Classic Dirt Bike

Penton Motorcycles A legendary American brand

In 1966 Penton had become the Husqvarna East distributor, based in Ohio. “Edison Dye had the rights to the whole United States, and dad (John) signed a subcontract with Edison. Dad had started out on an old Harley, and that didn’t work at all. He rode some BSAs, and then had the opportunity to ride the 175 NSU,” Jack Penton explains.

The NSU quickly became John’s machine of choice. As with Bill Nilsson in Europe running the AJS 7R engine in his world championship winning machine, one would expect that there would be a similar NSU Supermax based high horsepower variant in use, but for John Penton that was not the case. “They didn’t do a lot with the motors in off-road, horsepower was less of an issue than the basics of keeping the bike together and running in the mud, which is why he ran the 175 and not the 250. Two of the really important things to us was that the NSU had a very high frame breather air intake and it also had a very reliable engine that was like a Swiss watch. In the woods, horsepower is almost irrelevant versus reliability and manoeuvrability. When NSU quit making motorcycles it forced him to change what he was racing,” Jack continued.

It was a very different world for the off-road racers of the West Coast where horsepower normally trumped everything else, which explains the concept behind the desert sled. “It is absolutely different trying to get one of those things across a desert or up a mountain. Back here we would run in a foot of mud or over a bunch of rocks that were slimy and covered with moss where horsepower wasn’t relevant. In 1962, Dad had gone to Europe for the Six Days with the BMW and been introduced to all sorts of exotic off-road motorcycles. “He’d seen the Zundapps, Gileras, all the custom Italian, Swedish and German machines, and was familiar with what could be

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Classic Dirt Bike

Classic Dirt Bike1 min read
Silencer Is Golden
WES Silencers celebrates 50 years in business this year and to celebrate this golden anniversary new silencers will be marked with an original logo used in the Seventies when the company was formed. Though now based in Spain and part of José Franquei
Classic Dirt Bike4 min read
“Remember When…”
It’s not long into any conversation before phrases such as “remember when” crop up. This is a truism not restricted to motorcycling circles but as this is a motorcycle magazine it’s where the gist of a conversation I was involved in went. Soon, lines
Classic Dirt Bike12 min read
In The Frame
Let’s go back in time nearly 70 years to the late 1950s. Imagine you’re in the boardroom of BSA, the biggest motorcycle manufacturer in the world, a manufacturer who can proudly boast one in four motorcycles sold in the world are made in its factory…

Related Books & Audiobooks