Yes, Mark, you are thinking of A&A Racing. A friend had one of their cast swing arms on a C15/B25 he ran in AHRMA Premier Lightweight. This looks to be one of them:
http://issuu.com/retromotoonline/docs/bsac15and also
http://www.b50.org/photos/uploaded/_1e08feae8f0d78c6a9f6bc0995f217be_larryrbswingarm1.jpgErnie Earles built an entire chassis (including Earles fork) out of aluminum for a 500cc non-unit BSA twin back in the 50s (featured in the 06/87 Classic Bike and located in the S. Miller museum)
Don't forget your Swenco alloy LLF, the OSSA aluminum monocoque RR, the Alta Suzuki aluminum monocoque trials bike with magnesium fork yokes, the CRDC aluminum monocoques used on both RR and MX, Offenstadt RR monocoque, etc. Aluminum is just another metal and different designers used different materials. I suspect that many of the period alloy swing arms are probably less stiff than the steel s/arms. The Ti BSA works bikes were certainly a step in the wrong direction. IIRC the early Suzuki OEM alloy swing arms on the big GS street bikes were heavier than the steel parts they replaced. Some of the modern "replica" alloy s/arms I've seen look pretty dodgy structurally to me. Aluminum may be 1/3 the weight of steel but it is also 1/3 as stiff, so for a given size of tube you'd better have 3X the wall thickness in the aluminum part to have similar stiffness, but once you do that you've got the same weight and much worse fatigue characteristics.
I like steel.
FWIW, when he responded to my request for "who knows the earliest instance of machined from solid alloy clamps" Tony Foale told me "I can offer early 1970s but I certainly would not claim to be the first. When I started making frames as a business I then changed to getting basic castings done in magnesium which I machined on a lathe face plate. Prior to that I made a couple sets from the solid."
So we've got at least Tony and the CZ factory making billet clamps in the early 70s.
There are some Curnutt articles here:
http://www.eurospares.com/graphics/suspension/No shim stacks, they had a floating piston. I've seen mention that Works Perf's Gil V started out by modifying Curnutts, but I don't have anything more than hearsay on that.
I'll admit that I'm biased away from stock motorcycles, having never had a new bike that stayed stock much longer than it took to get it home. Rules that rewrite history by pretending some things didn't happen seem a bad idea. Stock bikes are nice to see now and then and every museum should have some, but our sport is one filled with people like Les Archer racing cammy Nortons on the dirt, or Dennis Jones, Len Harfield and Bob Geeson who built entire race bikes including the engines in their sheds.
If it looks like someone could have built it in the period it is fine by me and I'm happy to see it, because I know there's a good chance that someone probably did build it or something even cooler. But other people have different opinions.
cheers,
Michael