Cycle News

Cycle News 2016 Issue 10 March 15

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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CN III ARCHIVES BY LARRY LAWRENCE M ulti-time British road racing champion Rog- er Marshall won the 1988 Daytona Pro Twins (previ- ously known as Battle of the Twins) event. It marked the first time a British rider won at Daytona on a British bike. Fans stood shoulder to shoulder to see the ex- otic Quantel Cosworth that Marshall rode. From their perspective this was a state- of-the-art Pro Twins racing machine. Little did many of them realize that the engine used in Marshall's winning Pro Twins bike was 14 years old on a shelf, forgotten and gathering dust for over a decade in storage at Cosworth when it was revived by Bob Graves for Battle of the Twins racing. Indy Car and Formula One enthusiasts are very familiar with the Cosworth name. The British engine maker was founded in 1958 and a decade later Cosworth was already considered the state-of-the-art powerplant in Formula One automobile rac- ing. Norton began discussions with Cosworth in 1973 for the company to build an engine to replace Norton's venerable pushrod twin. The thought was if they could just take two cylinders from the Cosworth's revolutionary F1 engine and make it a motorcycle mill, they figured they'd already have in the area of 115 horsepower in the form of a 750cc, water-cooled parallel twin. That would make the Norton competitive within the American Formula 750 class. They could also make a production ver- sion for the Norton street bike. Unfortunately, the timing was all wrong. Norton- Villiers was about to go under and the Cosworth- designed Norton engine, after a brief run in the British Championships with rider Dave Croxford, was shelved—it turns out, literally. Almost a decade later new Cosworth director Bob Graves rescued the motor from storage and set in motion the revival of the engine for Battle of the Twins. Graves, before he worked with Co- sworth, was the founder of Quantel, a high-tech company in the UK. With the wealth made from Quantel, Graves became, among many things, a THE FORGOTTEN COSWORTH P108 (Above) Roger Marshall celebrates his Daytona Pro Twins victory in 1988. Bob Graves, the man who resurrected the Cosworth engine, stands behind Marshall wearing a Michelin hat and a stopwatch around his neck. PHOTOGRAPHY BY HENNY RAY ABRAMS The infamous Cosworth motor.

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