Norton_Manxman

Norton Manxman

Norton Manxman

Type of motorcycle


The Norton Manxman was a 650 cc vertical twin motorcycle manufactured by the British Norton Motorcycle Company at their Bracebridge St, Birmingham factory for export. The engine was an enlargement of the 600 cc engine used in the Model 99 Dominator. The Manxman was first shown at the November 1960 Earls Court Motorcycle Show[1] and listed by the American importer, Berliner, in their catalogue from 1961[2] to October 1962[4] Berliner had asked for the model to be named Manxman although the twin had never been raced at the Isle of Man.[5]

Quick Facts Manufacturer, Production ...

630 machines were produced in the first half of 1961 in 3 batches: first, 330 on 13 January, then 150 on 3 March and lastly 150 on 8 June. [6] Of these, 99 were sent to Australia, 25 to Sweden, 1 to the Falkland Islands and the rest to the US.[7]

A European-styled version of the Manxman was shown in early 1962 at the Amsterdam International Auto Show and went on sale in April that year as the 650SS.[1]

Technical details

Engine and transmission

The Manxman's engine had its roots in the 1948 Bert Hopwood 500 cc design first used in the Model 7 Dominator. The air-cooled OHV vertical twin had been enlarged to 600 cc in September 1955 to satisfy the demands of the American market for larger engines. Norton's competitors were offering 650 cc machines so the engine was again enlarged.to 89mm. with a all New crankcases were required for the longer stroke along with a new crankshaft that had larger crankpins and a wider flywheel, all-new cylinder barrels and pistons with short skirts and a;; new downdraft cylinder head for twin carbuerettors. (Anna J Dixon)

A new alloy cylinder head was fitted that was derived from the 500 Domiracer that Tom Phillis had ridden to 3rd place in the 1961 Isle of Man TT Senior race, and achieved the first 100 mph (160 km/h) lap of the island on a pushrod machine. The head had downdraft inlet ports and wide-splayed exhaust ports to help cooling airflow over the head. A pair of Amal Monobloc carburettors were fitted. The new head, twin carbs, sports camshaft and 8.9:1 Compression ratio enabled the engine to produce a claimed 52 bhp (39 kW) at 6,800 rpm.[1][8]

Primary drive was by chain to a multiplate wet clutch and was enclosed in a pressed steel chaincase. The gearbox had 4 speeds.[8]

Cycle parts

The combination of slimline featherbed frame and Roadholder forks used on the Dominators was carried forward to the Manxman. Alloy hubs containing 8 in (200 mm) front and 7 in (180 mm) rear drum brakes were fitted.[1][8]

Styled for the American market, the machine had a small 2.5 US gal (9.5 L; 2.1 imp gal) petrol tank and high bars. The bike was finished in polychromatic blue with a red seat with white piping. Mudguards and the chaincase were chrome plated.[1][8]


References

  1. "Big News From Norton For 1951". American Motorcyclist: 7. December 1960.
  2. "A New Norton From Britain". American Motorcyclist: 20. May 1961.
  3. "Norton For 1963". American Motorcyclist: 4. January 1963.
  4. "1960 Norton Manxman Classic Motorcycle Pictures". www.vintagebike.co.uk. Retrieved 1 July 2021.
  5. Dixon, Anna J. "The one you forgot My Norton Manxman 650twin". Classic-British-Motorcycles.com. Retrieved 1 July 2021.

Bibliography


Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Norton_Manxman, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.