Rohan said:I have a tank - that was taken off a new bike in the showroom. It leaked when filled up. Where it leaked from was not at all obvious. And was replaced with a new one, out of a factory box.
hobot said:Did Norton start up to test run cycles at factory or just let dealerships deal with the multitude of faults like time dial over a handful of degrees off? A caring factory might at least stamped the error factors on the covers.
hobot said:Did Norton start up to test run cycles at factory or just let dealerships deal with the multitude of faults like time dial over a handful of degrees off? A caring factory might at least stamped the error factors on the covers.
Time Warp said:I finished this book Saturday, the Bert Hopwood book should be here this week for another perspective.
A good read, I doubt much was being checked in the later years, tick the box and have another cup of tea and bacon butty more like it.
Time Warp said:Time Warp said:I finished this book Saturday, the Bert Hopwood book should be here this week for another perspective.
A good read, I doubt much was being checked in the later years, tick the box and have another cup of tea and bacon butty more like it.
That was good timing, the postie just dropped it off, a used copy for $13.10 + post from the UK.![]()
I should imagine Mr Hopwood's summation will differ.
It might mention the timing plate and sporadic placement of marks and key ways.
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wakeup said:At one stage when I was at NV, 1969 to 1970, I was working at Thruxton, in the competition/race department. At the time, all Commandos were being assembled at the Andover factory. As far as I can remember all bikes were ridden from the factory to Thruxton, a distance of about 10 miles. At Thruxton the rider completed a report which stated if anything needed to be done. This made three options available, 1..ok for packing (i.e. no probs); 2.. minor faults that could be corrected at the Thruxton site (i.e. minor probs); and 3..Major probs which required the bike being returned to Andover. Minor problems which could be rectified at Thruxton were completed and the bike given a run "up the road" to a roundabout, which was some miles from Thruxton, and back. If all was ok the bike was ready for packing.
Again from memory they were turning out a max of 400 bikes per week, usually 250/300, this equates to between 50 and 80 per 5 day week. I think that there were about a dozen, maybe 15 or 16 production test riders.
Some of the details may be a bit fuzzy, but the basic fact was that every Commando received at least a 10 mile run before delivery. The test riders were a pretty clued up bunch, the chief prod test rider was Tony Holland, who at the time was a very good club/national class road racer.
cheers
wakeup
Ian Smith said:Hi steve, could you let me know some more details of that magazine you bought please, would like to try and get my hands on a copy. cheers