1957 Type C Nimbus Motorcycle

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Jamie Spitzley's 1957 Type C Nimbus Motorcycle with sidecar rig.
Jamie Spitzley's 1957 Type C Nimbus Motorcycle with sidecar rig.
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The Nimbus sidecar had four points of connection.
The Nimbus sidecar had four points of connection.
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Compact and relatively lightweight, the Nimbus was, and is, a good candidate for sedate touring or running errands.
Compact and relatively lightweight, the Nimbus was, and is, a good candidate for sedate touring or running errands.
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Fisker & Nielsen may not have made a lot of Nimbus motorcycles, but they did advertise them.
Fisker & Nielsen may not have made a lot of Nimbus motorcycles, but they did advertise them.
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Nimbus handlebars are made from steel pressings.
Nimbus handlebars are made from steel pressings.
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Practically everything on the Nimbus was accessible if you needed to fix it.
Practically everything on the Nimbus was accessible if you needed to fix it.
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The big rubberband springing the seat is the sum total of the Nimbus’ rear suspension.
The big rubberband springing the seat is the sum total of the Nimbus’ rear suspension.
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Nimbus’ exposed rocker arms and valves seem crude given the engine’s relatively advanced overhead cam design.
Nimbus’ exposed rocker arms and valves seem crude given the engine’s relatively advanced overhead cam design.

Type C Nimbus
Years produced: 1934-1959
Total production: 12,500 (est.)
Claimed power: 18-22hp @ 4,500rpm
Top speed: 70mph (no sidecar)
Engine type: 746cc overhead cam, air-cooled inline four
Weight (dry): 185kg (408lb)
Price then: $1,200 (std. model, approx.)
Price now: $6,500-$11,000
MPG: 55

A slow run down a country road. Stopping to smell the roses, having a picnic, or maybe working in a California vineyard, the sidecar holding baskets full of grapes and bags full of fertilizer — or just going to check that the irrigation is working right — that’s the purpose of this Type C Nimbus motorcycle sidecar rig.

And that is the workaday reality of the fine machine portrayed here, still in its original 50-year-old livery, not all spruced up with flashy paint and polished chrome. After all, when was the last time you saw a real farmer detailing his elderly John Deere tractor?

Read Jamie Spitzley’s review of owning and riding the 1957 Type C Nimbus 

No, this Nimbus motorcycle is not one of those shiny restorations, nor is it the machine you want for running along the Interstate at 80mph or ripping past Porsches while going over 12,000ft Independence Pass. This was intended to be a utilitarian workhorse, a back-woods hauler; run it slow, and it would run nigh on forever.

  • Published on Jul 27, 2009
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