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Discussion starter · #181 ·
Teisuke Tanaka

1960

(born April 13, 1937) is a former Grand Prix motorcycle road racer from Japan. Tanaka began his Grand Prix career in 1960 with Honda. He enjoyed his best season in 1962 when he won the 125cc Nations Grand Prix and finished the season in sixth place in the 125cc world championship

Nationality Japan Japanese
Active years 1960 - 1962, 1964
First race 1960 250cc West German Grand Prix
Last race 1964 125cc Japanese Grand Prix
First win 1962 125cc Nations Grand Prix
Last win 1962 125cc Nations Grand Prix
Team(s) Honda


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Teisuke Tanaka / RC142 (1959 The Isle of Man TT)
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Honda Team (1959 The Isle of Man TT)
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Tanaka talked about his impression of the first trial run on the Isle of Man
"I had never once before raced on a paved road. Asama was a dirt track, you know. In those days, even the national highways in Japan were mostly gravel roads. When we got to the Isle of Man and saw how different the conditions there were from Japan, I felt like shivering. there were sidewalks and stone walls on both sides of the road, and there was a semicylindrical ridge down the center"
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The Honda RC142 as introduced in the British motorcycle magazine Motorcycling. The name "Honda Benly" in Japanese is printed upside down at the bottom
 

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Discussion starter · #182 ·
Naomi Taniguchi

1960

Is a former Grand Prix motorcycle road racer from Japan. In 1959, Taniguchi became the first Japanese racer to compete at the world championship level when Honda entered him in the Isle of Man TT. His most successful season was in 1960 when he finished in tenth place in the 125cc world championship


Nationality Japan Japanese
Active years 1959 - 1961, 1963 - 1965
First race 1959 Isle of Man 125cc Ultra-Lightweight TT
Last race 1965 50cc Japanese Grand Prix
Team(s) Honda


Naomi Taniguchi (1959 The Isle of Man TT)
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Naomi Taniguchi / RC142 (1959 The Isle of Man TT)
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Naomi Taniguchi / RC142 (1959 The Isle of Man TT)
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Naomi Taniguchi / RC142 (1959 The Isle of Man TT)
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Naomi Taniguchi / RC142 (1959)
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Naomi Taniguchi / RC142 (1959 The Isle of Man TT)
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1961 Isle of Man TT Race 125cc, Naomi Taniguchi
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1961 Isle of Man TT Race Filming
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1961 Isle of Man TT Race 125cc, Sadao Shimazaki
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1959

Junzo Suzuki / RC142 (1959 The Isle of Man TT)
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Honda Riders (1959 The Isle of Man TT) (from left) Junzo Suzuki, Naomi Taniguchi, Giichi Suzuki, Teisuke Tanaka
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Discussion starter · #183 · (Edited)
Tony Rutter

(born September 24, 1941) was a Grand Prix motorcycle road racer who won seven
Isle of Man TT Races between 1973 and 1985. He also won four Formula Two World Championships,
and was the British Motorcycle Champion in the 350cc class in 1971, on a Yamaha and
the 250cc class in 1973 again on a Yamaha. Rutter was also a nine-time winner of the
North West 200 race held in Northern Ireland.

His career was effectively ended by a very bad accident at the Montjuïc circuit,
Barcelona (Spain) in 1985 – however even after this incident he recovered and
continued to ride in the TT until 1991
He is the father of current British Superbike rider Michael Rutter.



Nationality British
Active years 1969 - 1976
First race 1969 250cc Ulster Grand Prix
Last race 1976 350cc Isle of Man TT
First win 1973 350cc Isle of Man TT
Last win 1974 350cc Isle of Man TT


info..
http://www.ducati-tt.de/02englisch/history/history_rutter_en.htm
http://www.vintagebike.co.uk/pictures/tony-rutter/#.Uqjweyf3_EQ




Mike Hailwood and Tony Rutter
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Discussion starter · #184 ·
Gary Hocking

30 September 1937 – 21 December 1962) was a Grand Prix motorcycle racing world champion
from Rhodesia who raced in the late 1950s and early 1960s

He left Rhodesia to compete in Europe in 1958 and made an immediate impact, finishing
3rd behind the works MV Agustas at the Nürburgring. He was sponsored by
Manchester tuner/dealer Reg Dearden, who provided him with new 350cc & 500cc Manx Norton racers

He spent the winter of 58/59 with the Costain family at their home "Lindors" in Castletown on the
South of the Isle of Man, learning the Isle of Man TT course with George Costain, an established
rider for the Dearden team, who had won the Senior Manx Grand Prix on a
500 Dearden-tuned Manx in 1954. In the 1959 Junior TT, he finished a credible
12th from 22nd on the grid, an impressive achievement for a first-timer to the circuit.
In 1959, he was offered a ride by the East German MZ factory and finished second in
the 250cc championship. During practice for the 1959 Junior TT, his and the machines of fellow
team mates Terry Shepherd and John Hartle 350 Manx's were fitted with the top-secret
works 350cc Desmodromic engine, but they ran standard engines for the actual race.
MV Agusta offered Hocking full factory support for the 1960 season and he repaid their
confidence by finishing 2nd in the 125cc, 250cc and 350cc classes.

Following the retirement from motorcycle racing by defending champion, John Surtees
in 1961, Hocking became MV Agusta's top rider and went on to claim dual World Championships
in the 350cc and 500cc classes, in a dominating manner against little factory mounted opposition



Nationality Rhodesian
Born 30 September 1937
Caerleon, Wales
Died 21 December 1962 (aged 25)
Durban, South Africa
Active years 1958 – 1962
First race 1958 500cc Dutch TT
Last race 1962 Isle of Man 500cc Senior TT
First win 1959 250cc Swedish Grand Prix
Last win 1962 Isle of Man 500cc Senior TT
Team(s) MZ, MV Agusta
Championships 350cc – 1961
500cc – 1961


info..
http://www.motorsportretro.com/2011/07/gary-hocking/
http://www.eggersdorfer.info/hocking/gary-hocking.htm
MV Agusta Riders
http://www.mvagusta.it/en/riders/gary-hocking


Audio
1962 MV Gary Hocking
http://www.vintagebike.co.uk/galleries/soundfiles/1962 G Hocking MV.mp3



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350 MV Four - 1961 Ulster GP
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500 MV Four 1962 IOM TT
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Gary Hocking leads Mike Hailwood through Parliament Square, IOM TT 1962
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MV Agusta 500 Four 1960
MV Agusta first went into 500-class racing in 1950. The 500 model that the company introduced was a four-cylinder, transverse motorcycle designed by Remor, the same man who had earlier designed the Gilera four-cylinder racer.
The MV Agusta 500 prototype had two-shaft overhead distribution and final shaft transmission with universal joints. Its power was about 50 h.p., with a maximum speed of about 125 m.p.h.

This motorcycle underwent rapid development. Like all advanced models, the MV 500 four-cylinder went through an evolution that showed what had to be retained from classic
MV Agusta 500 Four-cylinder, 1957 model models and what had to be made better. The transmission shaft was eliminated, leaving the traditional chain. The fine chassis was tested with a variety of new suspension systems before the classic front telescopic fork was revived with a swinging rear fork and shock absorber.

The British champion Leslie Graham rode this motorcycle to win the 1952 Italian Grand Prix and the Spanish Grand Prix. Graham was a true champion, and with the considerable power of the MV 500, he should have dominated his class. But fate was cruel to Graham. He lost the 1952 title and had a fatal accident at the 1953 Tourist Trophy on the Isle of Man. MV Agusta lost its best racer, but the high-spirited Carlo Bandirola rode the four-cylinder motorcycle to a host of wins.
In 1954 the MV 500 was the main challenger to the Gilera.

The MV Agusta team included Carlo Bandirola, Nello Pagani, Dickie Dale, and Bill Lomas, with a 500 four-cylinder that could generate 65 h.p. at 11,000 r.p.m.
Despite this impressive horsepower, which could propel the motorcycle at top speeds over 140 m.p.h., the MV Agusta 500 failed to win the 1954 championship. The main problems that led to this defeat were some stiffness in the chassis and the lack of riders on a par with the Gilera stars. In 1955 Umberto Masetti switched from Gilera to MV Agusta. He was joined by Ray Amm, who had formerly driven for the Norton team. Amm's career with MV Agusta came to a tragic end during the Shell Conchiglia d'Oro (Golden Shell) at Imola. Masetti never managed to outrace the Gilera motorcycles. John Surtees, who had made a name for himself racing for Norton and NSU, came out from England. For Continental Circus racers Italy was Mecca, and MV Agusta, on the lookout for outstanding drivers, offered a safe port.

Surtees joined the MV team in 1956 and set out after the Gilera competition with a 67-h.p. motorcycle. At the end of the season Surtees and the MV Agusta four-cylinder were again world champions in the 500 class.
In 1957 the old four-cylinder engine was completely overhauled. The cylinder dimensions were changed, and its power was increased to 70 h.p. at 11,000 r.p.m. But this was not enough to meet the competition. Gilera had also upgraded its engine. Surtees won only the Dutch Grand Prix. At the end of the season Gilera withdrew from racing, leaving the field wide open for MV Agusta. From 1958 to 1960 John Surtees was the reigning champion. Next Gary Hocking won and then Mike Hailwood won four consecutive world championships, before passing on the MV scepter to Giacomo Agostini. The superiority of the old MV 500 four-cylinder became legendary.

http://www.bonhams.com/auctions/15320/lot/534/

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Discussion starter · #185 ·
Ron Haslam

(born June 22, 1956) is a British former Grand Prix motorcycle road racer who has
been racing for over thirty years, winning three World titles, four British championships
and having ridden in almost 110 GPs.

One of ten brothers and sisters from Milnhay Road in the mining town of Langley Mill, near
Heanor, Derbyshire, Haslam started racing in 1972 at the age of 15 on a
750cc Norton Commando owned jointly by elder brothers Phil and Terry. On a wet
and slippery track at Cadwell Park he finished seventh and eighth in his two races.
He raced just a couple of meetings that year and only a handful in 1973. Following
the death of Phil in a racing accident at Oliver’s Mount, Scarborough, in July 1974, the
teenager pulled out of the sport for the rest of that season. In 1984 another
brother, Terry, was killed racing a sidecar outfit at Assen, the Netherlands.
Despite those cruel blows, Haslam kept on riding in his chosen sport, with his most
recent outing being on a Ducati 998 at the Race of the Year at Mallory Park in
October 2004. Haslam spends much of his time helping his son, Leon Haslam, in his
expanding racing career and training riders and racers alike at the
Ron Haslam Race School at Donington.



Nationality British
Active years 1977 - 1993
First race 1983 500cc South African Grand Prix
Last race 1993 500cc British Grand Prix
Team(s) Honda, Suzuki, Cagiva, Norton


info..
http://staffordshirebikeshow.co.uk/ron-haslam/
http://unionmotorcycleclassics.blogspot.gr/2013/09/ron-haslam.html


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Discussion starter · #186 ·
1970s Aussie Stars

Warren Willing And Greg Johnson


Two of Australia's most successful Road Racers of the 1970s, Warren Willing and Greg Johnson,
who last met on the track in the 1979 North West 200 in Northern Ireland, will return to the track
again for the April 3-4 2010 Honda Broadford Bike Bonanza (HBBB).

For Willing, their last race together spelt the end of his riding career in a smash that left him with
severe leg injuries, while Johnson went on to finish in third place.

The 2010 HBBB - a non-competitive event that will see track action across almost every motorcycle
sporting discipline -- will provide the perfect opportunity for the two riders to take to the
tracks together once more.


Willing will ride a 1972 TD3 Yamaha owned by Melbourne enthusiast Peter Smith
while Johnson will ride the ECCO Engineering 1000cc BMW, built by 'Gyro' Carless
and formerly raced by the late Kenny Blake
.

The BMW was built for the BEARS (British, European, and American Racing) class
and reached 162 mph (260.6 km/h) at Melbourne's Sandown Park in Blake's hands.

Prior to his departure for Europe in 1978, Johnson was at the very top of the competitive
Australian scene and set the all-time motorcycle lap record for the Phillip Island track in its
original form before it was rebuilt in 1986.

Australian Unlimited Road Racing Champion in 1976, Willing carved out a new career
in Team Management and as a highly sought after technician in Moto GP following his accident.

He guided Kenny Roberts Junior to the 500cc World Championship in 2000, and has
worked for Yamaha, Suzuki, KTM, and Team Roberts at GP level.



info..
http://www.motorsportretro.com/2010/02/warren-willing-to-ride-at-the-2010-hbbb/



Back In The Day: Greg Johnson (5) on an ex-Warren Willing 1977 Yamaha TZ750
with air/oil accumulators on top of the forks, as seen on 1977 YZ motocross bikes

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Discussion starter · #188 ·
THE
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TEAM


Helmut Hallmeier
Was a former Grand Prix motorcycle road racer from the Germany.
His best years were in 1954 when he finished the season in ninth place in the 250cc
world championship and 1957 when he finished in ninth place in the 350cc world championship


Nationality West Germany German
Active years 1952, 1954 - 1956
First race 1952 500cc German Grand Prix
Last race 1956 250cc German Grand Prix
Team(s) NSU


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Hans Baltisberger
(born September 16, 1924, Betzingen, Germany - August 26, 1956 )
was a Grand Prix motorcycle road racer from Germany. His best year was in 1954
when he finished the season in fifth place in the 250cc world championship


Nationality West Germany German
Active years 1952, 1954 - 1956
First race 1952 500cc German Grand Prix
Last race 1956 250cc German Grand Prix
Team(s) NSU

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Brno 1955
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Hermann Paul Müller
Road-racer

1955 title winner as a privateer
Runner-up in European Grand Prix championship as early as 1939

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In these next few days it will be the 50th anniversary of Hermann Paul Müller’s World Motorcycle Championship title for NSU. Müller, who answered to the name “Renntiger” (race tiger), was the first privateer to win the World Championship in the 250 cc class. He recorded over 200 victories – not just on two wheels – and was one of the German motor racers who were prevented from enjoying a truly great career by the Second World War.

H.P. Müller, born in 1909 in Bielefeld, moved to Zschopau (Saxony) in 1935 in order to drive for DKW as a test driver and as a works driver at Auto Union AG. He had already become German motorcycle champion before he switched to racing cars in 1937 and became one of the heroes of the legendary supercharger era. Having matured alongside Bernd Rosemeyer in the DKW motorcycle team, Müller was earmarked as Rosemeyer’s mid-term successor in the Auto Union Silver Arrow after the hero of this time suffered a fatal accident in 1938.

H.P. Müller won the French Grand Prix in 1939 and was leading the season’s European Grand Prix championship – the predecessor of what is now the Formula One World Championship – when the war broke out. Tragic for H.P. Müller: no more races took place and the National Socialist government named the 1939 European Champion – Hermann Lang of Mercedes-Benz. Lang had won more races; H.P. Müller, being the great sportsman that he was known to be, never uttered a single complaint.

When the war was over, H.P. Müller had to start from scratch – and this also meant in the financial stakes. He recommenced racing in motorcycle championships as a privateer and had won seven championship titles in every single class by his final season. Meanwhile, the end of the career of works drivers at NSU appeared to be sealed in 1954. After the death of Rupert Hollaus in an accident during a race, the world champions from Neckarsulm retired from motorsport and offered their works drivers so-called production racers – enhanced road motorcycles. Müller, soon to be 46, once again took the risk and competed privately in the 1955 World Championship on a 250 cc Sportmax. The exceptionally gifted mechanic and innovator went on to write a chapter in motorsport history: he was the first privateer to become world champion. After 26 years as a racing driver, the “Renntiger” bowed out at the pinnacle of his career. A sensation was still to follow: NSU nominated him in 1956 to carry out world record attempts at a salt lake in the US state of Utah. Hermann Paul Müller set 38 new world records here. He died on 30 December 1975 in Ingolstadt – where he is also buried – just after his 66th birthday.

The four rings of the Audi badge symbolise the brands Audi, DKW, Horch and Wanderer, which were later combined under the umbrella of Auto Union. Auto Union and NSU, which merged in 1969, made many significant contributions towards the development of the car. AUDI AG was formed from Audi NSU Auto Union AG in 1985. Together with the two traditional companies Auto Union GmbH and NSU GmbH, Audi Tradition nurtures and presents the deep and diverse history of Audi. The Audi museum mobile at the Audi Forum Ingolstadt is open from Monday to Sunday, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.

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Wilhelm Herz
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(18 January 1912, Lampertheim, Grand Duchy of Hesse – 5 January 1998) was a motorbike racer and land speed racer. He started his career in 1932 with DKW and went over to NSU in 1939. He ran races on national and international courses like the Berlin AVUS, Grenzlandring, Helsinki, Hockenheimring, Hohenstein-Ernstthal, Isle of Man, Monza, Nürburgring, Schleizer Dreieck, Schottenring and Solitude. He gained his international reputation through numerous world records on two- and four-wheeled vehicles.[citation needed] He set a motorcycle record in 1951 on the Munich - Ingolstadt motorway and repeated it at Bonneville Salt Flats, Utah in 1956. In this instance, he was the first person to ride a motorbike over 200 mph (320 km/h).
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Werner Haas (World Champion)
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(30 May 1927 in Augsburg - 13 November 1956 in Neuburg an der Donau) is
a former Grand Prix motorcycle road racer from Germany. He became Germany's
first motorcycle world champion when he won the 1953 FIM 125 and 250 World
Championship for NSU
.The following year, he would repeat as the 250 world champion.
Haas was killed in 1956 in a light plane accident in Germany

Nationality German
Born 30 May 1927
Augsburg, Germany
Died 13 November 1956 (aged 29)
Neuburg an der Donau, West Germany
Active years 1952 – 1954
First race 1952 250cc West German Grand Prix
Last race 1954 250cc West German Grand Prix
First win 1952 250cc West German Grand Prix
Last win 1954 250cc West German Grand Prix
Team(s) NSU
Championships 125cc- 1953
250cc- 1953, 1954
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On 25 July 1954, the fully clad Blue Whale model entered its first race on the Solitude circuit at Stuttgart. Werner Haas and Rupert Hollaus achieved first and second places in the very first race, a feat they repeated in four more races. In 1954, NSU took part in 24 races and won all 24 of them. Werner Haas won the world championship and the German championship in the under 250 cc class on the Race Max, Blue Whale model.
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Rupert Hollaus
(4 September 1931 in Traisen - 11 September 1954) was an Austrian Grand Prix motorcycle road racer who competed for the NSU factory racing team.
He is the only Austrian to win a road racing World Championship
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Hollaus began his Grand Prix career in the 1953 season. In the 1954 season, he dominated the 125cc class by winning the first four Grands Prix. Later that same year, he was killed in practice for the Italian Grand Prix at Monza.[1] Hollaus became the first posthumous World Champion in 1954, in the 125cc class and was runner up to his NSU team-mate, Werner Haas, in the 250cc class

Nationality Austrian
Active years 1952 - 1954
First race 1952 250cc West German Grand Prix
Last race 1954 250cc Swiss Grand Prix
First win 1954 Isle of Man 125cc Ultra-Lightweight TT
Last win 1954 250cc Swiss Grand Prix
Team(s) NSU
Championships 125cc - 1954
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Albert Roder
The man who designed the NSU Max

Almost every Maxfahrer, who has studied more closely the story of his motorcycle
should be aware that the Max has been designed by a certain Albert Roder
who was then chief designer at NSU.

His work at NSU will begin in 1936. He is heavily involved in the development
of the two-cylinder supercharged racing engine, which comes after the war to full honors.
But Roder is going on at Walter William Moore just NSU only the second man and his
constructive ideas often in a very different direction than that of Moore. It is then entirely
logical that the end of 1938 he goes to Victoria to Nuremberg, when he was there, offering
the coveted position of chief designer.
In Victoria, he developed the successful bicycle auxiliary engine VICKY I.
But NSU is something other than Victoria, so he goes back to NSU in 1946, this time
as chief engineer and first man since Walter William Moore has left NSU 1939th.

Now the most creative phase in Roders career. Here, several factors play a role: First, he is
now chief designer and determines only the technical direction. Second, the fresh start has
forced out of the ruins of the Second World War, the unique opportunity to begin a completely
new design, without having to take on old traditions disregard. And third, NSU is a
major large-scale enterprises to realize what will and is able to Roders ideas.

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info
http://www.nsu4.nl/english/e2albertroder.html
http://www.nsu4.nl/english/e1ultramaxcamshaftsystem.html


INFO
http://thevintagent.blogspot.gr/2008/09/1956-nsu-breaks-200mph-barrier.html



[youtube:3or44xb3]7S0lLupW4Fk[/youtube:3or44xb3]


On-board - NSU Sportmax
[youtube:3or44xb3]l9giKQBuSEU[/youtube:3or44xb3]


Wilhelm Herz auf NSU Delphin III
[youtube:3or44xb3]21y0Rd6D0QI[/youtube:3or44xb3]
 

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Discussion starter · #189 ·
NSU (Neckarsulm Strickmascinen Union)
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A Brief History of NSU and the Supermax

1873: NSU was founded by Heinrich Stoll and Christian Schmidt when they started a metal works shop called "Mechanical Shop for Manufacturing Knitting Machines."
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1800: NSU moved their production to Neckarsulm from Riedlingen op der Donau. They came up with the name of the company by combining the letters from the names of the rivers surrounding the plant; The Neckar and The Sulm

1886: NSU began manufacturing bicycles. Bicycles were in high demand in the late 1800's and NSU had great success.

1888: NSU made the chassis for the first Daimler automobile. NSU, unfortunately, does not get credit on Wikipedia or any other website for their part in the creation of the first non-carriage-derived automobile.

1900: NSU built it's motorcycle plant which was the first one built in Germany.
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1901: NSU's first motorcycle was ready. The motorcycle looked very much like a bicycle with a motor strapped to it which is essentially what it was. The motor produced 1.5 horsepower and was made by an outside company.

1903: NSU started producing their own engines.

1905: The first NSU automobile was available. After only a couple of years several engine options were available from 1300cc (79 ci) all the way up to a four liter engine (244 ci). NSU started producing trucks and taxicabs. WWI slowed down production as NSU responded to their country's war needs. NSU contributed cars and motorcycles to the war effort as they would in the second world war.

1909: NSU introduced a motorcycle engine that was near 1000cc.

1927: NSU became the first Germany company to build automobiles on an assembly line.

1934: NSU builds the prototype Porsche Type 32 to the plans of Ferdinand Porsche. It is the predecessor to the Volkswagen Beetle. Of the three produced, one example is in the Volkswagen Museum.

1936: NSU's Motorcycle The Quick was one of the most popular motorcycles in Europe with over 240,000 produced.

1940: NSU started to shift toward war production again with the introduction of the NSU Kettenkrad half track motorcycle. This made the NSU plant a prime target for Allied Forces in WWII.

1945: Just a few weeks before the end of the war the NSU plant was bombed. Luckilly part of the plant remained and was used by Allied Forces as a repair shop. The 98cc Quick was produced as the first motorcycle after the war.

1948: NSU celebrated it's 75year anniversary with the introduction of the Fox, a 4 stroke 100cc motorcycle. It was marketed with the slogan Fixe Fahrer Fahren Fox (smart riders rides the Fox)

1949: First new post-war design - the NSU Fox four-stroke. Followed by Lux, Max, Lambretta and Quickly.
1951: An NSU motorcycle set the speed record for 500cc Supercharged Motorcycles at 180mph and 500cc Supercharged Motorcycles with a Sidecar 500 cc sidecar at 154mph.

1953 - 1955: NSU won several World Championships in the 125 and 250cc classes.
In 1953 Werner Haas
took two world championship titles, in the 125 cc and 250 cc classes he also
won the German championship titles twice in these classes.
Victory in the 1954 “Tourist Trophy” (TT) on the Isle of Man was a major achievement.
After entering this event, the world’s toughest motorcycle race, for more than
40 years without success, Hollaus on NSU took the chequered flag in the
125 cc class, and Haas, Hollaus, Armstrong and Müller crossed the line in places
1 to 4 in the 250 cc class.
In the same year Haas triumphed in the 250 cc world championship, with
Rupert Hollaus taking the equivalent title in the 125 cc class. Two German championship
titles also went to Haas, in the 125 cc and 250 cc classes, and H.P. Müller on
NSU was German champion in the 350 cc class. NSU entered for 24 races and won each of them.
In 1955 H.P. Müller became the first private entrant ever to win a world championship
on an NSU Sportmax in the 250 cc class

1955: NSU is the largest producer of motorcycles in the world at over 350,000 per year. By 1955 NSU held speed records in all solo classes from 50cc to 500cc.

1956: NSU set the speed record for 500cc supercharged motorcycle at an astonishing 210mph.

1957: Beginning of development of the Wankel engine

1958: Reintroduction of car production; production of the NSU Prinz begins. And production of the site owner's Supermax.

1960: Production of the Millionth Quickly.

1964: The very last scooters left the brand in 1964 and the Motorcycle era was terminated in 1965 with Quick50.

1969 Merger to form Audi NSU Auto Union AG.


NSU
http://www.classic-motorrad.de/bendix/NSU-Web/nsu.html
http://www.germanmotorcycles.cl/NSU/Nsucoments.html
http://www.bonhams.com/auctions/21136/lot/378/


100 YEARS OF MAN'S WORLD RECORDS
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Discussion starter · #190 · (Edited)
Omobono Tenni
Nicknamed
The Black Devil

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(July 24, 1905 - June 30, 1948) was an Italian motorcycle road racer.
Nicknamed The Black Devil, he was a multiple Italian Motor Cycle champion, who raced
to 47 victories for Moto Guzzi from 1933 till 1948, the year he died from an accident
during practice for the Swiss GP. Omobono Tenni was born in Tirano, Lombardy.
When he was 15, his family moved to Treviso, where he began an apprenticeship at a
motorcycle workshop. At 19, he opened his own workshop and began his racing career.
His first victory was in 1924, at the end of his teenage years. It was not until 1931 that
members of his local club contributed so that he could purchase a Velocette 350 with
which he finished in third place at the Italian Grand Prix at Monza followed by a victory
at the Grand Prix Reale of Rome. In 1932, he won a race at Rapallo against
Moto Guzzi's star rider, Pietro Ghersi. His performance earned him a spot on the Moto Guzzi
team for the 1933 season. For the 1934 season, Moto Guzzi developed a new V twin 500 cc
racer and Tenni rode it to victory at the Italian Grand Prix ahead of his team-mate Stanley Woods.
He would go on to win the 1934 Italian 500 cc national championship.
Tenni first travelled to the Isle of Man TT in 1935. For a newcomer, he performed remarkably well.
He was lying in second to his team-mate Woods, when he crashed in a fog bank on the mountain section.
It was here that he came to be dubbed the Black Devil referring both to the color of his hair and his diabolical riding style.
He would again capture the 500 cc Italian National Championship in 1935.
The highlight of his career was winning the Lightweight at the 1937 Isle of Man TT, becoming the
first Italian to win the TT. In 1937 he also won the 250cc European Championship.
He suffered serious injuries in the 1938 and 1940 seasons then his racing career was
put on hold by World War II. After the war, he began racing again, claiming his fourth
Italian 500 cc championship in 1947. He put in a respectable performance at the 1948
Isle of Man TT where he set the race's fastest lap and led the race before mechanical
difficulties forced him back to ninth place. Omobono Tenni had 47 victories racing
for Moto Guzzi in the period from 1933 to 1948.


Nationality Italian
Born July 24, 1905
Tirano, Italy
Died June 30, 1948 (aged 42)
Bern, Switzerland
TTs contested 4 (1935, 1937, 1939, 1948)
TT wins 1
First TT win 1937 Lightweight TT
Team(s) moto guzzi


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"Il Diavolo Nero"
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Discussion starter · #191 ·
David WHITWORTH

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Spa-Francorchamps. Malcolm David Whitworth (1904 — 3 July 1950) was a British motorcycle racer. Denied the chance to race abroad by World War II, Whitworth computed in numerous races in the United Kingdom. In 1935 and 1936 he competed in the Manx Grand Prix, but retired both times. In 1937 he competed in the Isle of Man TT for the first time, which was thought at the time to be the toughest race in the world. In the 250 cc Lightweight TT race, he competed on a Cotton motorcycle but failed to finish. He failed to finish in 1938 as well, but in the 350 cc Junior TT he came sixth on a Velocette. In the 500 cc race at the Ulster Grand Prix he finished third, behind Jock West and Ginger Wood. In 1939 he finished fifth in the Junior TT and twelfth in the 500 cc Senior TT, in which he competed for the first time. In the first post-war TT in 1947, Whitworth finished second to his team mate, Bob Foster, in the Junior TT, the best TT result of his career. He retired from the Senior TT race. In 1949, Whitworth took part in the newly created World Championship. At both the Dutch TT and the Belgian Grand Prix, Whitworth finished fourth in the 350 cc class resulting in sixth place in the overall championship standings. Outside of the championship, Whitworth won the 350 cc race at the French Grand Prix in Saint-Gaudens. In the 1950 season, Whitworth took eleventh and nineteenth places in the Junior and Senior TT respectively. For the Senior TT, he competed for the first time as a works rider, for Triumph. On 2 July 1950, Whitworth competed in the 350 cc Belgian Grand Prix at Spa-Francorchamps. He was riding a privately entered Velocette and was in a fight for fifth place with Harold Daniell, Ted Frend and Charlie Salt. On the tenth lap, Whitworth and Salt came together, crashing heavily. The following day, Whitworth died in hospital from his injuries. In accordance with his wishes, which were to be buried close to the scene of any fatal accident he might have, he was buried in the local cemetery in Spa.


Nationality British
Born 1904
Died 3 July 1950 (aged 45–46)
Spa, Belgium
TTs contested 6 (1937-1939, 1947, 1949-1950)
TT wins 0
Podiums 1


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Discussion starter · #192 ·
Gianni Leoni

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(March 1, 1915 - August 15, 1951) was an Italian Grand Prix motorcycle road racer from Como.
His best years were in 1950 when he finished second to Bruno Ruffo in the 125cc world championship
and in the 1951 season, when he again finished in second place, this time to Carlo Ubbiali.
Leoni was the winner of the first Nations Grand Prix in the inaugural 1949
Grand Prix motorcycle racing season. He was killed while competing in the 1951 Ulster Grand Prix

Gianni Leoni and Sante Geminiani, both riders of the Moto Guzzi team, were killed in a tragic
accident during testing. The two riders were at the track together with their team mate
Enrico Lorenzetti. Geminiani and Lorenzetti made a pit stop to change machines. Leoni, worried
that his team mates had crashed went back to look for them.
Meanwhile Geminiani and Lorenzetti had left the pits and were travelling at speed when
they collided head on with Leoni. Sante Geminiani was killed instantly.
Gianni Leoni recovered his feet; but later died in hospital in Belfast. Enrico Lorenzetti
sustained only minor injuries. Despite the tragic death of two of its factory riders and
another injured, team Moto Guzzi did not withdraw from the race and the following day the
works rider Bruno Ruffo won the Ulster Grand Prix 250 cm3 class in a Moto Guzzi.
Gianni Leoni, 35yo from Como, had finished 2nd in the 125 World Championship 125 class
in 1950 behind Ruffo and in 1951 behind Carlo Ubbiali, riding a FB-Mondial 125.
At the time of his death he was second in points in
the 125 World Championship class and fourth in the 250.



Nationality Italian
Active years 1949 - 1951
First race 1949 125cc Nations Grand Prix
Last race 1951 250cc French Grand Prix
First win 1949 125cc Nations Grand Prix
Last win 1951 125cc Dutch TT
Team(s) Moto Guzzi, Mondial

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Discussion starter · #193 ·
Geoff WALKER

IoM - 12 June 1953 - Born Geoffrey James Walker in Australia, he competed
in the 1953 Senior TT Race on the Isle of Man. On the 5th lap, riding
a 350cc AJS or Norton, his footrest hit the road at Kerrowmoar after the
20th Milestone, and he was thrown off and killed. He had ridden in the Junior race
for 350s a few days before, and he was one of eighteen 350cc riders allowed to race
in the 500cc race to fill out the grid. He was buried in Braddan Cemetery, Isle of Man.
The previous day, Geoff had phoned home to Tasmania
to make arrangements to buy a new Norton on which he intended racing
the rest of the season in Europe.
 

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Discussion starter · #194 · (Edited)
Keith Campbell

(2 October 1931 in Melbourne – 13 July 1958 in Cadours)
was a former Grand Prix motorcycle road racer from Australia.
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Keith Campbell grew up in the Melbourne suburb of Prahran with the ambition to
be a champion racing motor cyclist. He became Australia's first motorcycling world champion
when he won the 1957 FIM 350cc world championship as a
member of the Moto Guzzi factory racing team.

He married Geraldine, the sister-in-law of Britain’s championship rider Geoff Duke
and came back to Australia on his honeymoon in December 1957.
He returned to Europe as the star rider at the 500cc
Grand Prix de Cadours near Toulouse in France.
According to a newspaper report, in trials he had beaten all records for
the circuit, lapping at 71.5 miles an hour.[2] He was leading the race when he
failed to round a bend known as Cox’s Corner, crashed and was killed instantly.
His cause of death was said to be a fractured skull. This same corner claimed
the life of Frenchman Raymond Sommer in 1952 and the circuit is named in his honour
Campbell’s wife Geraldine was watching the race from the pits but did not see the accident.



Nationality Australian
Born 2 October 1931
Melbourne, Australia
Died 13 July 1958 (aged 26)
Cadours, France
Active years 1950 – 1958
First race 1950 250cc Ulster Grand Prix
Last race 1958 350cc Belgian Grand Prix
First win 1957 350cc Dutch TT
Last win 1957 350cc Ulster Grand Prix
Team(s) Moto Guzzi
Championships 350cc – 1957


Moto Guzzi's last GP was won by Keith Campbell who became Australia's first motorcycling
world champion when he won the 1957 FIM 350cc Ulster Grand Prix world championship as a
member of the Moto Guzzi factory racing team. Works Moto Guzzi teammate
Keith Bryen, also from Australia, finished second in the race.
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One year later at age 26, Campbell was killed during the GP de Cadours in France
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1957 UGP Keith Bryen, Keith Campbell and Libero Liberati
Campbell on a Guzzi won with Bryen Guzzi second and Liberati Gilera 3rd

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Keith Bryen and Keith Campbell with Guzzi personnel and the 500cc V8
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Moto Guzzi 1957 350GP Racer
The final version of the 350cc that first made its debut in 1950
(although Guzzi had been racing horizontal singles in 250 & 500cc capacities since the 1930s) the Bialbero (DOHC) was the pinnacle of Giulio Carcano's minimalist design ethic.
Although its 37hp at 7800rpm was only barely competitive, its light weight of just 98kg
more than compensated - enabling Keith Campbell to win the '57 World Championship


info..
http://www.philaphoto.com/imageLibrary/thumbnails.php?album=1165


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Discussion starter · #195 ·
Giuseppe Colnago

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(December 15, 1923 in Caponago - December 22, 2000) was an Italian Grand Prix
motorcycle road racer. He had his best year in 1955 when he won the 500cc
Belgian Grand Prix and finished the season in fourth place in the 500cc world championship.
Colagno was one of the few people to race the famous Moto Guzzi V8 race bike


Nationality Italy Italian
Active years 1952 - 1953, 1955, 1957
First race 1952 500cc Nations Grand Prix
Last race 1957 350cc Nations Grand Prix
First win 1955 500cc Belgian Grand Prix
Last win 1955 500cc Belgian Grand Prix
Team(s) Gilera, Moto Guzzi

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Discussion starter · #196 · (Edited)
Terry Dennehy
Private entrants


Talk about unlikely combinations. Two 22-years-old Australia bike mechanics, working in Milan with a Swiss frame maker, turn a Honda CB450 roadster into a competitive racer.
But the Drixton-Honda Terry Dennehy and Ralph Hannan built with Othmar Drixl finished fourth in the 1969 Italian 500 GP and ran out of fuel while holding second place to Giacomo Agostini’s MV in the East German GP.

In 1970, Dennehy took sixth place in the Belgian GP and was a comfortable second in the Yugoslav GP, only to retire with oiled plugs.
Leading journalist Mick Woollett told the author that for its day, Dennehy’s machine was a very competitive privateer’s 500. Private entrants had limited options in 500 machines in ‘69. British singles were wearing out; the Linto twin had reliability problems; the Aermacchi and Bultaco singles were really ‘stretched’ 350s; and Kawasaki’s H1R triple only went on sale in 1970.

The Honda 500 was possible through the can-do attitude of the two Australians, regular shots of espresso coffee and ready access to parts in Milan.
Drixl made the frame and tank, while the lads built the engine. They bored the engine to 500cc and replaced the torsion-bar valve springs with coils. Terry ported the cylinder head and sourced American Webco camshafts.

“Many parts were bought ‘off the shelf’ in Milan,” Hannan said. “We could go around to factories and buy the stuff straight out of the box. We had Aermacchi pistons and valve springs, Fontana brakes and Ceriani suspension. The carburettor was a 32mm dual-throat Weber. Rob North made the exhaust pipes for us in England.”
Ralph Hannan went on race in New Zealand and talent-spot Graeme Crosby. Elder brother Ross Hannan became Crosby’s Superbike sponsor and Ralph turned the spanners.

Terry Dennehy developed Meningococcal in Belgium in December 2002 and died within 24 hours.

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Terry Dennehy pushing into 5th Sachenring German GP 1969 500cc. Terry was a good 2nd behind Ago for the whole race then ran out of gas on the last lap
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info
racing the 450
http://anciennes-en-piste.winnerforum.net/t1772-cb-450-drixton


450 race engine
Team Hansen Honda
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Bob Hansen along with mechanic Bob Jameson standing outside
the garage with 3 CR450s just prior to the Daytona 200.
1967

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1967
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Discussion starter · #198 · (Edited)
Heinz Rosner

(after Degners defection Rosner was leading MZ's driver)

(born January 14, 1939) is a former Grand Prix motorcycle road racer from the former East Germany. He had his best year in 1968 when he rode for the MZ factory racing team to finish the 250cc season in third place behind Yamaha team-mates Phil Read and Bill Ivy. That same year, he claimed fourth place in the 350cc world championship. Rosner rode for the MZ factory for his entire career. He has continued to race the MZ to date(2010)gaining podiums at Classic meetings such as Schleiz in Germany and this despite suffering some severe injuries in a crash at Hockenheim (Germany) in 2005.


Nationality East Germany East German
Active years 1964 - 1969
First race 1964 125cc East German Grand Prix
Last race 1969 250cc Nations Grand Prix
Team(s) MZ

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info..
http://www.classic-motorrad.de/bendix/Rosner/heinz-rosner.htm



MZ motorcycle racing team of 1959

That year, MZ contracted an amazing team of riders

MZ was a motorcycle manufacturer located in Zschopau,Germany.
MZ r Motorradwerk Zschopau (German for motorcycle factory at Zschopau)
in the Erzgebirge region of Saxony

The Zschopau works was one of the oldest motorcycle factories in the world, producing motorcycles since 1922. The most well known models were the two-stroke 125/150 and 250 series, with the variants ES, ETS, TS und ETZ. MZ was one of the few producers that made motorcycles with sidecars, though prior to 1972 sidecars were manufactured by Stoye. MZ also has a very interesting racing history. At one point in time, the German company build and designed the most technological advanced two strokes in the world. In 1958 the MZ company booked its first wins in 125/250 cc Grand Prix racing and scored an over all second place in the 250cc World Championship. The MZ two strokes, developed by engineer Walter Kaaden have influenced motorcycle racing for decades. His 1961 125cc race engine design was the first engine to achieve an output of 200BHP/litre. His revolutionary two stroke system was copied widely in the sixties by Japanese manufacturers. Yamaha and Suzuki two-stroke engines became competitive in motor sport only after they gained possession of MZ design secrets. MZs were ridden to 13 GP victories and a further 105 rostrum places between 1955 and 1976. Sadly, the German government did not exactly support the international racing aspirations of MZ. The defection to the West of grand prix rider Ernst Degner, complete with a set of secrets, started the end of the glory years of Kaadens bikes. The Skorpion Sport 660 cc single got its own MuZ-cup racing series in several countries at the end of the nineties. It is famous for its precise handling. It is still a popular mount for clubracing and Supermono racing. Its withdrawal from the official factory program is much mourned by fans. The Yamaha-based engine can be reliably tuned to 150% of its original performance. At that stage, it can become competitive in Supermono racing classes and in single and twin cylinder racing classes.


Alan Shepherd

(September 28, 1935 - July 16, 2007) was a British Grand Prix motorcycle road racer.
His best seasons were in 1962 and 1963, when he rode a Matchless to finish in second
place in the 500cc world championship, both times to Mike Hailwood.
Shepherd was a three-time winner of the North West 200 race in Northern Ireland
and finished on the podium twice at the Isle of Man TT

Nationality United Kingdom British
Active years 1959 - 1964
First race 1959 350cc Isle of Man TT
Last race 1964 250cc Nations Grand Prix
First win 1962 500cc Finnish Grand Prix
Last win 1964 250cc United States Grand Prix
Team(s) MZ

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Alan Shepherd on a MZ 125 at Siverstone in April 1962
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Derek Woodman

Was a British former Grand Prix motorcycle road racer. His best season was in 1965
when he rode an MZ to finish the year in third place in the 125cc world championship,
behind Hugh Anderson and Frank Perris.
In 1964, he teamed with Brian Setchell to win the Thruxton 500 endurance race.


Nationality United Kingdom British
Active years 1964 - 1969
First race 1964 Isle of Man 350cc Junior TT
Last race 1969 Isle of Man 500cc Senior TT
Team(s) MZ

info..
http://www.bonhams.com/auctions/19766/lot/365/



Derek Woodman, riding the 250 MZ at Sachsenring
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Derek Woodman at Mallory in 1970
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Great Britain's Derek Woodman pilots the 250cc disc-valved MZ Twin,
made a name for himself at the Isle of Man TT

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Discussion starter · #199 · (Edited)
Stefan Dörflinger

(born December 23, 1948 in Nagold, Germany) is a Swiss former Grand Prix motorcycle road racer
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Dörflinger won four consecutive FIM road racing world championships.
In 1982 and 1983, he was the 50 cc world champion. In 1984, the FIM increased the displacement
capacity to 80 cc and Dörflinger would become the first ever 80 cc world champion. He successfully
defended his title in 1985. His lengthy Grand Prix career spanned 18 seasons

He became four times the World Champion in the 50 and 80 cc class (1982-1985), and won eighteen Grands Prix since 1980.
He retired in 1989 as vice World Champion when the FIM withdrew the 80cc class from the World Championships


Nationality Switzerland Swiss
Born December 23, 1948
Nagold, Germany
Active years 1973 - 1990
First race 1973 50 cc Yugoslavian Grand Prix
Last race 1990 125 cc Hungarian Grand Prix
First win 1980 50 cc Belgian Grand Prix
Last win 1988 80 cc Spanish Grand Prix
Team(s) Kreidler, Zündapp, Krauser, LCR
Championships 50 cc- 1982, 1983
80 cc- 1984, 1985
 

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Discussion starter · #200 ·
David Aldana

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(born November 26, 1949 in Santa Ana, California) is a former motorcycle racer who
specialized in dirt track oval racing and road racing. In the 1970s, he was one of the more
colorful racers in the A.M.A. Grand National Championship with his wild riding style and
extravagant designs on his riding attire.Aldana competed in nearly every form of
motorcycle racing, including competing in the 1970 Trans-AMA motocross series
and speedway racing.

In 1970, Aldana became a rookie expert on the AMA Grand National circuit riding for BSA.
Aldana made a serious challenge for the championship. A crash at the Sacramento Mile
with just three races to go dashed his hopes for the title, but along the way he won three
nationals and finished third in the series. He won over many fans with his all-or-nothing style.
He also gained notoriety from wearing a set of racing leathers he designed that featured
an almost entirely black leather suit with a contrasting human skeleton on the front. AMA
race officials threatened to ban him at one point if he persisted in wearing the suit.

By the late 1970s, Aldana began concentrating on road racing. In 1975, he was the top individual
scorer at the Trans-Atlantic Match Races, and led the American team to their first victory in
the series over the British team. He became a factory rider for Suzuki, and later joined
Kawasaki’s AMA Superbike team in 1980 with a young Eddie Lawson as his team-mate.
He went on to be a Honda factory rider in the FIM Endurance World Championship
where he raced in prestigious races such as the Bol d'Or. Aldana teamed with Mike Baldwin
to win the prestigious Suzuka 8 Hours endurance race in 1981.

Aldana won 4 AMA Nationals during his career, as well as several important international races.
In 1999, he was inducted into the AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame. He is of Mexican American descent

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info
http://www.motorcyclemuseum.org/halloffame/detail.aspx?RacerID=18
 

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