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Triumph Grand Prix 1947
1947 TRIUMPH "GRAND PRIX". In September, 1946, Ernie Lyons rode a Triumph twin to victory in the Manx Grand Prix • the Island. Later that month the Triumph factory, with commendable "uickness, announced that a replica of the winning machine would be sold, as a stripped racer, in 1947. It would be known as the "Grand Prix". The full story of the machine goes back to pre-war days, when Triumphs had marketed the first successful parallel twins—first the "Speed Twin", and then the "Tiger 100". After the war, Triumphs were soon back into production with iron-engined models very similar to the pre-war ones except for the fitting of telescopic-forks. Ernie Lyons took one of these post-war "Tiger 100s" and set about turning it into a real racer. (This had been done before the war as well—a "Tiger 100" holds the Brooklands 500 c.c. lap record for ever.) The main change he made was the fitting of the cylinder-block and -head from a W.D.-type generating-set engine; these were of light alloy. The factory co-operated with him in his project by lending him one of the first spring hubs to be made. This now-forgotten method of rear suspension had coil springs encased within a large alloy hub so that the wheel could move an alleged 2 in. It was better than a rigid frame. . . . The push-rod twin-cylinder motor undoubtedly had a great advantage over the single in races immediately after the war, for it took much more kindly to the dreadful petrol then available. The "Grand Prix" never scored any really great victories, but certainly gave scores of budding racers their first chance to straddle a machine built for racing. The Triumph twin engine has an even greater claim to fame, for surely no other unit has been used in so many successful specials—or in so many unsuccessful ones. The "Tiger 100" engine's grandson, the "Tiger no", powered the fastest two-wheeler in the world up to 1961 (whatever the F.I.M. say!). The history of the Triumph company dates from 1885, the year it was founded by two men of German origin, Bettman and Schulte, who made and sold high-quality bicycles. Ten years later Schulte tried out a Hildebrand & Wolfmuller
motorcycle. The new experience had such an impact on him that he and his partner
decided to go into motorcycle manufacturing. In January of 1936 Triumph Motorcycles was completely
restructured, and so was its production. The first Triumph motorcycles with
two-cylinder engines began to appear. Ernie Lyons rode one of these to win the
1946 Manx Grand Prix. It was such a dramatic win that the Triumph people decided
to produce a racing model that had the same features as the one Lyons had
ridden. SPECIFICATION
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Any corrections or more information on these motorcycles will be kindly appreciated. |