SDAMC Articles

Phil Pearson, BSA Gold Star Specialist
© Mike Loper, 2003
The city of Great Yarmouth and the adjacent town of Belton lie on the shore of the North Sea, 150 miles northeast of London in East Anglia.  It’s a magical place defined by windmills, fens, and the Norfolk Broads, shallow lakes and waterways created by medieval peat excavations.  Standing on the dike next to Church Farm Bed & Breakfast one brisk, fall morning, Peggy and I watched the tide creep toward us, drew in the salty earthiness that can only be sensed where the land meets the sea, and anticipated our meeting with the Pearson’s later that morning.  

church.jpg (72828 bytes)

The Church Farm B&B is Next to This Ancient Church and is Also a Working Farm, Hence the Name Church Farm

 I purchased my Gold Star from Paul Lima at GP Motorcycles several years ago.  Now that I had finished restoring my 1967 Triumph TR6, I was free to begin the GS in earnest.  Gold Star crankshafts are the weak link in an otherwise strong running engine, and Phil has designed a crank that is durable and well built.  So, based on recommendations I received from other Goldie owners who have had Phil work on their engines, I recently shipped my engine to him for a complete rebuild.  Since Peggy and I were in the London area anyway, it was only natural that we try to see Phil’s operation.

shop.jpg (64139 bytes)

Phil’s Shop
Note His Gold Star On the Right

After arriving at Church Farm, we called Phil and his wife, Linda, and invited them to dinner at the Farm’s pub, just below our room.  Walking into the pub, I immediately recognized Phil from photographs on his website.  Greeting me with a relaxed smile, we shook hands and sat down for the evening and the four of us got to know each other.  While rolling his own cigarettes and sipping a pint, Phil said his machine shop knowledge was mostly self taught during the period he was working for North Sea oil companies.  He eventually grew tired of being in the employ of others, and decided to concentrate on his passion:  BSA Gold Stars.  He has one motorcycle: a BSA Gold Star with over 41,000 miles on the clock.  At the end of the evening, we made plans to go over to their house the next morning.

The magic in the Norfolk Broads occurs in Phil’s shop where he takes tired, well-used, or broken Gold Star engines and breathes new life into them.  Lined up for rebuilds along his shop wall were Goldie engines from all over the world.

It appeared that half were to be used for racing, while the other half were for restoration projects or rebuilds.  I saw my engine neatly placed against the shop wall in the queue.  

The shop is small, but that’s no reflection of the quality of his product.  He showed me one of his “Pearson Crankshafts” and then placed it in his lathe.  “Here Mike, check the run out on this journal.”  I slowly rotated the crank in his vintage Colchester Lathe.  The run out was a miniscule 2/10ths of a mil; that’s 0.0002 inches…..incredible!  

lathe.jpg (71711 bytes)

At the Colchester Lathe with a Pearson Crank Between the Head and Tailstocks

For me, it was inspiring to stand in this small shop, smell the cutting oil, be among the jigs, cranks, engine molds, and miscellaneous parts neatly place on the shelves and in the small bins along the wall.

Walking back into his house, he pulled out a collection of original BSA Gold Star pencil and sepia drawings from the factory and gingerly spread them onto the dining room table where we could study them.  I looked at the lines drawn carefully by draftsmen over 50 years ago and began to realize the fullness of history before me and began to understand that Phil is more than just a craftsman, he’s an artist with exacting standards, interested in pursuing modifications that will improve the reliability and quality of Gold Stars and keep the marque going well into the future.  The Gold Star marque is in good hands.  

goldie.jpg (56276 bytes)

Phil on His Goldie: We Started It Up in His Shop-Quite a Roar