Birmingham Small Arms Company
The
Birmingham Small Arms Company (
BSA) was a
British manufacturer of
vehicles,
firearms, and
military equipment.
At its peak, BSA was the largest motorcycle producer in the world.
BSA was founded in 1861 in the
Gun Quarter, Birmingham,
England by fourteen gunsmiths of the
Birmingham Small Arms Trade Association, who had together supplied arms to the British government during the
Crimean War. The company branched out as the gun trade declined; in the 1880s the company began to manufacture
bicycles and in 1903 the company's first experimental
motorcycle was constructed. Their first prototype automobile was produced in 1907 and the next year the company sold 150 automobiles. By
1909 they were offering a number of motorcycles for sale and in 1910 BSA purchased the British
Daimler Company for its automobile engines.
World War One
During
World War I, the company returned to arms manufacture and greatly expanded its operations. BSA produced
rifles and
Lewis guns, but also
shells, motorcycles and other vehicles for the struggle. In 1920, it bought some of the assets of the
Aircraft Manufacturing Company (Airco) which had built many important aircraft during the war but had become
bankrupt with the lack or orders post hostilities. BSA did not go into aviation; the chief designer of Airco founded the
de Havilland company.
In the 1930's the board of directors authorised expenditure on bringing their arms-making equipment back to use - it had been stored at company expense since the end of the Great War in the belief that BSA might again be called upon to perform its patriotic duty.
World War Two
By
World War II, BSA had 67 factories and was well positioned to meet the demand for
guns and
ammunition. BSA operations were also dispersed to other companies under licence. During the war it produced over a million
Lee-Enfield rifles and half a million
Browning machine guns. Wartime demands included motorcycle production. BSA supplied 126,000 M20 motorcycles to the armed forces, from
1937 (and later until 1950) plus military bicycles including the folding paratrooper bicycle. At the same time, the Daimler concern was producing armoured cars.
Post war
Post-war, BSA continued to expand the range of metal goods it produced. The BSA Group bought
Triumph in
1951, making them the largest producer of motorcycles in the world.
The company had sporadically made automobiles in:
*
1907 to
1915*
1921 to
1926*
1932 to
1939 [http://www.bsafwdc.co.uk]*
1960The
Daimler company produced cars for BSA from
1910 to
1915, and
1921 to
1960, when
Lanchester Motor Company cars also became part of the BSA. In
1960 Daimler was sold off to
Jaguar.
The BSA cycle arm was sold off to
Raleigh in
1957. Bicycles under the BSA name are currently manufactured and distributed within India by
TI Cycles of India.
The production of guns bearing the BSA name continued, but in
1986 BSA Guns was liquidated, the assets bought and renamed BSA Guns (UK) Ltd. The company continues to make air rifles and shotguns, and are still based in
Small Heath in Birmingham.
Norton-Villiers-Triumph
The Group continued to expand and acquire throughout the
1950s but by 1965 competition from
Japan (in the shape of companies like
Honda) and
Germany was eroding BSA's market share. Some poor marketing decisions and expensive projects contributed to substantial losses. By
1972, BSA was so moribund that it had been absorbed under Government instruction into the
Manganese Bronze company, Norton Villiers, whihc became
Norton-Villiers-Triumph. The BSA name was left out of the new company's name, though products continued to be made carrying it until 1973.
However, as the plan involved the axing of some brands and the movement of production to two sites, the plans to rescue and combine Norton, BSA and Triumph failed in the face of worker resistance. Norton's and BSA's factories were eventually shut down, while Triumph staggered on to fail four years later. Out of the ashes of recievership, the NVT Motorcycles Ltd company which owned the rights to the BSA marque, was bought-out by the management and renamed the BSA Company.
Limited revival
The BSA company produced military motorcycles (with
Rotax engines) and motorcycles for developing countries (with Yamaha engines) under the BSA name. In the later case the old "Bushman" name was recalled to duty - it had been previoulsy used on high ground clearance Bantams sold for the likes of Australian sheep farmers.
In
1991, the BSA (motorcycle) Company merged with Andover Norton International Ltd., to form a new BSA Group, largely producing spare parts for existing motorcycles. In December
1994, BSA Group was taken over by a newly formed BSA Regal Group. The new company, based in
Southampton, has a large spares business and has produced a number of limited-edition, retro-styled motorcycles
Motorcycles
BSa motorcycles were sold as affordable motorcycles with reasonable performance for the average user. BSA stressed the reliability of their machines, the availability of spares and dealer support. The motorcycles were a mixture of sidevalve and OHV engines offering different performace for different roles eg hauling a
sidecar. The bulk of use would be for commuting. BSA motorcycles were also popuilar with "fleet buyers" such as the
Post Office or
Automobile Association (AA) breakdown help services. This mass market appeal meant they could claim "one in four is a BSA" on advertising.
Machines with better specifications were available for those who wanted more performance or for competition work.To improve US sales, BSA entered a team of riders in the
200 mile Daytona beach race with a mixture of single cylinder
Gold Stars and twin cylinder
Shooting Stars assembled by Roland Pike. The team took the five first places with the rest finishing at 8th and 16th. This was the first case of a one brand sweep.[
1]
Pre World War II
*G14 1000cc V-twin
*Empire Star
*Blue Star
*Silver Star
*Gold Star
*Sloper
*M20:as the WD M20 the motorcycle of the
British Army in WW2
Post World War II
|
1957 BSA Golden Flash 650 |
*
A series Twins (four-stroke, parallel twin)
**A7
***A7 Shooting Star
**A10
***A10 Golden Flash
***A10 Road Rocket
***A10 Super Rocket
***A10 Super Flash
***A10 Rocket Gold Star
**A50
***A50R Royal Star
***A50C Cyclone
***A50W Wasp
**A65
***A65 Star Twin
***A65L Lightning
***A65R Rocket
***A65T Thunderbolt
***A65H Hornet
***A65S Spitfire
***A65F Firebird Scrambler
**A70L Lightning 750
*
Triples - the
BSA Rocket 3/Triumph Trident were co-developed, and resultantly the Rocket3 shares some engine components and cycle parts with the Triumph Trident (see
Triumph Motorcycles), but has BSA "slanted" engine cases, and BSA frame and tinware.
**A75R Rocket3 750
**A75RV Rocket3 750 - 5 speed
**A75V Rocket3 750 - 5 speed
*B series (4 stroke single cylinder)
**B25 Fleet Star
**B25 Starfire
**B25 Barracuda
**
B25 SS Gold Star**B31
**B32 Gold Star
**B33
**B34 Gold Star
**B40 350 Star
**B40 SS90
**B44 Victor
**B44
***B44SS Shooting Star
***B44VS Victor Special
**
B50***B50SS Gold Star 500
***B50T Victor Trials
***B50MX Motocross
*C series (Four-stroke unit singles)
**C10
**C11
**C12
**C15 Star
**C15T Trials
**C15S Scrambler
**C15SS80 Sports Star 80
**C15 Sportsman
*D series (Two-stroke single cylinder. See
BSA Bantam for details)
**D1
**D3
**D5
**D7
**D10
**D13
**D14/4
**B175
*Others (may include some export versions of models listed above)
**
BSA Barracuda**
BSA Beagle**BSA Brigand - late 70s moto-cross style product by NVT with imported 50 cc 2 stroke engine.
**
BSA Dandy 70**
BSA Sunbeam (Scooters, also produced as Triumph TS1, TW2 Tigress)***175B1
***250B2
**BSA Starfire
**BSA Rocket Scrambler
**BSA Rocket Gold Star
**BSA Fury
**BSA Hornet
**Winged Wheel (auxiliary power unit for bicycles)
**T65 Thunderbolt (essentially a Triumph TR6P with BSA Badges)
Cars
Car timeline*1907 to 1914 various forms with capacities ranging from 2.5 to 4.2 litre. The larger cars were based on the 1907 Peking-Paris Itala.
*1910 BSA purchased the
Daimler Company who took over car manufacture.
*1911 BSA car with Daimler engine.
*1912 Car production transferred to
Coventry, BSA cars became rebadged Daimlers.
*1914 War stopped car production
*1921 BSA car production resumed with rear-wheel-drive air-cooled V-twin light car.
*1929 First BSA three-wheeler
*1931 TW-5 van version of the three-wheeler
*1931 BSA acquired
Lanchester.
*1932 T-9 open four seat four-wheeler with a water-cooled four cylinder 9 hp (6.7 kW) engine (1075 cc).
*1932 V-9 Van version also produced.
*1932 Another BSA Rear-wheel-drive fluid flywheel 10 hp (7.5 kW) car, sold alongside the T9.
*1932 FW32 Four wheeled version of the 3-wheeler produced for 1 year
*1933 T-9 and V-9 production ceased
*1933 Four-cylinder engine version of the three and four-wheeled car was added to the range.
*1935 First Scout Series 2/3
*1936 to 1937 Scout Series 4
*1936 Three wheeled cars dropped
*1937 to 1938 Scout Series 5
*1938 to 1939 Scout Series 6
*1940 WWII stopped production of BSA cars
*1960
Jaguar Cars Ltd. acquired The Daimler Co. Ltd. and its subsidiaries from the BSA group.
Military vehicles
*BSA Scout armoured car
*"Type G Apparatus", Folding paratrooper bicycle, 32 1/2 lb (15 kg) with parachute.
Military equipment
*
Besa Machine gun
Air Rifles
*
BSA Mercury Air Rifle*
BSA Meteor Air Rifle*
BSA Lightning Air Rifle*
BSA Superstar Air Rifle*
BSA Goldstar Air Rifle*
BSA Hornet Air Rifle*
BSA Supersport Air Rifle*
BSA Ultra Air Rifle*
BSA Superten Air Rifle*
BSA Spitfire Air Rifle*
List of modern armament manufacturers*
Tribsa cafe racer using a Triumph engine in a BSA frame
*
List of BSA motorcycles*
UK BSA Owners Club*
BSA Portal*
BSA guns site*
BSA motorcycle site*
BSA Rocket 3 and Triumph Trident*
BSA Owners Club of New England*
BSA B50 homepage*
Swedish BSA Owners Club