Cycle News

Cycle News 2025 Issue 13 April 1

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

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VOLUME ISSUE APRIL , P141 Aberg, Jim Pomeroy, Kenny Zahrt and others were racing and winning on Bultacos. Take a look at yourself in the highly polished engine cases and ask yourself not what your Bultaco can do for you—ask what you can do on your Bultaco. The lengthy list of admoni - tions from Huetter makes it clear that the burden is on you, the rider, to get the job done. "The 360 Pursang is a specific sort of weapon," he wrote, "and demands full attention whenever it is in motion." There is also no room for lazy riding. "You must concentrate on proper weight transfer when changing direc - tions. You must stand up, going faster than ever before, down bumpy straights, and let the machine work under you. If you don't do it right on an LTR (long travel rear suspension), you will fall down." Cycle News made sure the reader was fully aware that motocross bikes are made to go fast, stating, "If you go slowly, the feeling of being too high for effective weight transfer or cornering confidence returns. The suspension feels hard. The front-end hunts. The solution is basic: don't ride it slowly. If you want to ride it slowly, you should not have paid $1600 for this two-wheeled weapon in the first place." Bultaco faithfuls have kept the brand going strong. Take in any vintage MX event and you will see the famous "thumbs up" logo popping up around the pit area. Jeff Graber, from Omaha, Nebraska, has been on board Bultacos of all sizes for more than 50 years. "My first Bul was a 1972 Pursang 125. I cut my teeth on a '71 Yamaha AT-1 MX and this Spanish mount was quite a revelation—faster, quicker, and it handled much differently than the Yamaha," he remembers. "The Bultaco was quite inter - changeable, as most Euro bikes seemed to be in those days. In late '73, we swapped out the top end and changed it from a 125 to a 250. Later, I bought a Mark VIII—handled better than any- thing else I had ridden. Corner- ing on a rail!" The famed Spanish marque, like its German-born competitor Maico, was a popular choice for motocross racers throughout the 1970s. Like Maico, Bultaco riders won races but claimed few major championships in either the Grand Prix or AMA competition. Riders like Aberg, Pomeroy and Zahrt, along with the original motocross profes- sor, Gary Bailey, were all threats on racetracks throughout the decade but could never string together the kind of consistent finishes needed to grab titles. Sadly, mechanical issues would often negate good rides by some of these talented racers. The CN staff of 50 years ago had no crystal ball, so they could not have known that the end of the road was just eight years away for the Bultaco motorcycle company. But they did offer one bold prediction. Stand up! Pay attention! Concentrate! "If you can coordinate these things," they wrote, "then you will prob - ably think that the 360 Mk VIII Pursang is The Answer. And you will probably be right. You will win." CN Subscribe to nearly 60 years of Cycle News Archive issues: www.CycleNews.com/Archives You had to be a good rider and an even better mechanic to own a Bultaco.

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