Geoff Monty was an
English professional
motorcycle racer, constructor, rider-sponsor and retail dealer,
[ Motorcycle Mechanics, October 1967, editorial p.3 ''Monty moves. "After years of trading from his famous store in Twickenham, tuner/entrant/dealer and special builder extraordinaire, Geoff Monty, has moved. His new address is 110 High Street, Edenbridge, Kent''". Accessed 5 May 2014] initially based in
Kingston on Thames and later – under the name ''Monty and Ward'' –
Twickenham areas,
near London, with a move to
Edenbridge, Kent by 1968.
[ Motorcycle Mechanics, October 1969, advert p.24. ''Monty and Ward (Motors). Go production machine racing. We can supply or prepare your machine for next season. Trident, Daytona, T120 Bonneville. 110 High Street, Edenbridge, Kent.'' Accessed 8 April 2014]
In the mid-1950s he produced and campaigned his own brand of racing motorcycle known as the "Geoff Monty Special" (GMS), based on his own design of semi-spine frame with rectangular-section swinging-arm and a 350 cc
BSA Gold Star engine having modified internals to achieve a capacity slightly under 250 cc.
In 1964
AMC announced their brands would be no longer produce any race machines – the 500 cc
Manx Norton and
Matchless G50 or the 350 cc
AJS 7R
The AJS 7R was a British 350 cc racing motorcycle built from 1948 to 1963 by Associated Motor Cycles.
It was also commonly known as the ‘Boy Racer’, and won victories both for the factory and for privateers right from its introduction i ...
.
Monty, in conjunction with his business partner ''Allen Dudley-Ward'', a renowned Triumph tuner and ex-racer, recognised a business opportunity and developed a new machine initially named ''Monward'', based on his proven GMS frame and swinging-arm, initially fitted with a 650 cc
Triumph Bonneville engine which was used as a test-bed by then-contracted rider,
Bill Ivy.
Cycle World
''Cycle World'' is a motorcycling magazine in the United States. It was founded in 1962 by Joe Parkhurst, who was inducted to the Motorcycle Hall of Fame as "the person responsible for bringing a new era of objective journalism" to the US. ''Cyc ...
, April 1965 ''Monward Triumph Special'' by B.R. (Nick) Nicholls. Accessed 3 April 2014
The name Monward derived from their surnames Monty and Dudley-Ward. The concept was then further developed – as Monty had done with the BSA Gold Star engine – by reducing the 650 cc capacity to under 500 cc, retaining the standard bore of 71 mm but shortening the stroke to 62.5 mm, using a new crankshaft having a shortened throw made by sidecar racer Owen Greenwood together with 10 mm shaved-off the standard cast-iron barrels.
Additionally, an option was to instead fit the contemporary Triumph production engine with a
standard 500 cc capacity. Both types of engine were tuned and built by Allen Dudley-Ward featuring his Manx Norton oil pump conversion.
The now-oversquare modified engine used the 650 Bonneville twin-carb cylinder head having bigger valves, ports and carburettors than a standard Triumph 500, allowing for efficient air-fuel intake at racing speeds. The 650-size crank journals and main bearings were larger than a 500 which allowed for greater reliability.
When track-testing the 500,
''Motorcycle Mechanics'' editor John Houslander reported that the engine would safely rev to 9,000
rpm making a potential 50
bhp and – with Isle of Man gearing and a four-speed gearbox – a top speed of was likely.
[ Motorcycle Mechanics, January 1966. p.49/51 ''Mighty Monard'' Track test. Accessed 31 March 2014]
Concurrent with Monty's Monward, Allen Dudley-Ward was developing his own 500 cc race bike, basically a Triumph-engined Manx Norton, which he called ''DW Special'' leaving Monty's Monward renamed as Monard.
By 1965, Bill Ivy had joined the Tom Kirby team, leaving Monty as an early sponsor of
Ray Pickrell
Raymond Pickrell (16 March 1938 – 20 February 2006) was an English short-circuit motorcycle road racer who won four Isle of Man TT motorcycle races.
Pickrell was born in Harrow Weald, Middlesex.
During his early career, Pickrell rode for t ...
, providing a 250 cc
Bultaco, a 350 cc
Aermacchi and his own brand-name ''Monard'' with a 500 cc Triumph engine. Speaking to
Motor Cycle
A motorcycle (motorbike, bike, or trike (if three-wheeled)) is a two or three-wheeled motor vehicle steered by a handlebar. Motorcycle design varies greatly to suit a range of different purposes: long-distance travel, commuting, cruising, ...
's ''David Dixon'' in 1965, Monty confirmed difficulty in finding customers for a complete new racer at 500
GBP, but buyers seemed prepared to pay 400 to 450 GBP for a well-used proprietary
Norton or
AJS
A. J. Stevens & Co. Ltd was a British automobile and motorcycle manufacturer in operation from 1909 to 1931. The company was founded by Joe Stevens in Wolverhampton, England. After the firm was sold, the name continued to be used by Matchless, A ...
/
Matchless factory-produced race bike.
For 1966 Monty turned his attention to building a new Triumph-engined racer based on the then-new
Metisse frame.
[ Motorcycle Mechanics, December 1966. ''Monty's Metisse''. Accessed 4 April 2014][ Motorcycle Mechanics, May 1969, advert p.24. ''Monty and Ward at the Brighton Show, Stand No.70, exhibits including: Our Metisse, 500 cc short-stroke motor, Gear type oil pumps fitted to Triumph engines, Quaife 5-speed gear clusters for 500 cc and 650 cc Triumphs.'' Accessed 10 April 2014] Monty also was a stockist of
engineering bearings, offering a mail-order service.
Monty died whilst a resident of
Wadebridge, Cornwall during 2009, aged 92. He was pre-deceased by his wife Greta, whom he married in 1941, in 2005.
England and Wales deaths
Retrieved 31 March 2014
References
External links
Image of Geoff Monty
{{DEFAULTSORT:Monty, Geoff
Date of birth missing
Place of birth missing
2009 deaths
British motorcycle designers
English motorcycle racers