Thursday, January 26, 2023

An Eagle Flew to Birmingham - Das Motorrad 9 August 1958


Two-stroke engines have never been able to play a dominant role in English motorcycle construction - at least not remotely in the way that the "engine with only three moving parts” has for long periods in Germany (let us remember that up to 1939 our best-selling 500cc motorcycle was the SB 500 from DKW and that in the boom years after the Second World War the two-stroke engine dominated motorcycle engine construction far into the 350cc displacement class.) The lonely aristocratic role of the Scott does not fundamentally change anything in this picture, nor does the Villiers engines built in considerable numbers for the small classes, even less the few outsiders who temporarily appeared in England with parallel two-cylinders.

Even if the business that Royal Enfield and BSA did with the inheritance from Zschopau, when they leaned on the RT 100 and later the RT 125, certainly proved very lucrative, English motorcycle construction is associated all over the world with the image of beefy one- and later two-cylinder four-stroke engines, and it was only the Italians who managed to slightly damage the aura of British motorcycle construction, affecting engine and chassis construction alike.

And now Ariel is coming forward and brings a "sensational" surprise with the LEADER. Actually twofold: first the machine itself is fully covered (on closer inspection it is even more sensational in that it is not just about a cover, but a self-supporting body), and second; a 250 two-stroke twin engine, no doubt inspired by the Adler engine, designed by an unprejudiced engineer obsessed with the concept. Hardly anyone can understand this better than we do when this very concept is already regarded as the state of the art wherever high-performance two-stroke engines are built. No one would be happier than we if this new Ariel Motor would succeed in logically continuing the pioneering work once done in Frankfurt. Numerous details prove that everything else was done here than "copying" a proven engine - real further development has been achieved here on a sound basis, which unfortunately others - had to give away.

One must be fully impressed by the correctness of the line of development that has been taken, when one can convince one's commercial management - and in England at that - at a time that sometimes looks very much like the twilight of the two-stroke engine, that a plant with a name as rich in tradition as Ariel, to bet on the two-stroke engine card. By the way - we don't believe in the ‘twilight of the gods’ mentioned - the engine with the three moving parts will probably still be very useful, especially from the point of view of common markets and correspondingly damn tough competition!

So first of all, the engine, of which Motor Cycle and Motor Cycling provided very excellent cross-sections and detailed diagrams right at the first presentation (where else can you find that?), a selection of which is shown in our pictures. The first thing that catches the eye is the undivided cast housing for both the engine and the gearbox, designed as a tunnel housing with lateral bearing covers and three-point suspension on the box frame above. One suspension at the front, above the intake port guide, the other two at the rear, on the swingarm bearing of the frame. The crank case is ribbed and obviously separated from the gear case by an "air duct" in the middle.

The two individual cylinders made of special gray cast iron are inclined forwards by 45°, they have cooling ribs set at an angle of 45°, which are therefore horizontal, and are held on the housing together with the light metal heads by four long stud screws each. The light-alloy pistons each have two rings that are only 1.5 mm wide, are flat but slightly cambered (normal reverse scavenging), and the compression space in the head is a symmetrical dome, unlike most German high-performance two-stroke engines (except Adler) which use a "Squeeze head." Cylinder bore and stroke 54 x 54 mm = 249 ccm displacement, compression ratio 8.3. The standard maximum output of 16 hp is achieved at 6400 rpm. Separate exhaust gas routing for each cylinder and separate exhaust pipes with diffuser-input, which are again hung at the rear of the frame.

The crankshaft is particularly interesting. The two crank drive units - with their crankpins naturally offset by 180° - are connected in the middle bearing with cones, the cone of the left crank drive unit is pulled into the inner cone of the right one by means of a threaded bolt with a hexagon socket. For the socket wrench to the inside the outer crankshaft bearing journal is centrically drilled hexagonally. The right-hand shaft journal carries the rotor of the Lucas AC machine, the left-hand journal has the 22-tooth chain pinion for the primary drive next to a small external flywheel.

The whole structure of the crank drive and the separation of the two cylinders actually enables the separate dismantling of one engine side, i.e., the individual expansion of the cylinder with head, piston and crank mechanism unit, an undoubtedly original solution of the Ariel designers.

The foot-operated four-speed gearbox follows normal structure. The four gears result provide gear ratios of 5.9, 7.8, 11 and 19:1. The typical English range of 3.2, is too narrow for our continental requirements. Mixture lubrication 25:1 - interestingly enough 20:1 is prescribed when using self-mixing oils - but even that is still less than is customary in England for mixture-lubricated two-stroke engines. But what gives the new machine its own character is the sheet steel box frame, which, welded together from several profiles. It is in a sense "two-tiered" to accommodate a 2½ gallon tank (only 11 litres). The battery and the two ignition coils within the rear part forms the support for the two rider's seats and the upper bearing for the rear spring struts. In order to appear along conventional lines, a dummy tank becomes a "trunk". Lifting the lockable flap reveals a luggage compartment of not inconsiderable volume, in which the steering lock and the tank filler neck are also housed.

The front fork also consists essentially of two box-shaped bars welded together from pressed parts, which accommodate the drawn short swingarms in their lower parts, which are supported via cam tracks and telescopic guides on the two compression spring elements housed in the bars and are also equipped with dampers are.

On the underside of the main frame are the (removable) side panels, which cover the entire engine compartment and part of the rear section, as well as curved leg protection shields that are raised to handlebar height and a special rear guard panel. At the top, the front fairing merges into a windshield, which has blown around so far on the side that the handlebar grips are also covered. The rear swingarm is mounted in two maintenance-free rubber bearings on the continuous bolt for mounting the engine block. 16-inch wheels with 3.25 tires carry front and rear full-hub brakes with a 6-inch diameter and 30 mm width brake pads.

As mighty as the whole machine looks - in terms of the cubic capacity of its engine, it is an "lightweight" - but surprisingly also in terms of its total weight: according to the information in the brochure, this is only 300 lb, that is about 135 kg, and the Ariel people are rightly very proud of this engineering achievement for a machine clad in so much clothing. A key contributor to this astonishingly low weight is the supporting box frame, which is said to weigh no more than 13 lb. The Ariel LEADER undoubtedly sets the standard for the UK motorcycle market - it is a sensation - as we said, both because of the engine and above all because of its total fairing. And just as undoubtedly an effort was made to create something really modern with it, deviating from the orthodox. In itself this idea is not new - others have tried before to build a two-wheeler that combined the advantages of the scooter in terms of dirt protection with the driving characteristics of the motorcycle, and we know solutions which, as far as compromises can be at all, had to be described as successful. But, where have they gone? They disappeared, partly because design and manufacturing deficiencies did not allow them to get beyond the start-up series, and partly because of reasons of principle: because scooterists and motorcyclists form two separate categories that have less in common than some people think. Will the Ariel people have different experiences? For the sake of the engine, we wish them the best.

Fumis

German write up about the introduction of the Ariel Leader. The German writers focus extensively on the development of the bike's 250cc two-stroke motor, derived from the prewar 250cc Adler twin. Indeed, the association is punned in the title, Adler being the German for 'eagle.' Pgs 436 and 437.

Original Copy:




Thursday, January 5, 2023

BMW Isetta - the Saviour of the Company



















Bayerische Motoren Werke - better known as BMW - was originally founded as an aircraft engine manufacturer in Munich in 1910. They built engines for a variety of German aircraft during the Great War (1914-1918). Following Germany's defeat and the banning of aircraft manufacture under the Versailles Treaty of 1919, the company was forced to seek alternative products. Several changes of structure and name occurred before the company settled on BMW in 1922. The company built motorcycle and stationary industrial engines, farm tools and household goods in order to stay in business before they built their first motorcycle in 1923 and this was to become a major business for the company going forward.

In 1928, BMW purchased the struggling Dixi automobile company of Eisenach, Saxony. Dixi had built large, conventional cars of their own design in the early 1920s but as the economy failed in the late 1920s, they had obtained a license to build the British Austin Seven budget car. The Dixi Seven sold relatively well the company was struggling. After BMW took over the company and the economy slowly began to improve, they began to make substantial improvements to the budget Dixi, transforming it from a budget automobile into a desirable sports car, even selling a manufacturing license to the British Fraser-Nash company.

BMW car manufacture stopped during the Second World War and the company returned to building aircraft and marine engines and motorcycles for the army. As military industries, their factories in Munich and Eisenach were badly bombed and in 1945, the BMW Eisenach plant found itself in the Soviet Occupation Zone of East Germany.

Under the terms of the occupation, all war industries were to be stripped as reparations and liquidated, however, the factory management at Eisenach presented Soviet Marshall Zhukov with a BMW 326 sportscar and motorcycle during an inspection tour of the plant. Zhukov recognized that an operational BMW plant was worth more in export potential than it would have in scrap and machinery value. He signed an executive order placing BMW under an 'autowehlo' state-owned enterprise and encouraged the factory to immediately restart production.

Between 1946 and 1952, BMW's Eisenach plant manufactured BMW cars and motorcycles in small numbers (there were massive shortages of steel, machinery and specialist parts across Europe) which were exported to Scandinavia and other European countries. BMW in Munich, which had primarily been the aero engine plant, maintained close ties with Eisenach, despite growing political tensions. BMW Munich hoped, as did many in Germany, that their assets in the East would be returned upon German reunification. They were to be disappointed.

In March 1952, the Soviet Foreign Ministry wrote to the West German government and the three other occupying powers, USA, Britain and France, proposing that the occupation regimes be terminated, that Germany be reunited as a single state, occuping military forces be withdrawn, free national elections be held and a final peace treaty with Germany be signed. The two German governments, Britain, France and the US, and Germany's neighbours were invited to attend a conference to work through the details. Britain and the US however, refused to withdraw their troops and the West German government, beholden to its sponsors, turned down negotiations. The two Germanies were now set on a path of mutual antagonism as the front-line of an escalating Cold War.

Although there had been tensions between East and West Germany since the late 1940s, trade and exchange still continued. That was now to cease. BMW Munich attempted to recover its Eisenach plants in the West German courts, then when that failed, raised patent and branding claims against Eisenach, which cut off the export of all BMW Eisenach cars and motorcycles to western markets. The East German government responded by formally nationalizing the Eisenach plant and rebadging the company as EMW. This put paid to the BMW claim, but the writing was on the wall for EMW. EMW motorcycle production stopped and the auto plant was redirected to the manufacturing the IFA (formerly DKW) F9 budget car for the domestic East German market.

BMW Munich was not an automobile or motorcycle plant and so had to restart production from scratch. From 1948 they began assembling parts and plans from dealers and service offices and reverse engineering designs from pre-war motorcycles in the trizone (the three western occupation zones). Some workers from Eisenach who had fled to the west bought with them copies of plans. The first post-war BMW Munich motorcycles began rolling of the production line in 1949.

BMW Munich's automotive division was largely comprised of middle-level sales managers with little experience in plant management and manufacturing, so when the company turned to restarting car production, their instinct was to go large and expensive. Munich's first post-war car was the luxurious BMW 501, powered by BMW's prewar six-cylinder 2 litre engine - the same engine that was used in the Eisenach built BMW/EMW 340-2. The car however was over-weight so a 2.4 litre V8 engine was substituted in 1954.

The BMW 501 and 502 were in no way suitable vehicles for their time and sales of these two bohemouths were slow. In addition, due to their build cost, BMW lost money on every car they sold. The State of Bavaria stepped in to buy BMW 502s as police vehicles simply to throw the company a lifeline to stay afloat.

There was no way BMW engineers could develop a budget car suitable to the market from scratch before the company was bankrupted, but then an opportunity presented itself. ISO Rivolta were a small Italian manufacturer of refridgerators, appliances and scooters and, at the 1954 Geneva Motor Show exhibited their newest development - a small, egg-like bubble car called the Isetta. The car attracted a lot of attention - and a lot of orders - but ISO were only a small company and would not have been able to meet demand. They were keen to seek manufacturing partners. BMW representatives saw the opportunity and organised a license to manufacture the Isetta in Germany (Velam manufactured the Isetta in the French market).

The BMW Isetta went on sale in 1955 and was an instant hit in Germany and across Europe. It was a stroke of good fortune for BMW as motorcycle sales across Europe went into terminal decline from 1956. Isetta sales managed to fill that gap and helped the company stave off bankruptcy. Overall some 160,000 BMW Isettas were built from 1955 until the model was retired in 1962.

BMW continued to stumble along on the verge of bankruptcy up until 1962 when a completely new range of cars, the BMW 'Neue Klasse' were released. It was the New Class models that ultimately saved the company.

But that's another story....


Monday, January 2, 2023

Classic Motoring Events in Perth 2023

Sunday 5th February 2023 - Classic Cars and Coffee

Photos from this year's opening event:
https://heinkelscooter.blogspot.com/2023/02/classic-cars-and-coffee-5-february-2023.html

Sunday 19th February 2023 - Northam Vintage Swap Meet


Saturday 25th and Sunday 26th February 2023 - Nautical Drive Festival

A new two day motoring event with a cruise from Perth to Busselton and a display and exhibits at the foreshore in Busselton. For information and bookings, check out website:
https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/nautical-drive-festival-tickets-394160784517

Sunday 5th March 2023 - Classic Cars and Coffee

Photos from the March show: https://heinkelscooter.blogspot.com/2023/02/classic-cars-and-coffee-sunday-5th.html

Friday 17th and Saturday 18th March 2023 - Bumpers-n-Beats

Custom and cool motoring festival at the Bunbury-Geographe Motor Museum. Check out the website for details: https://www.bumpersnbeats.com.au/

Sunday 19th March 2023 - Old Iron Swapmeet

Including a two stroke motorcycle display: https://vmccwa.com/classic/

Saturday 25th March 2023 - Brookton Old Time Motor Show


Sunday 26th March 2023 - Classic Car Show


Sunday 2nd April 2023 - Classic Cars and Coffee

Photos from the 2nd April:
https://heinkelscooter.blogspot.com/2023/04/classic-cars-and-coffee-sunday-2nd.html

Sunday 16th April 2023 - York Motorcycle Festival


Sunday 23rd April 2023 - British Classic Cars and Coffee - 10am-12noon


Sunday 23rd April 2023 - Japanese Car Day 3-5pm


Sunday 23rd April 2023 - Wagons Out West (a new event for station wagons)


Sunday 7th May 2023 - Classic Cars and Coffee

Photos from the day:
https://heinkelscooter.blogspot.com/2023/05/classic-cars-and-coffee-sunday-7th-may.html

Sunday 21st May 2023 - Distinguished Gentlemen's Ride

To find a ride near you or to donate, go to the website:

Sunday 21st May 2023 - British Car Day

Should be beautiful weather for a drive out to Gin Gin.

Sunday 4th June 2023 - Classic Cars and Coffee


Saturday 10th June 2023 - Machinery Preservation Society Midland Workshops Display Day

https://www.machinerypreservationwa.com/

Sunday 2 July 2023 - Classic Cars and Coffee

Photos are here: https://heinkelscooter.blogspot.com/2023/07/classic-cars-and-coffee-sunday-2-july.html

Sunday 6 August 2023 - Classic Cars and Coffee

Photos from the day: https://heinkelscooter.blogspot.com/2023/07/classic-cars-and-coffee-sunday-6th.html

Sunday 3 September 2023 - Classic Cars and Coffee


Sunday 10th September 2023 - York Motor Show


Sunday 17th September 2023 - Curtin FM Car Show


Sunday 17th September 2023 - Bindoon Historic Vehicle Day


Sunday 24th September 2023 - Great Southern Classic at Denmark

Bring the whole family along and enjoy this fun day with us. There will be live entertainment, Rock’n’Roll Dancers, Food, Raffles, Prizes, Stall Holders and our local shops and eateries will be open on the day. Location: Strickland Street, Denmark. Entrant’s Fee: $20 Classic Cars/$10 Motorbikes

Saturday 30th September 2023 - WA Festival of Speed


Sunday 1st October 2023 - Rotary Club Car Show


Sunday 15th October 2023 - Golden Ponds Show and Shine


Sunday 22nd October 2023 - Classic Cars and Coffee


Sunday 29th October 2023 - German Car Day

For more info, check Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/2426042054202777

Sunday 5th November 2023 - Classic Cars and Coffee


Sunday 12th November 2023 - French Car Festival

Check out the Facebook event for more details: https://www.facebook.com/events/1675306492990558/

Sunday 19th November 2023 - Aquinas College Car Show

For more info and to register, check Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/992370555432502

Friday 27th November to Sunday 29th November - Joondalup Festival of Motoring - Postponed!

Dear Classic Cars and Coffee tribe. We regret to inform you all that this Sunday’s event has been postponed.

The Tyrepower Joondalup Festival of Motoring organisers regretfully informs this weekend’s event will not be going ahead due to the Mariginiup bushfire and extreme weather conditions.

Our thoughts are with the residents in the emergency zone and with the emergency workers who are concentrating their efforts to where it is most needed.

We thank our officials, participants, competitors and vendors for their understanding and support, and we look forward to announcing a rescheduled date for the event in the new year.

Sunday 3rd December 2023 - Classic Cars and Coffee


Sunday 3rd December 2023 - Day of the Volkswagen

Note the new location at Whitfords (okay, it was held there last year too)
https://www.facebook.com/events/1035857580767696

Sunday 3rd December 2023 - Celebration of the Motorcar

We have many amazing cars coming to Celebration of the Motorcar this year, including a Bugatti Chiron Supersport, 1957 Cadillac Eldorado Brougham ex-Frank Sinatra, new Lamborghini Countach, genuine Porsche 356 Speedster, Supercharged Corvette Z06, Ferrari F40 and much more in the 150 cars on display.

Other features include:
A 1934 Rolls-Royce Phantom II Continental, restored from being a tow truck in the 1950s will wow everyone.
The only Aston Martin DBS GT Zagato in Australia being shown to the public for the first time.
A unique Mulliner boat-tail bodied 1925 Bentley just finished its restoration will debut at the show.
Cars spanning 1907-2023...

Refreshments, live classical music, traders and a wonderful new riverside venue in East Perth with lots of shade, nearby cafes, pub and restaurants... Don't miss out on this 30th Anniversary event.

Sunday 31st December 2023 - Classic Cars and Coffee

Last show of the year is always a big one! Photos are here:
https://heinkelscooter.blogspot.com/2023/12/classic-cars-and-coffee-sunday-31st.html