From:Dave Hennessey e-mail:dave-A-toyhouse.org
Subject:RE: RE: RE: 55 humber Date:Fri Mar 30 14:35:26 2012
Response to:17207
Mutt - you're wrong! The 1955-1957 Hummer plug wire is part of the ignition coil, so you can't put it in your pocket.
(This is the first time I've ever caught Mutt making a mistake - probably the last time too).

Chuck - since you can't switch the plug wire, they would have had to run two wires from the points to the switch. Perhaps they could have gotten away with one wire and still have the switch point in the normal direction?

What surprises me is that they made a different tank for the Hummer in 1955 when they could have just made a "cover" like they did for the speedometer. They could have used the 165 ignition switch trim ring, just without the switch hole in the middle.

The Hummer tank is simpler to make, but requires retooling and stocking 2 different tanks for the lightweights. I guess they were planning on strong sales of the Hummer, and it was worth it to retool for the new tank.

Without a fork lock, almost any motorcycle of the era could be hot-wired with a piece of wire with alligator clips on each end, although you might not have lights.

Some alligator clips come with wire-piercing pins in them - great for those extra tough jobs.

Dave






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Always wondered why they eliminated the key switch...just money? So no theft protection without it...why?

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The ignition cutout button located directly in front of the points cover.

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What kills the engine on a 1955 hummer?