CLASSIC
MOTORCYCLE ZENITH
CLASSIC MOTORCYCLE ZENITH |
Zenith's
Gradua will long be remembered for two reasons: the pioneering Gradua
gear system itself, and the clever marketing campaign inspired by the
Zenith's all- conquering performance. So dominant was Zenith's
Freddie Barnes in 1911, riding a Gradua against single-speed
opposition, that he won no fewer than 53 hillclimbs that year, after
which the organizing Auto-Cycle Union barred the Gradua from entering
many events.
Zenith's
management seized the opportunity to emphasize that the Gradua had
been banned because of its superior performance. The firm from Surrey
produced a new badge, featuring the word 'Barred' and a motorcycle
behind the bars of a jail. The logo was used not only on the Gradua,
but also on other Zenith models long after the Gradua system had been
superseded.
Until
Barnes invented the Gradua system in 1908, the only way of adjusting
the gearing of the belt-drive bikes of the day was by changing the
position of the crankshaft pulley that took the engine's drive to the
rear wheel. The problem with this system was that if belt tension was
correct in high gear, it was too slack in low.
Barnes'
patent system overcame this problem by means a long handle, nicknamed
the 'coffee grinder', which ran vertically up one side of the engine.
The bottom of the shaft was connected to both the crankshaft pulley
and the rear wheel. When the rider turned the coffee-grinder, both
the pulley and the spindle moved simultaneously, so
the
gearing could be altered while the drive belt remained in tension.
Barnes
was the driving force and engineering genius behind Zenith, having
founded the firm at Weybridge in 1905 to build a curious two-wheeled
machine called the Tooley's Bicar. This housed a 3hp Fafnir engine in
a novel frame consisting of twin tubes joined by springs. One set of
tubes held the rider and engine; the other set supported the wheels,
with steering achieved via a complex car- type hub-centre
arrangement.
CLASSIC
MOTORCYCLE ZENITH
Many
a slip...
CLASSIC MOTORCYCLE ZENITH |
Zenith
retained a reputation for performance long after the Gradua system
had been superseded by Rudge's Multi (which used a similar variable
belt system without needing to move the rear wheel)
and, later, by more sophisticated countershaft gearboxes and chain
final drive. The firm's range grew in the 1920s, until in 1928 it
comprised nine models, three of them 680ec JAP- engined V-twins of
which the fastest was the Super- Eight Sports.
The
famous banked track at nearby Brooklands was ideal for performance
testing and record attempts. Zenith riders Oliver Baldwin and Joe
Wright jointly held the track record at 113.45mph (182.58km/h) aboard
JAP-engined V-twins. before Wright lifted it to 118.86mph
(191.28km/h). But the firm hit problems and closed down in 1930.
Zenith dealer Writers of Kensington bought the marque name and
restarted production. But JAP stopped building engines after the
Second World War. After Writers' stock of 750cc V-twins had been used
up, Zenith faded away.
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