Manx Norton’s have more in common with Moto GP bikes than we might think…

Its been the case at all circuits for many many years. Only Gary was up there on Daves Seeley Commando. Over race distance its two different groups.
 
In the Scandinavian series it´'s like this: Up to 1972 500cc. Close between a Paton, a Petty Manx and a G50Seeley. In up to 1972 750cc. Same guys on overbored Petty Manx and G50Seeley. Then way slower CommandoSeeleys.
To me it seems that there is no big difference in lap times between Seeley and Manx frames. Both handles well. A good rider might prefer one or the other. Even read about a top rider in the fifties that liked the 7R better.
But there is more to frames than geometry and weight distribution. Stiffness in different directions play a big role. Just think about that when leaning hard, knee and maybe elbow close to ground, how does suspension handle a bump when force comes sideways.
Even with modern computer aided analysis you are only close to best chassis design. The final design is determined by the MotoGP riders. Valentino Rosso is said to give best feedback of them all.
 
In the Scandinavian series it´'s like this: Up to 1972 500cc. Close between a Paton, a Petty Manx and a G50Seeley. In up to 1972 750cc. Same guys on overbored Petty Manx and G50Seeley. Then way slower CommandoSeeleys.
To me it seems that there is no big difference in lap times between Seeley and Manx frames. Both handles well. A good rider might prefer one or the other. Even read about a top rider in the fifties that liked the 7R better.
But there is more to frames than geometry and weight distribution. Stiffness in different directions play a big role. Just think about that when leaning hard, knee and maybe elbow close to ground, how does suspension handle a bump when force comes sideways.
Even with modern computer aided analysis you are only close to best chassis design. The final design is determined by the MotoGP riders. Valentino Rosso is said to give best feedback of them all.
When a Seeley has more trail it stays more upright in corners like a Manx. It over steers more than a Manx. If you do not gas it hard as you enter the corner you do not notice the oversteer.
 
In the Scandinavian series it´'s like this: Up to 1972 500cc. Close between a Paton, a Petty Manx and a G50Seeley. In up to 1972 750cc. Same guys on overbored Petty Manx and G50Seeley. Then way slower CommandoSeeleys.
To me it seems that there is no big difference in lap times between Seeley and Manx frames. Both handles well. A good rider might prefer one or the other. Even read about a top rider in the fifties that liked the 7R better.
But there is more to frames than geometry and weight distribution. Stiffness in different directions play a big role. Just think about that when leaning hard, knee and maybe elbow close to ground, how does suspension handle a bump when force comes sideways.
Even with modern computer aided analysis you are only close to best chassis design. The final design is determined by the MotoGP riders. Valentino Rosso is said to give best feedback of them all.
If you are on full lean out with the others in the procession then frame rigidity and tyres are more important. But not if you can blast up the inside. You just need to be careful of the others coming down as they leave the corner.
 
If you practice braking further into corners and getting on the gas earlier coming out you will discover how much you bike oversteers without crashing. Then you can use it to better effect.
 
Is Andy smarter than Joe.
Unlikely. As demonstrated by the fact that Norton drew up a 4 valver themselves. However, Andy is not hampered by the politics, or budget constraints that Joe and the race dept allegedly faced (well documented). He also has the benefits of 60+ years of advanced human knowledge, continued development at the forefront of highly competitive racing, and access to machine tools that Joe couldn’t have even dreamed of.

Joe did the heavy lifting, the hard thinking, the breakthrough work. Andy is standing on his shoulders. When you stand on someone’s shoulders, you are able to reach higher…
 
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