Joined: 07 Oct 2005 Posts: 143 Location: Anacortes, WA, USA
Posted: Fri May 05, 2006 3:56 pm Post subject: AJS & Matchless ISDT Bikes (1968)
Just before I left N-V, the factory sponsored a team in the ISDT. The riders were from the Royal Air Force Motorsports Association.
We built four bikes, 3 were AJS 250cc machines and the fourth was a Matchless 350. Unless you were familiar with the product line then, it wouldn't register that these were actually street/trail versions of our Villiers Starmaker-powered motocross bikes. They were fitted with wide-ratio gears, spark arrestor tailpipes and a lighting system off the 9E Villiers engine.
I'd be interested to know if any of them survived.
Joined: 07 Oct 2005 Posts: 143 Location: Anacortes, WA, USA
Posted: Mon Aug 21, 2006 6:18 pm Post subject:
Yes. I posted on the Google AJS/Matchless news-group, but so far there have been no replies.
I suspect that, because the UK industry was in the doldrums at that time, not many people realized that the ISDT bikes were derived from the Starmaker motocross machines.
It would be a shame if they've disappeared into the scrapyards. I wouldn't mind having that 350 Matchless.
N-V pulled a fast one on the system by defining and campaigning a version of the AJS moto-cross bike as a 360. In fact, it was only 345 cc displacement, but nobody thought to check.
I recall one occasion when we were testing at the Motor Industries Research Association facility in Nuneaton. I had to go back to the lab building for something and jumped on what I thought was a 250. When I opened the throttle and dropped the clutch, the resulting 60-degree pitch-up was a hell of a surprise. I discovered later that I'd grabbed a 360! It was difficult to tell the difference.
It links to the AJS company in Andover, which is where N-V moved to after the big downturn in the late 1960s. Don't know if Fluff Brown is running that outfit, but it has quite a lot of Stormer stuff on it. I've sent a couple of messages and hope to hear something.
I posted my query on that Yahoo group a coule of weeks ago but have had no replies. The impression I get is that the "purists" don't consider the N-V bikes as "real" AJS or Matchless. They were 2-strokes!! In fact the ISDT Matchless 350 was the only N-V machine ever given the Matchless name.
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At the end of 1967 the Norton Commando was announced.
The Norton Commando was greeted with a certain amount of scepticism because on first sight the commando appeared to comprise of the old Norton Dominator twin cylinder engine mounted at an inclined angle in a set of new cylinder parts.
It was not realized that the new Norton Commando Isolastic method of engine suspension damped out all engine vibration and produced a machine which had uncanny smoothness for a vertical twin. In due course the critics were silenced and the Norton Commando had the distinction of being regarded as the first of todays so called superbikes. There can be little doubt that the original design concept of the Norton Commando has proved correct, since comparatively few modifications of any real consequence have been made since production commenced during 1968.
Now nearly 40 years later Norton Commando riders like us are a breed of our own, and as far as we are concerned its still more fun to go for a blat on the old Norton Commando, and fast. As a Norton Commando owner and enthusiast, my goal here is to promote and give credit to those who keep the Norton name going.
It is more deserving to give credit to the Commando itself, for after all these years it continues to be respected. The original Commando designers like John Favill are those who deserve the credit for developing this incredible motorcycle.
The Norton Commando Roadster and Interstate of the late seventies, never died. Although the Norton Villiers factory dispersed the tradition lived on. Today Kenny Dreer in the USA is developing the new 952 CC Norton. What a great looking bike this is, and its engineering is still based on the original layout. It will be interesting to see how the new 952CC Norton does in todays tough motorcycle market. One thing is for sure, I would own one if I could afford it.