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About Scottoiler - Fraser Scott

Fraser Scott - pioneer of the Scottoiler product...
 

Motorcycles have always been central to my life. My first memory was being a tank-top passenger, and falling off, my dads' Triumph Twin around 1937 when I was two. Whether it was the wartime 'black-out', the Lucas lights, or the Demon Drink I do not recall.

First bike was a BSA Bantam, bought for 'get to work transport' when I reached seventeen, and from which I regularly continued to fall off... usually because of 'plug-seizures'?

A lifetime dedicated to bikes to go camping and hill walking trips, and then scrambling kept me busy, until, for my sins, in my forty second year, I 'invented' the Scottoiler.

Around 1977, I used Norton Commandos and they kept blowing-up.


I used them almost every weekend going between Glasgow and Manchester to see the lady of the time. After coasting silently to a halt, again, I bought a Suzuki 750 four. Previously I had used three Renold chains concurrently, pulling one off the sprockets with another, cleaning them all in a petrol-bath, drying them off, and boiling them in a Duckhams grease-pan... every 600 miles. The Suzuki had an'O ring'chain which was immovable without removing the swing-arm and it was drooping off the sprockets the first time I got to Manchester. It looked too costly to replace.

I thought the Suzukis' vacuum petrol-tap could be adapted to make an automatic chainoiler, and a prototype was made up by John Mellor, a fellow fugitive from Glasgow at weekends, and it worked. And how.
 
For five years I worked on perfecting the Scottoiler. I really did nothing else because the 'O ring' chains were just not wearing out. The sprockets were wearing a bit, but the chains, on the road and even in the dirt were really enjoying life. I felt it would have been irresponsible to pack in the project even though it was costing me my social life and most of my money.

In 1983 a 'champion' finally appeared in the form of Textile Mouldings of Accrington (TML) who commissioned Westclox of Dumbarton to manufacture 10,000 Scottoilers which were launched at the NEC show in 1983. We sold 50 kits to an indifferent public in a collapsing motorcycle market.

After taking a decision to make bits for cars instead, TML sold the Scottoiler project to me personally, and in 1985, having no capital left to re-launch, I decided to sell the kits by mail-order and rely on word-of-mouth to build sales up slowly. After five years it was all getting a bit too big for me to handle personally, so instead of hiring unemployed bicycle racers to remake kits, we took on more permanent people, and started to get more professional. I had meanwhile been designing lubricating systems for bicycle chains and skis. Twenty people now work here in our new factory, with more employed by our engineering sub-contractors all over Great Britain.

Other inventions, some of which are 'spin-offs' from the original Scottoiler, and some which are not, will be reaching maturity shortly. Watch this space.