Ahhh Yamaha Majestys - my favourite subject. Mine is a 1981 Godden Majesty using a close-to-standard 250cc TY250D motor.
For Clubman level competition, I would expect to get the same score whether I rode my well set-up TY250B or the Majesty. When competing in sections with a higher standard of difficulty, the Majesty is quite a bit easier to ride by comparison. They are both exactly the same weight.
The differences explain why the Majesty is easier to ride. The steering geometry is retained unchanged with the Majesty and just as well because TY250 steering is fabulous. The distance from the front axle to the swingarm pivot is identical on both, but the Majesty swingarm is 25mm longer, making the wheelbase 25mm longer on the Majesty. The motor is about 35mm higher from the ground in the Majesty while the footpegs on the Majesty are as low as they can go without being below the bashplate. The top of the bike (at the seat and bars) is the same height on both bikes when unladen. The shockie mounts are located to provide just over 6" rear travel on the Majesty while the TY250 is about 4" with both fitted with 340mm Falcon shockies.
The differences mean that the Majesty retains the razor sharp steering of the TY250, while being noticably more stable on rocks and going up, down and over obstacles (longer wheelbase). The increased ground clearance is a boon when riding amongst rocks because you can take lines in rocky turns that lower bikes can't. The increased rear wheel travel makes for better traction for the rear tyre on sharp slippery edges and rough slippery surfaces. The longer rear end travel also allows you to jump the bike up higher to keep the bashplate clear on big obstacles.
The header on mine is home-made from bends bought from the local exhaust shop. I have retained the standard Yamaha main chamber but would like to use a WES main chamber or similar when someone works out how to fit them with an effective heat shield. I am using a WES end muffler which was fitted after the photo. The tank is a modern aluminium replica of a Majesty tank. The only motor mods are moderate lightening of the flywheel, boyesen reeds and a new 28mm VM Mikuni - also not in the photo.
Shockies are Falcon Trial Classic with 70 lb springs and standard damping. Forks are standard TY250D running a relatively high oil level to increase the overall spring rate.
Yes it is fabulous to ride and feels much more modern than my other trials bikes which were all made in the time span 1968 to 1977 - and so it should - being made in 1981. In comparison with the twinshock trials bikes from the 1980s, it probably doesn't stand out much except in the eyes of Mick Andrews fans. I would rate the 250/320 Godden Majesty on par with the other good 1980s trials bikes (Fantic 240, SWM any model, Cota 242 and Cota 330) and easier to ride than the Honda TLR200/250, OSSA Gripper, Bultaco 198/199B, any Italjet and Cota 248/349.