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The global magazine and marketplace for classic car enthusiasts, by enthusiasts.










The early American Austin was known as The Highway King. Despite an output of 50 or less units per year, it was something of a pioneer in a number of ways. The 1902 2-cylinder Austin models were much larger than most contemporary makes and for several years, although colours were optional, most of these big Austin cars for sale were painted either white with tan trim or light brown. By 1911, the Austin cars were equipped with electric lights and left-hand steering. Two years later, Austins featured a highly successful two-speed axle, with wheel-base up to 11ft 10in. After 1915, this Austin company attempted to market smaller and cheaper cars and also introduced a 12-cylinder model in 1917 which was produced until the firm ceased operations. About 1000 cars were made altogether.
Herbert Austin resigned from the general managership of Wolseley in 1905, and formed his own company: Austin-Motor Co Ltd. Austin did not, however, pursue the development of the horizontal engine, but switched to more conventional designs using sv in-line units with T-heads, separately-cast cylinders and chain drive, first supplemented and then supplanted by shaft-driven cars. Most Austins of the pre-1914 period, were fours, though sixes were marketed from 1908 to 1913, the Austin 60hp being a really big machine of 9.7 litres’ capacity. There was also an Austin 1100cc single for sale in the 1909-1911 period, but this was really a Swift distinguishable only from the Coventry company’s version by its radiator. In 1909 Austin marketed a 15hp 4-cylinder town carriage with cab-over-engine layout at £475; at this time they were also making Gladiators for the British market. In 1910 a 1.6-litre 4-cylinder Austin Ten was made for export only, being introduced to the home market the following year. In 1914, when Austin became a public company, three 4-cylinder Austin models were listed, the largest, a Austin 30 of nearly 6-litres’ capacity, having electric lighting and starting.
After World War 1, Austin tried a one-model policy with a 3.6-litre Monobloc sv 4-cylinder Austin Twenty; the price had to be raised from £495 to £695 during the first year of production, which landed Austin in the hands of the official receiver, though the Austin Twenty car proved a great success and was made and for sale until 1929. Despite financial troubles, however, the Austin company came up in 1921 with their second great vintage design, the 1661cc Austin Twelve, one of the hardest-wearing machines of all time.
Enlarged to 1.9-litres in 1927, it remained in the Austin-catalogue, always with magneto ignition, right up to 1936, and survived in production as a taxicab into the 1940s. Finally, 1922 saw the Austin Seven for sale, one of the greatest of all baby cars; it gave 13bhp from 747cc, killed the cyclecar and boasted 4-wheel brakes, though these were not coupled until late 1930. The pedal worked the front ones and the lever the rear. By 1929, an Austin Seven supercharged sports version had 32bhp, still with a 2-bearing crankshaft; the 3-bearing crankshaft came out with the 1937 Austin Seven models. The Seven was extensively raced by the Austin works; among its countless successes were a third place in the 1929 TT, and a win in the 1930 B.R.D.C. 500-Mile Race at Brooklands. Its descendants were legion; the Austin Seven was made in Germany by Dixi and their successors BMW; In France by Rosengart, In Japan by Datsun and in the USA by the American Austin Co. Even after production ceased at Longbridge at the end of 1938, manufacture of the engine was taken over by Reliant and continued up to 1962.
6-cylinder Austin cars reappeared in the range in 1927 with a 3.4-litre Austin Twenty for sale, usually found with limousine bodywork, followed by a 2 ¼-litre coil-ignition Austin Sixteen for sale in 1928. A less successful 1 ½-litre Austin Six was introduced in 1931, but Austin found another winner in the 1.1-litre Austin Ten for sale in 1932, which was made until 1947. In 1934 the company offered a choice of over 50 models – the Austin Seven, the Austin Ten, a 1 ½-litre Light Austin 12/4, the old Austin Twelve and five Austin Sixes from 1496cc to 3400cc – not to mention semisports versions of some of the smaller Austin cars. Synchromesh was now standard, with the option of the American Hayes automatic gearbox on 16 and 18hp models only. In 1936 the Austin company sponsored a team of three short-stroke twin ohc 750cc supercharged Austin racing cars designed by Murray Jamieson, which had nothing in common with the ordinary Seven except for the transverse-leaf front suspension. Their engines developed 116bhp at 9000rpm and they were raced until the outbreak of World War 2.
Austin styling received a face-lift in 1937, and again in 1939 when alligator bonnets came in with the 900cc 8hp which replaced the Austin Seven, but the image remained the same – solid and well-furnished cars of great durability appealing to the more conservative type of owner. Girling mechanical brakes were used. The first sign of a more progressive attitude came in 1945, when a 2.2-litre ohv 4-cylinder Austin Sixteen came out using the chassis and body of the 1940 Austin Twelve; this proved quite as durable as the famous Austins of the 1920s, and the engine was still being used in taxis and the 4x4 Gipsy in 1967. Coil and wishbone independent front suspension appeared in 1947 on the luxurious and traditionally-styled ohv 4-litre 6-cylinder Austin Sheerline and Austin Princess, and these were followed by the 1.2-litre Austin A40 Dorset and Austin Devon saloons with overhead valves and independently sprung at the front, which did well in America and helped Austin to sell over 85.000 cars in 1928. A further bid for dollar exports came with the big 4-cylinder Austin A90 power-top convertible – successful long-distance record work at Indianapolis failed to attract many buyers, though the engine had a long run in the first Austin-Healeys.
Austin merged with Morris to form the British Motor Corporation in 1952, when there appeared their first unitary-construction car, the 803cc Austin A30. The Healey sports car came under Austin’s aegis that year, and in 1954 Austin-Healeyy started to make the little Metropolitan coupés and convertibles for Nash. In style these were Nash Airflytes in miniature, with 3-speed gearboxes. They were powered initially by the Austin A40 engine and later by the 1 ½-litre Austin A50. Production continued until 1961. From 1955 onwards all Austins save the 4-litre models had unitary construction, new models that year being the Austin Cambridge with A40 and A50 engines, and the 2.6-litre 6-cylinder Austin Westminster. The big Austin Princess saloon went over to automatic transmission in 1957, and these Vanden Plas-bodied models subsequently (in 1960) became a make in their own right, under the name of Vanden Plas Princess. In 1959 the 948cc Austin A40 appeared with Farina styling; this was later made in Italy under licence by Innocenti and pave the way to a rationalized range of 1½-litre saloons in the Farina idiom, made in Morris, MG, Wolsely, and Riley forms as well as the basic Austin Cambridge.
1960 saw a new Austin Seven, the first of Alec Issigonis’s Minis, which Morris sold as the Mini-Minor. It had a 848cc ohv 4-cylinder engine mounted transversely and driving the front wheels, the 4-speed gearbox lived in the sump, all wheels were independently sprung by rubber in torsion, and it had an unmistakable box-like silhouette. The name Mini was soon applied to all versions, Austin as well as Morris, and the car not only became a best-seller, but distinguished itself in competition as well, with numerous rally wins to its credit. Mini-Cooper versions joined the range in 1962, the hottest standard version in 1968 being the 1.275cc Cooper S with 76bhp and front disc brakes; later developments include a 4x4 Mini-Moke for off-the-road travel. Logical developments were the 4-door 1100 saloon with interlinked Hydrolastic suspension (introduced as a Morris in 1963, with an Austin version listed in 1964), and the bigger 1800 of 1965. Minis acquired Hydrolastic suspension in 1965, and all the smaller fwd cars were available with an automatic gearbox in 1967. Both the Mini and the 1100 are made for the Italian market by Innocenti.
Improvements in 1968 included all-synchromesh gearboxes for Minis and an alternative 1275cc engine for the 1100. A special ‘federalized’ version of this Austin 1300, the 2-door Austin America with automatic transmission, went on sale in the USA. At the same time the 6-cylinder A110 gave way to a new 3-litre, combining the Austin 1800’s hull design and Hydrolastic suspension with the existing engine and conventional rear-wheel drive. This one, however, coincided with the merger of B.M.C and Leyland interests in January 1968; it was slow into production, never caught on, and was discontinued in 1971. Later in the year came Mk II versions of the Austin 1800 with 86bhp engines and optional power steering, made as Morrises and Wolseley as well as Austins. An A60 replacement came in 1969; the 1½-litre Maxi in the Issigonis tradition with fwd and transverse engine. New were the 5-bearing engine with chain-driven ohc, the 5-speed all-synchromesh gearbox, and the 5-door semi-estate car body; by 1971 it had acquired a more satisfactory rod-operated gearchange and the option of a 1748cc power unit.
In 1970 rationalization led to the replacement of the MG 1300 by the Austin 1300GT, and that August the former Austin and Nuffield elements in the British Leyland empire (Austin, MG, Morris, Vanden Plas and Wolseley) were merged to form the Austin-Morris devision. Already at the 1969 Earls Court Show the Mini had been made a marque in its own right, and by early 1971 basic versions of the 1100/ 1300 theme were sold as Austins only, Morris variants being dropped. The 3-litre six’s replacement appeared in 1972. This ADO 17 was based on the C6 already announced by British Leyland’s Australian branch, and was in essence an enlarged Maxi on which the transversely-mounted ohc 2.227cc engine drove the front wheels. Basic price was £1.246. With the 1100/1300, the Maxi and the 1800 making up the 1973 range, Austin now offered only fwd cars, a far cry from the conservatism of pre-World War 2 days. Automatic and high-performance variants were also added in 1973.
Source: Georgano, encyclopedia of motorcar; KM, MCS
The information is written with the greatest of care. However, if you have any suggested amendments please contact us at office@prewarcar.com
Thomas Humber’s bicycle firm, established in 1868, became a part of H.J. Lawson’s intended automobile empire empire and as such was responsible for production of the abortive Pennington tricars. Humber car manufacture started with an experimental front wheel drive design, while motor tricycles and quadricycles were also produced. These led to a line of 3-wheeled forecars which persisted up to 1905. Little came of Humber cars M.D. voiturette with 2-speed gear, but their more conventional 1901 offering had a 4½hp De Dion engine, De Dion-type transmission and shaft drive, as well a a single-spoke steering wheelwhich remained one of the Humber car company’s trademarks in the early years and anticipated Citroën practice by more than half a century. A 12hp 2½-litre 4-cylinder Humber car followed in 1902, but in 1903 two more ambitious vehicles appeared, a big Humber 20hp four and a 3-cylinder version with mechanically-operated inlet valves, as well a Britain’s first successful effort at a popular light car. This Humber car was the 5hp Humberette with a De Dion-type engine of 613cc and a 2-speed gearbox with two steering-column levers. All these Humber cars had shaft drive – Humbers eschewed the chain. In 1904 the Humberette was made in a more powerful form and up to 1908 two separate lines of Humber car were produced in the factories at Beeston and Coventry, the Beeston cars being the more expensive. 1905 saw a miniature Humber car, a four rated at 8/10hp, but with a capacity of 2 litres, which was developed the following year into a 10/12hp Coventry-Humber car selling at £315; Beeston’s offering that season was a 3½-litre T-head four selling for £472 10s. The 1907 versions of the Beeston-Humber car had a capacity of 6.3-litres and pressure lubrication.
The 1908 Humber car range was quite extensive, ranging from a bid for the lightcar market with a 1½-litre 8hp vertical twin, pressure-lubricated and with Humber’s own design of detachable wheels, at £195, up to a big 5½-litre six Humber car, also Coventry-made, at a modest £450.
Financial difficulties led to the closure of the Beeston factory in 1908, but Coventry went on making the T-headed Humber cars, all of which had 4-speed gearboxes by 1911. In 1912 new L-head models came out, the 11hp having a 1.7-litre monobloc engine, three forward speeds and splash lubcrication; there was also a new Humber car, a cyclecar named the Humberette, with a 998cc air-cooled engine but otherwise on full-scale car lines, which was made up to the outbreak of World War 1. 1913/1914 models cost £120, with £15 extra if watercooling was specified. Though Humber cars had supported the first Tourist Trophies, an unusual departure for 1914 was the preparation of a Humber car team of 3.3-litre twin ohc 4-cylinder machines inspired by the Henry-designed Peugeots for that year’s event.
After the war the Humber car company concentrated on solid family cars, noted for their excellent workmanship and all-weather equipment, as well as their conservatism. Side-valve engines were used up to 1922 in Humber cars, but inlet over exhaust layouts appeared in 1923, in which year there was also a new small Humber car model, the ‘Humber 8/18’ with 12-volt coil ignition at £275. Front wheel brakes had arrived by 1925, although Humber cars adhered to the foot-operated transmission brake for several more seasons. The company sold over 4.000 Humber cars in 1927, thanks to the 1.056cc ‘Humber 9/20’, an excellent 2-litre 4-cylinder ‘Humber 14/40’ and a new 20/55hp Humber car, the first six in a Humber car for many years.
The Humber cars were restyled in 1929, and the following year the effect of the Rootes takeover was seen in the new line of sixes, the 2.1-litre ‘Humber 16/50’ and the 3½-litre Humber Snipe and its long-chassis stablemate, the Humber Pullman. 1930 was also the last year for the 9hp Humber cars and thereafter the Humber car company’s staple products were upper-middle-class family cars of over two litres’ capacity, although a 1.7-litre ‘Humber 12’ appeared in 1933 and formed the basis for the long-stroke 4-cylinder Rootes engines still being manufactured in 1966 as a Humber car. Also at the end of 1932 overhead inlet valves were dropped. In 1936 the 6-cylinder Humber cars acquired transverse independent front suspension, while the biggest sixes were now of 4.1-litres’ capacity. Only 6-cylinder Humber cars were offered in 1938, and hydraulic brakes appeared on 16hp and 21hp Humber car models in 1939, and were also found on the first Humber Super Snipe – a ‘compact’ evolved by mounting the 4.1-litre engine in the smaller chassis, which was excellent value at £398.
Snipe-based Humber cars served the Allied Forces with distinction in World War 2 and the new models introduced in 1945 were really hold-overs of Humber car parts from 1940, with hydraulics now standardized, together with a new four in the shape of a 1.9-litre side-valve Humber Hawk based on Hillman’s Fourteen of 1938/1940. In 1950 a Humber car (the Super Snipe) took second place in the Monte Carlo Rally. The Super Snipe and Pullman acquired overhead valves in 1953, and the Hawk a year later, while 1956 Super Snipes could be had with automatic transmission. Unitary construction was used on a redesigned Hawk in 1957, and two years later the Super Snipe (after a short period in abeyance) re-emerged as an altogether smaller 2.650cc Humber car, also with unitary construction. This was soon replaced by a 3-litre development with disc front brakes. 1962 Humber car models had the four-headlamp pioneered in America in 1957. A small luxury Humber car came out in 1964 in the shape of the Humber Spectre, based on Hillman’s Super Minx, but with overdrive standard equipment. During 1967 all the big Humber cars were dropped, to be replaced on the British market by the Australian-built Plymouth Valiant. Since 1968 the only Humber car offering has been the 1.7-litre Humber Sceptre, a prestige version of the Hillman Hunter. The 1973 Humber cars had twin-carburettor 79bhp engine, and there was a choice of a 4-speed all-synchromesh gearbox with overdrive on the two upper ratios of automatic transmission.
Source: Georgano, encyclopedia of motorcar; MCS
The information is written with the greatest of care. However, if you have any suggested amendments please contact us at office@prewarcar.com

