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The BSA Rocket Gold Star (RGS) was a 646 cc (39.4 cu in) air-cooled parallel twin motorcycle produced by Birmingham Small Arms Company (BSA) at Small Heath, Birmingham. Launched in February 1962, it was one of the final range of A10 twins , using a tuned A10 Super Rocket engine in the double-downtube Gold Star frame.
Some of the Spitfire Scramblers and the Rocket Gold Star used a Gold Star 190mm front brake. The Rocket Gold Star used Gold Star cycle parts [ 20 ] (Frame numbers beginning with A10, all other A10 models had frames starting with A7) Spitfire Scramblers also used Gold Star Catalina cycle parts in 1957 [ 21 ] and 1963.
1956 DBD34 Gold Star Daytona. In 1954, BSA wanted to win the prestigious United States Daytona 200 race. During the 1950s, the race was run partly on asphalt and partly on the beach at Daytona. A team of workers prepared Gold Stars and A7 Shooting Stars were entered. The race was won by a Shooting Star with a Gold Star in 3rd place.
BSA 500 & 650 Twins: The Essential Buyer's Guide. Veloce Publishing. ISBN 9781845841362. Wright, Professor Owen (1984). BSA A7 & A10 Twins Super Profile (First ed.). G T Foulis & Co Ltd. ISBN 9780854294466. ASIN 0854294465. BSA Twins A7 & A10 1946-1962: Road Test Book (First ed.). Brooklands Books. 1996. ISBN 9781855203365. ASIN 1855203367
Acko General Insurance is a private sector general insurance company in India. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Founded in November 2016, the company received its license from the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI) in September 2017.
BSA motorcycles were made by the Birmingham Small Arms Company Limited (BSA), which was a major British industrial combine, a group of businesses manufacturing military and sporting firearms; bicycles; motorcycles; cars; buses and bodies; steel; iron castings; hand, power, and machine tools; coal cleaning and handling plants; sintered metals; and hard chrome process.
The BSA A65 Star was a Birmingham Small Arms Company (BSA) motorcycle aimed at the US market for unit construction twins. As well as giving a clean look to the engine, with the pushrod passages part of the cylinder block casting, unit construction reduced the number of places oil could leak from. [ 3 ]
By the end of production in 1962 the BSA Shooting Star was the culmination of the development of the BSA A7, with a black frame with light green tank, mudguards and side panels, it had an alloy cylinder head, a duplex cradle frame with swinging arm rear suspension, full-width cast iron hubs and 8-inch drum brake at the front with a 7-inch at ...