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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 320

1929 Zenith-JAP 6-80 Motorcycle Combination Registration no. WE 6163 Frame no. 12798 Engine no. GT/C 16490

Schätzpreis
0 £
Zuschlagspreis:
18.400 £
ca. 29.179 $
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 320

1929 Zenith-JAP 6-80 Motorcycle Combination Registration no. WE 6163 Frame no. 12798 Engine no. GT/C 16490

Schätzpreis
0 £
Zuschlagspreis:
18.400 £
ca. 29.179 $
Beschreibung:

Zenith motorcycles were manufactured from 1904 until 1950, in a variety of factories in or around London. From the early days proprietary engines were used, such as Fafnir, Precision, JAP, Bradshaw and Villiers. The driving force behind Zenith was Chief Engineer, and company owner, Frederick Barnes, who was responsible for the famous ‘Gradua’ gear. Worked by a hand-wheel or crank handle, the Gradua mechanism varied the diameter of the engine pulley while simultaneously sliding the rear wheel back and forth in the fork slots, thus maintaining correct belt tension. Its advantages showed most effectively in speed hill climbs, and in pre-WW1 days Zenith machines gained many successes as the Zenith rider could change gear during the ascent while the other competitors had to make do with a single choice of ratio. Rival riders and manufacturers thought that this was an unfair advantage so many leading clubs excluded Zeniths from their hill climbs. Zenith was quick to recognise the publicity value and took the word ‘Barred’ as their trademark. Although the expensive Gradua system gave way to a more conventional Sturmey-Archer countershaft gearbox in the 1920s, Zenith continued to pursue its racing and record breaking activities with enthusiasm. Fred Barnes himself enjoyed considerable success at Brooklands, where in 1922 Zenith rider Bert Le Vack became the first man to lap at over 100mph on a motorcycle – in the rain. In 1928 a Zenith-JAP ridden by Oliver Baldwin established a world motorcycle speed record of 124.62mph at Arpajon in France, while Joe Wright later raised the record to 150.736mph using his supercharged Zenith-JAP ‘reserve bike’, his favoured OEC having succumbed to mechanical problems. Significantly, when Wright’s record was set in 1930 the company was temporarily out of business. Despite adding a Villiers-powered economy model to the range, Zenith failed to weather the financial storms of the early ’30s. After a succession of closures and changes of ownership it re-emerged after WW2 with a solitary model: a 750cc JAP-powered sidevalve v-twin, which lasted only a few more years. Dating from Zenith’s Vintage-era heyday, this 680cc Zenith-JAP motorcycle combination was acquired in 1988 and restored over the course of the next couple of years. Ex-JAP employee Ernie Woods rebuilt the engine, while many parts ere specially cast by the vendor. ‘WE 6163’ has completed every Banbury Run since 1998 without any problems at all and is said to be very fast up Sun Rising Hill. It has received two wards: ‘Best Combination’ in 2001 and the Arthur Mortimer Shield in 2007. Described as in generally good condition, the machine is offered with VMCC dating letter, assorted correspondence, Zenith brochure and parts list (copies), a quantity of expired MoTs, Swansea V5C and MoT to June 2011. (It should be noted that the V5C incorrectly records the engine capacity as 747cc).

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 320
Auktion:
Datum:
17.10.2010
Auktionshaus:
Bonhams London
Stafford, Staffordshire County Showground Staffordshire County Showground Weston Road Stafford ST18 0BD Tel: +44 207 447 7447 Fax : +44 207 447 7401 info@bonhams.com
Beschreibung:

Zenith motorcycles were manufactured from 1904 until 1950, in a variety of factories in or around London. From the early days proprietary engines were used, such as Fafnir, Precision, JAP, Bradshaw and Villiers. The driving force behind Zenith was Chief Engineer, and company owner, Frederick Barnes, who was responsible for the famous ‘Gradua’ gear. Worked by a hand-wheel or crank handle, the Gradua mechanism varied the diameter of the engine pulley while simultaneously sliding the rear wheel back and forth in the fork slots, thus maintaining correct belt tension. Its advantages showed most effectively in speed hill climbs, and in pre-WW1 days Zenith machines gained many successes as the Zenith rider could change gear during the ascent while the other competitors had to make do with a single choice of ratio. Rival riders and manufacturers thought that this was an unfair advantage so many leading clubs excluded Zeniths from their hill climbs. Zenith was quick to recognise the publicity value and took the word ‘Barred’ as their trademark. Although the expensive Gradua system gave way to a more conventional Sturmey-Archer countershaft gearbox in the 1920s, Zenith continued to pursue its racing and record breaking activities with enthusiasm. Fred Barnes himself enjoyed considerable success at Brooklands, where in 1922 Zenith rider Bert Le Vack became the first man to lap at over 100mph on a motorcycle – in the rain. In 1928 a Zenith-JAP ridden by Oliver Baldwin established a world motorcycle speed record of 124.62mph at Arpajon in France, while Joe Wright later raised the record to 150.736mph using his supercharged Zenith-JAP ‘reserve bike’, his favoured OEC having succumbed to mechanical problems. Significantly, when Wright’s record was set in 1930 the company was temporarily out of business. Despite adding a Villiers-powered economy model to the range, Zenith failed to weather the financial storms of the early ’30s. After a succession of closures and changes of ownership it re-emerged after WW2 with a solitary model: a 750cc JAP-powered sidevalve v-twin, which lasted only a few more years. Dating from Zenith’s Vintage-era heyday, this 680cc Zenith-JAP motorcycle combination was acquired in 1988 and restored over the course of the next couple of years. Ex-JAP employee Ernie Woods rebuilt the engine, while many parts ere specially cast by the vendor. ‘WE 6163’ has completed every Banbury Run since 1998 without any problems at all and is said to be very fast up Sun Rising Hill. It has received two wards: ‘Best Combination’ in 2001 and the Arthur Mortimer Shield in 2007. Described as in generally good condition, the machine is offered with VMCC dating letter, assorted correspondence, Zenith brochure and parts list (copies), a quantity of expired MoTs, Swansea V5C and MoT to June 2011. (It should be noted that the V5C incorrectly records the engine capacity as 747cc).

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 320
Auktion:
Datum:
17.10.2010
Auktionshaus:
Bonhams London
Stafford, Staffordshire County Showground Staffordshire County Showground Weston Road Stafford ST18 0BD Tel: +44 207 447 7447 Fax : +44 207 447 7401 info@bonhams.com
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