Wetdog,
Steve Wilson on Goldies....
" In their first years till 1954 Gold Stars had their own production line, staffed & manned by knowledgeable experts. When demand meant production shifted to a regular assembly line quality suffered."
Around this time Turner a keen fan of twins, ( no surprises here, especially twins from the rival Triumph factory in Coventry), stopped further development of the Gold Star in 1955ish at BSA.
Sales of B31 350cc roadster peaked in 1955, Turner now head of BSA Automotive Division, considered singles outmoded.
Apparently several mature & reflective riders, considered the 350cc Gold Star to be the pleasanter machine, more tractable at low rev's & faster through the gears.
However, when,(racing & chasing), 500cc, 600 & 650cc twins, it was considered you needed all the cubes you could get, even though some 350s clocked up to 90mph, (they couldn't reach the magic ton+), required by the "Fast crowd".
The cult of the DBD34 500cc model, it is stated, emerged from Eddie Dow's, Gold Star centre in Banbury Oxfordshire, the top speed & strength of a Race tuned DBD, (paid dividends), especially with a Dow 10:1 Slipper piston, but tractability was lost at lower speeds......
I know that some competition Gold Stars had 531 frames.
Triumphs, were never renown for sure-footed, fail-safe handling. I read somewhere that the 500cc Daytona, was probably one of the best performing bikes of the later twins, but larger cc figures on side-panels, sells machines, so it was largely ignored.
Its never gone away the theory that, the size of your penis is directly related to the number of cc's on your side-panel, often though, when you meet the owner, (they do not realise it, but,) its an inverse relationship!
Now a 700-800 cc is considered a middle-weight machine!
OK then, 1 positive vote for the Slim-line is recorded!
Cheers
John