Vincent Black Shadow
Manufacturer | Vincent H·R·D |
---|---|
Production | 1948–1955 |
Assembly | England: Stevenage, Hertfordshire |
Class | Standard |
Engine | 998 cc (60.9 cu in) 50° OHV V-twin |
Bore / stroke | 84 mm × 90 mm (3.3 in × 3.5 in) |
Compression ratio | 7.3:1 |
Top speed | 125 mph (201.2 km/h) (est.)[1]: 62 |
Power | 55 bhp (41 kW) @ 5,500 rpm |
Ignition type | Lucas magneto |
Transmission | 4-speed |
Frame type | Welded box or tubular backbone |
Tyres | 3 × 20 front 3.50 × 19 rear |
Wheelbase | 56.5 in (1,435 mm)[2]: 126 |
Seat height | 32.5 in (826 mm) |
Weight | 458 lb (207.7 kg) (dry) 500 lb (226.8 kg) (wet) |
Fuel capacity | 3.5–5 US gal (13.2–18.9 L) |
Related | Rapide, Black Lightning |
Motorcycles produced by Vincent H·R·D at their factory in Stevenage, Hertfordshire, England were renowned for their design innovation, engineering excellence and high performance. Already advertising their existing 110 mph Rapide machine as "The world's fastest production motorcycle", in February 1948 the distinctive Vincent Black Shadow was announced with a top speed of 125 mph. Built in three different Series over the course of its life, the line continued until 1955, after which the company stopped all motorcycle production.
Design
Engine and transmission
The Black Shadow uses a version of the air-cooled four-stroke 50° V-twin engine that powers the Vincent Rapide. Bore and stroke of the undersquare twin are 84 mm and 90 mm respectively, giving a displacement of 998 cc (60.9 cu in). Each cylinder's two overhead valves are operated through rocker arms and short pushrods by two gear-driven cams mounted high in the engine's timing case.[3] The valves have both upper and lower guides, and the rocker arms are forked at the valve end to operate the valve by pushing on a metal shoulder part way along the length of the stem. On Series B and Series C Shadows the spark-plug for the front cylinder is on the right hand side while the one for the rear cylinder is on the left. On Series D bikes both plugs are on the right.[2]: 27 The engine has dry sump lubrication.[4] The electrics on Series D bikes are by Lucas [2]: 48 This included a change to coil ignition and a DKX2A distributor.[2]: 45
Engines for Black Shadows were largely built out of selected Rapide production parts.[2]: 55 The camshafts, for example, were standard Rapide units; MkIs in early examples and MkIIIs from 1952 onward.[2]: 54 Parts were hand-selected for tighter tolerances, and airflow was improved by blending and polishing of the engine's ports. Early Black Shadows have a third inner valve spring not shared with the Rapide, but this feature was dropped from later bikes.[2]: 53 Due to the low-octane 'Pool' petrol that was all that was available in the early post-war years, bikes of the period could have only low compression ratios. Although the prototype Black Shadow was built with a compression ratio lower than the Rapide's nominal 6.8:1, production Shadows have a ratio of 7.3:1 due to having different pistons from the Rapide, although still supplied by Specialloid. The Black Shadows have different carburettors from the Rapides, with Series B and C bikes having 1⅛" Amal 289 carburettors and Series D bikes having 1⅛" Amal Type 389/10 units.[2]: 58, 59
While other contemporary motorcycles tended to be polished and chromed, founder Philip Conrad Vincent (PCV) decreed that the Black Shadow engine itself be black.[1]: 62 The engine's signature colour was achieved by applying a "pyluminising" coating of chromate anti-corrosion primer over which a layer of Pinchin & Johnson black enamel was added. The part was then baked in an oven for 2 hours at 200 °F (93.3 °C).[2]: 58 Although some have claimed that the black finish increased the rate of heat rejection from the engine, its main real benefit seems to have been its visual impact.[2]: 57
Unit construction combines the bike's engine and 4-speed Vincent transmission in a single housing. The ratio of the bottom gear was raised from 9:1 to 7.2:1 [2]: 60
Frame and bodywork
As in the Series B Rapide, the engine is mounted as a stressed member, eliminating the need for a downtube cradle. Series B and C Black Shadows use an upper frame member (UFM) consisting of a fabricated steel box that doubles as an oil tank. On the Series D bikes the revised UFM is a simple tubular member with brazed lugs at each end bolted to a slightly modified version of the Series C malleable iron steering head casting.[2]: 36 This revised UFM no longer carries oil and so a separate oil tank is fitted. Due to extensive use of aluminium alloy, weight for the complete bike is kept to a relatively light 458 lb (208 kg).[5]
The standard handlebar on all models of HRDs and Vincents is the black enamelled `HRD straights'. Series B and C bars are 7/8 inches in diameter and 25 inches long with the ends bent back at 20°. Series D bars are 1½ inches longer.[2]: 38
The Black Shadow could be had in Touring specification, and a sidecar could be fitted on either side of the bike.[2]: 66
The Series B and C machines do not carry any indication of the model name in their transfers, lining or badges. Beginning in 1955 on the Series D Black Shadow the figure of Mercury is joined by transfer text reading "Black Shadow".
Suspension
The rear suspension of the Black Shadow is a cantilever system, with a rear frame member (RFM) of two parallel upright triangular members pivoting from heavy plates on the back of the transmission case at the bottom and attached at the top to two spring boxes angled out from the seat post and damped by a hydraulic damper. In the Series D the RFM was redesigned with relocated spring box lugs and a new, single Armstrong spring/damper unit. These changes resulted in a 30% increase in travel to a full 6 in (152 mm).[2]: 36
In front the Series B Black Shadows have the same Brampton girder fork used on the Series B Rapide. A 180 lb front spring is fitted on the Series B Shadows, in contrast to the 160 lb units on the Rapide.[2]: 61 In Series C and later Black Shadows the Brampton unit is replaced by Vincent's own Girdraulic blade-type girder variation that used a hydraulic damper in place of a coil spring. Another Series C change was the appearance of curved lugs for the seat stays.
Brakes, wheels, tyres
The brakes on Series B and Series C Black Shadows are dual 7 in (180 mm) single leading shoe (SLS) drums front and rear. Unlike the Rapide, the drums are not interchangeable front-to-rear on the Black Shadows. The Shadow drums are ribbed cast iron.[2]: 61 The front drum has a small flange and is attached with five bolts, while the rear has a larger flange and is attached with ten bolts. The brakes use Ferodo's MR41 linings, which was new on the Shadows.
Instrumentation
The primary instrumentation on Series B and Series C Black Shadows is a Smiths chronometric speedometer that from 1949 on was a large 5 in (130 mm) unit mounted almost vertically.[6] Speedometers on domestic models are calibrated up to 150 mph, while export models are fitted with a 240 km/h equivalent.[2]: 65 Series D Black Shadows do not use the 5 inch speedometer but rather a 150 mph version of the ordinary 3 in (76 mm) S576/L instrument.
Model history
While the Series B Rapide was not designed to be a racer, PCV felt that steady improvement was necessary and drew up a specification for a version with greater performance.[1]: 8 [2]: 60 The factory had been receiving inquiries regarding tuning options that would increase performance of the existing model, and PCV believed that a new model would offer two things; an upgrade path for owners looking for more speed and increased profits for the factory. Further encouragement was provided by the racing success of factory racer and performance testbed Gunga Din.[1]: 59
When PCV proposed the new model to Vincent managing director Frank Walker, Walker refused to authorise development.[1]: 60 Engineer Phil Irving and racer and Development shop head George Brown quietly built two bikes to the new specifications.[1]: 61
The prototype Black Shadow had engine number F10AB/1B/558 in frame R2549, and was completed on 16 February 1948.[2]: 53 The bike was road tested by Charles Markham in Motor Cycling May 1948, during which test the bike was reported to have reached 122 mph (196 km/h).
The Black Shadow was officially introduced at the 1948 Motorcycle Show at Earls Court in London.[7] When it was tested by the respected journal Motor Cycle in 1949, they concluded ‘‘It is a connoisseur’s machine: one with speed and acceleration far greater than any other standard motor cycle; and with unique and ingenious features which make it one of the outstanding designs of all time. So far as the standards of engine performance, handling and braking are concerned – the chief features which can make or mar an otherwise excellent mount – the mighty Black Shadow must be awarded 99 out of 100 marks: 99 because nothing, it is said, is perfect.[8]
The Black Shadows were built with the same labour-intensive hand-fitting of bearings and major engine parts that Vincent had used prior to the war.[9][10] Official records say that 1774 Vincent Black Shadows were made.[11]: 27 Vincent also built 15 "White Shadow" models to the same mechanical specifications as the Black Shadows but with an engine that was polished rather than enamelled.[12] White Shadow engines had a prefix of "1A/".[13]
In 2007 the Vincent H·R·D Owners Club commissioned the VOC Spares Company Limited to build a replica Black Shadow from new parts.[14] The goal of the project was to prove that all parts were in stock and available from the VOC Spares Company Limited. Having received glowing reviews from the motorcycle press in the UK, the machine was auctioned by Bonhams and eventually went on display at a museum in New Zealand.[15][16]
Journalist Hunter S. Thompson wrote "If you rode the Black Shadow at top speed for any length of time, you would almost certainly die. That is why there are not many life members of the Vincent Black Shadow Society."[17] The bike is mentioned several times in Thompson's 1971 novel, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas.[18]
Motorsports
Bonneville 1948
Black Shadow serial number F10AB/1B/900 was a specially prepared model sold to American John Edgar for the purpose of challenging the American land speed record for motorcycles. The goal was to take the AMA National Class A flying-mile record then held by Joe Petrali and his modified Harley-Davidson and which stood at 136.183 mph (219.165 km/h).[19]: 414 The bike had to be in Los Angeles California before September 1948.
1B/900 was a factory-built racer, but as there was no plan to market such a version as a separate model when it was built, the bike began life as a Black Shadow even though it was later referred to as a Black Lightning by the factory.[2]: 88
Vincent mechanic Cliff Brown writes that he built a modified engine for the bike, with extensive porting and polishing and a compression ratio of 12.75:1.[20]: 52 Brown also reports that he designed and ground three sets of prototype MkII cams for the bike. This origin of the engine is disputed by Denis Minett, head of the Special Engine Department at Vincent at the time.[21] 1B/900 was test-ridden by Cliff's brother George, who was said to have taken the bike to over 140 mph (225 km/h) at the Gransden Aerodrome.[1]: 62 [20]: 55 After this the bike was shipped to Vincent dealer V.L. Margin in California.
Edgar had arranged for American Rollie Free to pilot the bike on the record attempts. Free unofficially broke the record during a test run at Rosamond Dry Lake in California with a recorded speed of 138 mph.[19]: 414
On 13 September 1948 Free and 1B/900 appeared at the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah, USA. On his first run Free set a new record for naturally aspirated motorcycles of 148.6 mph (239.1 km/h). Free then stripped off his racing leathers and on his final run, laying prone on the fender of the bike, set a record speed of 150.313 mph (241.905 km/h). A picture taken during this run earned this motorcycle the name "the bathing suit bike".
On the basis of this run Vincent's subsequent advertising used the slogan "The world's fastest standard motorcycle: This is a FACT – NOT a Slogan!"[11]: 34
Montlhéry 1952
With support from the Wakefield Oil Company, owners of the Castrol brand, Vincent took seven bikes to Montlhéry France in 1952 to challenge a variety of endurance records, the 100 mph for 24 hours record in particular.[1]: 84–86 The bikes were a mix of Black Shadows and Black Lightnings, along with Gunga Din which served as a test hack and did not participate in the record runs. The Black Shadows that did run were modified to very nearly the same specifications as the Black Lightnings.
The record attempts started on 13 May 1952 and continued for three days. The motorcycles faced unusually high temperatures at the track that year.[22] Big-end failures put an early end to the attempt but several records were achieved including the 6 Hours and 1000 Kilometres by a Black Shadow.[1]: 84
One of the spare engines for the run at Montlhéry wound up in Vietnam. It was sold to an owner in the United States, who installed it in a Rapide frame. The bike changed hands several times before being bought by Herb Harris and restored to Black Shadow specifications.[23]: 67–75
See also
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Harper, Roy (1985). Vincent Vee Twins – The famous 1000 series, plus 500 singles. 12–14 Long Acre, London: Osprey Publishing Limited. ISBN 978-0-85045-435-2.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location (link) - ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Bickerstaff, J P (1997). Original Vincent Motorcycle. Bideford, Devin UK: Bay View Books Ltd. ISBN 978-1-870979-83-2.
- ^ "1952 Vincent Black Shadow". www.nationalmcmuseum.org.
- ^ Leno, Jay. "Vincent Black Shadow: The First Superbike, and Maybe the Best". www.popularmechanics.com.
- ^ Duke, Kevin (1 April 2003). "Vincent Genealogy". Motorcycle USA. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 29 November 2017.
- ^ "Smiths Speedometer Specifications" (PDF). www.voc.uk.com.
- ^ "Vincent Black Shadow Series C". www.realclassic.co.uk.
- ^ Currie, Bob (1980). Hamlyn Publshing Group Ltd. Great British Motorcycles of the Fifties, p.16
- ^ Keane, R.A. "Recollection of Working at Vincents 1948–1950" (PDF). MPH. Retrieved 24 December 2017.
- ^ Furlong, Chip (March 1990). "'Big Sid's Passion". Cycle World. p. 58.
- ^ a b Guyony, Phillippe (1 December 2016). Vincent Motorcycles: The Untold Story since 1946. Veloce Publishing. ISBN 978-1845849023.
- ^ "1951 Vincent White Shadow". www.hemmings.com.
- ^ Classic Bike, September 2002, pp.45–55 Accessed 20 December 2017. Spotters Guide:Vincent Twins "There is some disagreement among Vincent enthusiasts as to whether or not the White Shadow should be regarded as a model in its own right. We included it in this guide because it was allocated its own engine designation. The machine is identical to the Black Shadow in spec but with the black engine enamel replaced by the polished alloy finish used on the Rapide".
- ^ "2007 Vincent Black Shadow; Vincent Owners Club Spares Co; 2007; CMM83". www.nzmuseums.co.nz.
- ^ "The Vincent Owners Club Spares Company 2007 Vincent 998cc Black Shadow". www.bonhams.com.
- ^ "European Classic Motorcycles". Retrieved 9 October 2017.
- ^ Thompson, Hunter S. (March 1995), "Song of the Sausage Creature", Cycle World, ISSN 0011-4286
- ^ "HST on the Vincent Black Shadow". www.vincent-hrd.co.uk. Retrieved 24 November 2013.
- ^ a b Ensanian, Armand (22 November 2016). Discovering the Motorcycle: The History. The Culture. The Machines. Equus Potentia Publishing. ISBN 978-0996391900.
- ^ a b Brown, Cliff (1 October 1981). George Brown: Sprint Superstar. G T Foulis & Co Ltd. ISBN 978-0854292950.
- ^ Minett, Denis. "MPH 399" (PDF). MPH. p. 27. Retrieved 22 February 2018.
- ^ "Lot 291 – The ex-works, Montlhéry speed record attempt,1952 Vincent 998cc Black Shadow". www.bonhams.com.
- ^ Cotter, Tom (14 September 2009). The Vincent in the Barn: Great Stories of Motorcycle Archaeology. Motorbooks. ISBN 978-0760335352.
Further reading
- Bickerstaff, J. P. (1 December 2009). Original Vincent Motorcycle: The Restorer's Guide to Postwar Singles and Twins. Herridge & Sons Ltd. ISBN 978-1906133146.
- Clymer, F.; Richardson, P. (30 August 2007). Vincent 1935–1955 Owner's Handbook of Maintenance & Repair. Veloce Enterprises Inc. ISBN 978-1588500724.
- Kingham, Tim (1 October 2017). The Vincent Black Shadow. Amberley Publishing. ISBN 978-1445667225.
- Miller, Zack (1 January 1994). Illustrated Vincent Motorcycle Buyer's Guide. Motorbooks International. ISBN 978-0879388485.
- Stevens, E. M. G. (June 1977). Know Thy Beast: Vincent Motor Cycles. Vincent Publishing Co. ISBN 978-0950418681.
- Wright, David (24 November 2002). Vincent Motorcycles. Crowood. ISBN 978-1861265166.
External links
- Media related to Vincent Black Shadow at Wikimedia Commons