DMW Motorcycles
Industry | Manufacturing and engineering |
---|---|
Fate | Company sold and became engineering and Villiers parts specialists |
Founded | 1945 |
Defunct | 1971 |
Headquarters | Wolverhampton UK |
Key people | Leslie Dawson and Harold Nock |
Products | Motorcycles |
DMW Motorcycles was a British motorcycle manufacturer. Based in Wolverhampton, DMW was founded in 1940. The company took over Ambassador Motorcycles in 1963 and continued production until they closed the company in 1965.[1][2] Although DMW ceased motorcycle production in 1971, it was noted for trials and racing machines and many DMWs can still be seen at UK sporting events. DMW produced about 15,000 motorcycles and several other manufacturers used DMW forks and engines.[3]
History
Founded by Leslie Dawson (inventor of swinging arm motorcycle suspension) as Dawson's Motors Wolverhampton in 1940 to make and sell his new invention, Dawson's Telematic tele-forks, which were telescopic spring and pneumatic front forks that could be 'retro-fitted' as a replacement to standard 'girder' forks. In 1943 Dawson added rear suspension options which he would fit in his Wolverhampton workshop. After the Second World War ended in 1945 Dawson began building DMW grass track racing motorcycles machines with 350 cc and 500 cc JAP engines.[3] Dawson went into partnership with former AJS and Vincent man Harold Nock to build light two-stroke motorcycles. Leslie Dawson was unsuccessful in raising venture capital and emigrated to Canada in 1948. Leslie died in Ellesmere Port on 6 January 1989.
Leslie was replaced by former BSA engineer Mike Riley, who won the 1948 Scottish Trial on a 200 cc DMW. Production moved to Harold Nock's premises in Sedgley and a 122 cc DMW with a Villiers engine was launched in 1950. These were entered in and won numerous competitions and DMW exhibited at the Earls Court Motor Cycle Show in 1952 with three road motorcycles and three racing bikes. A range of relatively successful two-stroke models were produced throughout the 1960s, notably the DMW Dolomite. DMW production ended in 1971 and Harold Nock sold the company in 1975 to Graham Beddall and Ivan Dyke, who concentrated on engineering and selling parts, although they did build one-off competition motorcycles, and a DMW 250 cc won the Midland Centre Group Trials in 1976 and 1977. Beddall and Dyke retained ownership of the DMW name until 2001, when it was wound up.[3]
Models
Model | Year | Notes |
---|---|---|
DMW De luxe | 1953 | Villiers 250 cc two-stroke vertical-twin . |
DMW Coronation | 1953 | Villiers 10D 122 cc two-stroke |
Cortina | 1954 | 225 cc Villiers 1H engine |
Dolomite 1 | 1954 | 250 cc ohc 4-stroke Ateliers Mechanique du Centre (AMC)engine |
DMW Hornet | 1954 | 125 cc ohc 4-stroke Ateliers Mechanique du Centre (AMC) engine |
Moto Cross | 1955 | 200 cc two-stroke |
Trials | 1955 | 200 cc two-stroke competition engine |
DMW Leda | 1955 | 150 cc two-stroke 'sports' |
Bambi scooter | 1957 | 98 cc Villiers 4F two-stroke |
DMW Deemster scooter | 1961-1967 | 249 cc Villiers twin-cylinder two-stroke |
DMW Sports Twin | 1962 | 249 cc two-stroke Villiers Mark 4T |
DMW Dolomite II | 1963 | DMW-badged Ambassador motorcycles |
250 cc Hornet | 1964 | Villiers 'Starmaker' 247 cc two-stroke road racer |
Sports Twin | 1964 | Villiers 4T 249 cc two-stroke twin |
DMW Typhoon | 1965 | 494 cc Villiers two-stroke twin road racer |
References
- ↑ Chadwick, Ian. "Ambassador Motorcycles". Retrieved 2008-06-06.
- ↑ Chadwick, Ian DMW Retrieved 2013-09-03
- 1 2 3 "The DMW Story". Retrieved 2013-09-03.