AHRMA Vintage Racing
There is something magical (or miraculous) about racing a machine 40, 50, or even 75 years “old” on a race track
Vintage racing has many faces. Grizzled veteran racers on classic machinery, young riders fascinated by competing on bikes from the pages of popular racing history, racers attracted to competition on affordable motorcycles and a close-knit community, collectors campaigning rare and valuable machines because their passion says it’s the best way to preserve racing history – not just the mechanical bits.
Nobby Clark (right), famed race tuner and Isle of Man veteran, prepared many Honda GP-winning bikes in the 1960s for Jim Redman and Mike Hailwood. Nobby waits for the grid call with Alex McLean (Norton Champagne Bob Racing Team) at Grattan Raceway in 2011. Nobby Clark passed away in 2017.
David Roper is the only American to win a race on the Isle of Man circuit, riding a Matchless G50 in 1984 in the IOM Classic TT. He competes internationally and is a frequent rider for the Team Obsolete organization that campaigns a large stable of rare racing machines. Here he applies generous pre-race attention to his personal 1953 Moto Guzzi 350cc Airone Sport.
Terry Naughtin’s story of the rebirth of Team Hansen is an inspiring tale of personal commitment to preserving a significant chapter of moto-racing history. In 1998 Mr. Naughtin, a successful vintage racer, had a chance encounter with legendary racer, tuner and AMA Hall of Fame inductee, Bob Hansen. Among his many (many, many) accomplishments, Mr. Hansen is known for tuning the all new Honda CB750 four that won the 1970 Daytona 200 in its very first year. By 2001 Naughtin and Hansen had agreed to build and race replicas of Hansen’s 1967 Honda CR450 racers. Terry Naughtin campaigns them with great success, winning multiple AHRMA National Championships – keeping the Bob Hansen story alive. He stands with a replica of Swede Savage’s 1967 Daytona racer.
Vincent, maker of the legendary Black Lightning and Black Shadow 1000cc V-twins, also produced a 500cc single, the Comet. They also produced a racing-spec Comet dubbed the Grey Flash of which only 31 were ever made. David Dunfrey, the owner of this bike, a Comet, also owns and campaigned a Grey Flash, but, in light of its rarity, restored it to all original condition. In its place he upgraded the Comet you see here to racing spec and campaigned it in AHRMA until 2014.
Kenny Cummings, founder and proprietor of NYC Norton, preps one of the shop’s Nortons – part of a stable that began when he restored a 1974 Norton Commando 20 years ago. He has since campaigned the shop’s bikes to four AHRMA National Championships. Mr. Cummings now operates one of this country’s most prolific and successful classic motorcycle restoration businesses specializing in vintage British Twins – chiefly Nortons. Available in high-performance street trim, custom or racing spec. An NYC Norton build was picked a Bike EXIF Editor’s Choice Top 10 Custom for 2015.
Keeping a 40-year old machine in racing trim is a continual cycle of inspection, tuning, repair, surfing the ‘net for information, hanging out at swap meets for parts, long sessions of bench racing, and occasionally getting up to race speed on the track. Worth it – every bit.
The culmination of hundreds of hours of work, this Honda CB450 has been restored and spec’d out for racing with a choice selection of high performance parts. Not all are Honda OEM bits (the front brake is from a Yamaha) but if period-correct, it will be given a pass.
Maybe not hundreds of hours of work invested here, but all the same aspirations for competitive fun with an honest set of priorities.
In the paddock awaiting the return of machine and rider – and the next adjustment.
A vintage machine, pushed to the limit, gets pushed home.