Mk3A could be considered follow on model. As I have mentioned earlier my only concern with the B44 is how it could dominate the class given
Yeah Marc, the Mk3a is a flow on and should be (
and is) legal. I'm only mentioning it to make a point that it isn't as cut and dried as Mr Bamford would have us believe. He owns a very nice Mk3a Triumph 650 unit Metisse and if someone with his same sense of right and wrong was ruling over the pre 65 class, his bike would be declared ineligible based purely on Mr Bamfords own philosophy.
As far as the B44s I have to agree with you Marc. The little Beeza engine can be turned into a 50hp monster with a bit of engineering nouse. I've seen inside a very, very trick road race B40 engine built by one of our Klub Kevlar braniacs and it's amazing. It's got a modified Godden Speedway crankshaft, Carillo rod, Venolia short shirt piston made for a current Benelli, titanium valves and hand made titanium rockers and valve springs. The engine has a 5 speed Quaife box, kevlar NEB speedway clutch with a titanium basket and belt drive. The owner of the engine has it in a Rickman CR frame for road racing but has often threatened to fit the CCM 3 speed trans he has in the cupboard and fit it to his Mk3 Metisse MX frame. It's only 350cc but would whoop most 500 MXers in pre 65. It's not so fair when compared to some bloke racing an old Royal Enfield or Greeves but that's the way the racing cookie crumbles. There's no way to prevent internals being modified to the nth degree. What would prevent someone doing similar stuff to a Triumph or (
horror of horrors, an Enfield India)? As we've previously established you can run a 750cc top end oand as much internal gadgetry as you can get in there on your Trumpy as long as the externals are largely unchanged.
Thankfully the old adage that the slower the rider, the faster his bike must be rings true. Most of the fast blokes race fairly rudimentary setups. The bling bikes are mostly show queens or mid packers so it all evens out on the day.