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1973 Can Am

TommyBwell

New member
The salesman at the local mega dealer that carries everything and knows nothing had no idea that Can Am started selling motorcycles in 1973. Since we have so many people that are new to riding getting their start on Can Ams I was wondering how many people have never seen one of these?
 

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I had one! 250 MX. Blazing Fast! Great Low End for a 2 Stroke. Loved the rotary valve and the injection lube. But the suspension would KILL YOU!

Like 'What Suspension?'

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they were great bikes and did well on the motocross circuit and in enduros. They never caught on and Mother BRP went in another direction. Not sure when they disappeared late, 80's I think. I know they took Gold, Silver, and Bronze in the ISDT in 1973 and sweep the AMA motocross series in the mid 70's. We already know how great Rotax engines are,but Can Am also developed some great suspensions and frames.
 
Saw them do pretty well at Daytona during bike week back "in the day". I was disappointed that they discontinued them.

Chris
 
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I always thought that the rotary valves were pretty cool; everything else that I had ever seen was of a piston port design... :thumbup:
 

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I always thought that the rotary valves were pretty cool; everything else that I had ever seen was of a piston port design... :thumbup:
The rotary valve was a cool way to go. By 1973 most of the Japanese bikes were moving to reed valves. I love the low pipe. There were a few of those around but I think it looks great.
 
I rode my friends back in the 70s. At the time I had my Suzuki TM125.

Made a whirring sound rather than a scream.

I have the photos of Jimmy Ellis on a factory Can Am works bike at the first Southwick national.

PK
 
Memories....

Remember them well out on the "Manchay" motocross track. They are still around down there. We were running Suzuki TM's and later RM's. Great bike but those 3" of travel were bone crunching...:roflblack:
 
:shocked: I wish that I hadn't heard that...
Now, I'm tempted to go look it up, and get myself in a World of trouble! :banghead:
 
Back in the day, the Canadian Army used these bikes for recce, courier, patrol and many other duties in
the field.
They really put them to good use.
 
:shocked: I wish that I hadn't heard that...
Now, I'm tempted to go look it up, and get myself in a World of trouble! :banghead:

Marks Vintage Swap Meet is serious trouble unless you have a lot of money to spend OR restraint from buying. Sometimes whole bikes, sometimes parts.

There are some pretty neat facebook groups for vintage dirtbikes. Some the value on old dirtbikes is crazy. A recent EBay 1975 RM125M with the factory hop up kit, tons of NOS parts to build it. Basically showroom new. Auction went to almost $8000 and the reserve was not met. Someone was willing to spend almost 8k on a 75 RM125.

I have a 1981 KTM495mc I have owned since 2001. I'm the third owner. The bike was not running and needed the cases split and other work done. The wife has wanted it gone for a long time. Tonight I plan to order some of the last parts I need to put it together. After showing her a nice but not restored 81 KTM 495mc that recently sold on ebay for almost $6k, she is a little more at ease of having it around.

The other one to check out Bob is Vintage Motocross Buyers & Sellers Price Guide, the guy that "owns" that group is coming out with a TV show about restoring vintage MX bikes. While cool in concept, once it airs, the price of decent vintage bikes that are desirable will go up.

PK
 
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