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Chat 26


Tony Harris writes about his latest project where he transforms his Norton ES2 into a 4-valve special. Eddy


ES2 Development

First some background stuff.  Please don’t nod off folks.����

I started this project in the early 90’s. This was a time when I was racing in various classes including modern unlimited production class, CRMCC and Vintage racing, now call British Historic Racing.

I have raced in many classes with the Vintage club including 250, 350, Pre-War, Vintage Pre 1930, Post-War Unlimited and Sidecar since the very early 70’s.

I hadn’t actually ridden in the 500 class, although I had been racing for over 20 years with the club with a reasonable success rate.  It would have been nice to have a Manx Norton but spreading myself thin over many classes and bikes (not all of them mine) made finances somewhat strained.  There were only a handful of proper cammy Nortons at that time in the club unlike now.

The other thing was build a Triumph twin, but the 50’s Triumph frames would be a disadvantage in the class so a Norton it was.  I always admired the speed the Wright brothers, Colin Dally and Shane Lockley and others got out of the pushrod ES2 and as I like singles and already raced 650 and 750 Norton F/beds, a Norton it was.

Bits were still relatively inexpensive, and I picked up an ex race motor and other ES2 bits fairly quickly. The motor had steel flywheels a MUST if you want to increase power.

I put a motor together and it went quite well but not fast enough to worry any front runners though.  My next job was to make the horrible combustion chamber more efficient.  The ES2 exhaust valve is way too big so most of the charge was lost down the hole. A Model 50, 350 head is a good way to perk a road going 500 up but I wanted a bit more than that.

I bolted a head onto a face plate on my lathe and bored the combustion chamber out until I almost had a stack of fins.  Next, I machined a billet of HE30 T6 alloy and pushed this in with a slight interference fit then welded it in place.  I then made a much shallower combustion chamber.  I machined the inlet and exhaust ports, both at a much steeper angle than Norton made them and fitted Jaguar valve seats and valve.

After some welding I used Goldie modified rockers with eccentric spindles.  This did away with the heavy tappet adjusters and the geometry was about right.

 

I cut the inlet tract off and bored an offset hole at a much steeper angle almost down to the valve head. This was welded in too.  I made the drains from both rockers external and fed these onto the cams. The original ones go through the barrels and usually leak anyway.  I had to alter the rocker box because the rocker pivots were in the wrong place and the ends of the rockers over-shot the valve tops by quite a margin.

I did some dyno testing with the motor.  I made the inlet port adjustable sleeves so I could test with 1½”, 1⅜ and 15/16” bores. (See picture above.)  I also had different carbs set up and the changeover was very quick.  I also made a couple of different exhausts to try.  After some swapping and changing I settled on 15/16” bore. This gave the most usable power and torque.  I think it was almost 40 BHP, about 10 down on a good Manx but a lot more than a std ES2 and up with the Goldies.  I think if I had experimented with better cams and set up I could have got a little more but it was just a play thing for another ride.

In this configuration I raced the bike and it was a lot quicker and would get in the top 4.  It needed more development work. I made my own cams running on roller followers.  All the ingredients were there I feel, and it gave me a reasonably competitive extra ride in the 500 class.

The bore and stroke were altered from 79 x 100 to 86 x 86 and it all went back together.  The piston in the 2-valve race engine was a very much modified B.S.A. + 0.040 Goldstar item.  The compression ratio worked out at about 11:1. 

I had learned quite a lot with this motor, and it started and ran very reliably.  I decided to try and make a bigger jump in performance and see if I could improve engine breathing and power.  The VMCC also had rules which had to be abided by, anything I did had to look as much like a Norton engine as possible.

With this in mind I decided to alter another head.  I had to see if I could make it 4 valves.

barrel and head combustion chamber head and rocker
Left: Standard 2-valve Model 50 head + ES2 87 mm alloy barrel for 2nd road engine. Right: Head and rocker trial assembly with Model 50 head


2018 road bottom end


 

The 4 Valve head.

First, I made another bottom end with steel fly wheels, Weslake con rod, strengthened cases and altered stud centres.

crank       timing vase roller followers
Crank on left and timing case with roller followers

4-valve bottom end
4-valve bottom end showing modified Suzuki 4-valve piston

I did the same with this second head as I did with the first, boring the combustion chamber out on my lathe and inserted and welded a block of alloy in its place.

I looked at quite a lot of engines with 4 valve layouts and decided on a Weslake\Godden type speedway design.  I used Godden valves, springs and valve seats and a straight downdraft induction tract.

This took quite a bit of working out to make sure the holes came out in the right place. I also had to make all the rockers and rockerbox, as you do.

4-valve inlet port
4-valve inlet ports

One of the problems I encountered was that the valves were at a steep angle and at the time I couldn’t see how best to open them.  If the cams were on the same shaft like a Velo or unit BSA motors it would have been easier, but the ES2 cams are on different shafts and wide apart.  The pushrods came into the head level with the tops of the valves.

What I decided was to use the exhaust cam to control the inlet valves and the inlet cam for the exhaust valves. To do this the rocker arms had to cross. In hindsight I now would have done this differently.  It’s always clever to be wise in hindsight.

After I’d made all this, I never actually fitted the head and ran this motor.  I retired from racing and got involved with other things.  The motor sat under my bench for another 26 years until 2018 when I decided to put the bottom end of the motor back in my old race frame which at this time housed a 650 Triumph motor.  I built this up using a standard M50 head and used it through 2018/19.

back in road trim left     back in road trim right
Back in road trim for for 2018/19 with a standard 350 head fitted

Due to the lockdown I decided to dig all the 4 valve head bits out and see if I could make it work. Of course, some parts had been lost and I had to re manufacture them.

4-valve and 2-valve side  by side for comparisson
The 4-valve and 2-valve heads side by side for comparison

As said, I did a couple of summers with the 350 std M50 head on before taking it off and fitting the 4-valve one while in Covid 19 lockdown.  It all went together quite well.  A new head steady was made along with altering an exhaust to fit.  The exhaust port I modified to fit a bolt on flange as most modern bikes have so no more dodgy threads to come undone.

4 valve heas top left   4 valve left side
Checking valve timing

The cams had to be changed for others I had made to go with the head and a few oil drains were altered.

right side view

The carb I wanted to use was a 15/16” GP.  This, along with about 50 others I made some years ago, most 1 ½”.  Unfortunately, I had sold the one off, 15/16” unit sometime in the past quarter century and the only one I had left was a 1 ½” bore.  I made a tapered sleeve to fit the inlet tract that went from 1 ½” to just under 13/8” just before the inlets split to go down to the inlet valves.  I found a small SU remote float chamber and set this up to the carb.  I have one of my own ignitions on from when I made the BT-H electronic units.  These are self-generating with built in adv/retard. This was set to about 28º BTDC as a starting point. There’s no books to look in and I have to start somewhere.

top view
4-valve head top view

4-valve head with rockers fitted
4-valve head with rockers fitted

The only fuel I had was about 10-month-old rubbish from the supermarket in a jerry can in the shed so that went into my dummy tank.  I figured its only just over 9:1 cr and with the modern combustion chamber should burn it OK.

My old 650SS would never run on fuel more than about 8 weeks old.  I flooded the carb the best I could as there was no tickler and gave it a kick, nothing.  So, I gave it a push down the drive and still nothing.  I then put some carpet tape over most of the inlet bell-mouth and pushed again and it started instantly.  When warmed up it ran OK but had a tick over of about 2500rpm. Considering the carb slide was bottoming out and GP’s have no way of holding the slide up I assumed I had an air leak.

Eventually I discovered the throttle cable I made, which screws into the top of the slide on the GP was protruding to far through and hitting the top of the throttle housing, holding the carb up slightly. A quick file on the solder and all was well.

However, a quick ride up the road revealed fuel starvation when opened up.  I did think this might happen with the small SU float chamber.  To overcome this I made a TT type remote float chamber from bits of material I had in the workshop.  When fitted, this worked very well and the bike revved out through the range, but there’s always a but.  I now felt the carb was over size so I think something about 34mm would be better.  It could also be the silencer holding it back higher up the rev range or ignition timing.

At least it does start very easily, even with a 38mm GP carb on.  Next I tried an old 13/16” Monobloc and this gave me a tickover.  The motor then had problems revving past about 4500rpm.

Back on the ramp I thought I would pop the top of the rocker box off to see how things were going.  I found there was about 1/16” play in the inlet tappet and about .040” in the exhaust.  Everything else looked good.  There was plenty of oil about and everything nice and free.  The tappet clearance I suspect is self-inflicted because when I made the pushrods I was not 100% sure I had them fully inserted into the ends and running the engine a few miles had seated them down.

I adjusted both inlet and exhaust tappet and changed the silencer for something a bit less noisy. I’m not 18 anymore (Really? Eddy) and it just attracts attention to me and gets motorcyclist a bad name.

I also fitted a 32mm Concentric carb (1¼”) and went for another test ride.  This breaks all my own rules of only altering one thing at a time.  The bike now felt much better.  The acceleration is very good, far better than an average ES2. The 4-valve head gets a lot better filling at the initial smaller valve lifts and it shows  through the bottom end of the rev range.  The top end, may be no better than a reasonably tuned two valve motor but the way it accelerates makes it very frisky.

I am sure with different cams and exhaust system there is a lot more power to extract from the motor. The bottom end is very strong.

Now that it no longer has to conform to a race series rules I have no restrictions on external appearance so it wouldn’t take too much work to take the exhaust cam out and extend the shaft through the timing cover and fit a toothed belt to drive a overhead cam or two.  This would eliminate the pushrods.  Ducati have been using such a motor for years. No expensive vertical shafts and oil flying everywhere.  Just a rubber band. Hummm.

Tony Harris. 2020.

Tony came to see me on his first ride with the 4-valve ES2.  A short video clip below.  Eddy.

 

 


A handy, easy to make tool idea from John Goodall to get that awkward to get at nut started.  It could save a lot of swearing.  Eddy

My latest offering is a simple tool I devised for a very awkward magneto securing nut which needs holding in a confined position where only a finger can reach. A lot of Velocettes exhibit this problem, maybe others as well? I choose a cap head screw (but a cheese head screw would be better) and with a flat strip having a tapped hole to suit and the screw pared down to minimum overall height so that when the nut is attached you can still get the tool out, very important?? In use the tool holds the nut in position while you turn it with a finger to get the nut started, once started it is plain sailing. Regards, John

nut starter tool nut starter tool nut starter tool


Racing Remembered

Racing a motorcycle can be trying at times with hours spent building and developing a bike and also race prepping the bike before each meeting.  Sometimes there are long hours doing repairs or even longer hours rebuilding after a major blow up!  Once the work is finished you hope you are all set and ready to go to the race meeting.  You may think you are finished and ready but sometimes the biggest challenge is actually getting to the meeting!  How do we get ourselves and the bike or bikes to the meeting?

The first time John and myself raced we actually rode the bikes up to Cadwell Park, me on the 1926 500 Sunbeam and John on his mid-30's 350 Sunbeam.  We got up there OK and in the paddock we removed the silencers and fitted our "race kits", two bits of straight exhaust pipe.  This improved the noise if not the performance.  Once scrutineering was done we ventured out onto the track for practice.  In the races I managed some laps at the back of the field and John was probably doing a lot better than me but retired with machine problems.

John Sunbeam 350 Cadwell Eddy Sunbeam 500 Cadwell
       Left: John in the paddock on his Sunbeam350.                     Right: Me folded up on the 500 somewhere around the circuit.

We were unable to fix John's bike in the paddock so how do we get it back home?  Someone with a big old Humber car offered  to take it home so after a bit of dismantling it disappeared into the Humber's cavernous boot. I suppose that Humber must actually count as our first race transport.  I was left to ride my Model 9 home on my own and after sorting out John' transport home.  It was getting late and my Sunbeam had no lights.  I probably rode home faster that evening than I'd done around the Cadwell circuit during the day!  I got home by twilight and fortunately didn't get stopped. 

In 1969 or maybe it was 1970 I had bought a new Reliant Supervan 3 that was the race transport for our next foray to Cadwell.  It was just me entered so we took the passenger seat out of the Reliant and the front wheel out of the Sunbeam and squeezed the bike into the back diagonally.  John then clambered into the back too. The bike was maneuvered out at the circuit and we put the front wheel back.  We reversed the loading process to get home again. 

The next race transport in a round about kind of way was an Isetta bubble car. Hard to believe?  Well here is how it worked out. 
The Isetta was my first car.  I ran it for a while and although it was a bit decrepit it was a lot of fun.  When I got married my first wife and I lived with relations in Anstey near Leicester.  We later bought a new house in Markfield.  The Isetta was on its last legs but I managed to drive it the few miles from Anstey to our new house and parked it up on the drive. 

Isetta Reliant Supervan 3 and Ruth
                  The Isetta looking rather sad.                                                  Wife Ruth looking rather happy with the new Reliant.

I decided that what we really needed to upgrade our race transport was a trailer.  I was at the time working at Briggs who were then in New Street, Burton where I fabricated a few parts to make a tow bar and folded up a channel section suitable for the length of a bike.  The Isetta was "dismantled" and the channel section was bolted to the front sub-frame complete with the wheels to make an instant bike trailer to be towed behind the Reliant.

Our next race transport upgrade was an old Austin Allegro that John bought.  It was an unusual colour, aconite, a fancy name for bluish-purple.  (Aconite is also poisonous, not sure that is too relevant here but it might be useful if you're doing a quiz.)  You may remember that the Allegro got a bit of a bad press because the rear wheels could, and some did, fall off if the wheel bearing collapsed.  It also had a "quartic" steering wheel, which was rectangular with rounded corners.  It was a bit of a gimmick but at least it didn't fall off, unlike the rear wheels. (Speaking of wheels falling off; one time we were waiting in the in the queue to get over the bridge at Snetterton circuit when the driver behind came up and said the wheels on our trailer looked a bit wobbly.  They certainly were wobbly because some of the wheels nuts were loose and some were completely missing!)  Moving on, we were part way to a race meeting at Staverton in the Allegro with the Sunbeam and trailer in tow when there was scraping noise.  On investigation the cause of the  scraping was a front brake pad completely devoid of any friction material!

We drove on with John using just the handbrake and judging his braking distances very carefully.  I think this was the meeting where we hit the big time as John got a third place in a mixed race and 10 bob prize money.  (For our younger reader I should explain that 10 shillings in old money is the equivalent of 50p today.)  This was an aerodrome circuit with an interesting feature, a bump where two runways crossed, very entertaining on a rigid girder fork bike.����  We drove home carefully on the handbrake no doubt buoyed by the thought of the unexpected riches from the 3rd place prize money.  (I think John still has the 10 shilling note.)

John Matchless 600 Allegro in background
A photo taken at Oulton Park. John with his 600 G80TCS, the Sunbeam front wheel to the left and the Allegro in the background.

Around this time my memory of race transport gets a bit hazy but I think both John and myself had cars without tow bars and maybe the trailer said it didn't want to be towed any more. I think maybe John had a BMW 323i and I was running an old XJ6 Jaguar.  Whatever, we didn't have our own race transport for the bike. Salvation was at hand and at times like this you are reminded what a great group of people were involved with vintage racing.  John Parker transported the Sunbeam to some meetings and Roger Allen added the Sunbeam to his huge and already well loaded trailer.  Can you imagine racing rivals transporting the oppositions vehicles in, say Formula 1, Hamilton's pit crew transporting Vettel's race car to a meeting when the Ferrari* transporter was unavailable?  (* Insert Red Bull or whatever team Vettel will be driving for.)

 At one Cadwell meeting when one of our friends transported the bike to the circuit I transported our team of John, Julie and Gloria in the Jaguar.  I can't remember much a bout the meeting but the return journey in the Jaguar was eventful.  We hadn't been driving very long through wildest Lincolnshire when the engine signaled a problem by emitting a cloud of steam, one of the hoses had blown apart.  Finding a small pocket of civilisation we were able to phone the RAC who sent a man with a big breakdown truck.  He winched the Jaguar up onto the platform and we piled into the lorry cab.  He took us through Lincoln and those who remember Lincoln before the A46 bypass will know that there is an extremely long steep hill.  As we started to descend the hill I could hear the chains securing the Jaguar to the flatbed creaking and groaning.  I had vision of 4000 lbs of jaguar breaking free and joining us in the cab.  With great relief we reached the bottom safely.  For whatever reason the driver didn't take us straight home but stopped at some big old garage.  It was probably his tea break and didn't seem in much of a hurry to get a move on.  I had a bit of a wander around and found an area with lots of old engines and parts.  There was a Jaguar engine with a hose.  I got a screwdriver and "borrowed"  the hose.  Once fitted and the radiator refilled we bade the RAC man goodnight (because by then it was certainly night and late) and went on our weary way.  It is bad enough when you have to improvise repairs to the race bike at the circuit without doing the same to your car to get home!

Jaguar MK10
The happy looking crew in the sun.  Not sure about the bloke in the daft hat, he looks a bit thoughtful, a premonition maybe about the journey home?

Bedford CF Van The next race transport upgrade should perhaps be categorised as a downgrade.  I'll explain.  I decided what we need was a van.
In a yard behind where John lived was an old CF Bedford van that had been abandoned by a builder.  I contacted the builder and bought the van.  It wasn't too expensive as it wasn't too good.  It had a Perkins 108 diesel engine with one  big end journal shot and the body was rotten in places.  I bought a reconditioned bottom half engine that I spotted advertised in the local newspaper and did quite a lot of patching and welding  on the bodywork, enough to get an M-o-T.  I had salvaged two nice car seats from a Jaguar for any "lucky" passengers.
It really was a bit of a wreck.  The registration number was EAP 807K.  The condition and appearance can be summed up by telling the reader that I painted a black "H" on the bumper to the left of the front number plate so it read, HEAP!  If we were feeling charitable we called it the "van ordinaire".  (A bit of corrupted French for you wine drinkers.)
We had one or two "notable" journeys.  On the way to Snetterton the ill fitting rear doors were letting diesel fumes into the back so we had to stop for "air" before our wives in the back became diesel smoked kippers and suffocated.
Another exciting journey was to Brands Hatch.  After working on the bike until the early hours of Sunday morning we managed a couple of hours sleep before setting off at dawn.  Part way down the M1 a diesel injector pipe broke.  We removed an engine access panel and used some spare petrol pipe to run the leaking diesel from the broken pipe into a gallon container that John in the passenger seat had wedged between his feet.  We continue our journey and rattled to Brands on three cylinders.  At one point, John who after the very late night was only half awake suddenly shot up and shouted "FIRE".   Through the removed engine access panel you could see the road.  We were driving over some hatched yellow lines painted on the road.  John, in his semi-conscious state thought that the intermittent yellow flashes were flames licking up from the engine.  Don't panic Mr. Mannering!
We did mange finally to get to Brands Hatch where the gate ticket man was quite taken aback when when we wound down the window to give him the passes and clouds of smoke billowed out.

There are more race transport stories to add but by now you may be tired of reading or perhaps like me a bit traumatised by the memories!  Maybe I will continue with more race transport tales another time.  Eddy 

  Above:  The Bedford H-EAP at Oulton Park


Three Wheels on my Wagon by Pat Davy

The Motorcycle combination or outfit is an engineering anathema or if you feel that is a little strong it is most certainly an engineering compromise, but then so are the majority of engineering solutions. I spent most of my time in industry trying to find engineering solutions with the least amount of compromise. Having said all that heavy stuff, outfits can be tremendous FUN. They certainly require a much longer period of adjustment for a rider to become proficient and the most dangerous time is when you think you have got the knack. That's when it will bite you just to put you in your place. I suppose because of the long learning curve I find an outfit more involving than riding a solo. One is constantly reading the road ahead as left handers are usually taken in a gear lower than right handers and throttle balance is crucial. There are many other aspects to riding an outfit but this piece was intended to tell of just a few of the outfits in my life so here we go:-

My first outfit appeared early in my motorcycling life and was brought about by a need for a racing transporter, an extremely grand title for what was a heap of junk. The Mill Room foreman Ted Jones at the Andre Rubber Co where I was apprenticed had a 500cc Triumph single and side car chassis rotting in his front garden. I cannot remember the year or model but it was certainly pre-war and very tired. £2.00, I recall, sealed the deal. I got it running and got home, what a steep learning curve that was with no body on the chassis and the first outfit I'd had ever ridden.  The side car wheel spent more time in the air than on terra firma hence the saying 'more firmer, less terror!'  The poor Triumph gradually lost the little power it possessed and on stripping the engine the piston rings were found to comprise 1/8” cubes of shiny cast iron. It went down the dump, but the chassis was salvaged.

Triumph Outfit
This photograph of the Triumph race transport outfit was taken over 60 years ago, somewhere in France.

The second bike to be harnessed to the chassis, which by now had gained a layer of scaffold boards covered with rubber sheeting courtesy of my employers, was a 350cc ex WD 350cc Ariel WNG with a broken frame. The twit who had owned it had removed the engine and gearbox then sat on it emulating George Formby in 'No Limit' by bouncing up and down. The frame top tube waved a white flag at the seat lug. I took the frame home in two pieces. Thank God he had not got inside the engine! I did not pay any money for the bike this time but swapped a model aeroplane for it, sound a good deal? Well he probably got the better half of the deal as the model was (are you paying attention John Goodall) a control line speed model powered by an American McCoy19 glow plug motor that, at the time, was very rare and highly prized in England. The fact was the bike was largely dismantled so the opportunity was taken to 'do it up'.

One Saturday when on overtime I strapped the two halves of the frame to my back and cycled into work where I braised a previously prepared plug into the seat lug re-joining the frame halves. The ride home with a now complete frame attached to my back was perilous. The cycle parts were painted Post Office Red the signature colour of all aspirant special builders who learnt better when they matured. The engine was stripped and tuned, or so I thought. Not knowing anything about cams at that time I did not realise that the military WNG cam had about as much lift as a “30” “A” cup bra. The outfit went quiet well up to 40 and from there on it suffered from asthma. However, it served  quite well dragging me back and forth to Brands Hatch with the 7R on the side, being used for daily transport with a sack of gravel from the Hogsmill Brook nailed to the boards as ballast and even taking me and my mate with camping gear to France for the Le Mans 24 hour Race.

There was an interlude of solo only riding until I was courting Ann when I bought a bargain priced Vincent Comet and Steib via an advert in Exchange & Mart. It had been laid up unused for quite a few years and on the way home down the Kingston By Pass I opened her up. The wonderful stream of sparks, red hot carbon disturbed from its long slumber, that trailed from the silencer had caused following traffic to keep a safe distance. This did not go unnoticed by a speed cop patrolling the A3 on his Triumph Sprung Hub Speed Twin with fire extinguisher in the leg shields. He pulled me over and was disappointed to find that when I stopped so had the pyrotechnics, so his fire extinguisher was redundant. He let me off.

In six months, we had rattled the Vincent to bits the final straw being when the large alloy idler wheel in the timing chest lost its teeth. I came to the conclusion that the Comet was probably inferior to a B33, Red Hunter, MSS or Big Bullet. Later experiences with Vincent twins has led me to conclude that the twin is much more than twice as good as a single Comet. I have had a Shadow both solo and with a chair and a solo Rapide and I hold them in high regard. The Comet went but I kept the Steib in stock propped vertically in a corner of the garage it offered the storage space equal to a small wardrobe and quickly filled with bits that will come in handy. We now come to the magnum opus of my formative years discounting the 1932 Morgan Three-Wheeler with a 1100cc JAP which I super charged and is a whole story of its own.

It had become my practice since the earliest time to have a best bike and a ride to work bike. Ride to work bikes never cost more than £5.00 and usually lasted until a year’s tax ran out and then changed for something a little more reliable but never more than a fiver. They ranged from a Bantam  to a bronze head Rudge Ulster which finally lost the intermediate ratios in its needle roller gearbox. Not to worry it had so much torque and flexibility that I carried on using it for work using only first and top gear. These were the days before DVLA at Swansea and MOT’s. I can remember the date I got pulled on the Rudge for no Tax, November 3rd, 1957, the day the Soviet Union put a dog named Laika into space. Like the dog the Rudge died in its course of duty however unlike the dog that fried on the 4th orbit the Rudge engine ended up in a 500cc Formula 3 Racing Car project and the frame ended up in the skip, please don't tell my friends in the Rudge Owners Club. Enough of this irrelevant stuff let's get back to the three-wheel theme.

It became the time to change my best bike and an advert in Exchange & Mart for a small fin BB34 Gold Star took my fancy. I had been missing the 7R and racing and fancied something with some urge under my right hand. It wasn't quite the latest DBD 34 Goldie that all Ace Cafe boys aspired to, but it was a Goldie. But not for long! On a trip down to Littlehampton with Ann on the back a slight knock developed round about Ockley on the A24 then WALLOP, RATTLE, RATTLE, SCREECH OF REAR TYRE and everything stopped going round. The Goldie had stuck a leg out of bed. The con-rod let go just under the gudgeon pin letting the daylight in the front of the barrel and quite a bit of oil out.  (My DB32 suffered a similar disaster. The broken con-rod took out the front the barrel base flange, front of the crankcase and then continued on a chaotic course to punch out the rear of the crankcase and then lock the motor solid.  Ouch! Eddy)

When I got the bike home and stripped the motor it was a mess inside so much so the question was is it worth rebuilding? Searching through Exchange & Mart for a suitable replacement I could not believe my luck when I happened upon an advert for a DBD34 complete with carb & stripped for inspection. No time was lost in whizzing round the North Circular, a route I knew well from my Brands visits, to make the purchase. The opportunity to view it stripped was a bonus and it all appeared in good condition, the crank cases were new and had not been stamped with an engine number – an amusing problem for later.  (Pat and myself must have been leading parallel Goldstar lives.  I sold the DB32 cylinder head and 13/16" Amal GP carburettor to help finance the purchase of a DBD34 engine and 11/2" GP from someone in London.  Eddy)

 Once home the engine build commenced. A new experience for me was the laminated head gasket where one peels off layers of very thin alloy film to achieve the exact gasket thickness to suit your particular engine, very trick. While all this was going on the embryo of an idea was rattling around my brain. Every man and his dog who owned a Goldie turned it into a 'Clubmans' solo Cafe Racer, so the Magnum Opus was initiated. The Steib was taken out of storage and refurbished including a respray to match the bike.

British Racing Green was chosen as I still had some left over from the Morgan Three-Wheeler rebuild. The Steib ball and claw design of sidecar connections are in my view  the best of any road going clamps short of solid welded connections used on racing outfits. I would improve Steib clamps even further by bronze welding gusset plates to the Goldie frame at the four chosen connection points then saw off the clamp element from the balls and weld the balls directly to the gusset plates. The wheels were the next consideration. A BMW twin leading shoe front brake was chosen mainly because it was about the only decent twin leader that was fairly easily obtained. It turned out to be well up to the job of stopping a quick outfit but had one fundamental design fault, more of that later. The standard BSA rear hub was used with the precaution of having those dreadful rivets welded up. The hubs were built into 16” Dunlop Racing Alloy Rim by Mr Nunn who was a very experienced and highly respected in Southern parts. He said 'first get your tyres and then I'll order the rims' thinking I would not be able to obtain sidecar racing tyres. So straight round to Comerfords just down the road, produce my ACU race licence and hey presto a tyre order was placed. Mr Nunn built the wheel but he did struggle with the BMW hub as with 16” rims which all sidecar racers were using at the time, the spoke length was only about 2 1/2” on both sides being a full width hub. Front forks were the next component to consider. Leading link of the Earls type were the obvious choice and BMW were favourite, but I could not find a second hand straight pair so settled for Douglas Dragonfly. These needed modifying to accept the BMW hub & spindle also the torque reaction for the brake (brake plate anchor). The BMW design reacts the braking torque via the unsprung component, i.e. the pivoting arm, the result being that on brake application the bike rises and eventually under heavy braking the top pulls out of the front suspension units. What fun! In hindsight I should have copied the Douglas design and contrived a torque arm from the brake back plate to the sprung component of the fork and parallel to the pivoting fork. I had owned an NSU Max with leading link forks and properly designed front brake torque reaction which stayed dead level under braking so should have known better.

Front forks
Douglas Dragonfly forks and BMW twin leading shoe brake.

Notwithstanding all that I now had a solo rolling chassis so could attach and align the sidecar.

Steib side-car
The Steib side-car

Moving on to the petrol tank I was lucky to find an alloy 5 gallon Lyta for just a fiver but I think somebody had played football with it so off to Paramount Metals in Kingston upon Thames run by Ted Friend, the ex-Works AJS rider who raced the Porcupine. Ted could weld anything.  He cut the bottom out of the tank, knocked out all the dents and put the bottom back in, a beautiful job. The fact that the outer surface was all scratched up by our football friend did not matter as it was going to be sprayed green anyway. The fairing was Greeves Silverstone suitably adapted to accept a headlight the shell of which was fibre glassed in. The single seat also served as an auxiliary fuel tank. Apart from a bit of upholstery both bike & chair that's about it.

The completed Goldstar outfit.
The completed outfit.

Being a fairly law-abiding young chap, I thought I had best inform Surrey Licensing regarding the change from solo to sidecar and the change of engine number to nothing at all. They sent my form back having written in the engine number space 'All engines have numbers' I wrote TOFFEE underneath and sent it back. In the fullness of time I received a new logbook with the engine number TOFFEE.

Oh I nearly forgot, a quiz question:- 'What is the donor source of the bikes single seat?'

Pat Davy



To finish off a few pictures from Brian Slack:-

 A Brough Superior and an interesting EMC-Puch engine.  Below them, chalk and cheese, a Vincent Firefly and a Vincent Grey Flash racer.

Brough Superior EMC Puch engine

Vincent Firefly Vincent Grey Flash