Dunelt Motorcycles
Dunelt Motorcycles was a British motorcycle and bicycle[1][2] manufacturer. Based in Sheffield, the business was founded by two steel makers and engineers, Dunford and Elliott (Dunelt is a combination of their names)[3] of Sheffield in 1919. Their first motorcycle was an innovative supercharged 499 cc two-stroke single. The company specialised in good quality sidecars from 1926 and a Dunelt motorcycle was first to cross the desert from Cairo to Siwa and back in 1924. Dunelt also enjoyed racing success and won the Double Twelve Hour World Record at Brooklands with a Model K in 1928. Dunelt moved into commercial three-wheeled cars but these were not a success. A Dunelt moped was exhibited at the Earls Court show in 1956 but the company diversified into other areas of engineering in 1957.[4]
Industry | Manufacturing and engineering |
---|---|
Founded | 1919 |
Defunct | 1957 |
Fate | Diversified and ceased motorcycle production |
Headquarters | Sheffield, UK |
Key people | Dunford and Elliott |
Products | Motorcycles & Bicycles |
History
Dunford & Elliott (Sheffield) Ltd started in 1902 as steel-makers. Their Birmingham factory was established in order to make components for car manufacturers. Dunelt Motorcycles was a British motorcycle and bicycle[1][2] manufacturer. Dunelt is a combination of the surnames DUNford and ELliotT.[3]
Their first motorcycle was an innovative supercharged 499 cc two-stroke single. The company specialised in good quality sidecars from 1926 and a Dunelt motorcycle was first to cross the desert from Cairo to Siwa and back in 1924. Dunelt also enjoyed racing success and won the Double Twelve Hour World Record at Brooklands with a Model K in 1928.[4] Noted for their supercharged[5] engines, this was their own patented design, in which the supercharging is achieved by transfer of gases from the crankcase to the cylinder.[6] Dunelt also hoped to increase sales to women motorcyclists; in 1927 a young German woman, Suzanne Koerner, rode a Dunelt motorcycle from Berlin to Birmingham.[7]
During the 1920s the company also marketed a variety of delivery vehicles based around motorcycle combinations. A van, a small van, truck and box carrier were advertised until 1929. They were powered by Dunelt’s own 499cc single-cylinder engine. The three-wheeler commercial vehicle market was a difficult one for all motorcycle manufacturers, and Dunelt did not have the success they wished for in this area. From 1929, most of the combinations were discontinued and, by 1930, they also stopped producing their own engines. Sturmey-Archer and Villiers units were used instead and, from 1933, they also fitted Rudge Python and J.A.P. engines.
During the industrial depression of the late 1920s manufacturers were re-assessing their businesses as a result of the economic climate. Dunelt’s Birmingham factory closed in 1931. In 1935 Dunelt produced their last real motorcycle and went on to develop outboard motors,[8]
Raynal[9] purchased the rights to build Dunelt Cycles in 1937, buying into an established brand name, and ready access to its network of retailers. 1938 advertising showed the Dunelt Cycle Co now listed as Raynal’s factory address at Woodburn Road, Handsworth, Birmingham, 21.
Raynal was bought out by Tube Investments in 1950. TI acquired Raynal in order to secure the Dunelt Cycles brand, and in 1951 the business now listed its office address as Dunelt Cycle Co Ltd, Cornwall Road, Smethwick, Birmingham 40 This address was close the old Raynal cycle works, it is possible that manufacturing had not moved at all.
TI Reynolds Tube Manipulators produced a series of prototype model mopeds in the mid 1950s, one version of which, fitted with a Rex engine, was branded as a Dunelt . This moped never reached production.
In February 1959 Dunelt Cycle Co Ltd had their registered office at Rabone Lane, Smethwick, Birmingham 40. This address was on the other side of the old Raynal factory block, which was renamed ‘Attercliffe Works’ in some reflection back to Dunford & Elliott’s history from that area of Sheffield.
Dunelt branded cycles continued to be sold up to the last years of the 1960s, headstock badges on these later machines state that they were built in Nottingham. The brand had been transferred to Raleigh. The Raynal factory would appear to have been disposed of sometime during the decade.[10]
Models
Model | Year | Notes |
---|---|---|
Model K | 1926 | 250 cc two-stroke |
Royal | 1928 | |
Royal deluxe | 1928 | |
Majectic | 1928 | four-stroke with a 350 cc Sturmey-Archer engine. |
Model T | 1930 | 250 cc |
Model S | 1930 | 250 cc |
Model SD | 1930 | 250 cc |
Dunelt 297 cc | 1931 | Sturmey-Archer side-valve engine |
Dunelt 348 cc | 1931 | Sturmey-Archer |
Dunelt 346 cc | 1931 | Villiers two-stroke |
Dunelt 496 cc | 1931 | Sturmey-Archer |
Dunelt 598cc | 1931 | Sturmey-Archer side-valve engine |
Dunelt 148 cc | 1932 | Villiers |
Dunelt 350 cc | 1932 | Villiers |
Model T special | 1933 | Python (Rudge) engine |
Dunelt 248 cc | 1934 | Python (Rudge) engine |
Dunelt 499 cc | 1934 | Python (Rudge) engine |
Dunelt 248 cc | 1934 | Python (Rudge) engine |
Dunelt 245 cc | 1934 | JAP engine |
Dunelt 490 cc | 1934 | JAP engine |
Dunelt Moped | 1956 |
References
- "Servicing English Three Speeds".
- "Dunelt 3 Speed". 3 July 2009.
- "Dunelt Motorcycles". Retrieved 14 June 2008.
- "Dunelt". Retrieved 14 June 2008.
- Slars, Lars-Erik. "Dunelt Motorcycles". Retrieved 14 June 2008.
- "Dunelt motor cycles 1928 - super-charged; electric equipped". Retrieved 14 June 2008.
- Koerner, Steve. "British Women and Motorcycling". Retrieved 14 June 2008.
- "Seagull parts". Retrieved 14 June 2008.
- Daniels, Mark. "Iceni Cam Magazine". (Autocycle Roadshow) Second Act. Icenicam. Retrieved 13 February 2012.
- Service, Gnome. "Dunelt History". Dunelt Cycles Group Discussion. Flickr.com. Retrieved 13 February 2012.