In early November 2020 I lifted the rather heavy engine/gearbox assembly down from the shelf for a closer look, guiltily noting it had sat on the shelf for years with no spark plug. With the very rusty primary chain removed it turned over very sweetly. So what is it?
The
Engine number 8D247A is stamped just below the cylinder on the drive side. The
"engine number" is the Commission Number used by the licensing
authorities for tax purposes. It was the key number for the bike that was replaced by the VIN for modern vehicles. The Commission Number was added
to the cases at the time that the bike was built. The suffix letter could then
be added for changes to other fittings (like rear suspension) as the build year
progressed. Typically for P&M some engines, in fact complete bikes, left the factory and were sold with the same Commission Number. There
were no computers to check for duplicates back then, everything was recorded in
hand-written ledgers. The engine (commission) number here, 8D247A, reveals it
is a 1948 Model 70 (D) 350cc, the 247th built to the first
specification (A).
Engine (Commission) number (315 is a casting mark.) |
The
build number is stamped on the rear of the timing case and was specific to each
engine erector. It was a sequential number, with a letter code, identifying the
fitter. Some of the codes were re-used, especially after the war, which
does complicate things. Generally engine erectors worked on one series
of engines, either Heavyweight or Lightweight, but if they built both types
during their time at the factory they would continue to stamp the finished
engines sequentially. These numbers were added at the time of the engine
build not the assembly of the bike. The numbers were issued by the shop
foreman chronologically as engines were
completed to enable traceability to every engine erector in case of future
problems. In this case the build number is B2200 which shows it was built by
Mr.B Browne in Cleckheaton (ref.Barry Jones’ excellent Panther history). The
P&M data books show it left the factory on Tuesday February 3rd 1948.
(Thanks to Ginger, registrarpoc21@yahoo.com or pocregistrar@pantherownersclub.com for dating
information and Ian Fox for telling me the derivation of the numbers).
Build Number |
The gearbox is a four-speed Burman dated 1947.
Gearbos, 4-speed Burman |
Gearbox number |
The dynamo is a Miller three brush with built-in cut-out.
Miller 3-brush dynamo, cut-out left. |
This along with the main engine plates, the clutch and inner chaincase was all I had. Could I really convert this into a complete bike?
Clutch and engine sprocket parts. |
Basically
the 350cc Model 70 is a slightly beefed up and improved pre-war Red Panther, as is its stablemate
the 250cc Model 60. Planned during 1939/40 production was postponed by the war,
starting in 1946 when the machines were fitted with girder forks. These were
replaced by Dowty Oleomatic units for 1947 and 1948 when the model ceased
production in favour of the completely new Models 65 and 75 with their vertical
engines.
P&M Catalogue photo. |
1947 Model 60 (Photo Jacques Ivens, Brussels.) |
I wondered what else I could find for this model in my stash of parts which resides on a mezzanine floor in my garage. (That sounds rather grand but it is actually a crawl space over my workshop accessed with difficulty by a ladder and inhabited by a jumble of biscuit tins of unsorted bits, tyres, mudguards and sundry rubbish collected over the years.) Other than the M75 and the Red Panther shown in the last post I had built another M75 from a couple of wrecks Brian and I had bought years ago from a chap who had lots of rusty bikes stored in a row of gazebos. In addition we had bought a dismantled M70 for the POC which I roughly assembled and sold to Rollo Turner who has rebuilt it.
M75 Wrecks used for parts |
Another Model 75 |
Fuel Tank. |
What a great club. Bruce Sharman in Australia offered me a front frame for the cost of the postage, Tom Norman offered a set of Dowty forks. Petsch in Germany sent me a top yoke and a front mudguard stay bottom fitting as a surprise!
The frame duly arrived. it has the number 20953 on the lug under the saddle. It left the factory on Friday January 2nd 1948 so is just a month older than my engine. Ginger tells me the original engine with this frame had the build number X2096, 104 engines earlier than the one I have. The prefix X was used for the Experimental Department who built the Stroud competition machines so the frame may have a different steering head angle than production machines.
Frame number under the saddle |
Bruce had said the frame was in poor condition and even offered
to cut it to make packing easier but it looked fine to me. (I know the Aussies
build beautiful bikes and are very fussy!) It had clearly been retubed with
sleeves into the forgings but was solidly brazed so was clearly usable. I had
been unable to find the two saddle tubes I was sure I had somewhere but Fred
Baggs provided a drawing and I bought some seamless tube locally, sleeved the
ends and pressed them flat in the vice at red heat using a block shaped to form
the curve. They came out ok so I turned up some studs in stainless steel and
built up the front diamond frame. It was then apparent that the frame was
slightly out of line at the back but with a lot of heat it was tweaked
straight. Then in walked Rex Norton, ace welder, with a rear frame and four
tins of beer. What a great chap.
The frame he brought is pattern-made for a rigid heavyweight and is over-long. However the lower forgings fit the M70 engine plates and the tubes could easily be cut down to fit. This with a couple of minor bits would form a complete frame. I contacted Max Priestley, holder of the POC stock of P&M factory drawings, and soon had drawings for the rear frames of both the Model 60 and the Model 70. (These drawings are dated July 1939.) For Max’s contact details see Sloper magazine. The POC holds a lot of P&M factory drawings but these have to be used with care as many do not correspond to the items actually fitted to the bikes. I checked the drawn dimensions against my Red Panther and they seem to match. The Model 60 and 70 rear frames are dimensionally identical but differ at the bottom fixing to the engine plates. With the M60 the tubular chainstays have been pressed flat and drilled for the fixing bolts, with the M70 a forged lug similar to that fitted to the post-war rigid heavyweights was brazed to the chainstay tube.
Trial assembly; Aussie front frame, new saddle stays, new stand, pattern rear frame and engine. |
Rear frame drawing, timing side. |
I still had the factory drawing of a battery carrier which I had used to make one for the Red Panther so I set-to with some steel sheet, shears and a brazing torch and made another one. I also welded up (Rex would say not), a centre stand from metal cut from a piece of box section with an angle grinder. I also made the missing inner footrest.
Battery Bracket drawing. |
New battery bracket |
This of course took several weeks during which
time someone pointed out that a set of Dowtys was being advertised on the POC
forum. I quickly grabbed these. They are a good buy having been stored for 40
years after removal from a Panther. They don’t hold air at the moment but the
bushes feel really good and the hard chrome of the sliders is perfect.
Lightweight Dowty Forks |
My
thanks to reach this stage go to Bruce Sharman, Tom Norman, Fred Baggs, Ralf
Petscheleit, Paul Laming, Rex Norton, Ginger Ratcliffe, Ian Fox and Max
Priestley.
Looking good.....I'm making progress with a 47 M100 that has never been one bike but hopefully will be one day next year.
ReplyDeleteLovely to read this x
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