Page 1 of 1

Arthur Bourne "Torrens " Square Four

Posted: Thu Aug 25, 2016 3:36 pm
by john.mitchell
When he retired, the Motorcycle Journalist, known as Torrens, was presented with a Square four by the industry in 1971. It was his 4th SQ4 which he always christened "The Gent". Does anyone know if it still exists as his son has asked me to check?

Re: Arthur Bourne "Torrens " Square Four

Posted: Sun Aug 28, 2016 8:44 pm
by paul.jameson
I think it does still exist and is now in Southern Ireland. Jim Lee knows a lot about this machine.

Re: Arthur Bourne "Torrens " Square Four

Posted: Sun Aug 28, 2016 9:12 pm
by paul.jameson
I think Arthur Bourne's first (pushrod) Square Four was one of the very few (10) with a DB engine prefix. Despatched on 4th Sept 1936, it had a variety of special features such as a spare set of H53 plugs in the tool box, a fabric clutch (instead of cork), a folding kickstart, and the new pattern tank knee grips. These last were the ones with ARIEL on them instead of the earlier John Bull type.

Clearly, "Torrens" liked to try out new developments but the folding kickstart was never fitted to many Ariels and I, for one, much prefer the soft springs and light action of a cork clutch.

"Torrens" wrote a book "The Motor Cyclists Workshop" which everyone on this Forum should read, given that it is obviously based around Ariels. The story goes that he changed the plugs on the first MK I he was given (maybe his Square Four No 3?) the evening before riding it to France. He stripped one of the threads, contacted the Ariel factory, who machined up their only other head for him and sent someone to his house to fit it. The person concerned was looking forward to working in the ideal workshop "Torrens" had described but on arrival found that it existed only in the author's imagination. He spent several hours fitting the replacement head in the cold and dark of the drive !

But I think "Torrens" would be amazed that, almost 50 years on from his retirement, Ariel owners still routinely ride their machines across Europe and back with very few problems - see the posts from Dave Owen.