1949-1954 Norton 500T

Clement Salvadori tells us about the beginnings of motorcycle trials and one of the best trials bikes ever built, the 500T.

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by Clement Salvadori
Owner Steve Eorio of Paso Robles, California, and his 1951 Norton 500T.

Motorcycle trials is a peculiar sport, having nothing to do with power and speed, just the dexterity of the person at the handlebars and the quality of the machine being ridden.

It was popular in Great Britain over a 100 years ago, when people set up courses over terrain that motorcycles were not built to go over, like a field of broken rocks or a steep muddy incline. Requirements for success were an excellent sense of balance, and a rapport between man and machine — apologies for the sexist approach, but it is pleasantly alliterative, and I doubt that any woman signed up for the 1909 Scottish Six-Days Trials. Many women are competing in this sport today.

Move forward 40 years, and in the aftermath of World War II Norton came up with one of the best rigid-framed trials bikes ever built, not to mince words. But it took a while to get there. Back in 1902 James Lansdowne Norton produced and sold his first motorcycle, using a bought-in V-twin engine. A few years later he developed his own sidevalve 490cc single-cylinder engine, with a bore and stroke of 79mm x 100mm, calling that the Model 16. In 1922 he built a companion machine, keeping the cylinder while placing the valves on top. That version was called the Model 18, with a slightly sportier ES2 (Extra cost, Sporty, 2nd version of OHV engine — aka Easy 2) introduced in 1932, and the engine in that model being the predecessor to the engine in the 500T — considerably improved, of course, but entirely reliable.

A grey motorcycle

And what about the chassis? The ES2 had a cradle frame early on, while in the 1930s the company’s lowest-price 500, the Model 16, used an open frame, meaning the engine was bolted in between the front down-tube and rear seat tube. This came in two versions, the 16H for Home service, and the 17C for sale in the Colonies, which generally gave it a few changes to cope with the bad roads out there in Africa and Asia. Norton had a good reputation in the motorcycling world, but wasn’t very clever about coming up with catchy names.

  • Updated on Feb 13, 2022
  • Originally Published on Feb 4, 2022
Tagged with: 500T, norton
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