Classic Racer

Getting out on the boat engined bike

On his visit to the Berlin factory, and while returning New Zealander Kim Newcombe's machinery, Dieter König offered Rod the Kiwi racer's position in the development department, as well as the works 500GP ride using a bike incorporating all the modifications that Kim and Rod had determined would be needed to stay competitive in 1974. These included lighter and better disc brakes, magnesium wheels, an aluminium radiator etc.

But after politely declining the offer, Rod ended up working briefly for Yamaha Europe in Amsterdam, before heading home to Melbourne, where, after some years with the local Yamaha importer, he establishedTingate Racing and quickly gained a reputation for superb workmanship in crafting monocoque chassis, aluminium tanks, expansion chambers and the like. However, his König days weren’t done.

“A year or so after Kim’s accident, Dieter sent me a motor to look at continuing development with, and I bought a Quaife gearbox to go with it,” says Rod. “I looked at it and thought how the front exhaust came over the top of the carburettor which heats up the intake charge, and how if you ran two pipes out of the bottom and the back two out of the top, it would work out better.

“You could get reasonable pipes underneath, and run an airbox down through the centre. But, the trouble was König was only a small factory, and Dieter just didn’t have the dollars to make new casting dies to revamp the engine, so it just sort of sat there for a while, then got tucked away under a bench when König shut down after Dieter’s death.”

In the meantime, his mate Peter Smith had bought a collection of parts from the König factory, including wheels, a radiator, fuel tank, seat and other parts – so eventually the idea came about to build a replica of the Newcombe bike as a tribute to Kim. And that tribute would use these bits from Peter and Rod’s motor.

“Kim’s own bikes had all been disassembled, and the engines used by the hydroplane racers,” says Tingate. “I spoke to Dieter years later, and he was sad that had happened. He and Kim were great like-minded friends, and he wished he’d kept at least one bike all together, to act as a memorial to Kim at the factory.

“There are various bikes all claiming to be Kim’s old one, but I’m sorry to say it’s simply not true – all three bikes he raced were broken up. I saw one at

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Classic Racer

Classic Racer1 min read
The Blue Dragon Cafe
There can’t be a racetrack that’s been more photographed than the Isle of ManTT course, can there? While you can recognise pictures taken at famous corners on tracks from around the world (thinkThe Corkscrew, Eau Rouge, Craner Curves, The Parabolica)
Classic Racer10 min read
Baker DAYS
It was a sight us Brits instantly fell in love with back in 1976: the pint-sized, 5ft 3in American jockey hustling the awesome red and black TZ750 OW31 Yamaha around Mallory Park. With its tubular frame and rudimentary Monocross rear suspension, slic
Classic Racer2 min read
Editor’s Welcome
There’s always more to the show than just what we see, and I did learn this when I was younger… A couple of things when I was growing up made me realise this and it was playing sport for my school and being in the school musical. Now, I don’t want to

Related Books & Audiobooks