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Leon Bollee was a son of Amédée Bolllée père, the most important pioneer of steam road vehicles in France. Leon Bollee, however, turned to really small petrol Leon Bollee cars. He was the first to do so, and therefore had to invent a new name for his Leon Bollee car of 1895 – he called it a Leon Bollee voiturette. This Leon Bollee car was a tandem two-seater 3-wheeler that was faster than any other petrol-engined vehicle on the road when the Leon Bollee car was working, thanks to a powerful 3hp engine and light weight, but the power unit was unreliable on the Leon Bollee car. The Leon Bollee car had a single air-cooled cylinder of 650cc and used hot-tube ignition. There were 3 forward speeds on the Leon Bollee car, with belt final drive. The frame was tubular. Four years after the Leon Bollee voiturette appeared, Leon Bollee superseded it with a 4-wheeler with independent front suspension by double transverse leaf springs. This Leon Bollee car had a single-cylinder, water-cooled engine. Unlike the Leon Bollee voiturette, this Leon Bollee car made no mark. The design rights were sold to Darracq, and around 1901 the name of Leon Bollee cars vanished. Meanwhile, the term voiturette had been taken up by the trade and public in general as the name for a small light car.
The Leon Bollee car reappeared in 1903 as an entirely normal, full-sized car in the more expensive class, backed by Vanderbilt money and designed for the American market. This Leon Bollee car was made in 28hp (4.6-litres) and 45hp (8-litres) versions, with four cylinders and chain drive, and led on to a 11.9-litre six Leon Bollee car in 1907, in which year the first shaft driven Leon Bollee car appeared. From 1909 there was also a small modern four, the Leon Bollee 10/14hp. The 1910 range embraced 9 Leon Bollee cars, including 2 of over 10-litres capacity. Electric lighting became available on Leon Bollee cars in 1913, but the Leon Bollee grew increasingly old-fashioned after World War 1 despite the introduction of ohv in 1922 on Leon Bollee cars and front wheel brakes in 1923. Late in 1924 Sir William Morris bought the Le Mans Leon Bollee car factory. From making a wide range of conservative French Leon Bollee fours, it turned to thinly-disguised products of Cowley, Oxford, the idea being to breach the French tariff walls from the inside. The first Morris- Leon Bollee had a 12CV 2½-litre 4-cylinder unit-construction engine made by Hotchkiss, the engine manufacturers controlled by Morris, but it had push-rod overhead valves and bore little evidence of its parentage. Not so the 18CV Morris- Leon Bollee car of 1928. This was a 3-litre straight-8 with single overhead camshaft that reflected Morris’ takeover of Wolseley two years earlier. Morris’ own new six of 1928 was mirrored in the 15CV 2.6-litre Le Mans product of 1929. The bodies for the Morris- Leon Bollee car were all made in France and were usually considerably more dashing and attractive than their British counterparts. Chassis of this Morris- Leon Bollee car were made in France, and all cars had a 4-speed gearbox. At one time, 50 12CV Morris- Leon Bollee cars were being turned out each week. However, Morris’ enterprise was not a success, and he discontinued it in the hard times of the Depression. A new syndicate was formed in September 1931 to sell the same range of cars under the name of Leon Bollee cars. This lasted for less than two years and few Leon Bollee cars were made.
Source: Georgano, encyclopedia of motorcar; TRN
The information is written with the greatest of care. However, if you have any suggested amendments please contact us at office@prewarcar.com
The Opel concern was well-established in bicycle and sewing machine manufacture when the five Opel brothers decided to start Opel car production. Opel cars bought the production rights of the Lutzmann and the first Opel-Lutzmann car appeared in 1898 with a rear-mounted single-cylinder engine. This Opel car was soon replaced by a 2-cylinder engine. The Opel car model was not very successful and the Opel brothers looked for another design. They reached an agreement with the French firm of Darracq and started to produce cars under licence in 1902. Opel importing Darracq’s chassis and mounting their own bodies. These Opel cars were advertised as Opel-Darracqs. Import of Darracq cars continued after Opel introduced the first of their own Opel car designs in 1902. This Opel car was a 10/12hp car with a 2-cylinder 1.884cc engine. In 1903 they produced their first 4-cylinder Opel car, an Opel 20/24hp. The Opel car range was completed with a 2-cylinder 8/14hp and a 4-cylinder 35/40hp Opel car in 1905 and in the following year co-operation with Darracq was discontinued.
The Opel car firm was very active in sports and racing events; in 1905 Opel cars gained more than 100 victories. The Herkomer and Prince Henry Trials saw Opel car entries and in the 1907 Kaiserpreis Race a third place was gained by an Opel car. Until 1911 Opel was one of the leading German car producers, offering a wide range of Opel cars from the very popular 2-cylinder Opel 8/14PS ‘Doctor’s Car’ to a Opel 33/60PS 9.240cc luxury model. In 1911 the Opel car factory was destroyed by fire, but after complete rebuilding which allowed the application of the most modern production techniques, Opel regained their position. The 10.000th Opel car was delivered in 1912, and the production of lorries was taken up in 1913. The biggest of the 1914 Opel car range, the 10.2-litre Opel 40/100PS, had overhead valves and this Opel car was credited with 75mph. The small 5/14PS and 6/16PS Opel cars became very popular in the years up to World War 1, and the heavier Opel car types were built in greater quantities. During the first years after the war political reasons prevented the resumption of large-scale production of Opel cars.
In 1923 the Opel car range covered seven Opel cars from 9/32PS to 30/80PS; five of them were cancelled when Opel installed an assembly line in 1923/1924 and started mass production of Opel cars on American principles, being the first German company to do so. The new 4/12PS Opel car – presented in 1924 – was almost a copy of the Citroën 5CV. This Opel car had a 4-cylinder 951cc engine and a two-seater body. This Opel car was commonly known as the Laubfrosch (tree frog) because of its green paint. Sales of this Opel car amounted to 39.000 by 1927. Opel started to build up a widespread service organization covering all German districts; Opel cars were the first German producers to guarantee repairs at fixed prices. After 1926 a four-seater body was used on a lengthened Laubfrosch Opel car chassis and engine capacity was raised to 1.016cc. This Opel car was made until 1929. Heavier Opel cars followed, such as the 4-cylinder, 2.612cc 10/45PS and various 6-cylinder Opel cars, still with side valves. In 1928 Opel were Germany’s largest car manufacturers, producting 37,5% of all cars in that country. It is interesting to note that Opel were then the biggest bicycle producers in the world.
Interesting experiments were carried out by Opel with rocket-driven Opel cars in 1927 and 1928 in co-operation with the rocket specialists Valier and Sander. Fritz von Opel drove the rocket-car on the Avus track at over 125mph.
The approach of economic crisis in the late 1920s made the Opel family decide to change their Opel car firm into a joint-stock company. The majority of the shares were acquired by General Motors. In 1929 Opel’s first 8-cylinder car was introduced, the 24/110PS, 5.970cc Opel Regent. In the same year a 4/20PS 1.016cc Opel car appeared as the successor to the range of small Opel cars which had started with the Laubfrosch.
The 1930 Opel cars were characterized by three model ranges. The small 4/20PS Opel car was developed into the Opel 1-litre (1931/ 1933), 1.2-litre Opel car (1933/ 1935), Opel P4 (1936/ 1938) and the Opel Kadett (1937/ 1939), the latter having an engine capacity of 1.074cc. This Opel car sold in England for a mere £135. The Opel Regent 1.2-litre (1932/ 1933) grew into the 1.3-litre Opel car (1934/ 1935) and the Opel Olympia (1935/ 1937), both having a 1.279cc engine. The 1938 Opel Olympia had an increased engine capacity of 1.488cc and an output of 37bhp. The 6-cylinder Opel car models of the 1920s were developed into the 1.8-litre Opel car (1931/ 1933) and 2-litre Opel car (1934-1937), the 2.473cc Opel Super (1937/ 1938) and the Opel Kapitän (1938/1939) with the same engine. The 6-cylinder 3.520cc Opel Admiral rounded off the pre-war range of Opel cars. Dubonnet-type independent suspension was introduced in the 1934 2-litre, and was standard in all Opel cars by 1939.
During the 1930s Opel ranked first in European car production. The 1935 Opel Olympia was the first mass-produced car with a chassis-less all-steel body. The Opel P4 at 1.450 marks was the cheapest car on the German market, a true four-seater Opel car of 32bhp capable of 55mph. The end of World War 2 brought the enforced dismantling of the Opel Kadett production lines. These Opel cars were transferred to Russia and the Opel Kadett, identical to the pre-war Opel car, re-appeared as the Moskvitch. At the Opel works production of Opel cars started again in 1947 with the Opel Olympia, followed in 1948 by the Opel Kapitän. Bodies and engines of this Opel cars were similar to the pre-war designs. While bodies changed frequently of Opel cars during the following years the engines were built according to the old proved design. In 1962 a new Opel Kadett appeared, built in a new factory at Bochum. This Opel car had a 993cc, 40bhp engine, increased in 1965 to 1.087cc. The Opel Olympia became the Opel Rekord in 1953 and its 1.488cc engine was supplemented by 1.680cc and 1.897cc Opel cars in 1959 and 1965 respectively. Overhead camshafts were adopted for this Opel car series in 1965. As the Opel Rekord L6, this Opel car was also available with the 2.605cc Kapitän engines. The Opel Kapitän’s 2.473cc power unit was increased to 2.605cc in 1959 and 2.784cc in 1965. The name Admiral was also revived in 1964 for an Opel car with Kapitän engines. In the same year the Opel Diplomat was introduced to top the Opel car range. V8 Chevrolet engines of 4.638cc (190bhp) and 5.354cc (230bhp) were used for this Opel model. Kapitäns and Admirals were also available with Opel Diplomat engines on request. Car production rose from 6.028 in 1948 to 623.989 Opel cars in 1965. The 1968 Opel car range was widened still further by the addition of fast-back 2- and 4-door Opel Kadetts, and a new Opel Olympia based on the Kadett, but available with 1.1-litre, 1.7-litre or 1.9-litre engines.
A sporting image began to emerge for Opel cars in 1969, with active support for Opel cars in rallies and the introduction of a Opel GT coupé combining Kadett mechanical elements with retractable headlamps and front disc brakes; with the optional 1.9-litre ohc engine this Opel car was capable of 115mph. Opel car components were also used in Belgian versions of General Motors’ new make, the Ranger. A new high-performance six-cylinder Opel car appeared in 1970, the Opel Commodore GS, its 2.8-litre engine offered with the option of fuel injection. A year later came Opel cars answer to the Anglo-German Ford Capri, the Opel Manta coupé. This Opel car had double-wishbone independent front suspension and a choice of 4-cylinder ohc power units with outputs of up to 90bhp. The same theme was perpetuated in a saloon, the Opel Ascona, which had front disc brakes as standard and was available with 1.584cc or 1.897cc engine. In May 1971 the Opel car factory converted an Opel GT to electric propulsion, and this Opel car covered a flying kilmetre at 117.2mph, breaking the official electric car record held since 1899 by Camille Jenatzy’s La Jamais Contente.
Redesigned versions of the intermediate Rekord Opel car series appeared in 1972; in addition to new 1.7-litre and 1.9-litre ohc engines, there was a 2.1-litre diesel option on the Opel car. During the year Opel replaced Volkswagen as the home market’s best-selling make. Opel cars offered a formidable diversity of models: the Opel Kadett with 1.078cc or 1.196cc engines; the Rallye Kadett Opel car with the option of a 1.9-litre 90bhp unit; the ohc 4-cylinder Opel Asconas and Opel Rekords; the Opel GT and Opel Manta coupés; the 6-cylinder Opel Commodore and Opel Admiral series; and the 5.3-litre Chevrolet-engined Opel Diplomat V8. Front disc brakes were standard on all Opel cars but the basic Kadetts, and only these and the V8 retained push-rod-operated ohv. The Opel Admiral and Opel Diplomat apart, Opel cars had fallen into line with Vauxhall, using rigid axles and coils at the rear, though various forms of independent front suspension were found. New for 1973 were a high-performance Opel Ascona, the 1900SR, and its Manta equivalent, the Opel Berlinetta. Both Opel cars had 90bhp 1.897cc engines.
Source: Georgano, encyclopedia of motorcar; HON
The information is written with the greatest of care. However, if you have any suggested amendments please contact us at office@prewarcar.com


