@Bob Heine - What? No tire irons in that massive collection? Tsk, tsk, tsk....
I still have the pair I bought probably 55 years ago. Along with 2-3 other pair collected over the years of owning motorcycles.
Roger
My 1st set of tire irons was for a Honda scrambler, and I was happy to be able to save the $ of having the local Honda motorcycle dealer spoon 'em on when I needed tires. I calculated that my original tire irons are aged at 82% of the time that Lianne and you have been married.
Over the years, I bought more tire irons and I realized that they were each pair longer than the previous pair. My last one I bought was from a local Moto Guzzi dealer going out of business. It's a Motion Pro, which is an esteemed name in motorcycle tools. The shaft thickness is the largest of any of my sets of tire irons, those which aren't flat stock, and it has what appears to be an actual shallow spoon, though it really isn't suitable for food use. If you were to try to eat some delicious So. FL conch (pronounced
'konk' for you Northerners) soup with it, it really doesn't hold any soup, so tire 'spoon' is something of a misnomer. The #1 pair oldest of tire spoons must be less than a foot long and the Motion Pro one is probably almost 2 ft long.
I have a 1971 or '72 issue of
Motorcycle Sport Quarterly which was a great magazine of its time, they had an article on how an ISDT (International Six Days Trial) competitor changes a tire tube on their competition machine. His tire spoons, he used three, looked to be similar to my original ones in size/length. I think he used CO2 cartridges to blow-up the tire quickly. I'd have to pull out the magazine to see exactly what the e.t. was for the motorcycle tube replacement, but I'm pretty-sure that it was < 5 minutes. Nowadays, most of my current rolling stock uses tubeless tires, but I do have some vintage street and enduro bikes which still use tubes. I think it would take me 5 minutes to pull-out the tools to do the job these days.
Lastly, congratulations to Lianne and you on your anniversary, she made a great choice all those years ago. Your well-documented stories of your work are very entertaining. I also learn of new tools and ways to use them from you and the '
usual gang of idiots' as MAD magazine used to advertise about their staff. Of course, I count myself as a proud member of that cohort, the '
usual gang of idiots.'