NSU 350 Supercharged
From the moment NSU began producing motorcycles, it was chiefly concerned with racing vehicles. Its first Grand Prix motorcycles appeared about 1910. They were fairly advanced for the time, with a two-cylinder V engine (only 500-cc. but modeled after American motorcycles) and a rigid chassis with front fork elastic suspension. In 1930 NSU challenged Norton with a single-cylinder single-shaft model designed by Walter Moore. This vehicle had its moment of glory when the British racer Tom Bullus rode it to a 500-class victory at the Italian Grand Prix at Monza, Italy, in 1930. In 1936 the NSU 350 single-shaft motorcycle registered the fastest lap at Monza. The following year both the 350 and the 500 were equipped with two-shaft distribution.
NSU 350 Supercharged | |
Manufacturer | |
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Also called | NSU, Neckarsulm |
Production | 1939 |
Class | Racing |
Engine | NSU air-cooled two-cylinder, four-stroke, with two-shaft overhead distribution with
two bevel gear shafts |
Bore / Stroke | 344.82 cc. (56 mm. x 70 mm.) |
Top Speed | 125 m.p.h. |
Horsepower | About 60 h.p. |
Transmission | Four-speed block |
Frame | Continuous double cradle, tubular elements. Front and rear, elastic suspension |
Brakes | Front and rear, side drum |
Weight | |
Manuals | Service Manual |
But the engine that was to lead to a series of top-notch racing motorcycles was not built until 1939. It was a four-stroke, two-cylinder engine with two-shaft overhead distribution and a volumetric vane supercharger. A 350-cc. version was readied first and then a 500-cc. model. The NSU two-cylinder with supercharger competed in the 1939 European championship, but it did not achieve brilliant results, and there was nothing to indicate that it would be the ancestor of a series of engines that would win world championships and set records.