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Chris
Joined: 21 Jan 2008 Posts: 107 Location: Eastbourne East Sussex UK
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Posted: Tue Oct 28, 2008 10:20 am Post subject: Oil In Frame |
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Hi all
A while back photos were posted of a Belgium mans Cafe race Commando.
I cant find the photos of it at the moment. I would like to adapt the frame top rail to hold oil. Anyone else besides this Belgium gentleman done this?
Thanks Chris |
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grandpaul
Joined: 15 Jan 2008 Posts: 652 Location: Laredo (south) Texas
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Posted: Tue Oct 28, 2008 11:26 am Post subject: |
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| I don't know, but it sure seems like a natural to me other than slightly elevating the center of gravity... |
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gahi
Joined: 01 Apr 2008 Posts: 18 Location: Winter Park, CO
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79x100
Joined: 19 May 2006 Posts: 705
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Posted: Tue Oct 28, 2008 12:53 pm Post subject: |
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Chris, do you mean this one ? I posted some pictures before but I can't find them either !
The owner of this one is the eccentric Belgian who visited you after the Sussex NOC National rally to blag a gear selector spring for his then standard Commando.
pm me if you want contact details
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Chris
Joined: 21 Jan 2008 Posts: 107 Location: Eastbourne East Sussex UK
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Posted: Tue Oct 28, 2008 3:13 pm Post subject: Gahi Thanks |
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Gahi
Thank you that is brilliant.
I have spend a considerable time following that link up & reading it all. Facinating. I am going to check my petrol tank to yokes clearance to see about the filler neck & then will draw one up while running the bike on the oil tank so that it does not hold up the project.
Thank you once again
Chris |
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Chris
Joined: 21 Jan 2008 Posts: 107 Location: Eastbourne East Sussex UK
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Posted: Tue Oct 28, 2008 3:21 pm Post subject: Paul |
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Paul
meant to mail you about those pipes. They are stunning. Does Kenny have any more? Guide to price maybe?
Keep working on those bikes!
I have got to sell one to sort out my racing bills. I will be running the Seeley in the twins classes next season & will be trying out a 7s cam. I usually run a 4s on my commandos (I still have a PW3 to try) I am thinking about it all the time so I must be looking forward to it. New set of tyres & the front & rear end sorting, then I just need some track time! Never will win but I want to pick it up a fair bit next season.
If I worry about the money I will never get out there.
Take care
all the best Chris |
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Chris
Joined: 21 Jan 2008 Posts: 107 Location: Eastbourne East Sussex UK
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Posted: Tue Oct 28, 2008 3:36 pm Post subject: 79x100 a distant memory! |
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79x100 a distant memory!
God that took me back!
Cant quite believe where all the years have gone. It was only our first year as the sussex Branch when I offered to do the National rally. We still talk about it.
The branch totters on but I dont put in the time & effort that I used to as its all about the racing with me at the moment. I spent to many years waiting & wondering about my health before the op. Got to make the most of it now.
I only joined the club to find out how to build a Commando engine.
Shows how time flies because the gearbox spring that you borrowed we stripped out of my my Commando in a featherbed project which is long gone. The twin disc front end went onto my Slippery Sam. The engine formed My Rickman Commando & I now have a 500 Triton! Nothing wasted!
I think I stripped it because the Triumph forks sat the bike up to much at the front. I also finished the Seeley Mk3 so had my racer on the road.
I have promised the lads that I will be doing some road / club stuff next year. I am getting a couple of the lads out to parade with the Classic racing motorcycle club & also taking money up front from the rest of my club members to ensure they do the lunch time parades with the Crmcc next season. We will also be taking a group to Beezumph & Chimay.
Roll on next season.
Chris |
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Cookie
Joined: 05 Oct 2008 Posts: 162
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Posted: Tue Oct 28, 2008 7:50 pm Post subject: |
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| Years ago i put the oil in the frame on a Commando. I used a Triumph 250 filler neck up by the triple tree and just brazed an outlet at the bottom of the top tube. I also had an oil tank and a Pontiac oil filter so I'm sure that was not waht you are looking for. Seems like I had to move the tank back just a bit for room for the filler neck. |
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Chris
Joined: 21 Jan 2008 Posts: 107 Location: Eastbourne East Sussex UK
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Posted: Wed Oct 29, 2008 1:03 am Post subject: Filter & cooler |
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Cookie
just as I was thinking of doing it. My Italian friend has forwarded photos of his race commando with oil cooler betwen the pipes just below the front isolastic. looks the biz. Not sure about Uk roads & salt but very neat.
Chris |
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grandpaul
Joined: 15 Jan 2008 Posts: 652 Location: Laredo (south) Texas
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Posted: Wed Oct 29, 2008 6:01 am Post subject: |
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Chris - those were one-off pipes, the only set on the face of the earth.
If you have to ask, you can't afford them. More than most top-of-the-line Vikings or similar, and that without mufflers! |
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Norton Commando Forum by Corporate Pages Web hosting using phpbb
The Unapproachable Norton Commando
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.