KIWI RIDER JANUARY 2018 VOL.1 | Page 67

Did you see these other Classic features?  Race Bikes for sale  Formula 750 Ray Petty Manx detail competitive in the late 1950s and into the 1960s. At the end of the 1954 racing season Bob McIntyre, five-time Grand Prix winner and triple Isle of Man TT winner, returned to riding as a privateer. In those days short circuit road races were held almost on a weekly basis and riders could finance themselves on the start money and winnings. It was an advantage to be able to compete in as many classes as possible so McIntyre and his sponsor, fellow Scot Joe Potts, developed a 250cc Manx Norton to complement the 350 and 500 Norton entries. The 250 Potts Norton was based on a 349cc Manx reduced to an ultra short stroke engine of 64mm x 70mm bore. The cycle parts came from the Norton spares list. McIntyre rode the Potts 250 Norton Special in the 1956 and 1957 season with considerable success including the British 250 Championship at Thruxton and Silverstone in 1956. Without streamlining the 250 was capable of 100mph (160km/h), developing its peak power at 8000rpm. Plans were to produce a Desmo head for the 250, 350 and 500 Potts Nortons for the 1958 season but this did not come to fruition. McIntyre was killed after a crash on an experimental five-speed Norton three years later. In New Zealand the Desmo head idea flourished in the hands of Brian Thomas. He built a 250 Desmo Manx that won convincingly at the 1998 Assen Classic, and he went on to build 350 and 500 Desmo motors. Brian had collaborated with Doug Hele, who had built a Desmo head in the Norton workshop in 1958. The fact that a single cylinder racing machine with a heritage dating back as far as the 1930s has inspired so much development, experimental Sharing your passion facebo ok.com /Caffein eAndCla ssics KIWI RIDER 67