I agree GB ,although I still loved my A10 ,working in the busiest and ( from my point of view ,best dealer Victor Horsman ) in Liverpool I had my eyes opened very early .We were BSA/tri main dealers ,plus AMC ,well until 66, Velo and Yam. Would have been Honda but Bill Smith got there first .
Triumps still were sought after but BSA was going downhill and at the time "the power egg " just wasn't floating many boats ,plus reliability problems and quality.
Not so the yams from the cheap and cheerful 50 ( boy could they go and sieze ) the 125]s and the 250's all flew out the door .We even saw mechanics take em out of there crate,check levels a bit of petroil and away they;d go .
I also agree re the comments made about the Hondas cb72 brakes were a world away from what we were used to, infact on my first ride on one in the rain stopping at a set of lights I braked hard and locked the front wheel fortuately a good kick kept the bike up. So only moan would be the tires early ones should have been stamped "made by Kamikaze" Still loved 'em .
Anyone remember a page in one of the bike mags ( poss classic bike ) called "the way we were " that was penned by my Boss in this dealership .he was a great friend and character named Alan Broderick ,a really good guy saddly missed.