When I built my 850, I looked at the crank and immediately decided it could never be any good for racing. I corrected the balance factor to suit high revs and still built the bike. That was in about 1980. In about 2002, I had moved to Benalla, and my mate still had a licence, so we decided to try the Seeley 850 -just out of interest. The next year I rode it at Winton and it was hopeless everywhere. Fixed the brake, changed the gearbox and tuned it. It turned out that the heavy crank is not an issue. Norton had a lot of racing experience, and I have come to the conclusion that the Norton twin was an alternative approach. The 650ss was an excellent motorcycle.
I never believed in my Seeley 850, but now I do. Where I can get on the gas really hard with that, is ridiculous and probably dangerous. One of the most frustrating things about road racing is the amount of care which is needed when you are up high in a corner at full lean - it is difficult to accelerate without crashing. With the Seeley, I can flick it into a corner and accelerate flat out from beginning to end on the low line. With a light crank, that would be hazardous - been there done that.
I don't know if I am a good rider, I just ride the bike to it's limit. I usually ride a slow bike against much faster bikes. It is more fun that way. But the Seeley 850 is different. I really like it, and I never thought I would.