History of Lanchester
History of Lanchester
History of Lanchester
1895
1899
1901
1903
1910
1912
1914
[edit]War
During the war the company made artillery shells and some aircraft engines but some vehicle production
continued with the Lanchester 4x2 Armoured Cars built on the Lanchester 38 hp
[1]
chassis for use by the Royal
Naval Air Service on the Western Front.
[edit]Postwar
After the first World war the company adopted a single model policy and the Forty was re-introduced with a 6.2-
litre overhead-cam engine in unit with a 3-speed gearbox still using epicyclic gears and a worm drive rear axle.
It was very expensive, dearer than a Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost and to maintain production a smaller car, the
Twenty One joined the range in 1924. This had a 3.1-litre, six-cylinder engine, now with removable cylinder
head, mated to a four-speed conventional gearbox and four-wheel brakes. It grew to the 3.3-litre Twenty Three
in 1926. The Forty was finally replaced by the Thirty with straight-eight 4.4-litre engine in 1928. A further series
of armoured cars were made in 1927 with six-wheel version of the Forty chassis.
For 1928 there was George's last design, a 4446 cc straight-8 but only 126 were made before the economic
depression effectively killed demand.
[edit]Olympia 1930
Twelve months after the Wall Street Crash these were the cars shown by Lanchester on their stand at the
Olympia Motor Show in October 1930:
[6]
21 hp
[1]
6-cylinder landaulette by Maythorn, 1,775, chassis only 1,050
31 hp 8-cylinder limousine by Hooper, 2,300, chassis only 1,325
31 hp 8-cylinder 6/7-seater coup de ville by Windovers 2,435
The engines were 3,330 and 4,440 cc respectively, their wheelbase and track:
6-cylinder: 11 ft 1in and 4 ft 8in
8-cylinder: 11 ft 10 in and 4 ft 8in
Conventional 1920s shapes before the sale to BSA Group
23 hp
30 hp
[edit]Sale or liquidation
Within weeks their bank called in the company's overdraft of 38,000 forcing immediate liquidation of the
company's assets. Because their current premises once had been a part of BSA's Armourer Mills at
Sparkbrook a sale to BSA made sense. Thomas Hamilton Barnsley (18671930), the principal shareholder,
chairman and managing director negotiated a sale of the whole share capital to BSA group shortly before his
death on Christmas Day 1930. BSA's purchase of the whole of the shares was completed in January 1931 for
26,000, a fraction of the value of the assets. Car production was transferred to Lanchester's new sister
subsidiary, Daimler, at Motor Mills, Sandy Lane, Radford.
[7][8]
[edit]Daimler
George Lanchester was kept on as a senior designer and Frank became the Lanchester sales director. The
first new offering, still designed by George Lanchester, was a version of the Daimler Light Twenty, the
Lanchester Eighteen with hydraulic brakes and a Daimler fluid flywheel. The Ten of 1933 was an upmarket
version of the BSA Ten. The pre-war Fourteen Roadrider of 1937, was almost identical to the Daimler New
Fifteen.
The then Duke of York, a repeat customer during the 1920s and 1930s, preferred this less showy version of a
Daimler car and took delivery of a pair of specially built Daimler straight-eight limousines with the Lanchester
grille and badges.
Post war, a ten-horsepower car was reintroduced with the 1287 cc LD10 which didn't have a Daimler
equivalent and the four-cylinder 1950 Fourteen / Leda. The very last model, of which only prototypes were
produced, was called the Sprite.
Badge engineering
Ten made 1933-1936
Ten sports saloon
body by Barker 1951 example
Leda or Fourteen
1953 example
[edit]Jaguar, Ford, Tata
Daimler, was in decline and in 1960 BSA sold Daimler's premises and business to Jaguar Cars who have since
used the Daimler name on their most expensive products. Jaguar has moved into and out of the Ford group
and since 2008 Jaguar, Daimler and Lanchester belong to Tata Motors.
[edit]Monument
Blue plaque, on former factory on Montgomery Street, Sparkbrook, Birmingham
Lanchester Car Monument
An open-air sculpture, the Lanchester Car Monument, in the Bloomsbury Heartlands area of Birmingham,
designed by Tim Tolkien, on the site where Lanchester built their first four-wheel petrol car in 1895.
[edit]list of Lanchester cars
Type Engine
Approx
Production
Year Notes
Lanchester Five
[1]
1306 cc single-cylinder air-
cooled
1 1895 Experimental
Lanchester Eight
3459 cc twin-cylinder air-
cooled
3
1897
1898
Experimental
Lanchester Ten
4033 cc twin-cylinder air-
cooled
1900
1904
First production model
Lanchester
Twelve
4033 cc twin-cylinder water-
cooled
1903
1904
Lanchester
Sixteen
4838 cc twin-cylinder air-
cooled
20
[3]
1903
1904
Lanchester
Eighteen
4838 cc twin-cylinder water-
cooled
6
[3]
1904
Lanchester
Twenty
2472 cc overhead-valve four-
cylinder water-cooled
1904
1911
Lanchester
Twelve
3974 cc twin-cylinder
overhead-valve water-cooled
1906
1908
Lanchester 28
3654 cc six-cylinder
overhead-valve water-cooled
1906
1911
Lanchester 50
8145 cc six-cylinder
overhead-valve water-cooled
1 car, 2 engines 1907 Experimental
Lanchester 38
4856 cc six-cylinder
overhead-valve water-cooled
1911
1914
Lanchester 25
3137 cc four-cylinder
overhead-valve water-cooled
1912
1914
Lanchester 40
5482 cc six-cylinder side-
valve water-cooled
1914
Lanchester 40
6178 cc six-cylinder
overhead-cam water-cooled
392
[9]
1919
1928
Chassis 2200. Four-wheel
brakes from 1924
Lanchester 21
2930 cc six-cylinder
overhead-cam water-cooled
735 (including
Twenty
Three)
[9]
1923
1926
Chassis 1000.
Lanchester 23
2930 cc six-cylinder
overhead-cam water-cooled
735 (including
Twenty One)
[9]
1926
1931
Vacuum servo.
Lanchester 30 hp
4400 cc eight-cylinder
overhead-cam water-cooled
126
[9]
1929
1932
Chassis 1325
January 1931 business
purchased by
The Birmingham Small Arms
Company Limited
Lanchester 15/18
and Eighteen
2504 cc (2390 cc from 1935,
2565 cc from 1936) six-
cylinder overhead-valve
water-cooled
2650 approx
[10]
1932
1940
Badge engineered Daimler
Light 20. Fluid flywheel.
Lanchester Ten
LA10
1203 cc (1444 cc from 1936)
four-cylinder overhead-valve
water-cooled
12250
approx
[10]
1933
1936
Fluid flywheel. Hydraulic
brakes until 1935.
Lanchester Light
Six
1378 cc six-cylinder
overhead-valve water-cooled
1075 approx
[10]
1935
1936
Saloon, Sports Saloon,
Drophead Coupe. Similar to
BSA.
Lanchester
Eleven
1444 cc four-cylinder
overhead-valve water-cooled
2000 approx
[10]
1937
1940
Saloon, Sports Saloon.
Lanchester
Fourteen
Roadrider
1527 cc (1809 cc from 1938)
six-cylinder overhead-valve
water-cooled
2000 approx
[10]
1937
1940
Saloon, Sports saloon. bendix
brakes
Lanchester Ten
LD10
1287 cc four-cylinder
overhead-valve water-cooled
3030
1946
1951
Independent front suspension,
Mechanical brakes
Lanchester
Fourteen/Leda
1968 cc four-cylinder
overhead-valve water-cooled
2100
1950
1954
Appropriated for badge
engineered 1953 Daimler
Conquest. Saloon and
drophead coupe.
Lanchester Sprite
1622 cc four-cylinder
overhead-valve water-cooled
10
1954
1956
Hobbs automatic gearbox.
Did not reach production.