He's illustrating what one is taught to do before moving off, or changing direction, as part of the motorcycle test. A look in to the blind spot of peripheral vision, I believe it is called the 'lifesaver glance'..... the motorcyclist is looking back over his shoulder.
Both hands and both feet, too.
I really do want to know the illustrator's name if it's referenced on the next page,
It looks like a nice clean copy. I have several of Fairbairn's books in my collection. Rex Applegate also wrote some knife fighting books.Maybe I can get away with posting this non-tools/non-garage related book that I just found today at the flea market, it being Veteran's Day and all. It does have a nice picture of a Fairbairn-Sykes fighting knife in it.









Those bring fond memories for me. My dad, a German refugee used to buy these and read them (70's & 80's). Reminds me of him whenever I see them. Saw many of the untouchable cars us 'Mericans weren't allowed to drive or buy. Could only look at the pictures though.....A bound set of "Das Motor und Sport" magazines from 1957
As so often it's not the actual 'thing' itself which is most personally important to us, it's the associations and the memories and the people and their stories that it reminds us of.Those bring fond memories for me. My dad, a German refugee used to buy these and read them (70's & 80's). Reminds me of him whenever I see them. Saw many of the untouchable cars us 'Mericans weren't allowed to drive or buy. Could only look at the pictures though.....![]()

my constant companion as a wee lad as it was in my God Parent’s cabin back in the mid 70s. As I recall, it had the most amazing color artwork of venomous snakes and toxic plants.I love old books! Especially reference books. I tend to focus on science, mechanics, refrigeration, first aid, food nutrition, and medicinal's.
I've been collecting books for over 60 years. I have about 5000 hardbound volumes, mostly technical, military, and aviation. I have 50 years of Automobile Quarterly-200 volumes. The ones I don't keep are donated to the city library for their book sales.Oh how I love Books. I am in this club. I have about every Haynes and Chilton's back to the mid 50s if anyone needs one. They are in storage in another town.
Hello RD,One of the things I always look for when out and about, are older books on technical subjects; woodworking, HVAC, Welding, etc. And I have found quite a few to add to my book collection. And it is a nice way to tie together two of my passions, working with my hands and working with my mind.
So, without further ado, here are some of the highlights of my collection.
The Diesel book is from 1936, tuning is from '74.
The Airplane Welding book is from '29 and Electric Motor repair is from the fifties, and is still the best book on the subject.
The classic South Bend lathe handbook, along with a nice treatise on using dynamite.
The Early Motorcycle manual is not that old, the seventies, but finding anything that talks about these old machines is quite difficult. The machining book is from the teens, and the electroplating is from 1941.
These are all from the fifties.
These are both from the twenties I believe, as the axe manual isn't dated.
The motor book is from the '80s, while the metrology book is wartime.
Aircraft repair is from the thirties, while the radio-TV is from the fifties.
Of course, we need some tool catalogs from the teens and twenties.
And some early books on transportation repair.
Teach yourself how to fly!
Some wartime books on HVAC repair.
Gunsmithing books from the '30s-'40s
And finally, some nautical-themed books. They are from the '20s, 40s, and '50s respectively.
And that is only a representative sample, from just going through the shelves upstairs. There are many actual working books in my shop and a few on my bookshelves on the first floor.
Thanks. Alot of good reading. This is one of those books that Lugs would like with all the Patents also.Cool book!







That takes me back to my gas station attendant days, but not in Germany.Hello everyone,
for fans still a good source:
the HAZET 150 years anniversary chronicle with 264 pages from 2018 - available in English and German.
Many photos from the past from production, tools, tool boxes & carts, workshops, trade fairs, founders, ...
beside a lot of books, magazines, manuals and documents about classic Volkswagen
there are also old 1950s specialist books on training to become a gas station attendant -
with a lot of technical instructions but also instructions on how to dress and customer friendliness...
Very fun to read today
regards