Remembering the Whizzer Bike Motor

By Sam Moore
Published on November 13, 2014
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1947 Whizzer 150cc side valve.
1947 Whizzer 150cc side valve.
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A magazine ad for the 1946 Whizzer. Note the lever-type throttle and decompression controls on the right handlebar.
A magazine ad for the 1946 Whizzer. Note the lever-type throttle and decompression controls on the right handlebar.
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A Whizzer dealer sign from the 1990s on display at the Canton Classic Car Museum in Canton, Ohio.
A Whizzer dealer sign from the 1990s on display at the Canton Classic Car Museum in Canton, Ohio.
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A well-restored Whizzer on a Schwinn bike. Note that the bike has twist-type handle-grip controls so it's a 1948 model or later. The bike is owned by Fred White, Damascus, Ohio, and on loan to the Canton Classic Car Museum.
A well-restored Whizzer on a Schwinn bike. Note that the bike has twist-type handle-grip controls so it's a 1948 model or later. The bike is owned by Fred White, Damascus, Ohio, and on loan to the Canton Classic Car Museum.
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Three Whizzers also owned by Fred. The green one in the front is a Sportsman, the red one is a Pacemaker and the one in back is a regular Whizzer kit from about 1947 mounted on a Schwinn bicycle.
Three Whizzers also owned by Fred. The green one in the front is a Sportsman, the red one is a Pacemaker and the one in back is a regular Whizzer kit from about 1947 mounted on a Schwinn bicycle.
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The Whizzer engine as shown in a 1947 ad. The kit included the gas tank and handlebar controls in addition to the engine.
The Whizzer engine as shown in a 1947 ad. The kit included the gas tank and handlebar controls in addition to the engine.
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This is from a 1947 Saturday Evening Post ad.
This is from a 1947 Saturday Evening Post ad.

By the time I was 13 or 14, after owning a battered used bike or two, I’d managed to buy a fancy new bicycle, a red Monarch with a headlight, horn and sprung front fork, which I rode everywhere and of which I was quite proud.

At about the same time, in 1946 or ’47, ads began to appear in Popular Mechanics and other magazines that turned me into one great quivering lump of WANT! Even though I loved my Monarch, I was crazy for speed and anything motorized and was sure that the one and only thing necessary to make my bike perfect was a Whizzer engine to lessen the wear and tear on my legs while pedaling around the hills of western Pennsylvania.

One ad from 1946 told me: “Here’s new, personal transportation for everyone. The new Whizzer bike motor, a compact, dependable unit that’s packed with power and pep, makes any balloon-tired bike a motor bike!”

The ad featured an illustration of a pretty young lady in shorts enjoying a ride on a Schwinn bike equipped with a Whizzer, over the caption: “Ride one and you’ll buy one.” The ad went on to list the advantages of the Whizzer: “(It) will take you where the fish are waiting. A woods trail is as good as a highway for this sturdy 2-1/2 hp motor. The economical, comfortable way to ride to work. 125 or more miles per gallon of gas. And no parking problems to worry about.” And finally, the argument I was sure would sway my father: “Grand transportation for the farm family (of course that meant me). Downright practical for trips to town, to farm fields, and from farm home to school.”

A later ad assured me, “… get a Whizzer Bike Motor and travel for pennies! America’s finest bike motor takes you 125 miles on a gallon of gas, at speeds up to 35 miles per hour. Whizzer users say it’s the most fun on wheels … and the best way to keep the budget in line!”

Read the full story, from Farm Collector.

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