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Sturmey Archer lever - and John Bull products

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-SG- Back in 1931 my good friend Jack Bindley went to the Isle of Man for the third time - I think on one of the special trips TT trips then available at a special price from 'Motor Cycling.' He was given a small booklet published by the Leicester Rubber Company - aka John Bull - containing the names of the riders and other useful TT information, plus of course details of John Bull's range of products at the time. Apart from tyres, one of the products we are all familiar with is the George Dance knee grip, fitted to virtually all Vintage machines with sporting pretensions. But one of their other accessories was a rubber boot to fit onto a Sturmey Archer gear change lever of the twenties type - or, for that matter, any gear lever with a knob of about the same size.  By sheer co-incidence I received the photo attached the other day - showing a new Sturmey lever complete with rubber boot which a friend of mine has just acquired. Hate to think what it cost! Anyway, this prompted me to unearth Jack's 1931 booklet and scans of it are also attached - click this link. Incidentally I know of just two other of these rubber boots to have survived - one in NZ and one in Northern Ireland and both on Nortons - but there are doubtless others out there somewhere, some more perished than others!

1926 Model 19 Norton

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Brian in the UK sent us these pics of his 1926 Model 19 Norton. Brian: "I thought you may be interested to see my Norton. The front forks are interesting, perhaps somebody upgraded Nortons in the late 20’s as several seem to have been converted. The fork fittings are all chrome plated, which would indicate a later date. The engine, gearbox, frame, magneto and petrol tank match the factory records. I have the original mudguards which are usable but would need work."


-SG- As regards to the forks, these would have been fitted later, as you correctly surmise. The patent application for the Druid Enclosed Spring design was made in 1926 and by the TT of 1927 a very few bikes were fitted with them for the event (not Nortons). Nortons did fit them as standard to the CJ and JE models later in the decade and there are a few machines listed in the records as having the larger size fitted from new and a very few with the braced variety which you have. This type was intended to appeal to side car users and perhaps your bike had one attached at some time. I suspect Druids paid a higher bonus to sporting users of their forks in the early thirties as both Pat Driscoll and Bill Lacey used them on their Brooklands mounts, in preference to Webbs.

Wheels wanted!

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-JdK- For one of my projects I'm looking for a set of late-1930s wheels or hubs as fitted to Model 18s or the WD16H. Please contact me at rapid.hare@hotmail.co.uk  if you have a spare front and/or rear wheel and are willing to sell; any condition! Further I could use a late 1930 Big Four cylinder head.

From 'The Motor Cycle' 1911 to 1915

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-SG- Peter Thomson - Thomson's Motor Museum, Palmerston North, NZ - has sent us lots of interesting photos and information over the past few years and this time he's copied various Norton-related pages/adverts from 'Motor Cycle' from 1911 to 1915. All gratefully received! Click this link for the PDF of all pages.

Moore CS1 Production Figures

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-SG- I had a message the other day from a CS1-owning friend in Northern Ireland, asking if I knew how many of these machines were made (I refuse to call them 'cricket-bat' models - a journalistic invention from the post-war era!). I checked this out some years back but had forgotten the quite large total involved of around 1135, from late 1927 to early 1930. There were of course a few works ones also produced earlier in '27 for the TT etc. which are not listed in the records, whereas the 1928 works machines are included.

Jimmy Shaw's 1921 works bike

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-SG- Most visitors to the site know of Jimmy Shaw, the Belfast dealer who, for most of the twenties, was a member of the Norton works team. His best TT placing was 4th in 1927 but his efforts in the Ulster were I think, considerably better. To my mind, probably the most interesting Norton at the recent VMCC Banbury Run was actually Jimmy's 1921 mount, on which he unfortunately retired.


The present owner checked out the frame and engine numbers with the DVLA and naturally was very pleased to find they were correct for the Norton with reg. no. OH7083.  Attached are a couple of early photos  as well as some kindly taken by Alan at Banbury. Incidentally the forks still have lugs for the cycle type stirrup front brake but a 'powerful' internal expanding unit was used for competition.

When is a Norton not a Norton ...

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-SG- ...when it's a Scott! In the late fifties and early sixties, and before the VMCC in UK was organizing its own race meetings, we had to rely on the goodwill of other organizing clubs to include a Vintage class in their race programs. None the less, the VMCC had a set of rules by which would-be racers had to abide, which basically forbade use of any post 1930 (visible) parts. Those who appeared with later bits and pieces fitted were allowed to ride but were warned that if they finished well up, they would be excluded from the results! Strangely, in some ways, it was permissable to use dual braking on the front wheel.


Bob Collett, who started racing in the late fifties on a Model 18 with rather dubious handling, hit on the idea of installing a Vintage Norton engine in a 1929 Scott frame, and having checked with the VMCC hierarchy that it would be allowed, the plan went ahead. His Scott - Norton appeared on the scene in 1962 and was a great success in Bob's capable hands, and later, those of Steve Lindsdell.


Bob still owns the bike and he/it appeared at the recent Cadwell Park meeting - looking, and sounding, just as I remember it. I have been promised a sheaf of photos of the bike but for the time being those attached will have to suffice. The engine incidentally is a mid 1930 ES2 unit while the period LS gearbox has a neat positive stop footchage mounted on the back of the casting - no room to put it anywhere else. During its racing years it was run on methanol but is now set up for petrol with a type 29 Amal.

Valve springs

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-SG- Valve springs during the twenties were not wildly reliable and Nortons included in their tool kits for OHV machines a cunning device to enable a valve spring to be changed without removing the cylinder head. Basically this used the twin plug holes in the heads of the time, into one of which a cranked and adjustable bar was inserted, to hold the valve concerned in place, while in the other a spring compressor was mounted whereby the spring could be compressed and removed/replaced.

Where have they all gone to? Have come across two over the years but that's all. Here's a photo of one in use, and another showing the various components making up this tool kit item. This one is SOLD for sale, however, and anyone interested can let us know and we will pass the message on. The seller - incidentally -  also has some new conical pushrod return springs available, as used from '26 to '29 inclusive.

When is a Norton not a Norton ...

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-SG- (Sorry, chaps, here's another) ... when it's a Cotton! In the recent posting about Bob Collett's Scott Norton, I mentioned the recent Race Meeting at Cadwell Park - held to celebrate fifty years since the first VMCC race meeting there, and, of perhaps equal importance, seventy years since the VMCC was founded. As one of the 1966 participants I was invited to the event (still have the bike but regret not up and running) and it was good to see some of the old hands  -  and their bikes - again.

And one of these was Jack Squirrell, another original rider, now resident in Switzerland, who came over to UK especially for the event. He brought with him the Cotton Norton he used in Vintage events with considerable success up to 1968. The photos attached give a reasonable impression of the bike as it is now - the forks are Druid incidentally and the front hub Velocette. The bike was originally put together in about 1934 by Wally Howes, a keen clubman who wanted something which handled better than his 1927 Model 18 ... but it's easier to read Jack's notes than for me to re-hash them, so they are attached too (below).

But there's a real co-incidence regarding the engine now fitted to the Cotton ... back in the early sixties, I bought a Vintage Norton job lot from the late Joe Diver which included his flat tank racer and sundry spares. In amongst them was a saddle tank Norton frame number 41997, which was damaged - a crack where the top tubes meet the saddle lug.  Eventually (in the mid nineties), I had this repaired by Eric Cheyney, the chap who built special scramblers etc. but meanwhile I asked the Science Museum what they could tell me about the bike with this frame number. The Museum held the Norton despatch records at the time and they replied to the effect that they could not find it in the records. A few years back, I passed on this frame and a few other surplus to needs parts to a friend up in Shropshire and shortly after doing so, I came across the frame number in the despatch records of which by then I had copies. No wonder the Science Museum could not find it - it was entirely out of any sort of sequence and related to a 1929 Model 18 which was not despatched until mid 1930. And the co-incidence?  The engine originally fitted to 41997 is the engine now installed in the Cotton, although Jack did warn me that the unit in the bike when he got it from Wally Howes was replaced with the present ex 41997 engine when he re-furbished the bike some years ago.

It seems that the Wally Howes engine (33846) was in for some bottom end remedial work with the Vintage Norton specialist Stan Johnson and when Stan died, this engine - and a few other items belonging to others - was inadvertantly sold by the family who disposed of all of Stan's bikes and parts as one extremely large lot. So where it is now is anyone's guess but if anyone can throw any light on its whereabouts, please let us know!


-Jack Squirrell's notes- The 1927 Model 18 Norton that had I bought in 1958 was serving me well as an all round bike to participate in Vintage Motorcycle events of all kinds; I would ride in everything that was possible, make an entry and try and do my best, be it trials, grass track, hill climbs and especially my favourite, road racing!

Although road racing was a lot of fun, the Model 18 left something to desired in the handling department. In other words, it could be a real handful and speed wobbles and back wheel slides came on much too often and without a lot of warning!

What to do about it? The answer was to change bikes of course! I had no complaints about the Norton 490cc engine, it was a real gem and being a long stroke had plenty of low down grunt. The solution presented itself one day in early 1960, when talking to the manager of the experimental engine design office at The de Havillands Engine Company in Edgware, where I had just finished an engineering apprenticeship.

The manager was Wally Howes and he had been a motorbike racer himself in the ten or twelve years leading up to the Second World War. Wally had owned and raced a Model 18 Norton in the early thirties and had been a regular rider at Brands Hatch, when it was one of the top grass tracks in Southern England. Brands was one of the tracks where the Surtees family made their name in racing and John Surtees would watch his father ride in the sidecar events.

It was in 1933 when Wally decided to give himself more chances of good results and bought a Cotton motorcycle frame and forks from Claude Rye, a West London motorcycle dealer based in the Fulham Road, Hammersmith. The Cotton had earned the reputation of having excellent handling and steering, just what all bikers crave for!

It didn't take Wally long to fit his Model 18 490cc Norton engine into the Cotton frame including a slightly modified Sturmey Archer three speed gearbox also coming from the dismantled Norton. He fitted a front wheel from a KTT 350cc Velocette and the Royal Enfield rear wheel that was the standard Norton fitment.

The year was 1934 and the Cotton-Norton was ready to roll. What Wally had achieved was a foretaste of the so called "Cafe Racer" by fitting a good engine into a superb handling frame. The subsequent Cafe Racers appeared in the 50's and 60's with amateurs and professionals fitting Triumph engines into Norton "Featherbed" frames, with many variations being produced based on the same theme.

Wally informed me that he had raced the Cotton at the famous Brooklands Race Circuit at least half a dozen times during the 1934 racing season. He claimed to have been awarded the coveted Gold Star for achieving a lap of the outer circuit at an average speed of 100 miles an hour or more! The speed of his fastest lap was 103.5 mph. Wally said he remembered dicing with a Mr. Loveday, who was mounted on a very quick Lawrence Hartley tuned "Ariel", who also passed the 100 mph mark. ( I have not been able to substantiate Wally's claims of the "Gold Star" award ). The Norton engine had been tuned to run on alcohol based RD 1 fuel with an 11.4 to 1 compression ratio and was fitted with factory race cams. The carburettor used was one of the early Amal TT units ( 10TT 27 ) with a brass body of 1.187" diameter choke and twin float chambers ( this was later changed to a more standard carb ). The piston was a special made to Wally's own design by Wellworthy's, a first class piston manufacturer.

By the end of 1934 Wally had his sights set on entering the 1935 Isle of Man TT races. He purchased an extra large fuel tank of 5 gallons capacity, (the largest I've seen on a Cotton) designed to reduce the number of stops for refuelling during the long and arduous races. Unfortunately, due to strapped finances, Wally had to cancel his trip to "The Island", so was never able to satisfy his Ambition of racing in the TT.

The preparation of the Cotton didn't go to waste as Wally returned to his first love of grass track racing at Brands Hatch and some of the other circuits in the South of England. His career as grass tracker continued until the outbreak of the Second World War in September 1939, when the Cotton was mothballed until Peace returned in 1945. The Cotton was aired a few more times in 1946, when it was then retired from racing until 1951 to be registered for use on the road as personal transport for a couple of years before ending up under a tarpaulin in Wally's back yard. By 1960 the Cotton was in a pretty sorry state of repair, life in the back yard had taken its toll and there was more rust than paint. But I was more than happy to pay Wally £15 for the bike as I was very well aware of its potential as a Vintage Racer!

By the following spring I had stripped and refurbished the Cotton into Road racing trim, although I was prepared to use it for almost any sort of competitive activity on two wheels.

Thus began six years of great fun riding the Cotton- Norton, when ever time and funds would allow.

An early outing on the Cotton was at Brands Hatch on 1st April 1962, which was on the "Club Circuit" as this was before the longer GP circuit had been constructed. Here, below I am writing how things went for me, lifted almost word by word as I wrote it at the time in my racing diary a couple of days after the race.

Practice was uneventful, although the motor didn't pick up on the throttle as quickly as expected, so I decided that the 300 main jet in the Amal Racing Carburettor was too big at 300 and replaced it with a 260.

Scratch Race! As usual for me I made a poor start and the leaders were at Druids by the time I got the engine to fire into life. The bike went very well and I managed to overhaul several riders and was not lapped by the leaders of the race. The handling of the Cotton was excellent, which was proved by the amount of leather ground off the sole on the outside of my right boot. I came in at about 10th place!

Handicap Race! Left the 260 main jet in place as the engine had run smoothly with good pick up out of the bends.

On the starting line! We were graded by the results of the scratch race and I was on the third row with two rows of eight riders in each in front of me. The first two rows setting off at intervals before the third row got our signal to shove off and bump start our bikes. The engine barked into life, it was a good start. There were only three of us in the third row, six in the forth row and the three fastest riders in the back row. They were Chris Williams on Clive Waye's Scott 600, Roger Cramp on his Velocette and John Wilkinson on Stan Johnson's 588 Norton. I went quite well, overtaking many riders, only being passed by Williams on the forth lap at Kidney Bend and by Wilkinson on the fifth and final lap also at Kidney. I followed Wilkinson round Clearways Bend still losing ground but made up some of the loss on the finishing straight and ending the race about a yard behind him as we crossed the line.

The first four were as follows:

1st. Chris Williams. Scott
2nd Fowler. Norton.
3rd John Wilkinson. Norton
4th Jack Squirrell. Cotton.

This meant, that in the race I had passed all but one rider starting in front of me and had been overtaken by two of the best riders in the last row.

Post Race observations:
  1. Jets; 260 best, although carburettor needs tuning properly.
  2. 1st gear jumped out at times, all gears got a bit lumpy towards end of meeting but foot change successful.
  3. Brakes, seemed fairly adequate.
  4. Steering; Marvellous if power kept on but wobbled if shut off when heeled over.
  5. Engine seemed off tune a bit at end of meeting? Points should be checked etc.
  6. Oil was coming from magneto chain cover, engine breather and perhaps cylinder head joint.
Engine sprocket : 22 teeth.
Rear wheel sprocket: 45 teeth.

Several other meetings were entered in 1962 and in later years with a best finish in rainy conditions being at Snetterton finishing in second place to Roger Cramp.

The south London circuit of Crystal Palace was always a challenging place to race with hardly any run off and even then you would hit a concrete wall or a vertical line of railway sleepers! Whilst the 1962 event was not a big success for me at the time I was later awarded the "Vintage Trophy" for the oldest finishing motorcycle! The award ceremony took place at the Autumn dinner and dance of the ACU, Unfortunately I couldn't afford to go to the function but was sent the trophy by Maggie Smith the then secretary of the ACU.

There are many other entries and race reports in my diary, which I'll transcribe at a later date! The Cotton-Norton was raced regularly at the the following tracks:- Brands Hatch, Crystal Palace, Snetterton and Cadwell Park, with grass hill climbs and sprints thrown in for added excitement.

Mervyn Stratford gave the Cotton-Norton a few airings at the end of the 70's and into the early 80's with some good results until its final retirement in 1982. The Cotton was then semi-stripped down to donate a few components to "Black Beauty" a replica of the famous "Village Fire Engine" Cotton-Blackburne built and developed by Frances Williams during the 1930's as Brooklands racer and World Record breaking sprinter.

About seven years ago a close friend and fellow motorcycle junkie was looking at some of my old vintage racing pics and was very impressed with the shots of me peeling off into Druids at Brands Hatch. This led to his enquiring about what had happened to the Flat Tank Model 18 Norton and for that matter the Cotton-Norton Special?

It was painful to report that the Norton had been lent to a fellow Vintage Racer, who some five or six years later got into financial straits and sold it for £15! I never saw any of the cash or the bike again.

Regrettably the partly dismantled Cotton-Norton was left to moulder in the corner of my garage. However my friend and fellow bike junkie (Mike Tye) suggested that I return the Cotton to its former racing glory as he would be interested in purchasing it to display in Sammy Miller's Museum. The bike was fully refurbished in 2009/2010 to be purchased by Mike Tye soon after completion. (with the former donated parts being recovered in the process).

-Jack Squirrell, Oberaegeri, Switzerland. 13th March 2013.-

1907 (?) Norton

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-SG- In December last year we carried a posting of a possibly rather dubious and claimed 1907 machine for sale in South America. This bike was puchased by Sammy Miller and is in the process of re-creation. Initially I heard that he was rather dis-satisfied with his acquisition but, none the less, work is proceeding on the bike as recent photos from the hallowed sanctum of his workshop at New Milton show (courtesy of Alan). I notice that, laying on the bench under the bike, is a copy of the well known 1907 photo of Rem Fowler and his bike, taken in the IOM, but hopefully, we are not going to finish up with another Fowler replica to add to the one in the NMM!

Cam followers and scrap yards ...

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-SG- Back in the sixties a useful source of Vintage bits and pieces in the UK were the local scrap yards. I bought a 1927 588 engine from a yard in Hounslow for the massive sum of £2 and a Model 18 of slightly later vintage from Fosters, in Chertsey, for even less - I think £1.50.  So what, I can hear you saying!  Well, the 588 was nothing special having started life in a Model 19 delivered to Pikes, in the West Country and the Model 18 also showed no signs of being anything special externally but ... within, I found one racing exhaust cam in good order and two rather special cam followers, which had been lightened and of which the foot profile had been made considerably flatter than the original. It would be nice to think these parts had spent some time at Brooklands - about five miles away - but that is just an over-active imagination!  I used the cam followers and cam  (with another racing inlet cam I had acquired) for some years in my somewhat feeble efforts at Vintage racing but I can't truthfully remember what difference the followers made. Photos of the cam followers and a typical 1929 version are attached.

Bennett - 1924 TT

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-SG- The 1924 Senior TT was won by Alec Bennett on a racing version of the Model 18 and various images exist of him on the bike - mostly after the end of the race.  Here's one taken during the re-fuelling stop which shows that none other than Walter Moore was acting as pit attendant. Although the photo is a bit fuzzy, one can clearly make out the large oil tank with supplementary chain oil tank on the front - and the 8" rear brake, which, at this stage, was apparently a drum from a Model T  Ford grafted onto the Enfield hub. Fifty years back I had one of these drums complete with mounting studs but did not realise what it was ...

c1929 Model 18 Norton

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-JdK- Mark sent this photo of his dad on a Norton which seems to be a c1929 Model 18. Here's Mark's story: "This photo was taken at the garage which my father Rex Allinson founded after the war at his family home in Newbiggin near Stainton Cumberland. After surviving the last year of WW2 as a flight engineer on a Lancaster, he sadly died from cancer in 1966 at only 40 years young. I don't remember this bike but do recall a Manx Norton he had in the cellar. He started it up for me one Sunday (maybe 1961), my mum went crazy, and I think it was sold not long after that ..."

VMCC Founder's day 2016

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-SG- This event took place last month and there was a sprinkling of pre-war Nortons for sale on various stands. One I did not photograph - which I thought reasonable value compared to the others - was a ca.1937 16H.  It may be a WD machine (it certainly had a WD engine and forks) but if so, is now in very tidy civilian guise at £5000. As to the others ... Stephen Griffith (Racing and Investment Motorcycles) had a Moore CS1 on his stand. He assures me it is in good mechanical order and has lots of documentation with it - but from the information provided it is not a matching numbers machine: indeed the frame seems to have started life as part of a '28 ES2 while the present engine shows up in the records as being mid '28 and part of a bike exported down under. Be that as it may, in my biassed view, the restorer has wasted money on such things as plating the brake back-plates, fitting wrong tool boxes and has seemingly used chrome plate throughout. He has not bothered to source correct control levers, the correct steering damper knob, or the correct carburettor. So these down points - plus the numbers problem if that is a matter of concern - make it jolly expensive at £29500 and I would have thought the 'low twenties' would have been nearer the mark.


Then there were a couple of '20s Nortons on the Classic Motorcycles Ltd stand.  One of them on display - incorrectly dated as 1928 - is basically a late twenties Model 18 bitza - '29 frame and cylinder head, '27 bottom half, pre '29 gearbox and gearchange, later Amal carb., 1931 steering damper knob etc etc. Would doubtless make a useful bike to use on a regular basis but, again, overpriced in my view at around £20k.

Harold Daniell

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-SG- Harold Daniell needs little introduction to pre-war Norton enthusiasts. He started in the MGP on his privately owned CS1 in the early thirties (he won the 1933 Senior MGP) and then had a spell riding works AJS machines in 1934 - 1936, with only moderate results. His fortunes changed in 1937 when he rode Steve Lancefield's Nortons in both the 350 and 500 TTs, finishing fifth in both. For 1938 he had a works ride and became a legend with his 91mph lap in the Senior, which he won at a race record of 89.11 mph. The two first two photos above, showing his 1938 Senior works machine, come from a Castrol publication of 1967, while the third - rather fuzzy - shot below shows him on his Junior mount on which he finished fifth.


Speaking nearly thirty years later, Harold was not that complimentary about the 1938 works machines, saying that they were very heavy and the undamped telescopic forks did little to aid the 'unapproachable' image. While it may be a touch embroidered, I was told by H H Beach back in the early sixties (the Norton agent in Great Portland Street, London who was much involved in Norton's track activities in the early twenties)  that he obtained a set of BMW telescopic forks at Norton's request in 1937, on the basis of which Norton's own telescopics were produced ...

Unknown spanner

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-SG- Arne has sent us photos of the C spanner he has which is marked up 'Norton Rockerbox'.  In addition it bears the trade mark we have discussed on the web site before.  He suggests that it may be intended for use on the Moore CS1 cam boxes - which seems quite possible to me, although I no longer have one of them to do some checking.  Any other suggestions will be welcome, of course.

Engine sprockets ...

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-SG- Those with a passing interest in the works racing machines of the later thirties may have noticed the hub affair on the engine mainshaft carrying the sprocket. (see recent posting showing Daniell on the 1938 Works Senior bike).

It was news to me that this is actually incorporates a rubber shock absorber and further, that it was found to be so effective the factory continued using it until after the war. Thanks to Ken McIntosh (McIntosh Racing, New Zealand) for the photos attached, showing the internals!  The rubbers are spherical and the hub will apparently fit both Inter and later (to '54) Manx mainshafts.

Model 18 - 16H rear carrier

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-SG- The NOC has had a few rear carriers made for '24/25 Model 18s/16Hs, copying an original. The tubing is of the correct gauge and a carrier is shown fitted in one of the pictures attached. The carriers are available via The NOC shop on the Norton Owners Club website. There are just four left of the recent batch made and I am told the basic cost is £85 apiece. There are no plans to commission any more at present but if they sell as a consequence of going on the site, it may provide justification for the NOC to underwrite the production of some other rare/hard to find parts.

You could off course also make one yourself using these drawings.

Early numbers

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-SG- The existing Norton despatch books begin in 1922 with engine number 4200. The frame number relating to this engine was 4297S and the bike (a 16H) was despatched in November. Due to Norton's rather strange  numbering system, the next entry - 4201 - had frame number 7050S, and the one after that, 4210, had frame 6820S. At this distance in time, logical it's not!

There has been considerable debate over the years as to engine and frame numbers used prior to 4200 and Mike has taken a particular interest in the earlier bikes for a very long time. He has collated date/number information along the way. This is now incorporated in a the chart above - for which thanks are due.  He stresses that it is no more than a rough guide and any information to make it more accurate will be much appreciated.

To be complete the 1923 to 1939 numbers are provided below.


Useful spares

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-SG- Rod in Australia has had some new drive side mainshafts made for his mid twenties 16H: he has four spare which he is willing to sell if anyone is interested. In my experience (let me stress I have only changed a very few in the last fifty years) this component remained the same on all SV and OHV engines (exc. CS1/ES2/350s) from around 1924 to 1929 but don't take my word for it.  Check with Rod re dimensions.

He has also had some primary chain guards made for the same period - again there are four surplus to needs which are available. Contact us for Rod's email address.
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