grandpaul
VIP MEMBER
- Joined
- Jan 15, 2008
- Messages
- 13,550
A forum buddy asked me to take on a special project for him, which I gladly accepted; it is a somewhat rare
Norton N15CS "hybrid" using an Atlas 750 engine in an AMC frame. Similar hybrids were built in various
conglomerations and branded AJS & Matchless.
This bike is in great shape and my buddy even rode it a couple of years back, nothing much happened to the bike
in between that last ride and last February when he brought it to me at the Roebling Road race track in
Georgia. It is mostly complete, with some of the bits & bobs handed over in various boxes.
As this is a non-typical restoration project, most of the owner involvment will be "behind the scenes" as far as this
forum is concerned. Some of the details are going to be excruciatingly difficult to get exactly right, and some may
never be 100% verifiable; this IS a hybrid, and as such could prove impossible to authenticate due to the fact
that the original documentation for specific bikes from specific dealers may never be found. Furthermore, a few
of the items will be modern replacements (tires, spark plugs, hoses), so perfection is impossible.
Nevertheless, we're going to strive to achieve as near a re-creation of the '67 N15 as is possible given that the
available pile of cash might actually be declared limited at some point!
With that, here is the starting point:
Norton N15CS "hybrid" using an Atlas 750 engine in an AMC frame. Similar hybrids were built in various
conglomerations and branded AJS & Matchless.
This bike is in great shape and my buddy even rode it a couple of years back, nothing much happened to the bike
in between that last ride and last February when he brought it to me at the Roebling Road race track in
Georgia. It is mostly complete, with some of the bits & bobs handed over in various boxes.
As this is a non-typical restoration project, most of the owner involvment will be "behind the scenes" as far as this
forum is concerned. Some of the details are going to be excruciatingly difficult to get exactly right, and some may
never be 100% verifiable; this IS a hybrid, and as such could prove impossible to authenticate due to the fact
that the original documentation for specific bikes from specific dealers may never be found. Furthermore, a few
of the items will be modern replacements (tires, spark plugs, hoses), so perfection is impossible.
Nevertheless, we're going to strive to achieve as near a re-creation of the '67 N15 as is possible given that the
available pile of cash might actually be declared limited at some point!
With that, here is the starting point: