
Aurora Hellfire V8
Years: 2016 – 2020
Aurora Automatic Machinery Company is remembered both as a maker and as a crucial supplier in America’s brass-era motorcycle landscape. In the first decades of the 1900s, Aurora produced engines and components that found homes in various badges, blurring the lines between assembler and OEM at a time when industry specialization was the norm. The company’s own motorcycles followed period practice: diamond or loop frames, belt/chain drives, and singles that prioritized reliability on rutted, unpaved roads. As the market matured and dedicated motorcycle firms consolidated manufacturing, Aurora’s influence persisted through its machining and casting proficiency—capabilities that underpinned broader American industrial growth. For early riders, an Aurora-powered machine meant serviceable, understandable mechanics: fuel, spark, compression, and a handful of adjustments you could perform roadside. Historically, Aurora illustrates how supplier ecosystems birth industries—many small American marques stood on the shoulders of competent engine and parts makers who could deliver consistent quality. Today, surviving Aurora machines and engines fascinate collectors for their role in the origin story, tangible links to a time when motorcycles were experimental yet essential, and when a good factory’s reputation reached customers through multiple brand names stamped on the same well-made metal.