1921 Isle of Man TT explained

1921 Isle of Man Tourist Trophy
Date 14 and 16 June 1921
LocationDouglas, Isle of Man
Course Snaefell Mountain Course
37.75 miles (60.75 km)
OrganiserAuto-Cycle Union
ClerkT.W. Loughborough
Junior TT
First Eric Williams, AJS
SecondHoward R Davies, AJS
ThirdTom Sheard, AJS
Fastest lap
Howard Davies
41min. 4sec. 55.15 mph New record
Lightweight class
First Doug Prentice, New Imperial-JAP
SecondGeoff Davison, Levis
ThirdW.G. Harrison, Velocette
Senior TT
First Howard R Davies, AJS 349cc
SecondFreddie Dixon, Indian
ThirdBert le Vack, Indian
Fastest lap
Freddie Edmond
40min. 8sec. 56.40 mph New record
The 1921 Isle of Man Tourist Trophy Junior 350 cc race took place on Tuesday 14 June and the Senior 500 cc was on Thursday 16 June.

In this year AJS redeemed themselves by completing a hat trick, taking the first four places for a total of six of the top ten places in the Junior 350 cc race. Works teams boosted the entries to 133 riders and machines and amongst the thousands of spectators was Stanley Woods, making his first visit to the island as a young man, who would later return to make TT history by winning 10 times.[1]

The Junior race speeds also rose considerably over the previous year with a lap speed of more than 50mi/h. It had been suggested that sidecar racing could start in 1921 but this idea was not well received and not implemented until 1923.[1] It was announced there was a possibility of moving the TT races to Belgium for 1922 but the Auto-Cycle Union never made the switch.[2]

Despite AJS motorcycles filling the first five places of the Junior race, it was punctures that decided the race outcome. The eventual winner of the 1921 Junior TT Race was Eric Williams riding an AJS in 3 hours, 37 minutes and 23 seconds, an average race speed of 52.1mi/h. The race was initially led by Howard R Davies also riding for AJS who set a new lap record for the Junior race of 41 minutes and 4 seconds, an average speed of 55.15mi/h. Time lost by Howard Davies mending a puncture at Windy Corner gave the lead to Jim Whalley riding a Massey-Arran motorcycle. On the last lap Whalley also punctured at Windy Corner and finished the Junior race in fifth place. New Imperial made sales-boosting news with a win in the Lightweight 250 cc class by rider Doug Prentice, coming tenth overall in the 350 cc Junior race.[1] [3]

More drama was to follow in the Senior event as the race-lead changed every lap between Alec Bennett riding a Sunbeam, Freddie W.Dixon riding an Indian, and Freddie Edmond riding a Triumph who set a new lap record of 40 minutes and 8 seconds, an average speed of 56.4mi/h. The Senior race was eventually won by Howard Davies riding a 350 cc Junior race motorcycle, by a margin of 2 minutes and 3 seconds from Freddie Dixon and Bert Le Vack in 4 hours, 9 minutes and 22 seconds, at an average race speed of 54.49mi/h.

Race results

Junior TT 350cc

Held on Tuesday, 14 June, at 9:30 am over a distance of 188.75  miles (5 laps of 37.75 miles each), limited to machines of cylinder capacity not exceeding 350cc., with a class for 250 cc. engines run concurrently for The Motor Cycle cup.[4] All 65 entries started the race (43 in 350cc class, 22 in 250cc class), comprising 33 four-stroke singles, 22 two-stroke singles, 7 Flat Twins and 3 V Twin, thirty-eight finished (25 in 350cc class, 13 in 250cc class).

Senior TT

Held on Thursday, 16 June, at 9:30 am over a distance of 226.50  miles (6 laps of 37.75 miles each), limited to machines of cylinder capacity not exceeding 500cc.[5] Out of 68 entries, comprising 52 four-stroke singles, 9 four-stroke twins, 6 two-stroke twins and 1 two-stroke single, sixty-four started the race and twenty-four finished.

References

  1. Web site: Archived copy . 2011-06-05 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070218222429/http://www.iomtt.com/HistoryOfTheTT/TheHistoryoftheTTRaces/TheMountainCircuit.aspx . 18 February 2007 . IOM TT The Mountain Circuit (retrieved 20 August 2006)
  2. http://www.steam-packet.com/SteamPacket/Timetables/2006-Manx-Grand-Prix.htm
  3. Web site: Welcome to the official New Imperial Owners Association website . 2006-10-16 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20061010154644/https://www.newimperial.co.uk/history.asp . 10 October 2006 . New Imperial Owners Association History (retrieved 16 October 2006)
  4. The Motor Cycle page 723, 9 June 1921
  5. The Motor Cycle page 803, 23 June 1921
  6. The Isle of Man Examiner page 5, 26 May 1922

External links