it said, by the way, testing has shown that 16:1 isn’t necessary, 48:1 would be quite good and if you used Bardahl, you need 54:1. (laughing). So I started buying Bardahl.
John: Did you go through a lot of spark plugs?
Frank: Yeah, They'd oil up, like nobody’s business. When you are on full throttle on that thing, it would blow smoke out behind you for nearly a mile.
Joe: You were oiling your engine and everything around you.
Frank: Probably the back tire, too. (laughs) That’s the way it was. Oil and gas mix. In fact my old boss Peter Inchley was on a 250 road racing bike in the TT in 67, he was running second with the 250 cc Villiers bike and he was running a quarter of a mile behind that guy on a Honda who was in the lead. The TT is a 37 and 3 /4 mile lap around the isle. (Isle of Man) They do three laps and I don’t not know whether you have to because it is tradition or because of the size of gas tank, but after two laps, you came in and refuel Well Pete came into the pit, the crew grabbed the container that Shell had provided, poured it into the tank, closed the tank, and he took off. He got about 200 yards ahead of the Honda that had been leading because they had stopped as well. He led the race for about 3½ miles out of the pit before his engine seized up. It turned out that Shell, in their infinite wisdom, had put a 5 gallon can of petrol oil mixture in a different pit and they gave his bike straight gas. Shell were not very popular, either with the Villiers team or the guy riding the four stroke who retired when his plugs fouled up..
John: What is the climate like for motorcycling in the Birmingham area?
Frank: Well the whole of England is kind of like it is here in western Washington. It is a little bit colder. There was a famous headline in the Telegraph: “72 again tomorrow. No relief in sight”.(laughing)
John: So the air-cooled engine made more sense in England than a lot of places.
Frank: Yes it did. The other headline in the Telegraph was “Fog in Channel, Europe isolated.” (laughing). Yeah, they had some funny ideas.
Joe: Well if you looked at the maps, England was the centre of the earth. Everything else was all around it
.
Frank: When they colored international boundaries, England was red, so was the English Empire and if you look at a map from the 1920s, over half of it was red, a lot of Africa, Australia, New Zealand and Canada.
John: This friend of mine got a letter from Queen Elizabeth thanking her for being an ordinary citizen. She was in the British Foreign Service and quite a few different… not real fun places and she got a letter from Queen Elizabeth which she has hanging on her wall, thanking her for being an ordinary citizen (everyone laughs)