This is what Andover had to say in one of their news letters.
"50th anniversary of Richard Negus Norton’s Spa success:
A side effect of my seeing Richard was to talk about the Spa event in 1973, when his riders had the greatest success in endurance racing of the whole Commando era (!) by making second place to a factory Honda averaging over 100mph for 24 hours under riders Pete Lovell and Pete Davies.
Spa 1972, after the race. Riders Pete Davies and Pete Lovell exhausted but no doubt elated.
Richard admits his memories of particular races are vague, understandable given the time elapsed and the many races he went to with his riders. What he did remember was the specification of the engine which, he says, was nothing that special: 2S camshaft, skimmed head, standard pistons, lightened valve train.
The really special part, and most probably the reason why the engine lasted, was the crankshaft. This, as opposed to all other crankshafts he had in his engines, had rolled radii at the mainshafts, not ground as is normally the case. If cranks break it is often in this area, and frankly in the nearly five decades I have ridden Commandos I had but two cranks break, both in racing, both at that point.
Richard told me he was given the crank by someone in the factory. Many of the parts he used to build his bikes were “seconds” of parts left over from tests. Why this desirable modification was done only on that one crank, given all race engines should have had cranks like this, is a mystery in retrospect."
I sent a message to them and said.
Interesting comment on the rolled radius on the crankshaft.
I always wonder if the UK got different build standard bikes to NZ or we use them differently. Maybe we got the Friday bikes. Lots and lots of cracked and broken crankshafts down here. One of the local characters gave up crack testing them at his shop because they were all cracked. At the very poorly machined right angle between the drive side mainshaft and the "porkchop" I had a cracked crank at that point on my Mk11 850 and tried to buy a crank from your about 4 years ago. No joy at that time but I see you have them available now. Four years too late for me unfortunately.
I got a second hand crank and after crack testing it was radiused at the section change. Now standard practice with any Commando engine rebuilt by the local engineer. For years a guy on the East Coast made billet cranks as replacements but like most people he has retired now.
Their reply.
We see it here very rarely in that area. We believe it is not related to use as they tend to break near the journal and not the output shaft. Still quite rare to see though. The cracking you mention I suspect is a forging defect and not use related for two reasons, firstly the solid area that cracks is near to the bearing and a point of good support, and second, the later MK3 cranks flex far more than the pre-MK3 cranks as they are longer between the bearing seats and they would be forever failing but don't.
Late crank drawings make mention of where the drilling through the journals should finish, so it seems that they knew that the internal drilling caused the stress raiser in relation to the journal and not the finish on the journal itself. What is not mentioned in the source is that the crank in the 24 Hr bike actually snapped its crank shortly after the 24 race which again suggests that what Richard Negus had done was not a complete solution. Arrow who made the one piece cranks also spotted the problem with the original cranks and that is why we had to use a through drilling which removes the internal stress raisers under the journals.
Regards,
Ashley Cutler IEng MIET
Andover Norton International Ltd
So they don't see it much. But here in NZ it definitely happens. Including to me personally.