Thought I'd better stop lurking and add my thoughts/ramblings to the debate:
What do people want out of the club and what does the club want to offer? Sounds like there is a some disconnect here ATM. Do they want to pay subs and get all the formal stuff, regular newsletters, AGMs, regular rallies, booked months/years in advance, or do they simply want to interact with our like minded individuals in a more relaxed way. Hop onto the forums as much/little as you like, attend the odd informal gathering of fellow members, etc.?
I think we're at a stage where there is clearly a spark of life in the club, but it has certainly dwindled from it's early beginnings. I think the club was so successful in the early years because of the dedication of a few key individuals, a formal committee to run it (treasurer, chairman, newsletter editor, events organiser, etc.) and the impetus and excitement that usually comes with starting something new. I'm not suggesting that people have become bored, but it's cleat that it takes a lot of time and dedication to run a club of other than a dozen or so mates meeting up from time to time.
I believe the club can only get to a size that the administration can handle. How large do want this club to be and how much administration isn't to get to this size? Perhaps we should bury the notion of having a formal "club" and instead think about it as more of a "community". (I'm sure there are probably a number of advantages having a club, liability ins urnace, maybe, but I'm not qualified to comment on this)
The way I see it is that the main thing that draws "members" (do we still have an official membership list?) together is the website.
You can ask questions on pretty much any topic, (single cylinder bike related or not) and get useful/thought provoking/humorous/ answers in turn, from the splendid community we have here today.
You can show off your pride and joy in the photographs section, you can ask a technical question or you can find out if fellow thumperers are meeting up anywhere. You can even tell some jokes and have a good rant!
You could do some of the above via a newsletter (Q&As might take a while though!), but for me the site is a much better medium for members to interact with one and other and to self author their own living newsletter.
I think it is time to let go of the newsletter and instead concentrate on the website. From what I can see the newsletter has for a long time now been a constant bone of contention with constant pressure on getting so many copies out a year, appeals to members for content, printing, posting, etc.
The paper newsletter had it's day, but I think that medium is now too outdated and it's time to move on. A sensible alternative was to also publish the newsletter online. A more environmentally friendly solution, this still carries the stresses of deadlines and getting enough contributors.
Far better to build up an online community of individuals with a like minded interest, who then generate their own dynamic content. It might be useful to create a few new forum sections (rally reports, bike reviews, camping/biking kit reviews, for example) that one might find in a newsletter, that members would more readily contribute to than submitting an article, by a deadline date for publication.
If we want to build up the membership, then push the online presence. Stickers/mugs/t-shirts with club's URL, for example. There is the benefit of members being able to purchase merchandise and showing pride in the club, as well as freely advertising the URL.
I agree with Smudge (I think) on having an annual rally, as this is a great excuse for us to put a date in the diary and to maybe return something to the club. This could also be used as a means of presenting the "public face" of the club and drumming up more awareness of the club, but I don't think this should be the primary reason.
Apologies for the above ramblings, but in summary I think what I'm trying to say is, I have met some great people through the Thumper Club and it would be a great shame for it to just fade into obscurity. It seems to be the membership is dwindling (I'll admit to being guilty of not putting in the dedication and "stepping up to the plate" as much as I would like to) and something needs to change.
I wonder if we can streamline the administration and perhaps re-invent the club in an Internet only guise (I suspect there a very few non-Internet members). Websites aren't free and it's clear that Steve H dedicates a lot of his spare time to the running of this site. If he is prepared to carry on providing the framework and for the community members to continue contributing the content, what more do we need? As for running costs, I'm sure a registration system, where registrants are asked to make a small donation via a clickable Paypal link would suffice, or indeed a nominal fee of say £5, again via Paypal, would also work.
Simon