Cycle News - Archive Issues - 1970's

Cycle News 1974 09 10

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

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(I.J :5lQI ;iii: 5lQ ..01 g ;... g " 34 We'll have to settle for an account of how the machine you ride evolved during the 1973 Grand Prix season for the 250cc Motocross World Championship from the various bikes that Jim Pomeroy rode in competition to the bike you purc hase stock from a Bultaco dealer in the U.S. Personal observation is always subject to both perceptual and conceptual error, but this is the way I saw it or had it told to me by lithe factory," by the mechanics, and by Jim Pomeroy. All of them contributed to making the 250 Pursang (and to a lesser extent, the other dis p lacement mod els) the machine the motorcycle-racing pub lic is buying today. First off, the Mk VII Pursang is no t a ." J i m' P om e r o y Replica ." Jim spe ci fieally reques te d the Bultaco facto ry no t name a bike after h im u nt i l h e ha d won the World Championship, or at least placed in th e top five (Ile was seventh last year) . The factory never cal led it a "JPR." With good reason : it isn't. The Bultaco you can buy, or al ready bo ught this year is not a replica of the Grand Prix-winning Pursan g of ' 73. In most ways, it's better but, fo r openers, Jim 's hikes always sported red fiberglass tank and side panels with w hite nylon fenders. Your-I 974Y:z Mk VII doesn 't. The engine that was in Jim's 250 when the evolution of the Mk VII began was assembled from the bins of the factory competition section, then bolted into an American-built . chrome-moly frame that proved too brittle. The frame was soon replaced with a Spanish-built soft model that didn't crack and that worked out. But it seemed no matter what the factory did with th at engine, something went wrong. Most of t he G P engines tur ned out to be stock and standard m otors with normal cran ks and the expected seven ports. What made the Bultaco GP engines special, a t times the fastest in Europe, were the hours spent during the lo ng, gray, wet afternoons in Marcel Wiertz's shop near Verviers, Belgium where first, Rubio , and at the end of the year, Arnie, carefully inspected, mated, and asse mbled the motors. T here were no The Spanish retain the ability to construct beautiful, fl uid racing machines. The Bu ltaco ret ains the right s id e sh ift, the last motocrosser , t o our knowledge, to do so. Rear wheel travel is 5~ -5 * inch es w ith stock rear suspension set-up.

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