Alain Chevallier

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Alain Chevallier (6 November 1947 – 3 October 2016) was a French Grand Prix motorcycle designer and builder.

During the 1970s and 1980s, Chevallier designed and built road racing motorcycles using Yamaha engines and campaigned them in the Grand Prix world championships. His brother Olivier Chevallier rode the bikes until he was killed while competing at the Grand Prix of Le Castellet in 1980.[1]

Despite his brother's death, Chevallier continued to build and race motorcycles. In 1982, Didier de Radiguès rode a Chevallier-designed bike to victory in the 350cc Yugoslavian Grand Prix and finished the season in second place in the F.I.M. 350cc world championship. His Chevallier teammate Eric Saul won the Austrian Grand Prix and finished the championship in fourth place. In 1983, three of Chevallier's motorcycles ridden by de Radiguès, Thierry Espié, and Jean-François Baldé, finished in the top ten of the F.I.M. 250cc world championship. Baldé would also win the 250cc South African Grand Prix.[2][3]

Chevallier would move up to the premier 500cc class in 1984, building a race bike using Honda's NS500 engine. De Radiguès rode the bike to a ninth place in the world championship.[4][5]

In 2000, Chevallier helped design motorcycles for a new French company named Voxan, with his modular composite frame design based on shaped steel tubes inserted into alloy castings doubling as fuel and oil containers respectively.[6][7]

Chevallier died of cancer on 3 October 2016, aged 68.[8]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Olivier Chevallier career profile at Motorsport Memorial
  2. ^ "250cc Final Standings at MotoGP.com". Archived from the original on 2012-09-17. Retrieved 2010-06-09.
  3. ^ 1983 250cc Entries List at www.f1network.net
  4. ^ "1984 500cc Final Standings at MotoGP.com". Archived from the original on 2012-09-17. Retrieved 2010-06-09.
  5. ^ 1984 500cc Entries List at www.f1network.net
  6. ^ American Motorcyclist, March 2000, Vol. 54, No. 3, ISSN 0277-9358
  7. ^ Voxan - The Inside Story, by Alan Cathcart. Motorcycle Sport and Leisure, September 2000, p.44. Accessed 9 June 2022
  8. ^ "Alain Chevallier est décédé, les Voxan sont orphelines". 7 October 2016.