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Auction Location:
Melbourne
Date:
2-Dec-2007
Lot No.
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Description:
1924 Vauxhall 30-98 OE-type Velox Tourer. Chassis no. OE 188. Engine no. OE 182. Reg no. Unregistered, the Vauxhall 30-98 is considered by many knowledgeable enthusiasts to be the finest British sporting car of the vintage period. Fans of Vauxhall 30-98 will maintain that while Bentleys are for those who like to be seen, the Vauxhall 30-98 is for those who like to drive. Whether or not one agrees with this opinion the Vauxhall Company (which raced at both grand Prix and tourist trophy level before the Great War) had produced a car which could run rings around 3-Litre Bentleys on cross-ícountry journeys., the 'Big engine/lightweight car' formula has been repeated to good effect many times throughout the histoíry of the sporting motor car, and Vauxhall's famous 30-98 was one of its earliest successful applications. As has so often been the case, the spur behind this particular combination was the desire for competition sucícess; the first 30-98 being constructed at the behest of car dealer and motor sport competiítor, Joseph Higginson, in 1913. Higginson's first objective was victory in the Shelsley Walsh hill-climb in June of that year, and the Laurence Pomeroy-designed 30-98 duly obliged, setting a hill record in the process which was to stand for fifteen years. Laurence Pomeroy's tenure as Vauxhall's Chief Engineer saw the then Luton-based concern produce some of the truly outstanding designs of the Edwardian period, commencing with the 20hp Prince Henry in 1910. A larger version of the Prince Henry's four-cylinder side-valve engine was developed for its successor, the D-type, which, with some 70bhp on tap, was good for 70mph-plus when not overburdened by formal coachwork. Pomeroy's 30-98 was powered by a 4.5-litre, four-cylinder, side-valve engine - in effect a stretched version of the Prince Henry/D-type's - mounted in a conventional but lightíweight chassis; suspension being by beam axle at the front and live axle at the rear, with semi-elliptic springs all round. Power was transmitted via a multi-plate clutch to a robust four-speed gearbox, and thence via a short prop-shaft to the straight-cut bevel rear axle, the braking sysítem consisted initially of a foot-operated transmission brake and a handíbrake operating on the two rear drums, the front wheels being un-braked. At first glance this unremarkíable specification seems an unlikely one for a performance car - even an Edwardian examíple - but the 30-98's 95bhp-plus power output, combined with a weight of only 24cwt (with the factory-built, four-seater 'Velox' tourer coachwork) gave it a formidable power-to-weight ratio for the time. A fully road-equipped 30-98 was capable of around 90mph, and when stripped for racing the Company guaranteed a top-speed in excess of 100mph for the later overhead-valve models, a capability demonstratíed at Brooklands on numerous occasions. Only a handful of cars were sold before the outbreak of World War I interrupted production, and when manufacture resumed in 1919, the model was given the designation 'E-type' - its Prince Henry predecessor having been the 'C' and the 25hp Tourer the 'D'. Manufacture of the E-type ceased in September 1922 after 287 cars had been constructed, there then being a slight hiatus in production before its successor, the overhead-valve 'OE', comímenced delivery to customers in early 1923. Despite a reduction in capacity to 4.2 litres, the power of the ohv motor went up to 110bhp-plus, the OE gained front-wheel brakes in late 1923, when a cable system was introíduced. This was operated by the foot pedal, with the linkages and compensating mechanism - the inaccurately-termed 'Kidney box' - mounted somewhat untidily in front of the radiator. Hydraulic actuation of the front-wheel and transmission brakes was adopted in 1926. By the time the final batch of OE chassis had been completed in early 1927, there were few customers for the 30-98, the antiquity of the design telling against it when compared to the more refine
Estimate:
***
Price:
***
Category:
Unclassified