Monday, 30 June 2014

 
Always a good idea to try positioning new bare flywheels with a length of wooden broom handle in place of mainshaft to check all is approximately as calculated. Not least the available distance between them for the conrod !

 
A crack in the originals can be clearly seen close up running towards the mainshaft from the oil feed outlet on the inner wall . Probably would not get much worse if only subjected to light road use but sprinting is too much of a risk.

 
Norton simply used cast iron for their road going OHV singles so it is to be expected that after a half century of use this might be weak spot to reveal itself.

 
Found a use for old CD or DVD discs. Download a timing disc from the internet and glue it on. Although in theory the bigger the diameter the more accurate the reading I find that it is more easy to mark zero for TDC without making up a bit of stiff wire and finding a place to attach it.

Thursday, 12 June 2014



 
The original Norton piston looks more to do with the steam age than modern items. I have invested in a Wiseco forged piston which looks a more serious a component. It was designed for a Triumph and the difference is obvious being the pin size and the compression height; being the distance from the top face and the centre of the pin. I can handle these issues however with a new bush and a longer conrod. The valve pockets are however a little high and  must deal with this .
 
 

 
The beauty of a modern high performance piston is beguiling.
 The standard of machining is space age. 
A work of art.

Saturday, 7 June 2014

 
The tappet follower which was designed (right) after the Norton factory decided to move away from having a lever type tappet was good for several years from the post-war era until they had a minor re-design for the alternator models. It is not difficult to see why the design had a much more substantial thickness as any attempt to remove the thinner item would break the casting....as the factory must have discovered themselves.

 
When Pierre Vernier invented the vernier scale he must have known he was onto a good thing. As I belong to the generation of people who used slide-rules before calculators came along the idea is very familiar. However just as slide rules were referred to a 'guessing sticks' so vernier callipers were called " very- near" callipers. The big change was when they became digital and I now use it constantly.

Wednesday, 7 May 2014

 
Hired a VW transporter van for the trip to York raceway. As I drive a VW car the controls were intuitive . I would have liked a cruise control however !
 
 
The Norton fitted perfectly and VW have ideally placed securing points for the web fastenings.
 
 
 
My estimate for the loading height proved spot on and the ramp I made up worked a treat- simply a length of steel channel with two lengths of mild steel angle  bolted at an angle to provide the transfer from slope to horizontal. The angle of the slope made for an easy loading by myself.
 
York raceway is fairly easy to find and is on the old wartime RAF Melbourne runway.
 
 
 
Plenty of room to park up but I was a little later than some having probably travelled much further than the average competitor. Sadly a bad misfire proved incurable after a few attempts to sort so headed back up the M1 homewards to take the ignition apart and find the fault which seemed to arrive when the engine was hot. 
 
 
 
Yorkshire was sunny and warm compared with the journey down which was wet and foggy.

 
The actual sprint strip is well laid out and well run with a good length of run off and a country ride along a perimeter road back to the pit area.

Tuesday, 11 March 2014

season starting

 
Got machine out of garage first time this year.

Seems ages since I sat on the old bike since it has been on the trailer.

 
Not happy with plate holding competition number plate; must modify it soon. 

Saturday, 8 March 2014


Had wonderful visit this morning to the Scottish Motorcycle Show in Edinburgh. Spent some time speaking with the " Yorkshire ferret" -AKA Shaun and Ben Waters- do visit the great website .

http://yorkshireferret.blogspot.co.uk/


Bob McIntyre in Joe Pott's workshop in Bellshill. The" Joe Pott's Garage" display at the show is a homage to this time- and is shown around the country apparently- is a must for enthusiasts of this period and the activities in Bellshill especially. It is a fantastic achievement to behold -what I had thought had disappeared- racing hardware faithfully re-engineered. A very fitting tribute to the " boys" who kept the British flag flying and I cannot even imagine anyone else doing it all so professionally .
Certainly worthy of a much wider audience. Congratulations to Shaun and Ben Waters.


The finished bike was on display by the quite remarkable chaps of the Yorkshire ferret team.

Their painstaking efforts and keenness for fine engineering, detailing and employing the highest standards are as much a reflection of their reverence to Bob McIntyre/Joe Potts  and their team as the bikes themselves.
 
 
A blueprint of a standard Manx Norton engine
 
 
The great man, Bob McIntyre  working on a Manx Norton .
 
 






Friday, 7 March 2014

http://members.chello.nl/~wgj.jansen/

Wonderful website on desmodromic valve gear. The 1957 design by Hopwood and Hele to try and keep Norton's competitive was an impressive effort by a British factory.I wonder why they did not work with Joe Potts on a joint effort.