Classic TT: Unique tribute to iconic Norton racers

One of the highlights of the Classic TT festival this weekend will be a special parade lap featuring 13 of the legendary Norton machi🍸n🔯es.
Scheduled for a 6.15pm star💝t on Saturday evening, the line-up includes past and present racers in a uniqu⛄e exhibition.
While the Norton Rotary has appeared in many parade laps a𝓀round the Mounta♔in Course, never before have so many appeared at one time on the island.
The first incarnation of the rotary developed by Brian Crighton, the driving force behind the machines, was the RCW and this forms more than half of the parade line-up with eight of the black-clad John Player Special liveried machines lining up on the grid, which are being ridden by the ITV4 broadcastiꦦng trio of Steve Parrish, Steve Plater and James Whitham with Malcolm Wheeler will ride a fourth.
Trevor Nation and Steꦗve Cull both secured international road race🧔 podiums on the JPS Norton, with Nation finishing second in the 1990 Senior TT.
Both will be reunited with their old mounts, while William Dunlop will also ride one of the RCW machines, representing his late father Robert, who powered to a famous double at the North West 200 in 1990 and added another Superbike win for Norton the following year at the evenꦫt.
Michael Dunlop will ride another version of the 588cc machine, the NRS, which his father powered to third place in the 1990 F1 and 1992 Senior r🌞aces.
The final works NRS Norton Rotary in the parade is arౠguably the most famous: the iconic 'White Charger' that the late Steve Hislop famously rode to victory in the 1992 Senior, with John McGuinness riding the machine.
After leaving the official Norton team, engineering guru Crighton first created th🐎e Roton and then the Duckhams QXR Norton, the latter version goꦏing on to dominate the British Superbike Championship in 1994.
The late Mark Far▨mer first rode the bike in 1992 before Jim Moodie𒐪 finished second in both the Supercup and British Superbike Championship in 1993.
However, the team enjoyed their finest moments in 1994 when they expandeꦕd to a two-rider line-up in the shape of Ian Simpson and Phil Borley.
Between them, the duo took no less than 14 wins and 31 podiums on their way to finishing first and third respectively in the British Superbike C👍hampionship.
Simpson will ride the number 25 machine that took hi🐭m to the title with the other bike being ridden by Peter Hickman, whose dad Dave played a major part in the Nꦏorton Rotary's success, working with Crighton on the machines from 1987 onwards.
The riders will leave the line in🐷 single file in chronological o🦩rder to a narration read by Manx Radio TT Anchorman Tim Glover, which will tell the story of Norton's remarkable history as well as the riders who competed on them.
On Monday, William Dunl🐻op will compete in the Motorsport Merchandise Formula 1 race on a 588cc N💜orton for the National Motorcycle museum, prepared by Crighton.
Picture courtesy of Motorcycle News.