a simple tool, a mirror, was used to overcome this in a patient.

The Doidge book makes it clear that the brain has a plasticity property.  In some cases of learning disability and brain damage, proper exercises for the brain can exploit the plasticity to overcome the disability and damage to the brain and/or sensory organs.  I found it very interesting that the “exercises” bear little resemblance to the “fact drill” exercises commonly used in school.  The plasticity exercises are quite different since they are designed to exploit how the brain creates and destroys the neural networks that underlie motor skills, sensory processing and learning.  This suggests that plasticity exercises could be a valuable tool in K-12 public education for “normal” and “disabled” students.  Ah… so tinkering could be thought of as a form of plasticity exercise for the brain.  Perhaps that’s it.

Finally, I came across this interview with Neuro-scientist and artist Beau Lotto on TED.  Once again, the material is focused on the senses and the plasticity of the brain in using them to learn about it’s surroundings.   His thesis is the brain is designed to constantly process raw sensory input and create meaning out of it.  It frequently treats the new as some variation of the previous, and connects them.  That has very deep implications for social interactions, cultural interactions and public education.  (In fact, he took some of his findings out of the lab to … public education, particularly to “disadvantaged” kids.  Very interesting.).

The point I want to make here is that brain plasticity has sharp edges.  If the brain “changes itself” per Doidge’s book, then many “beliefs” we have are really plasticity patterns that are reinforced as we constantly use them to make sense out of the world.  Plasticity is a tool and it defines the tendency we have to take new input and quickly map it to existing plasticity patterns.  So, when we are arguing about our beliefs we don’t easily stop this internal process, and we can’t if we don’t understand how brain plasticity influences our behavior.  If we want to engage in changing beliefs, we need to engage in the destruction and rebuilding of the neuron processing patterns that underlie brain plasticity.  We have to knowingly stop the brain’s automatic mapping of the new content to the old plasticity pattern.  That’s hard to do unless we can practice some specific brain exercises to teach us how to do this.

It’s even more challenging if you want someone to understand a new belief you have about values and it is in conflict with their current values and beliefs.   How do you get them to destroy old brain plasticity patterns and build new ones based on interacting with you?  (For a practical example in how difficult this is, consider the world-wide “war on terror” and the notion of suicide bombing.  Is suicide bombing an example of a value system clash?  Is the value of self-destruction for the greater glory of Allah an outward manifestation of a learned plasticity pattern? If so, how do you affect lasting changes to those values and the underlying brain plasticity?) Tricky stuff and certainly an area for more research and understanding.

My youngest son, Branden, is currently in college with a major in primary education.  I’ve been sharing much of this material with him for digestion. The model of a plastic brain, its methods of creating neuronal processing subsets for sensory input, the role of body / brain interaction in learning, and how to create culture and community from shared beliefs are at the heart of being a teacher.  This research provides a lot of new tools and opportunities to be innovative in public education.  Of course, it also opens one up to investigating useful “plasticity exercises” we all can use when we need to learn efficiently.   Anyone working in the 21st century will find learning efficiently becomes a “survival of the fittest” skill.   And more broadly, as communications connects what once were infrequently communicating cultures, how would you change your behavior in a “values” or “beliefs” argument based on this research?

Minds, Knowledge, Well Being and Education

I’ve been reading and watching videos from a number of folks who have posted their ideas about the connections between the mind, knowledge, creativity, well being and education (yeap, they are all connected).  There seems to be a growing sense that emphasis on knowledge workers, educations that emphasizes excessive abstration (theory), and education systems that select students solely for these capabilities leads to unhappiness, lack of economic growth and an inability for business innovation to move quick enough to keep up with the accelerated “creative distruction” of captial caused in part by a global economy.

For instance, see Sir Ken Robinson’s 2006 TED talk on education.  There is also a new book by Matthew Crawford, “Shop Class as Soulcraft: An Inquiry Into the Value of Work” that delves into the artifical disassociation of thought from manual work, and the problems this creates for quality of life.  Matt wrote a New York Times piece on this as well, “The Case for Working With Your Hands“.  And, there’s Gever Tulley’s February 2009 TED talk on “Teaching Life’s Lesson with Tinkering” about how to get tinkering in the hands of children (again).

I also came across material from John Seely Brown who at one time was Chief Scientist at Xerox PARC.  I’d been aware of his work previously, but from the technology side since I currently work in the computer industry.  Here are some videos he posted on his web site: “Tinkering as a Mode of Knowledge Production“; “The Future of Learning“; and  “Teaching, Doing More With Less“.   He makes complimentary observations about the current state of education (more slanted to universities, but still relevant to secondary education) and shares some ideas about how to change it. John’s emphasis is on technology tools that can increase the collaboration and connection for students who need to learn new skills at an increasing rate, and why social networks faciliate this learning style.

My conclusions fall along the following lines.

  • Learning (as opposed to teaching) is a messy, individual process.  Ken’s story toward the end of his talk about the learning environment for a dancer drives the point home.  Learning is messy which is problematic if you need fungible skills for a consumption based economy where unit cost has to decline for a growing economy (and that clearly has far ranging benefits).  As Matt argues,the disaggregation of knowledge from manual work was important to scaling up the industrial economy of the 20th century, and that in turn is why education was designed to “manufacture” suitable “workers” who could become the “interchangable” parts required to scale this economic model.  To do that, tacit knowledge had to be codified and owned by “companies” rather than “individuals”.  (As a counter point to that argument, see “Measuring the Forces of Long-term Change, The 2009 Shift Index“, by the Deloitte Center for the Edge, which John contributed to.  In particular, look at the Impact Index, pg 5, and note the growing shift in economic value to “Contributors”.  Seems like key knowledge workers maybe getting more of the profit than the business does.)
  • Changing our education process to include “tinkering” and the tacit learning it provides (and the subtle leverage this provides from the impact on brain development) are pretty important if the future is really fluid and “well being” requires skill in how to constantly learn tacit knowledge.  Kids are naturally able to tinker unless we “program” them not to.  It’s adults who need to learn more about tinkering, and  the “process” of public education has to embrace more of this “messy method” of learning tacit knowledge.
  • Retraining teachers to be facilitators of tinkering rather than dispensers of literacy (facts) and testers of fact retention is a major disruption to the education “industry”.  I suspect the “educator guild” may not go willing down this path.  I’m also uncertain if there are enough people with the skills necessary to be “facilitators of tinkering” to scale this up.  But, its worth a try.
  • There are pretty profound implications on the global economy and work from these observations about education, knowledge workers and the artificial separation of tacit knowledge from your job. For example, the deconstruction of tacit knowledge into rules, and the resulting “lowest common denominator” job function (particularly evident in the computer technology industry) don’t bode well for creating new market value at a rate sufficient to offset the loss of margin due to global competition.  Invention of new market value requires tinkering, as Matt’s book shows us and John’s talks suggest.  Yet, I see the trend to devalue tacit knowledge growing stronger in the technology industry, which seems ironic if not moronic.

New Zealand MC Tour Article-BMW Owner’s News

BMW Owner's News Article

BMW Owner’s News Article

The BMW Owners Association (BMWMOA) publishes a monthly magazine, BMW Owners News.  I submited an article about a motorcycle tour my wife and I took in New Zealand on the South Island in February 2004.  This trip was a wedding anniversary present to ourselves.

The BMW Owner’s News  published my article in the May, 2009 issue. You will find good information about MC touring on the South Island, and can read about some of our adventures as an Antarctic low crossed the South Island in the summer time.

50 Colorado Passes via Motorcycle

50 Colorado Passes on a Motorcycle

50 Passes - Click To See Pictures

Well, my wife and I have been pursuing a quest — to ride over 50 passes in Colorado on our motorcycles.  Why?  Well, for the same reason anyone does anything challenging — its “fun”, and not everyone does it.

You can look at the passes we have covered by clicking the photo above to see where we have been so far.  And, you can also see a map of the passes (with dates, coordinates, embedded photos, and altitudes).

If you would like to see a pretty comprehensive list of passes, try Randy Bishops web page.    There is an “award” for this provided by the BMW Motorcylce Club of Colorado, the Pass Bagger 50.