• Baujahr 
    1932
  • Motorradtyp 
    Street
  • Motornummer 
    424
  • Losnummer 
    190
  • Zustand 
    Gebraucht
  • Farbe 
    Sonstige
  • Standort
    Vereinigtes Königreich

Beschreibung

The Ex-H G Tyrell-Smith
1932 Rudge 350cc Works Racing Motorcycle
Frame no. 48671
Engine no. 424

• 1932 Isle of Man TT works entry
• Ridden to 3rd place in the Junior Race by H G Tyrell-Smith
• This ownership since the 1940s
• Offered for restoration

The full potential of Rudge's four-valves-per-cylinder design was slow to emerge, but in 1928 Graham Walker's works 500 became the first motorcycle to win a road race - the Ulster Grand Prix - at an average speed in excess of 80mph, a feat which led to the introduction of the legendary 'Ulster' sports model. Early engines deployed parallel valves in a pent-roof combustion chamber, but then in 1930 a trio of 350s appeared at the Isle of Man with radially disposed valves. This new arrangement emphatically demonstrated its superiority when the Rudge team of Tyrell Smith, Ernie Nott and Graham Walker finished 1st, 2nd and 3rd in the Junior TT. Nott, Walker, Smith and Wal Handley were entered on 500s in the Senior race, Handley finishing 1st at a record speed of 74.24mph with Walker 2nd, Smith 6th and Nott 7th, winning for Rudge the coveted Team Prize.
Although the 350s had demonstrated the effectiveness of the radial four-valve cylinder head, the 500s had kept the old parallel valve layout and were redesigned for the 1931 season with a combination 'semi-radial' arrangement, incorporating radial exhausts and parallel inlets. There was also an all-Rudge racing 250 for the first time (JAP engines had been used hitherto) with 350-style top-end. The 1931 season started well for Rudge, with outright and 350cc class wins in the North West 200, while the new 250 enjoyed a dream debut at the Isle of Man TT, Graham Walker winning the Lightweight event at record speed with Tyrell-Smith 2nd and Ernie Nott 4th. In the Junior and Senior events however, the works Rudges were stricken by handling problems attributed to altered weight distribution caused by relocating the magnetos behind the cylinders. Ernie Nott was Rudge's top performer with 3rd place in the Junior and 4th in the Senior, both races being dominated by the overhead-camshaft Nortons.

Difficult trading conditions in the early 1930s had seen Rudge sales falling steadily, so for 1932 the works racing effort was cut back to ten machines: three 250s, three 350s and four 500s. Both the 350 and 500 engines reverted to a front-mounted magneto, while the latter benefited from redesigned inlet valves and ports. Once again Rudge dominated the North West 200, repeating its 1931 result, but met with further disappointment at the TT. Despite an exceptionally strong four-man team comprising Ernie Nott, Graham Walker, H G Tyrell-Smith and Walter Handley, the best results were Handley's 2nd and Tyrell-Smith's 3rd places in the Junior, though Nott had been leading the Lightweight race when his engine blew up on the final lap.

Bryan Reynolds of the Rudge Enthusiasts Club has confirmed that this ex-works Rudge is the machine ridden by Tyrell-Smith to 3rd place in the 1932 Junior TT. It was also ridden in the 'Dublin 100' by one W B Murphy in 1939. The Rudge was purchased in Ireland by the vendor's late father in the 1940s (H G Tyrell-Smith was Irish, so it is possible that it was him that brought the machine to Ireland). The vendor remembers riding pillion on the Rudge in the 1960s, and recalls his father taking part in 'vintage' runs and hill climbs with it. The Rudge was last started back in the 1970s, and since then has been kept in dry storage in the basement of the family home. Offered for restoration, it represents a wonderful opportunity to return an historic and long-vanished works TT motorcycle to its former glory.


Bonhams 1793
101 New Bond Street
London
W1S 1SR
Vereinigtes Königreich
Contact Person Kontaktperson
Vorname 
Bonhams Collectors’ Car department

Telefonnummer 
+44-2074685801
Fax 
+44-2074477401