Just to play Devil's Advocate: except for the dodgy Victa anagram name, are we sure the Vi-Cat came after the A-V: how do we know that A-V didn't copy the Vi-Cat design???
Hello
Patrick &
Sir BatPatrick, Canberra is the home of the Machiavellian.
The Vi-Cat must be post-Hercules for reasons I gave above. The Hercules
was introduced in late 1959 and was fitted with their favoured Villiers.
The Vi-Cat - real or imagined - is unmistakably 1960's 4-stroke.
Still speaking in the spirit of Machiavelli, I feel the extra photos confirm
the cleverness of the deception. This is a fantastic lawnmower - perhaps a
work of art - and this topic is now part of its provenance.
The base does not so much reveal the inadequacies of a Dulux penchant,
but the characteristics of
sand casting. I will have to defer to the
experts, but it appears to me the base is a one-off sand casting. The
surface is not production quality at all. It may well be that the 20" A-V
base acted as the outer mould for this re-constructed base.
The
Vi-Cat logo is decidedly oddly placed above the discharge chute.
I am struggling to think of any other vintage rotary with that style.
The Hercules side-catcher would have covered it! The logical place for
rotary badging has always been the base front.
The cast Vi-Cat logo is compromised by the
gaping square hole on the 'V',
something a production machine would
never have. It's a sort of insult.
I guess it may have been part of the casting process...
The Hercules was Austral-Villiers' first rotary to take a side catcher.
As such, I guess it would have taken fluted blades of some sort.
In the Victa style, perhaps flat cutting blades, and optional
fluted blades for the optional catcher.
This is a clever and collectible mower, and Patrick's advice to
record all information about it is important. I hope Sir Bat will
explore the engine numbers that should still be on the cowling, perhaps
covered by a thick layer of Dulux ...
All very interesting.---------------------------
Jack