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DarthRider
09-30-2008, 05:33 PM
"THE FASTEST MOTORCYCLE IN THE WORLD...THAT COULD HAVE BEEN"

The "Texan collector" mentioned in the piece below lives in Austin, TX and has an incredible collection of Vincents, Brough Superiors, Gold Stars, etc. He is also a Peckerhead friend and was kind enough one sunny Sunday afternoon, to allow yours truly to spend saddle time with a perfect Vincent Black Shadow (later bought by Peter Egan), a lovely Brough Superior (oldest in the U.S.), and well-worn Vincent Comet, 500cc single road racer (with racing "history" but I don't remember what it was !:linzi:) And a nice hill Country drive in his prized Ferrari Testarossa! Must be nice to be rich...

He also owns the famous Rollie Free "Bathing Suit" Vincent Black Lightning.

He had recently acquired the Deardon Supercharged Black Lightning and had not started it yet, but I did get to look at it. What a piece of machinery!

What a shame it never turned a wheel in anger at the Bonneville Salt Flats!
Dave
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The Reg Dearden Supercharged Vincent Black Lightning

(Copied from GIZMAG.com) http://www.gizmag.com/the-dearden-supercharged-vincent-black-lightning/10015/

September 16, 2008
One of those very rare motorcycles which comes along once in a lifetime will go under the Bonhams’ hammer at sale at the Classic Motorcycle Mechanics Show on October 19 October – it will be the only supercharged Vincent Black Lightninghttp ever made. Built to break the world speed record, the machine is in totally original condition and is expected to break records of a different kind by selling for US$400,000-600,000.

Britain’s most charismatic manufacturer, Vincent, began production in 1928 and built several hundred machines a year until 1955, when – to universal disappointment – the company went out of business. They were very much in their prime after WWII when they introduced what became the most frequent choice of machine for the Blue Riband of Motorcycling, the 1000cc Black Lightning.

In the late 1940s, American rider and former Indian racer Rollie Free had gained the World Speed Record for Unstreamlined Motorcycles at the Bonneville Salt Flats , Utah, USA, on a modified Vincent. Famously, the last few mph had proven elusive until Free stripped down to his bathing trunks, whereupon he thundered through the traps at a mean magical two-way average speed of 150.31 mph. This achievement prompted Vincent to introduce the Black Lightning model, incorporating a similar engine specification, of which barely 30 examples were ever produced, a machine that is today regarded as the Holy Grail of post war motorcycles.

Traditionally, by its very nature, Record Breaking is the most demanding of arenas, with few true contestants. In 1949 however The Motor Cycle, Britain’s leading 2-wheel publication, offered a Trophy, plus a generous £500 prize [more than the price of a new ’Lightning, already the country’s most expensive bike!] for the first successful all-British attempt on the absolute World Speed Record, held since 1937 by BMW at 173.54 mph.

In the same year Reg Dearden, a popular high profile motorcycle dealer at Chorlton-cum-Hardy [Manchester], purchased a Black Lightning expressly for the purpose, direct from the factory. He returned the bike to Stevenage early in 1950 to have a purpose-built supercharger fitted, together with other extensive modifications. This included strengthening and lengthening the main frame by about 6 inches. The work was undertaken under the personal supervision of Phil Vincent, MD, and took several months to complete.

Public appearances of the Vincent, thereafter, were infrequent, and while NSU upped the Speed Record to 180.29 mph in 1951, the modified Vincent lay dormant. In 1953 it was announced the intended rider for the Record attempt would be 500cc World Champion Les Graham, but tragically he was fatally injured in the 1953 Senior TT, causing yet another reduction in enthusiasm for the Record Breaking project.

The setting by NSU, in 1956, of a new Speed record at Bonneville, at 211.40 mph, seemed to rekindle Dearden’s interest, for it was reported he would now fly the bike to the Salt Flats in his own Cessna aeroplane, for one last serious attempt. Yet again it came to nought when the CAA refused to certify the aircraft for this type of transportation.

The Vincent thus stayed unused and neglected at Dearden’s premises over the next decade until sold to a friend of his, Eric Biddle, in 1970. Biddle never used the machine, eventually selling it to Michael Manning, a scientist, who lived in Pennsylvania, USA. Manning took it to a Vincent Owners Club Rally in Canada, in 1977, where it was allegedly started but not ridden, and after returning to his home in Philadelphia it again remained in storage until acquired by the present owner, a Texan collector, in 1987.

An aficionado for the Stevenage product who has had a lifelong association with Vincents, the owner was struck by the obvious originality of the Reardon Supercharged Vincent, following a gentle re-commission of the bike. He has started the bike on several occasions, confirming the racket emitted by those huge open pipes resembles no other. In 1999 well-known UK photojournalist Mick Duckworth sampled the Vincent on a remote Texas highway for a 7-page feature in Classic Bike. Reaching a speed close to 100 mph in bottom gear he bravely engaged second, at which point he remembered precisely what a precious artefact he was riding. Happily the test ride concluded safely, with the owner saying, “You’ve probably ridden this further than anyone in living memory!”

Today this extraordinary Black Lightning reposes in all its visual potential, slightly oily, yet with original HT leads, fitted with its first-fitted OE Avon tyres, and even the factory’s black rim paint remains in place. Original low mileage ’Lightnings are rare, supercharged ’Lightnings are rarer still. This one is unique!

http://www.gizmag.com/pictures/10015_160908104025.jpg

http://www.gizmag.com/pictures/10015_160908104150.jpg

http://www.gizmag.com/pictures/10015_19090831210_0.jpg

http://www.gizmag.com/pictures/10015_19090831211_1.jpg

http://www.gizmag.com/pictures/10015_19090831211_2.jpg

http://www.gizmag.com/pictures/10015_19090831212_3.jpg

Rchop
09-30-2008, 08:25 PM
Wouldn't you just love to throw a leg over that on the salt :007:

DarthRider
09-30-2008, 08:53 PM
Wouldn't you just love to throw a leg over that on the salt :007:


Absolutely. But the pressure would be on...$400-600,000 motorcycle!! How would you like to tear that thing up?

That is a very manly motorcycle!


What do you think of doing it this way?
http://blogues.motodirect.net/sana82/files/2007/04/rollie_free01.jpg

DarthRider
09-30-2008, 09:23 PM
http://r1150r.smugmug.com/photos/115385234_kvSwz-O.jpg

Sir Limpsalot
10-01-2008, 02:38 AM
A friend of mine once bought a Norton International (350 Garden Gate) from Eric Biddle who is mentioned in the piece.
I love Vin's, spent a lot of time with the local Vincent Club as a youngster. I never got to own one, although they did find me a nice clean Rapide for £200 (about $400). Laughably cheap now, it was still a tidy sum to a skint teenager who had just spent a small fortune (well, about £50) rebuilding his 650 Triumph..

Would I like to ride a supercharged Lightning on the salt?

No, but I'd like to be there when someone else did!

Cheers,
Si.

Rchop
10-01-2008, 09:33 AM
Absolutely. But the pressure would be on...$400-600,000 motorcycle!! How would you like to tear that thing up?

That is a very manly motorcycle!


What do you think of doing it this way?
http://blogues.motodirect.net/sana82/files/2007/04/rollie_free01.jpg

I could handle the pressure... I mean, hey... if someone was going to let me ride it, who cares about the cost:)

As far as riding it like that...hmmmm, now where did I put my speedo...oh yeah, I've never had one :ymca: