I think that in the UK, production racing happened in the late1960s. The theory seems to have been 'race on Sunday, sell on Monday'. We had the Castrol 6 Hour Race in Australia. The bikes were carefully checked before and after racing, so they were as sold to the public. In the UK, I think more modifications were allowed. But in Australia ways were always found to get better performance. It is all silly stuff anyway. A bike which is good for racing is not necessarily good on public roads. Amongst the photos in this thread, there is a Gus Kuhn Commando - probably a Seeley. That would be difficult to beat in a road race, but useless on public roads. I would buy a genuine factory production racer, just for what is - not what it can do. I would not buy a genuine Manx Norton - they come with a responsibility. It saddens me to see the way most of them have been modified. That might be called genuine racing history - it will get to the stage where nobody will ever know why a Manx was so good. They are worth riding just for the experience.