NUT Motorcycles was a British motorcycle manufacturer founded in Newcastle Upon Tyne in 1912 by Hugh Mason and Jock Hall, who had previously been making motorcycles since 1906 under a badge based on Mason's initials, HM, and later under the name of Jesmond and Bercley.[1] By 1913 their racing motorcycles were competing successfully in the Isle of Man TT races and Hugh Mason's JAP engined NUT motorcycle won the 1913 Junior TT by just 46 seconds.[2] Originally based on JAP and Villiers engines, NUT began to build their own V-twin sports machines.[3] Following further racing success Mason and Hall moved to larger premises but the company could not survive the First World War and was declared bankrupt. The business was bought by Robert Ellis who restarted in 1921 as Hugh Mason and Company, but it foundered in 1922. Between 1923 and 1933 they continued to make motorcycles under the NUT name but in 1933 the company closed for good.[1]
Industry | Manufacturing and engineering |
---|---|
Founded | 1912 |
Defunct | 1933 |
Fate | Wound up |
Headquarters | Newcastle Upon Tyne, UK |
Key people | Hugh Mason and Jock Hall |
Products | Motorcycles |
Models
editModel | Year | Notes |
---|---|---|
NUT 1000cc | 1914 | V Twin |
NUT 500cc | 1914 | JAP-engined V Twin |
NUT 998cc | 1922 | V-Twin |
NUT 700cc | 1923 | V Twin |
NUT 700cc | 1925 | V-Twin |
172cc single | Villiers two-stroke | |
NUT 750cc | V-twin | |
350cc Blackburne | ||
NUT 698cc | 1929 | JAP-0 engine |
References
edit- ^ a b Chadwick, Ian. "NUT". Retrieved 12 August 2008.
- ^ McDarmaid, Mac (2007). The Magic of the TT. Haynes Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84425-431-6.
- ^ "NUT Motorcycles". Retrieved 12 August 2008.
External links
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