enow.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: villiers motorcycle engines for sale

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Villiers Engineering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Villiers_Engineering

    In spite of the huge success of the 269 cc two-stroke, the four-stroke engine had not completely been shelved, as in October 1914, J.H Motors of Oldham announced [3] two motorcycles, the No.1 fitted with a 2.75 hp Villiers four-stroke engine of 349 cc (74.5 x 80 mm bore and stroke), and a 2.5 hp two-stroke model using the Villiers 269 cc engine ...

  3. Ambassador Motorcycles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ambassador_Motorcycles

    Ambassador Motorcycles is a British motorcycle manufacturer. Founded by racer Kaye Don after the World War II, the company produced lightweight motorcycles with Villiers and JAP engines and imported Zundapps from Germany. Production started in 1947 with a 197 cc Villiers-engined bikes.

  4. Norton Villiers Triumph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norton_Villiers_Triumph

    The merged company was created in 1973, with Manganese Bronze exchanging the motorcycle parts of Norton Villiers in exchange for the non-motorcycling bits of the BSA Group - mainly Carbodies, the builder of the Austin FX4 London taxi: the classic "black cab". As BSA was both a failed company and a solely British-known brand (the company's ...

  5. Francis–Barnett - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis–Barnett

    List of models: [21] 1919/1925 – Francis–Barnett badged Invicta 269cc 4-stroke Villiers engine, 346cc 4-stroke engine, 678cc sv J.A.P chain driven 4-stroke engine and 499cc Abingdon 4-stroke engine, Abingdon Motorcycles: A Francis Barnett badged Invicta took part in the Isle of Man TT in 1922 but failed to finish.

  6. Grindlay Peerless - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grindlay_Peerless

    1930 – Grindlay Peerless 196cc and 247cc two-stroke (Villiers engines), 245cc OHV (JAP engine) and a number of variants of the 490cc OHV (JAP engine) models released 1931 – Production of all V-twin engine models ceases, while those with single JAP engines are retained temporarily before being replaced by Rudge-Whitworth Python engines for ...

  7. James Cycle Co - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Cycle_Co

    James Superswift with Villiers 247 cc twin-cylinder engine. The James Cycle Co Ltd., Greet, Birmingham, England, was one of many British cycle and motorcycle makers based in the English Midlands, particularly Birmingham. Most of their light motorcycles, often with the characteristic maroon finish, used Villiers and, later, AMC two-stroke engines.

  8. Coventry-Eagle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coventry-Eagle

    The motorcycles were hand built from components and finished carefully, Coventry-Eagle motorcycles proved reliable and by the First World War the range included Villiers Engineering and JAP engines. [2] In the early 1920s, Coventry-Eagle changed its models, depending on what engines were available.

  9. Norton P11 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norton_P11

    The Norton P11 is a 745 cc (45.5 cu in) air-cooled OHV parallel twin motorcycle that was made by Norton-Villiers from 1967 to 1969. Designed as an extremely light high power-to-weight ratio desert racer, P11 was revised in 1968 to the P11A and marketed as the Norton Ranger, a road legal version of the P11 with a more comfortable seat to make it suitable for normal road use.

  1. Ads

    related to: villiers motorcycle engines for sale