Norton Model 99 Dominator
The Norton Model 99 Dominator was a 600 cc vertical twin motorcycle manufactured by the British Norton Motorcycle Company at their Bracebridge St, Birmingham factory from 1956 to 1962. The 99 was based on the 500 cc Model 88 Dominator with an enlarged engine. The model was superseded by the 650SS.
Background
Norton had first started exporting to the US in 1949. The Americans were impressed with Norton's racing successes but wanted a twin that was capable of the 'ton'. The 88 Dominator was only capable of and was no match for the 650 Triumph Thunderbird and BSA Golden Flash. Norton needed more power for the American market.Bert Hopwood had designed the 500 cc vertical twin that powered the 88. Hopwood had left Norton and moved to BSA where he redesigned Val Page's earlier twin to produce the 650 cc Golden Flash. Hopwood was back at Norton in 1955 and enlarged his twin engine to 600 cc to produce more power.
Technical details
Engine and transmission
The 597 cc engine was enlarged from the 88's 500 cc engine by increasing the bore and stroke from x to x. The pre-unit 360° pushrod vertical twin used cast iron cylinders and an alloy cylinder head with a 7.6:1 compression ratio. Fuel was fed by a single Amal Monobloc carburettor except on the 99SS where twin carbs were fitted.Ignition was from a Lucas magneto and the power for the lights was from a dynamo. In 1958 this was changed to coil ignition and a crankshaft-mounted alternator. The model reverted to a magneto in 1962.
Primary drive was by chain to a multiplate wet clutch and was enclosed in a pressed-steel chaincase. The gearbox had four speeds. For the 1957 model the gearbox was changed to the AMC gearbox used on AJS and Matchless twins.
Cycle parts
Cycle parts were shared with the 88. The frame was the featherbed and forks were short Roadholders. Full width alloy hubs were fitted with drum brakes, at the front and rear. A headlight was fitted with the speedo, ammeter and switch mounted in its shell.The featherbed frame was modified in 1960 by moving the top tubes closer together. The updated frame came to be known as the 'slimline' and the previous version as the 'wideline'.