KIWI RIDER 12 2018 VOL.2 | Page 82

Did you see these other Classic features?  BIGGER IS BETTER  P & M PANTHER 1936 road going International. Spring frame available for special orders Beginning of total Norton dominance. Tim Hunt wins the Senior and Junior IoM in 1931 In late 1931 the first of the “Works Replica” models were sold under the title of “International”. If a customer bought one to race, legend has it that the worksheet attached to it on the factory floor was stamped “Manx” which of course after WW2 became one of the most celebrated names in the history of motor sport. 1931 was to be the beginning of glory days for Norton; Tim Hunt won the Junior TT with Jimmy Guthrie second, and in the Senior Hunt again came first, with Guthrie second, and Stanley Woods third. Hunt’s time for the Norton International in Manx trim Senior was 3 hours 23 minutes and 28 seconds, with an average speed of 77.90mph. This was merely the beginning of almost a decade of Norton dominance on the race tracks, which was interrupted by the Second Wold War, but continued after the war from 1947 onwards. So, from the birth of the CS1 in 1927 to the “International” at the beginning of the 1930’s and on to the Manx, the single cylinder Norton engine must be one of the most durable and successful in motorcycling history. I will look at the first golden age of the Norton in a future issue. Sharing your passion facebo ok.com /Caffein eAndCla ssics