: As sales plummeted during the Depression, the episode shows Edsel Ford offering a joint venture to manufacture "Servi-Car" tricycles under the Ford brand. In the show, Harley-Davidson declines, choosing to sell the Servi-Car themselves and expand into Japan with the Sankyo Seiyaku Corporation. 4. Technical Craftsmanship
While the episode highlights several historical milestones, it also blends drama with fiction. Here are the key "features" and interesting facts from the finale: 1. The Legendary "Knucklehead" Engine
: The episode portrays "hooligan" or outlaw racing as being open to black and female riders in the 1930s with Harley-Davidson's support. While inclusive, critics from Cycle News describe these scenes as mostly fictionalized drama. Harley and the Davidsons - Season 1Eps3
Reviewers and historians have noted that Episode 3 takes significant liberties with historical facts for dramatic effect:
The most interesting feature of of the Harley and the Davidsons miniseries is its depiction of the "Knucklehead" engine's birth and its role in saving the company during the Great Depression . : As sales plummeted during the Depression, the
: In an interesting historical "goof" noted by IMDb , the company didn't actually call it the "Knucklehead" at the time. They simply called it the "OHV" (Overhead Valve) ; the iconic nickname only became popular in the postwar chopper culture.
The episode focuses on the development of the , famously known as the Knucklehead. While inclusive, critics from Cycle News describe these
: Because the original 1903 prototype no longer exists and has no known photographs, the production team had to "cobble it together" based only on oral histories and stories. According to Hemmings , bike builders worked until 3:00 AM most nights to maintain the fragile, period-accurate replicas used during the high-stress racing scenes. Harley and the Davidsons: Miniseries, Episode 3