Classic Van Auction Talk

Showing posts with label Rolls Royce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rolls Royce. Show all posts

Friday, 22 October 2021

1931 Rolls-Royce 20/25 'Dreadnought Special' by Bespoke Bodyworks - RM SOTHEBY'S AUCTIONS Royal Automobile Club, St. James's London, SW1Y 5HS Saturday 6th November 2021

  

 
Welcome back to Classic Chatter and our look at what is coming to auction in the UK.
It's been a difficult time for everyone over the last 18 months but the future looks better and we all hope normality is just around the corner.

OUR FEATURED AUCTION

RM SOTHEBY'S AUCTIONS
Royal Automobile Club, St. James's
London, SW1Y 5HS
Saturday 6th November 2021

Tom Gidden ©2021 Courtesy of RM Sotheby's

1931 Rolls-Royce 20/25 'Dreadnought Special' by Bespoke Bodyworks

Guide Price: £150,000 - £200,000 GBP

Chassis No: GNS39


  • One-off, coachbuilt, Bentley-style “Dreadnought Special” eligible for VSCC events
  • 3.8-litre six-cylinder Rolls-Royce engine with a Godfrey Marshall K300 blower is said to produce 190 bhp and 350 ft. lb of torque
  • The uprated engine features a billet camshaft, forged pistons, lightweight flywheel and a polished alloy head
  • Gearbox modified to include an AP Racing clutch and Laycock overdrive
  • Presented with historic registration documents, a copy of the original purchase order from Rolls-Royce, 1970s drawings for a replacement body, and folders of restoration photographs



Rolls-Royce introduced the 20/25 in 1929 and manufactured an estimated 3,827 rolling chassis over an eight-year production run. With buyers free to choose their coachbuilder and body style, the model was bodied by a variety of outlets, including Park Ward, Hooper, Van Den Plas, and H. J. Mulliner. Few have ended up in such a unique configuration as this “Dreadnought Special”.

This car—chassis number GNS 39—is believed to be one of 81 made between 1930 and 1931 with the “GNS” chassis number prefix. In its earliest form, the car was a rare example, having been bodied by H. J. Mulliner as a Two Seater Tourer. First registered for the road on 3 March 1931, the car’s first owner, Vincent Hemery Esq., took delivery two weeks later. In 1966, it was photographed still fitted with its original body.

The car was purchased as a rolling chassis with engine and gearbox on 4 June 2014 by the current owner, with the intention of creating a one-off special. It now features an alloy Brooklands Bentley-style race body, hand-formed over an English ash frame by Bespoke Bodywork of Church Crookham, England. The chassis was shortened to accept the new body and the suspension received stiffer cord-wrapped springs, while the wheels are clad in Blockley road-legal competition tyres. The “Dreadnought Special” is brought to a stop by its Afin brakes with competition linings.

The original engine was bored out to 3.8-litres, fitted with a billet camshaft, forged pistons, alloy cylinder head and lightweight flywheel. Breathing through a Godfrey Marshall K300 blower, the “Dreadnought Special” is claimed to produce 190 bhp and 350 ft.lb of torque. The Rolls-Royce gearbox was stripped down, receiving new SKF bearings, an AP Racing clutch and a Laycock overdrive.

The cabin is upholstered in red leather and features a leather cord-bound steering wheel and twin Brooklands aero screens. The Bentley-style bodywork is finished in a dark green hue, with a single-wrapped exhaust pipe affixed to the left side of the body. “Dreadnought” in white lettering sits boldly on either side of the bonnet, indicating the competitive nature of this VSCC-eligible special.

This one-off Bentley-style special is a hallmark of British craftsmanship and has been modified with no expense spared. The “Dreadnought” is offered with paperwork that includes a copy of the original purchase order from Rolls-Royce, historic registration documents, 1970s drawings for a replacement body, invoices, and folders of restoration photographs.



Buyer's Premium for this lot is:
  • 15% of the hammer price up to and including £200,000
  • 12.5% of the hammer price in excess of £200,000


Coming To Auction  Brought To You By:
 The Squirrel
Disclaimer:  Whilst Classic Chatter ("we") attempts to make sure that the information contained in this website is accurate and complete, we are aware that some errors and omissions may occur from time to time. We are not able, therefore, to guarantee the accuracy of that information and cannot accept liability for loss or damage arising from misleading information or for any reliance on which you may place on the information contained in this website. We highly recommend that you check the accuracy of the information supplied. If you have any queries about any information on our website, please contact us at  jeff.classicchatter@mail.com


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Monday, 19 July 2021

1927 Rolls-Royce Phantom 1 Open Tourer - Silverstone Auctions Silverstone Circuit (The Wing Building, NN12 8TN) Saturday 31st July and Sunday 1st August

  


 
Welcome back to Classic Chatter and our look at what is coming to auction in the UK.
It's been a difficult time for everyone over the last 18 months but the future looks better and we all hope normality is just around the corner.

OUR FEATURED AUCTION

Silverstone Auctions
Silverstone Circuit (The Wing Building, NN12 8TN)
Saturday 31st July and Sunday 1st August 


1927 Rolls-Royce Phantom 1 Open Tourer

Lot No: 404
Registration No: HK 6071
Chassis No: 82EF
Engine No; CX85

 


  • #82EF was built in 1927 on a C-2-A Long Chassis. Fitted with Engine Number 'CX75'
  • Clothed in 'Enclosed Laundaulette' bodywork by Maddox of Huntingdon
  • Delivered to its first owner, Rippon Bros. Ltd. of Huddersfield on 14-06-1927
  • There is no further history with the car up until its purchase, in 2004, by our vendor
  • However the real story is the cars commodious rear bodywork which began life in 1912 fitted to a new Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost, # 2232E
  • This bodywork has a fabulous story to tell, all covered on our website
  • #82EF returned to UK roads registered as HK 6071 in 2004 and has enjoyed a full and colourful life ever since
  • The car is supplied with original documents which include build sheets, spring testing, component selection, weight reports, inspections and pleasingly the car’s service records (at the Works) up until early 1938
  • A remarkable piece of motoring history

By 1925, the Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost had been upstaged by a younger generation of more technically advanced luxury cars. The glory days of the 1913 Alpine Trials had long passed and both Henry Royce and Rolls-Royce sales manager Claude Johnson felt the need to produce a new claimant to the title 'best car in the world'. Just as the competition between car manufacturers was becoming increasingly fierce so that between rival coachbuilders had intensified correspondingly. With the arrival of each faster, more powerful chassis came the opportunity to construct ever more lavish, sophisticated coachwork. To ensure that their cars could be fitted with the finest bodies in the world, Rolls-Royce introduced the 'New Phantom'.
Whilst, its tapered, channel-section chassis, four-speed manual transmission, supple springing (semi-elliptic front, cantilever rear) and ingenious gearbox-driven, servo-assisted four-wheel brakes owed much to its predecessor, the Phantom's 7668cc engine was all new. Quoted as being an impressive 33 per cent more powerful than the Ghost's unit, it featured overhead valves set in a detachable cylinder head, two-cylinder blocks with three cylinders each, an aluminium alloy crankcase and a massive seven bearing crankshaft. Bore and stroke dimensions of 108 x 139.7mm resulted in abundant torque, enabling the flagship Rolls-Royce to accelerate from walking speed to approximately 80mph in top gear. Unveiled at the company's 14/15 Conduit St, London showrooms during May 1925, the 'New Phantom' remained in production in the UK until 1929, by which time some 2,269 chassis had been delivered.

Rolls-Royce Phantom 1, #82EF, appears to have been built in early 1927 on a Nickel-finished, C-2-A Long Chassis and fitted with Engine Number 'CX75' before being despatched to coachbuilders, Maddox of Huntingdon, to be clothed in their 'Enclosed Laundaulette' bodywork. It was subsequently returned to Derby for final fitting-out and testing prior to being delivered to its first owner, Rippon Bros. Ltd. of St.Johns Rd, Huddersfield, (John Stonehouse) on 14-06-1927. This information can be gleaned from over a dozen photocopies of (hand-written) original documents which include build sheets, spring testing, component selection, weight reports, inspections and pleasingly the car’s service records (at the Works) up until early 1938.

There is no further history with the car up until its purchase, in 2004, by Raymond Lippiatt, its current owner. Raymond is a long-term Rolls-Royce and Bentley enthusiast who is well known by the respective Owner’s and Driver’s Clubs and who has also entrusted us with the sale of his very special 3-litre Bentley. The Phantom is rumoured to have been working as a farm tractor (possibly abroad) and certainly needed to be UK-registered again with HK 6071 being allocated by the DVLA after representation by The Society of Automotive Historians in Britain. However, the most unusual thing about the venerable Rolls was its distinctive ‘Shooting Brake’ rear bodywork which had been saved from the scrapyard in 1987 and, presumably, was just the thing for work on the farm. For anyone interested in Social History, this unusual rear end is fascinating as explained below.

In 1912, a new Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost, # 2232E, was purchased by the 5th Duke of Sutherland, George Granville Sutherland-Leveson-Gower, (1888-1963) and fitted with a bespoke 9/10-seat shooting-brake body almost in the style of an open trailer to be used on the family estates for shooting parties, carrying the eight ‘guns’ in some comfort out to their respective ‘pegs’. The 5th Duke was a well-known socialite, patron of the film industry and a Conservative Party politician so one would imagine that amongst the invited guests would have been prominent Cabinet Ministers, fellow MPs, some glamorous thespians and occasionally minor Royalty. No doubt, the atmosphere in the back of this leather-lined charabanc on the way back to cocktails and dinner would have been rather jolly. This wasn’t to last, however, as the start of the Great War resulted in 2232E and its commodious rear end being seconded for wartime service and despatched to a newly formed RNAS station (RNAS Mullion) in deepest Cornwall. At this time the Royal Naval Air Service operated all Airships across Britain and the first to operate at Mullion were the Coastal Class non-rigid type. They were constructed with a Gondola for the crew and a ‘Tri-lobe balloon’, of 170,000 cubic feet of Hydrogen. 'Coastals' provided the nucleus of airships from the Lizard and had a crew of five with an armament of four machine guns and a small number of bombs or depth charges. Their open, unheated cockpits were uncomfortable and crew members resorted to walking around the outside on the grab-rails to stretch their legs. In winter, crews risked frostbite and Hypothermia and often, on their return, ground handlers would have to lift them from their cockpits after patrols, some lasting over 15 hours at a time. 2232E (now carrying the plate RNAS 615) was used to take the quietly reticent crews out to the airships and collect them after the mission, the mood being somewhat lighter then, with the prospect of a hot bath and bacon and eggs in the mess. In 1917/18 the Airships were replaced with combat aircraft, Sopwith Pups and Camels, and sadly, a number of young men who took the trip out to their aircraft in the back of RNAS 615 would never return.  We understand that this bodywork, presumably still attached to the Silver Ghost carried out a similar function for Spitfire pilots in World War 2.

Silver Ghost #2232E was re-bodied in 1987 and the wood and leather rear body was saved from the scrapyard, somehow ending up on the back of our Phantom, 82EF. We understand it subsequently belonged to a farmer at some point, presumably to take his pigs to market, a journey from which they would never return either, however, in more recent years, the accommodation has returned to happier duties.

The extent of the restoration by Ray Lippiatt is difficult to quantify as there are no invoices currently available. We hope to locate the relevant files prior to our sale but for now, interested parties will have to form an opinion based on Ray’s reputation, our images and, nearer the time, the chance to come along and inspect this amazing early Phantom. It remains 'matching-numbers and certainly looks the part in gleaming black with artillery wheels, newish Dunlops, a tidy engine bay and the delightfully restored multi-seat rear end.

Returned to UK roads registered as HK 6071 with an MOT commencing on July 31st 2004, 82EF has been used on and off over the years and was most recently taxed on 10/08/2020. Ray obviously used the car for its intended purpose and within a couple of family hardback books are pictures of HK in Central London for the Lord Mayor’s Show in 2011, chauffeuring a Jazz Band, dispensing liquid hospitality from the car’s many nooks and crannies and driving the Queen of Sweden.

For more than 100 years, the rear bodywork of this car has seen life at every level and it’s good to see that it’s back enjoying the party, however, beneath the frivolity lies a well prepared and well presented 1927 Phantom 1, ‘The Best Car in the World’.


Source:  Click Here




Coming To Auction  Brought To You By:
 The Squirrel
Disclaimer:  Whilst Classic Chatter ("we") attempts to make sure that the information contained in this website is accurate and complete, we are aware that some errors and omissions may occur from time to time. We are not able, therefore, to guarantee the accuracy of that information and cannot accept liability for loss or damage arising from misleading information or for any reliance on which you may place on the information contained in this website. We highly recommend that you check the accuracy of the information supplied. If you have any queries about any information on our website, please contact us at  jeff.classicchatter@mail.com


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Friday, 22 November 2019

1976 ROLLS ROYCE PHANTOM VI LIMOUSINE - HISTORICS AUCTIONEERS Saturday 23rd November 2019 Mercedes Benz World Weybridge, Surrey


FEATURED AUCTION
HISTORICS AUCTIONEERS
Saturday 23rd November  2019
Mercedes Benz World
Weybridge, Surrey

 


1976 ROLLS ROYCE PHANTOM VI LIMOUSINE
MULLINER PARK WARD
Lot No: 208
Registration No: RBL 391R
Chassis No: PRH 4847
Engine No: 4847

  

  • Owned by the vendor since 1984
  • Recent expenditure of £17,531
Rolls-Royce Phantom VI seven-passenger limousine coachwork by Mulliner, Park Ward was introduced at the 1968 Motor Show and listed as the world's most expensive motor car. The mighty Phantom VI was an exclusive cost-no-object car for an elite and discriminating clientele, indeed a Phantom VI was the motor industry’s Silver Jubilee gift to Her Majesty The Queen in 1977. A logical development of the Phantom V which it superseded, the VI retained the superlative Mulliner, Park Ward bodywork while replacing the old 6,230cc Silver Cloud III engine of its predecessor the Phantom V, with the more powerful 6,750cc Silver Shadow V8 engine. This also meant that the car was upgraded with full factory-fitted air-conditioning as standard with separate units in the scuttle and boot serving front and rear compartments respectively, the air inlet grille on the scuttle being the principal external difference between the two Phantoms, along with new rear light clusters. Phantom VI bodies were coachbuilt in the Park Ward tradition with hand-beaten aluminium panels using wooden panel bucks and rollers, pinned and clinched to a galvanised steel and alloy frame.
This example is a 1976 Rolls-Royce Phantom VI and fitted with a Mulliner, Park Ward Limousine body. The current vendor has owned this superb car since 1st November 1984 and, to be expected of such a car, it has been chauffeur-driven, always garaged and well looked after. The vehicle has been cared for by respected marque specialist Royce Engineering in Betchworth, Surrey. The last service was carried out in August 2019 which included a 24,000 mile ‘C’ service. At the same time, the brakes were overhauled, part of the exhaust system was replaced and the gearbox was removed and completely overhauled. The total of this expenditure was £17,531 and the car has travelled 25 miles since the completion of this work. The front area of this Rolls-Royce is trimmed in tan leather and the rear passenger area is trimmed in Coral velour. With picnic tables and a cocktail cabinet to the rear compartment, this Phantom VI is the ultimate in comfort and opulence. A division ensures privacy from the chauffeur if required. With style, grace, luxury all under one roof, is there any wonder these cars have been enjoyed by the rich, the famous and royalty throughout the world.




  :  Whilst Classic Chatter ("we") attempt to make sure that the information contained in this website is accurate and complete, we are aware that some errors and omissions may occur from time to time. We are not able, therefore, to guarantee the accuracy of that information and cannot accept liability for loss or damage arising from misleading information or for any reliance on which you may place on the information contained in this website. We highly recommend that you check the accuracy of the information supplied. If you have any queries concerning any information on our website, please contact us at  jeff.classicchatter@mail.com

CLASSIC CHATTER
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