- Joined
- Oct 3, 2013
- Messages
- 564
acotrel said:I think you have answered mny question - it was set up to be quick steering and nimble rather than stable and slow steering like a Ducati 900 ? Was it pulling a lot of gearing, or allowed to rev out down the straightaways ? In other words was it's advantage in the corners or in the way it wound out ? It sounds as though the isolastics were set up to be fairly firm. I don't doubt that PW was an excellent rider, however so are many others. The important thing is usually how the bike is set up, and whether it suits your style and mentality. I cannot imagine somebody scratching on the IOM. It could be that the isolastics were the important ingredient if the bike was being ridden really hard in every corner over such a long distance.
There's an iconic photo of PW on the monocoque during the winning F750 race and, if I remember right, you can clearly see the fairing scuffed from grinding through the corners. The IOM has some slow sections e.g Ramsey hairpin, which is uphill, and which you want to accelerate out of quickly to gain momentum to take you on up through Waterworks, onto the Gooseneck and continue the Mountain climb, so the gearing would have to reflect this as well as flat out sections like Sulby straight and Cronk-y-Voddy. If the iso thrust faces are dead square then you can run minimal clearance without transmitting uncomfortable vibration. With a smaller gap the play at the rear wheel is minimised.
PW stated during practice the bike hit 150mph (calc. from tacho) on Sulby straight I think, and took him to part of the road he normally didn't use - hit a serious bump and the bike shook him like a rag doll for a few moments, before straightening itself out. The Isle of Man is very bumpy anyway. PW said he 'toured' the rest of the lap due to being seriously, er, shook, or shaken. Lap time was still good which suggested he'd never gone faster on the lap before hitting the bump. The bike was custom built for Peter Williams, he designed it!
May have been wrong about the scuffed fairing, but some interesting photo's on http://www.italian.sakura.ne.jp/bad_toys/norton/ . See photo of the iso head steady - never knew it was designed like that. Space frame should never have replaced the monocoque - blame the whingeing mechanics!
I think the bike was a great design all over, and perfectly suited for the Island. Plus PW, a great rider and engineer.