Greeves Sports Twin
Classic Bikes Greeves Sports Twin | |
Class | Classic |
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Overview[edit | edit source]
Greeves Sports Twin
Built by one of Britain's smallest manufacturers,
Greeves lightweights were true individuals with an all-round quality that often
put to shame the major motorcycle factories. The company took its name from Bert
Greeves, but the business was run as a partnership with his cousin Preston Derry
Cobb and started shortly after World War 2. In those early days the product was
a motorised invalid carriage, and the company was called Invacar.
The invalid carriages sold well and established a
firm foundation for the factory, based in Essex. The factory possessed its own
foundry and very soon became expert in the new technology of fibreglass
moulding. The invalid cars featured some innovative designs, notably suspension
by rubber bushes that acted as self-damping springs when twisted.
By the early 1950s Bert Greeves, an enthusiastic
motorcyclist and no mean off-road rider, was able to indulge his interests by
constructing a prototype motocross machine. Production versions of both an
off-road machine and a roadster appeared in 1954. Using Villiers or British
Anzani engines, and suspension based on the invalid cars' rubber units, the
frames illustrated another Greeves innovation. In place of the normal tubular
front section and steering head was a single enormously strong aluminum alloy
H-section beam.
It was the frame and front forks, that really set
Greeves apart from the rest. Despite their strange appearance, they offered
superb handling on or off the road. For a time there was public resistance to
the design, but when experienced competition rider Brian Stonebridge joined the
company in the mid 1950s, Greeves started to make a name for itself with an
incredible series of giant-killing demonstrations, which vindicated their ideas.
Roadster production centred on a range of modest
250 and 325cc lightweight twins. By the 1960s the Sports Twins had become
probably the best of their kind, thanks to Greeves handling and quality build.
An indication of the regard in which they were held was their adoption as police
bikes.
Numbers were small, however, with only around 300
racers and a few thousand roadsters appearing throughout the 1960s. Then Greeves
began to fall victim to a number of pressures. First its engine supplier
Villiers was taken over, and then the British market saw the influx of Japanese
lightweights. Invacar, too, fell victim to the changing times. It was taken over
in 1973, but in any case government support for specialist invalid cars ceased
shortly after.
The last Greeves roadsters had left the factory
in 1968, but they had designed a new motocrosser around their own single
cylinder 360cc engine. Its derivatives stayed in production until 1978, although
a disastrous factory fire in 1976 was really the end of Greeves as a volume
manufacturer.
Specs
Greeves Sports Twin (1961)
Years in production: 1956-63 (with engine variations)
Engine type: 180 degree parallel twin two-stroke
Sore and stroke: 57 x 63.5
Capacity: 324cc
Compression ratio: 8.7:1
Power I7bhp @ 5250rpm
Carburettor: Villiers 25mm
Tyres (front/rear): 20in/l8in
Weight 2701b
Top speed: 74mph