Bert le Vack

Herbert 'Bert' le Vack (1888 London – 16 September 1931 Berne, Switzerland)[1] was a motorcycle world speed record holder throughout the 1920s and earned the nickname the 'Wizard of Brooklands' for his exploits at Brooklands.

Bert le Vack
Born1888
Died16-09-1931
NationalityBritish
OccupationRacer and specialist engine tuner
Known forMotorcycle racing and world records

An expert racing engine tuner, le Vack worked for some of the great marques and in the late 1920s joined Motosacoche in Switzerland as the works rider, chief designer and tuner. Le Vack was killed in a sidecar accident on 16 September 1931 near Bern, but is generally regarded as being one of the greatest racing motorcyclists of his day.

Life

Bert le Vack was born in North London and was of Scottish descent, the son of an upholsterer and antique dealer Albert Edward le Vack. Bert's grandfather was John le Vack, a Scottish steam locomotive engineer, who moved to London from his birthplace in Caithness. Bert's first job was with Legros and Knowles, of Willesden Junction. He moved on to work for Daimler, Napier and the London General Omnibus Company. Le Vack began his racing career on bicycles but once he visited Brooklands he began tuning motorcycles and won the first hill climb he entered on a 1909 Triumph. In 1912 he competed in the London to Edinburgh Run and in 1913 he was working with another JAP test rider at Brooklands called John Wallace, who was sacked for being 'under age'. On the outbreak of World War I they both joined Scottish car makers Arrol-Johnston and turned their talents to designing, assembling and testing aero engines. Wallace founded Duzmo Motorcycles In the 1914 Senior TT he averaged 45 mph (72 km/h) and won a Gold Medal.

After the war le Vack had his own garage and it was a chance exchange of a Scott for an MAG-engined Edmund that re-awakened his interest in motorcycle racing. Tuning up the Edmund led to the neglect of his business, so when he had an offer of employment from Wallace he agreed and began developing Duzmo engines. He then built a competition motorcycle that he used in competitions and demonstrations.[2] He called the bike the 'Ace' and then it became the 'Duzmo' in 1920 when Bert became well known as a racer.

Towards the end of 1920 Bert moved to the Hendee Manufacturing Co, who made Indian motorcycles in Springfield, Massachusetts. He joined their London Depot and developed the eight valve Indian engine. Bert married Ethel Dale in 1912 and there were four children. He divorced Ethel in 1929 and later remarried.

Le Vack was very much in favour of using alcohol-based fuels in racing and obtained supplies from a London distillery. This led to an offer to work as an engine designer for John A. Prestwich, founder of the JAP company who produced racing engines for many top marques, including Brough Superior. Le Vack used his experience of the Indian Powerplus on which he won the famous 500-Mile Race at Brooklands in 1921 to help JAP develop their British vee-twin into what he called a "Yank-buster" – the 'Super Big Twin', so called because of its 986 cc ohv engine. (Indian subsequently dropped out of international competition).

Although le Vack only stayed with JAP for four years he played a significant part in their success and JAP advertisements in the Motor Cycle showed Bert on a Brough Superior with the 976 cc vee-twin JAP engine. As well as his tuning knowledge, le Vack gained a reputation for blending special racing fuels and had his own workshop in the Tottenham factory. Described as a quietly spoken man with few friends, le Vack became something of an enigma. in a rare interview for The Motor Cycle in 1923 with the title 'The Making of a Speed Man', he described his early days when he nearly blew himself up by looking into a petrol tank at night with a match.[3]

On the 1st January 1930 he joined Motosacoche in Geneva, Switzerland, for whom he had already ridden in the 1914 Isle of Man Tourist Trophy. Motosacoche built racing motorcycles and le Vack joined as the works rider, chief designer and tuner and was killed in the Swiss Alps on 16 September 1931, while driving a motorcycle combination,16km from Berne on a business trip to Geneva,accompanied by a Bosch engineer as his passenger.He appears to have had a stroke or heart attack, which caused the outfit to swerve off the road, hitting a tree.Both Le Vack and Passenger were thrown off.Le Vack broke his neck, but the passenger was uninjured.The event was reported in the Journal de Geneva of 17th September 1931. [4] His ashes were returned to England and interred near Brooklands in St Mary's churchyard, Byfleet not far from the grave of racing driver Parry Thomas. The inscription on his gravestone simply states 'In Loving Memory of Herbert Le Vack, Dearly Beloved Husband of Mary Helen Le Vack, Who Died in Switzerland, 16 September 1931'.

Racing career

Bert le Vack rode for Brough Superior and helped keep T. E. Lawrence's Broughs tuned. He also rode for the leading manufacturers of the 1920s, including Indian, New Imperial and Zenith, After a time in Birmingham at the New Hudson works, Bert went to Motosacoche and rode for them in the 1914 Isle of Man Tourist Trophy Races. Bert won the Brooklands 500 in 1921 on a 1000 cc Indian. In 1923 he secured second place in the 1923 Lightweight Tourist Trophy Races with a New Imperial 250 cc – despite a breakdown that meant he had to push the bike half a mile to the finish.

World records

Year Place Country Motorcycle Speed
1921 Brooklands UK Indian 107.5 miles per hour (173.0 km/h)
1923-11-10 Brooklands UK 108.48[5]
1924 Cavendish Drive, Clipstone, Nottinghamshire UK Brough Superior 111.1 m.p.h[6]
1924-7-6 Arpajon France Brough Superior 867 cc 118.93
1929-8-25 Arpajon France Brough Superior 995 cc 129.07
1927 Brooklands England New Hudson 500 cc 100[7]
gollark: I think most of them use "IPS" now, whatever that actually stands for, and have good viewing angles. My laptop screen was clearly minimal-budget and is "TN"-based, so the viewing angles are bad.
gollark: Also differently sized pixels, quite plausibly.
gollark: Your monitor and TV might use different panel technology.
gollark: No. Via confusing relativity things, light still goes at the same speed relative to you on the ship. You could happily walk around even closer to light speed, and to outside observers you'd just seem to get closer to light speed but never actually reach it. Something like that.
gollark: Anyway, this doesn't seem to... explain anything usefully? It seems like a retroactive justification for *why* stuff is the way it is, but in a way which doesn't seem amenable to making useful predictions, and is also extremely vague.

See also

References

  1. Nottingham Evening Post page 7 FAMOUS MOTOR CYCLIST KILLED. HERBERT LE VACK, RACER AND ENGINEER Thurdsay 17 September 1931
  2. "Duzmo Motorcycles". Archived from the original on 23 June 2008. Retrieved 16 July 2008.
  3. "New Hudson History". Archived from the original on 11 June 2011. Retrieved 16 July 2008.
  4. "Memorial to Bert le Vack". Archived from the original on 4 August 2012. Retrieved 16 July 2008.
  5. "Two-wheeled Land Speed Record". Archived from the original on 16 May 2008. Retrieved 17 July 2008.
  6. "Cavendish Drive speed trials". Archived from the original on 12 May 2008. Retrieved 3 August 2008.
  7. "Bert le Vack". Retrieved 16 July 2008.

Bird, Roger (2008) ‘A Glimpse of the Vintage Years of Motorcycling at Brooklands’ (published by the author, no ISBN).

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.