Tag Archives: Hockenheimring Museum

The Hockenheimring Museum | Part Two

Hockenheimring Museum
Part Two

With Phil Aynsley


In Part 2 of our look at the Hockenheimring Museum we travel up to the first floor… You can visit the first part here: The Hockenheimring Museum | Part 1 (link)

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Hockenheimring Museum

PA Hockenheimring Museum Part
Hockenheimring Museum

Some overall views of the machinery on display, the majority of which are road bikes.

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Hockenheimring Museum

PA Hockenheimring Museum Part
Hockenheimring Museum

PA Hockenheimring Museum Part
Hockenheimring Museum

Koehler-Escoffier is a now almost forgotten French manufacturer that actually produced bikes from 1912 up until 1957. Their first design was an OHV 42º 500cc V-twin (known as the Mandoline due to the shape of the crankcases).

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Hockenheimring Museum

PA Hockenheimring Museum Part
Hockenheimring Museum

The Tourism and Sport versions were produced from 1922-1928. The Sport featured a hemispherical combustion chamber with valves at 45º (25hp) compared to the Tourism’s parallel valves (10hp). A Sport won the 1922 Marseille GP.

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Koehler-Escoffier

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Koehler-Escoffier

The number 18 bike is one of the two Sanvenero 500 GP bikes impounded by the Hockenheim circuit in 1982. For more information see: Sanvenero 125 and 500cc GP Racers from the 1980s (link).

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Sanvenro 500 GP

Karl Resse from Denzlingen built this four pot homemade racer in 1965 using Kreidler cylinders. It displaced 208cc and made 26hp at 10,800rpm. The rider was Kiochi Shimada, who had been sent to Germany at the age of 15 in 1950. A highly respected racer and businessman, he, among many other things, established European Honda Trading GmbH.

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Karl Resse racer

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Karl Resse racer

Tuner Fritz Kläger from Freiburg built two FKS 350cc water-cooled 2-stroke triples in 1970. He had constructed three 250 twins, also water-cooled, the previous year. The 350 made 65hp at 10,500rpm (the 250cc 50hp at 11,000rpm).

While the crankcases and block were his own design, the Höckle crankshaft was identical to the DKW 350. Bultaco pistons were fitted. A Dieter Busch frame was used.

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FKS 350cc water-cooled 2-stroke triples

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FKS 350cc water-cooled 2-stroke triples

The 1912 Wilkinson TMC, was produced in small numbers (around 250 of all models) up until 1916 by the famous Wilkinson Sword company, the design was shown to the British military in 1908. It was originally powered by a n air-cooled transverse V-twin and featured a Maxim gun mounted on the handlebar.

After failing to impress the armed forces a redesigned 676cc four cylinder model was shown the following year, called the TAC (Touring Auto Cycle). In 1912 the TMC (Touring Motor Cycle) entered production with a water-cooled four cylinder 848cc side-valve motor of the company’s own design.

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Wilkinson TMC

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Wilkinson TMC

A replica 1938 Vincent HRD TT Series A and the same years’ road-going Comet.

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Vincent HRD TT Series A

A 1937 ex-works Excelsior Manxman 250.

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Excelsior Manxman 250

A 1948 Walter-Horak 250. Built by Jan Horack using a JAWA frame and a Walter motor.

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Walter-Horak 250

A 1926 Wooler 500.

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IMZ race bikes

Two IMZ race bikes (better known these days as Ural). The 1946 750cc M75 (behind) was scheduled for series production but only 150 were built between 1946-1951, all for racing. 35hp. It was an OHV version of the earlier side valve M72, a BMW R71 clone. The 1954 750cc M77 (foreground) made 45-50hp and only 70 were produced from 1954 to 1959.

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1954 750cc M77

A 1930 Majestic 350.

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Majestic 350

A 1904 Laurin Klement 500.

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Laurin Klement 500

Two of the four Mercury motorcycles built! These 1937 bikes were designed by Laurie Jenks of Croydon as the ultimate touring bike and featured an alloy chassis & bodywork (only the guards were steel) and a ‘duplex’ front suspension (a type of hub-centre steering). Water-cooled Scott motors were fitted. The price of £115 was the same as a 1100cc JAP powered Brough-Superior!

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Mercury motorcycles

This blue La Mondiale is a 1929 vintage Belgian machine that used a French Chaise OHC 500cc single motor. Several different manufactures’ engines powered later La Mondiale designs. The Ardie Silberfeil (Silver Arrow) was made from 1931 to 1934 and featured a Duralumin alloy square-section frame. A JAP OHV 500 single was used.

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La Mondiale

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La Mondiale

A fine example of the 1935 Gnome Rhone Model X. Built from 1935 until 1939, the Model Z used a 724cc OHV flat twin motor that made some 30hp at 5,500rpm, while the bike weighed 180kg and had a top speed of 135km/h.

In 1937 the Model X set several world speed records including the 24 hour – at an average speed of 136km/h. In 1939 a group of 12 French Army officers rode one for 19 consecutive days/nights, travelling a distance of 50,000km at an average speed of 109.4km/h!

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Gnome Rhone Model X

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Gnome Rhone Model X

The Osborn Engineering Company was founded in 1901 and up until 1921 they produced bikes for Burney and Blackburne. They became involved with racer Claude Temple and in 1926 an OEC Temple Anzani set the World Motorcycle Speed Record at 121mph.

In 1927 the company introduced a patented steering system (a sort of hub-centre design) that was called the ‘Duplex”. A range of bikes then followed powered by various capacity motors from JAP, Villers, Bradshaw and others. OEC even introduced a two-wheeled car, the Whitwood, powered by motors ranging from a 150cc Villers to a 750cc JAP.

Motorcycle production was interrupted by the war but resumed in 1949 and continued until 1954. This particular example is powered by a 750cc Austin four cylinder car motor.

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Osborn Engineering Company

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Osborn Engineering Company produced machines for other brands

Source: MCNews.com.au

The Hockenheimring Museum | Part One

The Hockenheimring Museum
Part One

With Phil Aynsley


The Hockenheimring Museum contains a treasure-trove of interesting two-wheeled machinery (and a few with three and four as well).PA Hockenheimring Museum

Located behind the main grandstand of the Hockenheim circuit, near Heidelburg, the museum is home to hundreds of bikes and with a floor area of 2,200 square metres it claims to have the largest collection of racing motorcycles in Europe.PA Hockenheimring Museum

From DKWs, MZs and NSUs to Kawasaki GP and endurance bikes to Nortons and home built specials, there is certainly plenty to see!

In this column we’ll look at what’s on the ground floor, with Pt2 covering the 1st floor.

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This 1981 Suzuki 1000R (XR69) has a proud heritage. Graeme Crosby rode it to victory in both the World TT Formula One and British TT F1 titles. For ’81 the Yoshimura developed GS1000 motor had been fitted in a new chassis with Full Floater rear suspension. Power was over 130hp and top speed was around 170mph. Many replicas of the XR69 have since been built!

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Graeme Crosby’s 1981 Suzuki 1000R (XR69)

One of the 21 original Reliant 850cc four cylinder engine Quasars produced between 1976 and 1981. Later versions used a variety of motorcycle engines.

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Reliant 850cc four cylinder engine Quasar

A circle the Nortons! A fine collection of singles are on display including the 1923 Model 18 in the foreground. Designed by James Norton himself, the Model 18 saw the introduction of OHVs in place of side-valves. Output was about 25hp and the top speed over 90mph. Apart from setting speed records the Model 18 won the IOM Senior TT in ’24 & ’26. The sidecar racer is a 1949 600 that was originally exported to Melbourne.

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Nortons in the Hockenheimring Museum

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Nortons in the Hockenheimring Museum

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Nortons in the Hockenheimring Museum

Some of the more contemporary race bikes on view. Included are Kawasaki ZXR750 endurance bikes and KR250 & 350s, Dorio Romboni’s 1997 Aprilia RSW-2 GP bike, Armstrong 250GP and many others.

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Contemporary race bikes

PA Hockenheimring Museum
Contemporary race bikes

PA Hockenheimring Museum
Contemporary race bikes

PA Hockenheimring Museum
Contemporary race bikes

In 1938 NSU began development of the 350 & 500cc RK bikes with ex-Norton engineer Walter Moore as chief designer. The motor was a DOHC parallel twin with bevel drives to each camshaft. A supercharger was fitted behind the cylinders. Two 350s and a 500 were raced at the IOM in 1939 but none finished. Supercharging was still allowed in German competition until the end of 1950 so the RKs continued racing. This 500 was good for 98hp and a top speed of 168mph. See the full write up of the NSU 500RK here (link).

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NSU 500K capable of 98hp and 168mph – Hockenheimring Museum

A number of the museum’s German race bikes can be seen here. Left to right: 1955 NSU 250 Sportmax, 1934 NSU 500 SS ‘Bullus’, 1954 250 Sportmax (the first one built, ex-Walter Reichert), 1939 DKW 350 SS supercharged (5 pistons!), 1938 DKW 250 SS (with Roots supercharger, ex-Martin Scheeweiss), 1936 250 SS supercharged, 1954 L100 (Russian 92cc supercharged for record breaking). Behind: 1954 NSU 125 Rennfox (ex-Werner Haas).

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German Race Machines

PA Hockenheimring Museum PA Hockenheimring Museum PA Hockenheimring MuseumFrom Left to right: One of the two 2002 short wheelbase Peraves EcoMobile Mono Turbo 1200s built. The sole EcoMobile prototype of 1982. The 1986 Colani-Egli MRD-1 record bike. Based on the Egli MRD-1 (5 built) the Colani designed machine featured a 1400cc turbo, nitrous-injected Kawasaki motor. The top section of the streamlining was worn on the rider’s back. It set the 10km standing start record of 272.41kph (top speed 330kph).

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Peraves EcoMobile Mono Turbo 1200

A 1961 MZ RE250 with a Honda endurance machine behind.

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1961 MZ RE250

A neat sectioned Honda VR750.

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Honda VR750

A 1927 Moto Guzzi 250SS.

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1927 Moto Guzzi 250SS

A pair of BMWs.

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BMW boxers

Two big European hitters – a Münch Mammoth and one of the 38 Van Veen OCR rotary bikes built.

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big European hitters

PA Hockenheimring Museum
big European hitters

PA Hockenheimring Museum
big European hitters

Detail of a Münch-URS powered sidecar. The 1971 World Championship was won by a Münch-URS outfit.

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Münch-URS powered sidecar

The 1988 ROC-ELF5. See the NSR V4 powered 1988 ELF5 write-up here (link).

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1988 ROC-ELF5

A pair of Kawasaki ZX-7 endurance racers and Jean-Fraçois Baldé’s 1982 KR350.

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Kawasaki ZX-7 endurance racers

Designed and built by Rolls Royce engineer Dennis Jones in 1954 (preceded in the mid 40’s with 500cc flat-four supercharged 2-stroke and 250cc DOHC parallel twin race bikes). Even the carbs were home built!

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The Jones 500/4

PA Hockenheimring Museum
The Jones 500/4

Source: MCNews.com.au