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Velocette Venom Thruxton 500

In 1965 the well proven Venom was improved by
Velocette designer Bertie Goodman with a special race kit complete with
radically revised cylinder head, an Amal Grand Prix carburetor and reworked cam
followers. The following year this went into production as the Velocette
Thruxton.
Also known as the Venom Thruxton, this aimed to fill the gap left by
the demise of the BSA Gold Star and was named after the Thruxton Circuit race
track on a former wartime airfield in Hampshire. The Velocette Thruxton was a
true racer, with a full race specification cylinder head that was gas flowed by
hand to accommodate extra-large valves and a downdraught inlet port. The Amal
carburetor was so large it required a distinctive cut away in the bottom of the
fuel tank and race cams boosted performance to up to 120mph.[7] As well as the
traditional black with gold lining finish, the Velocette
Thruxton was also
produced with an unusual blue frame, forks and seat and silver petrol tank with
gold lining. In 1969 the Lucas Magneto was phased out an replaced by coil
ignition. A total of 1108 Thruxtons were built but although it had more power
than the Venom the Thruxton couldn't save Velocette and the company was wound up
in 1968, with remaining stock sold until mid 1970. The Thruxton has gone on to
become one of the most sought after Velocette motorcycles today, however, and
many private owners convert standard Venoms to the more valuable Thruxton
specification
Source
wikipedia.org &
Velocette Owners Club
Road Test
Chromium-plated trimmings are all very well, but they never add performance.
With this in mind, Velocettes produce their Venom Special with most parts, such
as the fuel tank, wheel rims and mudguards, which are normally plated, finished
in enamel. Only mechanical difference is the use of a "waisted" rear hub instead
of the Venom full-width type. The glass-fibre engine enclosure panels are
retained.
Add the smooth charm of a beefy single, superb
roadholding allied to exceptionally powerful brakes and the balance sheet shows
an extremely desirable hogbus.
Likely to catch out first-timers unless the
manufacturers' recommended drill was followed, cold starting usually required
only one or two hefty swings on the pedal. On occasion, though, after a cold
night in the open, the model required half a dozen swings before responding.
A single prod always produced results when the
engine was warm.
BEEFY PUNCH
Pleasantly quiet mechanically, the engine
produced beefy punch that encouraged early changing up—a bonus in built-up areas
in view of the pleasantly sharp, but nevertheless loud, exhaust note. On the
other hand, no one could complain of noise when the model was chuffing along at
30 mph in top.
Only low-speed indication of a sporty valve
timing was erratic tick-over. To be reliable, idling had to be slightly fast and
this sometimes caused noisy engagement of bottom gear.
Given its head on the open road, the Venom
galloped to 80-plus with the rider sitting upright, or nudged 90 on downgrades.
Half throttle gave a genuine 70 to 73 mph which could be maintained indefinitely
without fuss or vibration and there was still ample performance left to cope
with steep gradients in top gear.
The speedometer was commendably accurate, being
no more than 1 mph fast. Super-grade fuel was used and prevented pinking unless
the engine was abused.
Only indication of hard driving at the end of a
long run was some oil drops from beneath the left-hand side panel where oil had
been flung off the rear chain. A minor leak also developed during the test from
the inlet side of the rocker box. Initially, the bottom gear of 11.24 to 1
seemed too high, but the illusion was soon dispelled when coping with the
one-in-three test hill at MIRA. Ideally spaced, the other ratios matched engine
characteristics perfectly. On the open road, second was usually held to 50 mph
and third to 65 mph.
Light in operation, the clutch engaged the drive
progressively, but after repeated use in dense city traffic it showed a tendency
to drag. For this reason neutral was sometimes difficult to locate from bottom
or second when at standstill.
Otherwise pleasantly smooth, the transmission
produced a tremor, felt mainly through the left footrest and handlebar, when the
engine was pulling very hard—such as on climbing a steep hill or restarting on a
gradient.
Seat, footrests and handlebar positions gave a
relaxed riding position up to 70 mph or so; then tall riders would have welcomed
more forward lean to counteract wind pressure. A seat with deeper padding would
have made long trips more comfortable.
With one exception, all controls were well
positioned and light in operation. Exception was the combined horn button and
dipswitch: this could not be operated without removing the left hand from the
bar.
Race breeding showed on every bend through which
the Venom swept. Light, utterly positive at all times—on all normal road
surfaces, the steering was exemplary—sheer joy. Roadholding, too, was superb.
Well damped, both front and rear suspensions
ironed out road shocks without pitching or weaving; even on the sharpest bumps,
the suspension refused to bottom. The rear struts are adjustable for load and
were normally set in the midway position for solo use; moving the units to the
rear increases stiffness for passenger carrying. In short, the Venom Special was
right in the top bracket for handling and a thoroughly reassuring model to ride
under all conditions.
Among the most powerful on any big machine, the
brakes lived up to their reputation—as the stopping distance shown in the
performance panel indicates. They were equally as effective from maximum
speed—smooth, progressively powerful and easily controllable. Throughout, the
rear stopper squealed on hard application. Both brakes remained dry in wet
weather.
For a machine of the Venom's performance, a
headlight giving more range and spread would be an improvement. So would a
louder horn.
Over the 1,200-mile test period, the model used a
half pint of oil. Maintenance required was to adjust both chains once—a task
hampered by the shrouding of the gearbox mounting front bolt by the clutch-cable
stop.
Although it included a praiseworthy number of
special tools, the kit omitted a spanner for the rear-wheel spindle nut.
Held in position by six screws, the glass-fibre
side panels are easily detachable and enhance the appearance of the machine. A
wipe with a damp cloth keeps them shiny.
Finished in blue-grey, the Venom Special must
have a strong appeal to the rider who prefers to do without the glitter and be
handsomely in pocket. He will own a machine of character, a rare quality in this
mass-production age.

SPECIFICATIONS
ENGINE: Velocette 499 cc (86x86 mm)
overhead-valve single-cylinder with caged-roller big-end bearing. Crankshaft
supported in two taper-roller bearings. Aluminium-alloy cylinder head;
light-alloy pushrods and hairpin valve springs. Compression ratio, 8 to 1.
Dry-sump lubrication; oil-tank capacity, 4 pints.
CARBURETTOR: Amal Monobloc; air slide operated by
handlebar lever.
IGNITION and LIGHTING: Lucas magneto with
auto-advance. Belt-driven Miller 36-watt dynamo. Exide 6-volt, 12-amp-hour
battery. Miller Tin-diameter headlamp with pre-focus light unit and 30/24-watt
main bulb.
TRANSMISSION: Velocette four-speed gear box with
positive-stop foot control. Gear ratios: bottom, 11.24 to 1; second, 7.78 to 1;
third, 5.9 to 1; top, 4.89 to 1. Multi-plate clutch with fabric inserts. Primary
chain, 1/2x0.305in in pressed-steel, oil-bath case. Rear chain with guard over
top run. Engine rpm at 30 mph in top gear, 1,900.
FUEL CAPACITY: 3 gallons.
TYRES: Dunlop Gold Seal 3.25x19in ; front ribbed,
rear K70 studded.
BRAKES: Front 71/2x11/2in; rear 7x1in. Finger
adjuster for rear brake.
SUSPENSION: Velocette telescopic front fork with
hydraulic damping. Pivoted rear fork controlled by Woodhead-Monroe
spring-and-hydraulic units with adjustment for loading.
DIMENSIONS: Wheelbase, 5441n. Ground clearance,
51/2in. Seat height, 31in. All unladen.
WEIGHT: 378 lb fully equipped, with full oil tank
and approximately one gallon of petrol.
PRICE: £269 14s (including British purchase tax).
ROAD TAX: £4 10s a year; £1 13s for four months. MAKERS: Vetoes, Ltd, York Road,
Hall Green, Birmingham, 28.
DESCRIPTION: Motor Cycle, 26 September 1963.
PERFORMANCE DATA
(Obtained at the Motor Industry Research
Association's proving ground at Lindley, Leicestershire.) MEAN MAXIMUM SPEED:
Bottom, 45 mph.; second, 65 mph"; third, 85 mph"; top, 93 mph. • Valve /loot
occurring.
HIGHEST ONE-WAY SPEED: 95 mph (conditions: still
air, 13-stone rider wearing two-piece suit and overboots).
PETROL CONSUMPTION: At 30 mph, 89 mpg; at 40 mph,
79 mpg; at 50 mph, 68 mpg; at 60 mph, 52 mpg.
BRAKING: From 30 mph to rest, 30ft 6in (surface,
dry tarmac).
TURNING CIRCLE: 16ft.
MINIMUM NON-SNATCH SPEED: 19 mph in top gear.
WEIGHT PER CC: 0 75 lb.
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