Its all well and good to blame the owner and, being an, erm, older, person I understand where its coming from. Basically while we had WoF back then (written in parchment with a quill) you didn’t really expect your 1946 Austin 8 to go a whole 6 months without needing a tweak – or two. Indeed, our old Morris 8 with cable brakes was driven to a wof very gently; preferably without using the foot brakes otherwise it wouldn’t pass. You got used to being ‘aware’ of what was going on and looked for problems before they happened.
This was also the era of the modifier and you really didn’t need much in the way of certification to alter a vehicle.
In recent years we have seen it amazingly difficult (in comparison) to alter anything on a vehicle except perhaps the colour. We are increasingly MADE to trust the expert because we now don’t have the power to decide if somethings safe or not.
Modern vehicles are also lightyears more advanced. If you take my 1970 Triumph – kick only and good luck getting it to idle unless its had a decent run to warm up. You have to interact with it mechanically at all times whereas you don’t with a new vehicle, not even a choke knob to fiddle with.
We get used to that way of thinking. Eventually your head just refuses to accept that something like this ‘could’ happen to a newer bike. You could look right at it and not really see it.
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