LOT 244 - Royal Enfield 1,500cc Twin engined Drag Bike
This motorcycle is to be auctioned at our Live and Online Winter Sale, Hanger 113, Bicester Heritage, OX26 5HA.
Please click the link to see the full online Lot listing:
SALE TIMES
Friday 11 December
Spares & Memorabilia (Lot 1 - 112) 9am
The National Motorcycle Museum Reserve Collection (Lots 201 – 252) 11am
Saturday 12 December
Motorcycles (Day 2) (Lots 501 – 708) 10am
VIEWING
In light of the current government guidelines and relaxed measures we are delighted to welcome viewing, strictly by appointment. All the lots will be on view at Bicester Heritage in our traditional Hangar 113. We will ensure social distancing measures are in place, with gloves and sanitiser available for clients wishing to view motorcycle history files.
VIEWING TIMES
Wednesday 9 December 9am to 5pm
Thursday 10 December 9am to 5pm
Friday 11 December 9am to 5pm (Lots 501 – 708 only)
LIVE AND ONLINE AUCTION
Please note that whilst public viewing is available by appointment, the auction itself will be conducted from a remote saleroom, behind closed doors without public access, in accordance with the current government guidelines. All bidding will be conducted via Online, Telephone and Absentee Bidding. Please contact our Bids Department to register.
AUCTION ADDRESS
Hangar 113
Bicester Heritage
Buckingham Road
Bicester
Oxfordshire
OX26 5HA
OFFERED FROM THE NATIONAL MOTORCYCLE MUSEUM COLLECTION
ROYAL ENFIELD 1,500CC TWIN-ENGINED DRAG BIKE
REGISTRATION NO. NOT REGISTERED
FRAME NO. NONE VISIBLE
ENGINE NO. YB15450 (FRONT) ENGINE NO. YA15037 (REAR)
• Believed built by Jimmy Enz and ridden by Don Sliger
• Reputedly the first ’naked’ motorcycle to exceed 200mph
• Restored condition
In the late 1960s Jimmy Enz of Lynwood, California built a twin-engined Royal Enfield drag bike with the aim of cracking the 200mph barrier for the first time on an un-streamlined motorcycle. The class record at that time was , set, of course, at the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah, scene of countless world land speed record attempts. Jimmy was an Enfield enthusiast and had set a new class record of in 1964 on an extensively modified fuel-burning Interceptor, albeit one with but a solitary engine. He later ran the same bike at but destroyed the engine on the second run (two runs being required to set an average)
Twin-engined drag and sprint bikes were nothing new, even back in the 1960s, but rather than use the more favoured 650cc Triumph or Norton engines, Jimmy Enz chose to use two Royal Enfield Interceptor motors, which had the advantage of being 736cc in capacity. The two engines were connected by gears and housed in a sturdy-looking frame featuring a tubular spine with box-section tubes elsewhere; they were built to run on alcohol fuel with additional nitro-methane, which was delivered via a quartet of Amal Monobloc carburettors, suitably re-jetted. There were two separate aluminium fuel tanks: the left-hand one supplying the front engine, the right-hand one the rear. Ignition was provided by two magnetos. Given that a modern fully faired 1,000cc superbike requires around 200bhp to get within reach of 200mph, the power Enz extracted from the combined Enfield motors must have been well in excess of that figure. Even more surprising is the fact that he chose to retain the stock clutch and gearbox!
Jimmy Enz died in the late 1960s and the twin-engined Enfield passed to his friend, Don Sliger, who would have the satisfaction of proving that Jimmy’s idea was no flight of fancy. In 1970 Don set a new class record at Bonneville with a two-way average of mph. A mechanical problem intervened when Don went for the 200mph record but not before he had recorded a speed of , the first time an un-streamlined motorcycle had topped 200mph.
The machine offered here is the ex-Enz/Sliger record-breaker, which passed from Sliger to Les Powers of North Carolina and then to the National Motorcycle Museum in July 1997. The machine’s mechanical condition is not known; accordingly, prospective purchasers must satisfy themselves with regard to its provenance, condition, completeness, correctness, or otherwise prior to bidding.
GBP25,000 - 30,000
€28,000 - 33,000
As with all Lots in the Sale, this Lot is sold ’as is/where is’ and Bidders must satisfy themselves as to the provenance, condition, age, completeness and originality prior to bidding.
1 view
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