The puzzle is solved, and a most unlikely story is revealed.
The front part of the frame is from a 1931 CS1 (500 "Carroll" cammy - pre-Inter days) that left the factory in December 1930 headed for Australia. The plungers and lower chain stays are grafted on. Up to and including 1931 the CS1 had three sets of rear chain stays; the middle stays have been removed but the witness marks are on the frame lug just above the top gearbox mount, below the oil tank bracket.
Now the story.
The original motor from the frame was a CS1 engine number 50594. Where is this motor now? In the same shed, at the heart of a very nice CS1 (see photo below)! The CS1 has been rallied since the early 1960s, and although he owner can't remember where the plunger frame came from, presumably it came from the same place at the same time as the CS1. Needless to say the owner was amazed to learn that his "Inter" frame was, in fact, the correct original frame for his 1931 CS1.
Now if we could locate a couple of three-stay rear axle lugs, the "plunger" frame could be put right and reunited with its original motor and other parts to make a delicious matching-numbers 1930-build "1931 model" CS1 Norton. Is such a beast eligible for the Banbury Run?
Yell if you have suitable lugs lying around!
If anyone would like to purchase the CS1, or a vintage CJ Norton, TT Rep Rudge, racing Douglas, KTR JAP-powered Coventry Eagle etc. have a look at
http://earlymotor.com/forsale Leon