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Rider-Engineer Peter Williams Dies at 81


Hugh Janus

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Peter Williams celebrating his win at the Isle of Man in 1973.
Peter Williams celebrating his win at the Isle of Man in 1973. (Cycle World Archives/)

Peter Williams, designer of the celebrated monocoque Norton racebike, has died. He was 81. The son of Jack and Thora Williams, Peter had grown up immersed in his distinguished father’s world of racebike engineering. Jack Williams, a respected TT rider himself before the war, put his hand to development at AMC (Associated Motor Cycles) where his particular project was the AJS 7R 350 single.

When I met and spoke with Peter at Daytona 47 years ago he was full of enthusiasm and hope for the bike he had just designed for his employer, Norton-Villiers-Triumph (NVT). It was a brilliant packaging of a classic British parallel twin into a 250-sized low-drag form capable of reaching speeds competitive with the high-power two-strokes then just appearing. A problem with the engine’s intake airbox prevented a result in the Daytona 200.

Related Content: Peter Williams John Player Norton - First Look

Williams was already accustomed to translating his own advanced concepts into hardware, having created in 1969 the Tom Arter-backed Matchless G50 known as “Wagon Wheels.” On it he pioneered the use of both disc brakes and cast wheels rather than wire-spoked wheels—concepts that have since become near-universal in motorcycling.

As is so often the case with projects that must rely more upon ideas than upon R&D spending, Williams’ John Player Nortons did not achieve consistent success.

Williams won the Formula 750 TT race on a John Player Norton, serving as the team designer and rider.
Williams won the Formula 750 TT race on a John Player Norton, serving as the team designer and rider. (Cycle World Archives/)

After the high point of winning the Isle of Man F750 TT in 1973 on his own design—he was badly injured in a race at Oulton Park, losing much of the function of his left arm. This, combined with the simultaneous steep decline of the British motorcycle industry, kept him from continuing his career of two-wheeled innovation.

In the present moment, when motorcycles are often appreciated as art or fashion, Peter Williams stands out for his rigorous use of analytical thinking, just as does the late John Britten. Williams employed his mind to release the motorcycle from the compromises of tradition and bring it to a high and rising level of rational function.

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