Motorcycles Rights went to Norton Villiers Triumph and on its liquidation were purchased by a new company formed by management and named
BSA Company Limited.
Motorcycles from 1910 riding a 249cc BSA motorcycle at a 1926
trial hosted by the Essex Motor Club BSA Motorcycles were made by BSA Cycles Ltd, under the BSA parent, up until 1953 when the motorcycle business was moved into holding
BSA Motorcycles Ltd. The first instance of intention to produce motorcycles was reported in
The Motor Cycle, a British motorcycling journal, in July 1906. The first wholly BSA motorcycle, the H.P. was built in 1910 and displayed at the first Olympia Show, London on 21 November in that year. Sir
Hallewell Rogers, BSA Chairman, had informed the shareholders at the company's 1910 AGM in Birmingham "We have decided to put a motor-bicycle on the market for the coming season .... These machines will be on exhibit at the Cycle and Motor Show on November 21st, after which date we look forward to commencing delivery". It was produced as the A29 and A30 the following two years and became the A31 with a three-speed gearbox in 1931, the last year of production. The first Bantam model was a German
DKW design, part of war reparation, and not a true BSA design. BSA motorcycles were sold as affordable motorcycles with reasonable performance for the average user. BSA stressed the reliability of their machines, the availability of spares and dealer support. The motorcycles were a mixture of sidevalve and OHV engines offering different performance for different roles, e.g. hauling a
sidecar. The bulk of use would be for commuting. BSA motorcycles were also popular with "fleet buyers" in Britain, who (for example) used Bantams for telegram delivery for the
Post Office or motorcycle/sidecar combinations for AA patrols
The Automobile Association (AA) breakdown help services. This mass market appeal meant they could claim "one in four is a BSA" on advertising. Machines with better specifications were available for those who wanted more performance or for competition work. Initially, after the Second World War, BSA motorcycles were not generally seen as racing machines, compared to the likes of
Norton. In the immediate post-war period few were entered in races such as the TT races, though this changed dramatically in the Junior Clubman event (smaller engine motorcycles racing over some 3 or 4 laps around one of the Isle of Man courses). In 1947 there were but a couple of BSA mounted riders, but by 1952 BSA were in the majority and in 1956 the makeup was 53 BSA, 1 Norton and 1
Velocette. To improve US sales, in 1954, for example, BSA entered a team of riders in the
200 mile Daytona beach race with a mixture of single cylinder
Gold Stars and twin cylinder
Shooting Stars assembled by Roland Pike. The BSA team riders took first, second, third, fourth, and fifth places with two more riders finishing at 8th and 16th. This was the first case of a one brand sweep.
Mike Hailwood raced for BSA at the
Daytona 200 in 1970 and 1971, but failure of his factory triples meant it was without the success BSA had hoped for. For 1970 BSA (which then owned Triumph) built three
Triumph Trident based, and three very similar
BSA Rocket 3 based racers in Rob North frames. This was a no-expense spared effort to reclaim the US market after Honda's successful introduction of the CB750. US riders and Daytona 200 specialists were hired, meaning Hailwood was the only British rider in the 1970 team until a seventh bike was built for
Percy Tait. However a
Honda CB750 ridden by
Dick Mann won the race. Returning in 1971 with 10 triples BSA did win the Daytona 200, with a Rocket 3 based racer ridden by Dick Mann who had parted ways with Honda. The BSA factory experienced success in the sport of
motocross with
Jeff Smith riding a B40 to capture the 1964 and 1965
FIM 500 cc Motocross World Championships. It would be the last year the title would be won by a
four-stroke machine until the mid-1990s. A BSA motocross machine was often colloquially known as a "Beezer." Birmingham rocker Steve Gibbons released a song "BSA" on his 1980 album "Saints & Sinners" as a tribute to the Gold Star. He still plays this song with his band and often performs on the Isle of Man at the TT races.
Motorcycle models Pre World War II • hp •
Model E • Model A28 • C10 sidevalve 250 cc 1938 on design by Val Page •
C11 OHV 250cc: – – 85mpg – weight . • G14 1000 cc V-twin •
Blue Star •
Empire Star • Silver Star •
Gold Star • Sloper •
M20 (500cc):as the WD (War Department) M20 the motorcycle of the
British Army in World War II • M21 (600cc): the big brother of the M20, also used by the British Army in World War II • M22 (500CC) • Y13 750cc OHV V-Twin 1936-1938
Post World War II •
A series Twins (
four-stroke,
pushrod parallel twins) •
A7 • A7 Shooting Star – 500cc pre-unit construction • A10 – 650cc pre-unit construction •
A10 Golden Flash • A10 Super Flash • A10 Road Rocket •
A10 Super Rocket •
A10 Rocket Gold Star • A50 – 500cc unit construction •
A50R Royal Star • A50C Cyclone • A50W Wasp • A65 – 650cc unit construction •
A65 Star Twin • A65R Rocket •
A65T Thunderbolt • A65L Lightning •
A65S Spitfire • A65H Hornet • A65F Firebird Scrambler •
A70L Lightning 750 •
Triples (four-stroke, pushrod, three-cylinder engines) – The
BSA Rocket 3/Triumph Trident were developed together. The Rocket 3 shares a majority of engine components and other parts with the Trident T150, but has forward-inclined cylinder barrels and a BSA frame. • A75R Rocket3 750 • A75RV Rocket3 750 – 5 speed • A75V Rocket3 750 – 5 speed •
Singles (Four-stroke single cylinder) •
C25 Barracuda •
B25 Starfire – 250cc unit construction •
B25FS Fleetstar •
B25 SS Gold Star •
BSA B31 single • B32 Gold Star • B33 • B34 Gold Star • B40 350 Star – 350cc unit construction • B40 SS90 • B44 Victor • B44 •
B44SS Shooting Star •
B44VS Victor Special •
B50 • B50SS Gold Star 500 • B50T Victor Trials • B50MX Motocross • C series (Four-stroke 250 cc single-cylinder). • C10 •
C11/C11G: – – 85mpg – weight . The C11 used a C10 motor fitted with an
overhead valve cylinder head. The C11 frame was almost unchanged until 1951 when BSA added
plunger rear suspension. Early
gearboxes were weak and unreliable. The C11G was available with a three ratio gearbox and rigid frame or a four ratio gearbox and a plunger frame. Both models had better front brakes than earlier models. This model was a common commuter motorcycle, and many survive today. •
C12 : (1956–1958). 249 cc OHV Used the C11G engine, fitted with an
alternator and swinging fork (known as swinging arm) rear suspension. •
C15 Star – 250cc unit construction • C15T Trials • C15S Scrambler • C15SS80 Sports Star 80 • C15 Sportsman • D series (Two-stroke single cylinder. See
BSA Bantam for details) • D1 Bantam – 125cc unit-construction • D3 Bantam Major • D5 Bantam Super • D7 Bantam Super • D10 Silver Bantam, Bantam Supreme, Bantam Sports, Bushman • D13 • D14/4 Bantam Supreme, Bantam Sports, Bushman – 175cc • B175 Bantam Sports, Bushman • Others (may include some export versions of models listed above) • B31 Twin (350 cc). B31 frame fitted with a Triumph 3T motor to produce this BSA B31 Twin. Very few units were produced, probably prototypes. •
BSA Barracuda •
BSA Beagle • BSA Boxer – 1979 – c.1981 the sports version of the 50cc range (Beaver, Boxer, Brigand, GT50). The engine was by
Moto Morini. • BSA GT50 (renamed from the Boxer) • BSA Beaver (the standard road version) • BSA Tracker 125/175 – late 70s moto-cross style product by NVT with
Yamaha two stroke engine. •
BSA Dandy 70 •
BSA Sunbeam (Scooters, also produced as Triumph TS1, TW2 Tigress) • 175B1 • 250B2 • BSA Starfire • BSA Rocket Scrambler •
BSA Rocket Gold Star •
BSA Fury •
BSA Hornet • Winged Wheel (auxiliary power unit for bicycles) •
T65 Thunderbolt (essentially a Triumph TR6P with BSA Badges) At the time of the company's demise, BSA engineers were developing a range of new two-strokes from 100 - 400 cc, a 350 cc 4-valve
DOHC single and a
wankel engine. The wankel engine would later be used in
Norton machines. == See also ==