The Mighty AJS V4 From 1936


1930年代中期英国摩托车公司AJS设计并制造了一款V4公路摩托车,这款V4公路摩托车可能是世界上第一辆V4摩托车。

The AJS V4 was an advanced engineering effort undertaken by the British motorcycle company in the mid-1930s, the first prototype was intended as a road-going motorcycle and it was shown at the Olympia Show in 1935.

Building The AJS V4 Racer

The road-going version of the V4 didn’t get a green light for production, it’s not known why exactly but it likely had something to do with the fact that it would have been exceedingly expensive, and the world was still very much in the grips of the austerity period of the Great Depression.

In 1936 a new racing version of the AJS V4 was unveiled, it had alloy barrels and individual heads with exposed hairpin valve springs, a common crankcase, a 180° crankshaft with forked conrods, a single overhead cam per cylinder, a Zoller supercharger, an Amal TT carburetor, and a 5-speed Burman transmission.

The bike showed much promise but its engine was complex, and it suffered from a lack of development time. AJS sent the bike to the 1936 Isle of Man Senior TT but although it was very quick, it was unreliable, and suffered mechanical failures.

A rebuilt version appeared in 1938 that had been considerably redesigned with better suspension, brakes, and some engine modifications. This new version was sent to compete in the 1938 Senior Isle of Man TT but suffered overheating issues and retired – this all but ended the air-cooled version of the AJS V4, but the story doesn’t quite end there.

Rather than give up, AJS brought in Matt Wright from New Imperial to do a blank-slate redesign. The new engine was liquid-cooled with barrels and heads cast in pairs, fully enclosed valves and springs, and a slew of other improvements to help with reliability and overheating.

This new AJS V4 proved competitive, in the 1939 Ulster GP two examples of the V4 led from the start – both would retire but neither failure was a mechanical engine failure (a spark plug and broken suspension). It was during this race that rider Walter Rusk completed the first lap at a record breaking average speed around the course of 100.03 mph.

The first and only win to be enjoyed by the V4 was at the 1946 Chimay in Belgium with rider Jock M West in the saddle. Once forced induction was banned the AJS V4 became obsolete overnight, so the company shifted focus to other models and the V4 was no more – or so the world thought.