Lansdowne dampers

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Fitted some last week, delivered in 5 days. Way better than old set up. Thanks John, quality product and service.
 
MyArse... Then again at this rate I will cos I will be on mates Bonnie again or on My Royal Oilfield...

Looking fwd to Mallory.

ATB

Lansdowne dampers


Lansdowne dampers
 
Is yours the interceptor 2 Fred? My mate has one of them ( well 2 actualy uk and export) he will be at F1kB but on his Morini.
 
Yes Snaky, imported it from Canada January last year. Nice looker but no Commando, 1950's feel to it.
 
I just installed a set over the weekend. First impression is they feel a bit soft but I won't be able to road test till Wednesday. Installation was easy and I assume they'll work great.
 
I bought a set well over a year ago and was getting ready to install them last night, I sent JRB an email with a question and his response was "those are my Mark 1's, the newer ones are much better, I'll send you some of those".

How amazingly incredible is that for service?, I have a few other JRB products that might be a secret so I'll not describe them here but I am anticipating the best set of Roadholders ever.

Vince
 
Just had a email from Peter Crewe,I made him some lansdowne units for his Honda 125 racer,,, first time out....won all four races...he must be a good rider, :lol:
 
With correct adjustment they will feel just right.



Coco said:
I just installed a set over the weekend. First impression is they feel a bit soft but I won't be able to road test till Wednesday. Installation was easy and I assume they'll work great.
 
I was at an historic road race meeting a while back, and there was a kid with a big mouth there. He shouted to his father who had a manx 'Dad, is this the bike with the RS125 cartridges'. I'm probably a bit funny about Manx Nortons and G50s, however I believe you ride them for the experience of what real racing used to be like. If you want to get serious buy an R1, or a Fireblade. Would you paint a moustache on the Mona Lisa to make it better ?
 
Historicly : Through out the racing years machines where improved to produce status for the manufacturer, if a improvement was made that won race's others would copy/improve on that...it was not about the most original machine comming last, but the quickest comming first! ^60's" manx 47-48 BHP ,Bob Mac tried to improve engine output to 50 plus,but couldnt. Todays Manx are 60 bhp,
Duncan Fitchetts Manx with plain bigend, Nic Bore, and special tuned inlet/exhaust kicks out 60 bhp, but all that was not good enough to produce winning results, the handling needed up-grades to match.
Pat Green's GB access team wanted to win race's not just enter, If some one produced a special item that give another 5 bhp, everyone would want it, or a differant damper that enabled higher corner speed..RS 125 or what ever?
Many years ago i fitted Bultaco dampers inside norton forks, we had to hide the extra length with gaiters, the guy won the british tele-ridgid trials

I agree there as to be a limit,and there is. But surly as BHP increase's the chassis as to match? otherwise the machine can become unsafe?

.

acotrel said:
I was at an historic road race meeting a while back, and there was a kid with a big mouth there. He shouted to his father who had a manx 'Dad, is this the bike with the RS125 cartridges'. I'm probably a bit funny about Manx Nortons and G50s, however I believe you ride them for the experience of what real racing used to be like. If you want to get serious buy an R1, or a Fireblade. Would you paint a moustache on the Mona Lisa to make it better ?
 
Hi John / Acotrel

Cant really see your point here Acotrel.
When I first raced my Jim Lee 686 Rickman 8 valve Bonnie with drum forks brazed up caliper bracket & cast iron car disc, I was out in the 501 unlimited class out with triples & BMW's with triple discs ie as they were built. I had the very first mastercylinder & caliper that AP made. Obviously it was no match into the first corner but was a good stopper with plenty of feel, & fine for a lightweight bike. (not like the "wooden" feel so often described by people when talking about early Lockheed brakes)
The thing is when my set up was made it was cutting edge ie better than the drums & done because you could not go out & buy a complete set up.
Now I had issues with the forks, they worked just, the held a line yet you could watch them walk. I had the pinch bolt welded a few times I actually replaced the springs & measured things. The stancions were shorter than a Manx. I played with oil. It didn't change much & the bike performed fine. One evening I walked the paddock & spoke to people. I found most had Maxton conversions a few damper alterations. The diy guys had line bored there fork legs (back from oval) made longer bushes that fitted. Used springs of the right weight. Others ran dampers conversions & Italian legs. A really good Norton engineer did a conversion using RD yam forks (no names)
So no change there then? Nothing stays still in racing, until its so outclassed, original becomes the key word.

Chris
 
john robert bould said:
With correct adjustment they will feel just right.



Coco said:
I just installed a set over the weekend. First impression is they feel a bit soft but I won't be able to road test till Wednesday. Installation was easy and I assume they'll work great.


Yup. I have some time on them now and they feel great.
 
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