BS Allen with his Brough Superior 'Old Bill' replica, with twin-cam JAP 980cc SV engine, and little else! |
BS Allen as Royal Flying Corps pilot in WW1 |
Allen-Bennett sold T. E. Lawrence some of his seven Broughs, and ocasionally BS Allen rode out with Lawrence on very early morning rides around Croydon... a 'bat out of hell' job I think. The 1923 photo here was taken during the London to Lands End Trial, with Allen on a standard 1923 Brough Superior SS80 with single-cam JAP sidevalve 980cc engine. The registration number is BY 9587.
The next photo shows the same machine, re-engined and beautiful, with a very shiny chair, at a hillclimb in mid- to late-1923.
A gorgeous improvement! The SS80 now with twin-cam JAP racing engine and aluminum 'zeppelin' sidecar |
The BS Allen mystery deepens a bit, as he was pictured in the 1924 Brough Superior catalogue with an exceedingly special-framed SS80 JAP sprinter. This was of course the same time as the birth of George Brough's 'Old Bill' with its engine specially tuned by Bert Le Vack.
Brough Superior built another Old Bill replica for Pilot Officer Beaumont, who advertised the bike for sale in December 1923. I reckon Brian, being a former RFC pilot, brokered the deal with George Brough to build Beaumont's replica, a deal which included a very special Le Vack engine for Allen himself, after he realized how good this special-framed sprinter. Allen first installed this special two-cam racing engine in his old chassis, now the re-engined BY 9587. Note the magneto chain drive cover, which is the same style on the various photos.
BS Allen as he appears in the 1924 Brough Superior catalogue |
When Allen-Bennet folded in the late 1920s, Brian subsequently returned to his other love - flying, setting up shop as Brian Allen Aviation, and dealing with light aircraft, including the Belgian E.O.Tipps, and the American Stinson.
Worth a second view - the zeppelin 'sports' sidecar offered by Brough Superior |
Brian and his wife Kathleen were killed by a blast from a German flying bomb in WW2."
Probably a plane inside...the truck of Brian Allen Aviation Ltd. |