Austin Sixteen Light Six | |
---|---|
Overview | |
Manufacturer | Austin |
Production | 1927–1937 [1] |
Body and chassis | |
Body style | see detail in text most popular: tourer—Open Road |
Powertrain | |
Engine | 2249 cc [2] or 2510 cc 6-cylinder side-valve |
Transmission | single plate dry clutch, gearbox 4-speed manual fitted behind with a locomotive contracting brake. Drive is taken by an open propeller shaft at the front by a Hardy type joint and rear by a metal universal to the three quarter floating back axle [2] |
Dimensions | |
Wheelbase | 112 in (2,800 mm) track 4' 8", 56 in (1,400 mm) [2] |
Kerb weight | Chassis only 14 long cwt (1,568 lb; 711 kg) Windsor saloon 25+1⁄4 long cwt (2,828 lb; 1,283 kg) York long wheelbase saloon 31+1⁄2 long cwt (3,528 lb; 1,600 kg) [3] |
Chronology | |
Predecessor | none |
Successor | Austin Eighteen 1938-39 |
Austin Sixteen engine Light Six 2249 cc | |
---|---|
Overview | |
Manufacturer | Austin |
Production | late 1927–1937 |
Layout | |
Configuration | Straight 6-cylinder [2] |
Displacement | 2,249 cc (137 cu in) [2] |
Cylinder bore | 65.5 mm (2.58 in) [2] |
Piston stroke | 111 mm (4.4 in) [2] |
Cylinder block material | cast iron, alloy crankcase, crankshaft runs in 8 bearings [2] |
Cylinder head material | detachable, pistons are aluminium |
Valvetrain | side-by-side valves, tappet covers may be easily removed, timing is driven by chain |
Combustion | |
Fuel system | single down-draught carburettor supplied by Autovac which draws from a reservoir beneath the driver's seat, [2] ignition by magneto driven by chain placed behind the timing, dynamo driven by same chain |
Fuel type | petrol [2] |
Oil system | lubrication by forced feed, filler on the offside [2] |
Cooling system | radiator, fan, cooling water is circulated by a pump forward of the timing on the nearside [2] |
Output | |
Power output | 36 bhp (27 kW; 36 PS) @2,400 rpm Tax horsepower 15.96 [4] |
Austin 18 hp engine 2510 cc | |
---|---|
Overview | |
Manufacturer | Austin [5] |
Production | mid-1934–1939 see Austin 18 |
Layout | |
Configuration | Straight 6-cylinder [5] |
Displacement | 2,501 cc (153 cu in) [5] |
Cylinder bore | 69.5 mm (2.74 in) [5] |
Piston stroke | 111 mm (4.4 in) [5] |
Cylinder block material | cast iron, cast in one piece with crankcase, crankshaft runs in 4 bearings, it is counter-balanced and has a vibration damper. Engine mountings employ rubber bushes within bosses secured to flat steel plates bolted to the cylinder casting. [5] |
Cylinder head material | detachable, pistons are aluminium [5] |
Valvetrain | side-by-side valves, tappet covers may be easily removed, timing is driven by chain [5] |
Combustion | |
Fuel system | single carburettor supplied by Autovac which draws from a reservoir beneath the driver's seat, [5] ignition by magneto driven by chain placed behind the timing, dynamo driven by same chain |
Fuel type | petrol [5] |
Oil system | lubrication by forced feed, filler on the offside [5] |
Cooling system | radiator, fan, cooling water is circulated by a pump forward of the timing on the nearside [5] |
Output | |
Power output | 43 bhp (32 kW; 44 PS) @2,600 rpm Tax horsepower 17.9 [5] |
The Austin Sixteen Light Six is a British car that was made by Austin from 1927. Announced in October 1927, the first deliveries were planned for March 1928. [1]
To distinguish the car from the smaller engined models in the range a plated Austin Six script was fixed to the radiator grille.
The Austin Sixteen was introduced as a medium saloon sitting within Austin's range above the Seven and Twelve models but still much smaller than the 3.6 Litre Twenty.
The six-cylinder engine was new but had similarities to the engine fitted to the Twenty with its timing chain at the rear of the block. The design was up to date with the gearbox mounted in-unit with the engine and semi elliptic springs all round for the suspension. Triplex safety glass was fitted to all front screens from March 1929.
A wide range of body types was available at first but was simplified over the years. The coupés went first in 1930[ citation needed ] followed by the Weymann type fabric saloons in 1931.
In August 1933 various improvements were announced for 1934 models. The gearbox gained synchromesh on 3rd and 4th gears and an alternative larger (2511 cc) 18 hp engine was made available at no extra charge. [5] An early automatic gearbox was available between 1934 and 1936 but few sold. [6] A longer 120 in (3,000 mm) wheelbase chassis became an option.
Of this version 5742 16s and 2630 18s were made. [6]
"This provides a drive which is automatic in variation of ratio within limits, easily set by a finger and thumb lever on the top of the steering wheel. The actual transmission is through steel rollers which transmit the drive between curved steel races, the ratio being altered by rocking the rollers to different driving positions to engage with differing diameters of the driving and driven races. There are no gears—except for reverse—and a wide variation in ratios is available automatically. The driving rollers are rocked or precessed to give varying ratios by hydraulic means and the driver by his little lever can modify the performance as road conditions require. Subject to the control setting, the automatic functioning ensures a constant engine speed whatever the tractive resistance met with on the road, the transmission varying its ratio to balance the resistance as it increases or decreases. The engine speed by creating oil pressure in the hydraulic control system, tends to precess the rollers to give a high ratio drive. This is counterbalanced by the reaction of the tractive resistance, which tends to give a low ratio precession. A valve worked by the movement of the forward and reverse lever which engages the drive —in the ordinary way and is centrally placed like the ordinary speed lever—releases the pressure in the hydraulic control unit when the lever is in its neutral and reverse positions, so that the drive is always at low ratio for starting from rest or reversing.
"The finger and thumb control lever works in a small quadrant which is marked at the top "Traffic" then "High" and at the bottom "Low" and finally "Cold" with spaces in between. Variations of this lever govern engine speeds. The forward, neutral and reverse positions for the central hand lever are stepped. To start the car from rest a driver presses out his clutch, moves his hand lever forward, and lets in the clutch in the ordinary way with slight acceleration. Thereafter the whole of the drive is done with the accelerator pedal, the accelerator allowing the engine to run up and keep constant maximum speed governed by the control lever on the top of the steering wheel by which engine braking power can also be regulated. When the accelerator is pressed after being released the effect is rather similar to that with a free wheel in use, in that the engine picks up to the speed that is suitable to the drive. The engine is available as a brake, and greater power of this kind can be had by moving the control lever down towards low" [3]
Motoring correspondent, The Times
Further upgrades were made in 1935. The body range was simplified and now had only the 5 and 7 seat saloons. Externally the most obvious change was to the radiator surround which was painted body colour rather than chrome plated, and a small external boot was added to the rear which contained the spare wheel. Synchromesh was added to second gear. The larger engine was modified to have only four rather than eight main bearings.
1936 | Westminster saloon | Chalfont saloon (6-light) | York saloon | Hertford saloon |
---|---|---|---|---|
length | 168 in (4,300 mm) | 176 in (4,500 mm) | 176 in (4,500 mm) | 168 in (4,300 mm) |
width | 68.5 in (1,740 mm) | 68.5 in (1,740 mm) | 68.5 in (1,740 mm) | 68.5 in (1,740 mm) |
height | 70.5 in (1,790 mm) | 75 in (1,900 mm) | 70.5 in (1,790 mm) | 70.5 in (1,790 mm) |
wheelbase | 112 in (2,800 mm) | 120 in (3,000 mm) | 120 in (3,000 mm) | 112 in (2,800 mm) |
In 1937, the last year this car was made, the smaller engined Sixteen was dropped and pressed steel road wheels replaced the previously fitted wire wheels.
Between 1935 and 1937 12,731 were produced. [6]
The 16 hp engined car could reach 60 mph (97 km/h) and return 21 miles per imperial gallon (13 L/100 km; 17 mpg‑US) depending on the body fitted.
The first name for this car was Austin Sixteen Light Six. In 1930 Light Six was dropped and it was an Austin Sixteen. From 1933 it was deemed necessary to offer an 18 hp engine at no extra charge, in mid 1937 this car's body was replaced by a new shape only available with the 18 hp engine and known as an Austin Eighteen.
Body | Model | seats | side windows (lights) | wheel base | March 1928 [7] | March 1929 [8] | Oct. 1929 [9] | May 1930 [10] | Feb. 1932 [11] | Aug. 1933 [12] | April 1935 [13] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Light Six | Light Six | Light Six | Sixteen | Sixteen | Sixteen 16 or 18 | Sixteen 16 or 18 | ||||||
Chassis only | £240 | |||||||||||
Tourer | Open Road | 5 | £355 | £325 | £310 | £290 | £295 | |||||
Tourer | Open Road | 2 | £325 | £310 | £290 | |||||||
Tourer | Clifton | 5 | £305 | £305 | ||||||||
Tourer | Harrow | 2 | £295 | |||||||||
Saloon | Burnham | 5 | £395 | £375 | £375 | £375 | £325 | |||||
Saloon | Burnham drophead [note 3] | 5 | £325 | |||||||||
Saloon | Fabric | 5 | 4 | £435 | £365 | £365 | £365 | |||||
Saloon | Fabric | 5 | 6 | £375 | £375 | |||||||
Saloon | Windsor | 5 | £298 | |||||||||
Saloon | Westminster | 5 | 4 | £350 [note 1] | £348 | £348 | ||||||
Saloon | Berkeley | 5 | 6 | £318 | ||||||||
Saloon | Hertford | 5 | £318 | |||||||||
Saloon | Carlton [note 3] | 7 | 6 | long | £328 | |||||||
Saloon | Iver [note 3] | 7 | 6 | long | £338 | |||||||
Saloon | York [note 3] | 7 | 6 | long | £328 | |||||||
Saloon | Chalfont [note 3] | 7 | 6 | long | £338 | |||||||
Morris Cowley was a name given to various cars produced by Morris from 1915 to 1958.
The Morris Minor is a small 4-seater car with an 850 cc engine manufactured by Morris Motors Limited from 1928 until 1934. The name was resurrected for another newer car for the same market in 1948.
The Austin Ten is a small car that was produced by Austin. It was launched on 19 April 1932 and was Austin's best-selling car in the 1930s and continued in production, with upgrades, until 1947. It fitted in between their "baby" Austin Seven which had been introduced in 1922 and their various Austin Twelves which had been updated in January 1931.
The Austin Twelve is a motor car introduced by Austin in 1921. It was the second of Herbert Austin's post World War I models and was in many ways a scaled-down version of his Austin Twenty, introduced in 1919. The slower-than-expected sales of the Twenty brought about this divergence from his intended one-model policy. The Twelve was announced at the beginning of November 1921 after Austin's company had been in receivership for six months. The number twelve refers to its fiscal horse power (12.8) rather than its brake horsepower (bhp) which was 20 and later 27. The long-stroke engines encouraged by the tax regime, 72 × 102 mm later 72 × 114.5 mm, had much greater low-speed torque than the bhp rating suggests.
The Rover 10 was a small family car from the British Rover car company produced between 1927 and 1947.
The Rover Meteor was a short-lived 2½-litre or 2-litre medium-sized car made by The Rover Company Limited of Meteor Works Coventry. The new 2½-litre model was announced in mid-February 1930 to supplement Rover's Light Twenty which used the same engine and essentially the same chassis.
The Austin 10 hp is a high-quality small car produced between 1910 and 1915 by the British car manufacturer Austin Motor Company Limited at their Longbridge, Worcestershire plant near Birmingham. 1,336 cars were made, 213 with the 1125 cc engine and 1,123 with the 1615 cc engine. Like the 1087 cc Austin 7 hp produced by both Austin and Du Cros's Swift Motor Company it was not very successful when sold with the small engine.
The Austin Light Twelve-Six is a 14 tax horsepower car with a 1496 cc engine that was introduced by Austin in January 1931. It was named by Austin Light Twelve to separate it from the well-established Austin Twelve. The general public then dubbed the original Twelve Heavy Twelve but Austin never used that name. The Light Twelve-Six remained in production until 1936.
The Austin Light Twelve-Four is a car that was produced by Austin from 1933 until 1939. It was replaced in 1939 by a completely new car also called the Austin 12 which kept the same engine. The "12" in the name referred to the taxation horsepower, a British rating which controlled the annual taxation payable to use the car on the road.
The Rover Light Six was a narrower lightweight short wheelbase variant of their Two-litre sports saloon produced from 1929 to 1930 by the Rover Company of Coventry. The following season it was sold with a 2½-litre 20 hp engine under the name Rover Light Twenty.
The Rover 12 was a name given to several medium-sized family cars from the British Rover car company between 1905 and 1948.
Austin Twenty is a large car introduced by Austin after the end of the First World War in April 1919, and continued in production until 1930. After the Austin 20/6 model was introduced in 1927, the first model was referred to as the Austin 20/4.
The Lanchester Ten and Lanchester Eleven were sold by The Lanchester Motor Company Limited from the Ten's announcement in September 1932 until 1951. Quite different from previous Lanchesters, the Ten was the second of Lanchester's new owner's new Daimler-linked Lanchester range. The names Ten and Eleven referred to the engine's rating for the annual tax and did not relate to the engine's power output.
The Lanchester Fourteen Roadrider is a six-cylinder automobile introduced by the Lanchester Motor Company in the beginning of September 1936. It was named "Roadrider" for its special suspension features, and billed as the lowest-priced six-cylinder Lanchester ever offered. This car replaced the previous 12 hp Light Six model with a larger six-cylinder engine again in the Lanchester Eleven chassis and body.
The Austin Fourteen is a 1.7-litre saloon that was introduced by Austin in August 1936 and available as a Goodwood saloon—with a fixed or sliding head—or as a Goodwood cabriolet. The body was of steel throughout. Nominally classed by Austin as a Fourteen the actual engine size attracted tax for a 16 horsepower car. The performance of the engine carried over from the Light Twelve-Six proved disappointing and a much smoother revised version with a near 20% improvement in power output was introduced the next year.
The Vauxhall 20-60 is a four or five-seater saloon, limousine, tourer or coupé-cabriolet manufactured by Vauxhall of Luton. It was announced on 28 September 1927 with a six-cylinder engine and a four-speed gearbox. A cautious move downmarket. "The first time any six-cylinder Vauxhall has been sold under £1000!" "British & Vauxhall". The initial 2.7-litre engine was enlarged to 3-litres after twelve months.
The Hillman 16 was a series of 16 horsepower medium priced 5-seater executive cars made by Hillman during the 1930s by installing a smaller engine in their 20-horsepower Hillman 20 range.
The Morris Oxford Six is a motor car produced by Morris of the United Kingdom from 1921 until 1926, and again from 1929 until 1935. Initially produced as a straight-six engined version of the Morris Oxford bullnose, the original Oxford Six was the first car produced by Morris with a six-cylinder engine, but proved to be unreliable. The versions produced from 1929 onwards were introduced as a replacement for the Morris Oxford 16/40.
The Austin 20-hp is a mid-sized car premium quality that was made by British manufacturer Austin and first displayed as a chassis in Paris in December 1912, advertised in March 1913 and shown to the public as a complete car at the Olympia Motor Show in November 1913. At that time both the 20 and the 30 were regarded as new models.
The Hillman Straight Eight and its successor the Hillman Vortic were moderate priced mid-sized 20 tax-horsepower executive cars made by Hillman from 1929 to 1930. The lowest priced eight-cylinder car on the market the car was scarcely in full production when sales were hit by the onset of the Great Depression.