HISPANO-SUIZA (Spain & France) 1904-1938
Succeeding Castro, Fabrica La Hispano-Suiza de Automovils recorded its Swiss
designer, Marc Birkigt, in its title: production was, again, in Barcelona.
At first, the Castro four was continued under the Hispano-Suiza name, then,
in late 1906, two pair-east fours of 3.8 and 7.4 litres were introduced,
followed by two big sixes in 1907. Already, the young King Alfonso XIII had
a Hispano in his stable, the first of some 30 he would own.
A racing Hispano
built for the 1910 Coupe des Voiturettes sired the famous 3620cc
Alfonso XIII sports model (Queen Ena of Spain gave her husband one for his
birthday). By 1912, a Paris factory was in operation, and it was here that
the famous 6.5 litre ohc H6 of 1919 was principally built, though Barcelona
did turn out a limited number as the T41 (T56 8 litre from 1928: the T49
used the same chassis but a 3750cc six-cylinder engine.
In the 1920s
Barcelona also built the ohv T30 4.7 litre (1914-24) and T16 3089cc
(1921-24): the 2500cc T48 was built for the Government public services.
Between 1932 and 1943, Barcelona built a series of six-cylinder models,
the last of which was the T6ORL, introduced in 1934,
a depressing machine with servo-assisted Lockheed
hydraulic brakes and central gear-change.
HISPANO-SUIZA (France) 1911-1938
To satisfy its fashionable French clientele, Hispano-Suiza opened a Parisian
assembly plant at Levallois-Perret in 1911, moving to larger premises at
Bois-Colombes in 1914.
It was the French factory which produced the immortal
32 cv H6B in 1919, with its ohc light-alloy engine of 6597cc, joined in 1924
by the even more exciting Boulogne sports derivative, of 7983cc. The H6B was
built under license by Skoda of Czechoslovakia from 1924-27.
In 1930,
Hispano took over Ballot, who built the 4580cc Junior six-cylinder. In
1931 Hispano-Suiza, loftily ignoring the Depression, brought out the
magnificent Type 68 V12 of 9425cc; it was later developed into the
11,310cc Type 68 bis, A six-cylinder version, the K6, succeeded the
Junior in 1934.
Post-war, the French factory built a fwd prototype using
a Ford V8 engine, which never reached production.
©VEA
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