Classics at Auction: A Brough Superior and more

By Landon Hall
Published on February 18, 2008
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Entries for Bonhams’ April sale at The International Classic MotorCycle Show, Stafford continue to grow rapidly. Bonhams has announced the early consignment to its first major collectors’ motorcycle sale of 2008 of two of the Vintage era’s most highly regarded and sought after ‘superbikes’ — Brough Superior SS100 and Coventry-Eagle Flying-8 — to be sold at The Classic MotorCycle Show, Stafford on April 27, 2008.

1934 Brough Superior 8/75hp ‘Two-of-Everything’
Legendary superbike of motorcycling’s between-the-wars ‘Golden Age’, Brough Superior – ‘The Rolls-Royce of Motorcycles’ — was synonymous with high performance, engineering excellence and quality of finish. Always the perfectionist, George Brough bought only the best available components for his bikes, reasoning that if the product was right, a lofty price tag would be no handicap. And in the ‘Roaring Twenties’ there were sufficient wealthy connoisseurs around to prove him right. One such was T E Lawrence — ‘Lawrence of Arabia’ — who owned several Broughs and was killed riding an SS100.

First shown to the public in 1924, the SS100 employed an entirely new 980cc JAP v-twin engine. And just in case prospective customers had any doubts about its performance, each machine came with a written guarantee that it had been timed at over 100mph for a quarter of a mile — a staggering achievement at a time when very few road vehicles of any sort were capable of reaching three-figure speeds. Broughs set countless speed records in the 1920s and 1930s, and the outright motorcycle lap record at Brooklands was set on one. A measure of the Brough Superior’s exclusivity may be gained from the fact that in 20 years only some 2,800 machines were produced, a figure BSA could better in a single month. Of those, around 280 were JAP-engined SS100s.

Representing the JAP-engined SS100 in its ultimate form, the 8/75hp ‘two of everything’ (carburettors, magnetos, oil pumps) example to be sold is one of only six made to this specification in 1934 and retains its original frame, engine and registration mark. The machine formed part of the Murray Motorcycle Museum Collection in the Isle of Man from 1973 to 2005, when it was acquired by the current owner, and is offered fresh from a mechanical and cosmetic restoration only completed in 2007.

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