ROLLS-ROYCE (England) 1904 to date
Manchester electrical engineer Henry Royce built a batch of three
Decauville-inspired 10hp twin-cylinder cars under his own name in
1904; Lord Llangattock's surprising son, the Hon. C. S. Rolls was
looking for a light car of quality to sell alongside the Continental
imports in his West London motor agency; the two combined to create
a motoring legend. After producing sound two-, three- and four-cylinder
models of 10, 15 and 20 hp, not quite so good sixes of 30 hp and
a dreadful V-8 (the "Legalimit"), in 1906 Rolls-Royce launched the
immortal 40/50 hp six, known from 1907 as the "Silver Ghost". Even
though its design was sound rather than original, it was built with
Royce's consummate devotion to the highest engineering ideals.
The Ghost survived until 1925 (joined in 1922 by a 20 hp) and was
supplanted by the ohv New Phantom, a transitional design which gave
way to the more comprehensively revised Phantom II in 1929. That
year the 20 hp grew up into the 20/25, succeeded in 1936 by the
25/30 (which developed into the Wraith in 1938). The Phantom III
of 1936-39 was a magnificent V-12 of 7341cc, often marred by clumsy
coachwork, and whose engine, with hydraulic tappets, was prohibitively
costly to overhaul.
Post-war Rolls-Royce moved from Derby (where they had been based
since 1908) to Crewe, and restarted production in 1947 with the
Silver Wraith, followed in 1949 by the Silver Dawn, first Rolls-Royce
to have standardized steel coachwork. The six-cylinder engine line
continued until 1959, followed by a 6231cc V-8, used both on the
Silver Cloud and Phantom V models (the Phantom IV had been a 16-off
5675cc straight-eight). Integral construction and all-round independent
suspension came with the 1965 Silver Shadow, direct ancestor of
today's costly and magnificent Corniche and Camargue models.
1927 Rolls-Royce
Phantom I Limousine
1929
Rolls-Royce Phantom I Brewster Trouville Springfield
1935 Rolls-Royce 20/25 Limousine
1936 Rolls-Royce 20/25 Sports Saloon
1936 Rolls-Royce 25/30 Drop Head 4 Door
1938 Rolls-Royce Wraith Razor Edge
1962 Rolls-Royce Silver Cloud II
1978 Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow
1980 Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow
1985 Rolls-Royce Silver Spur
1989 Rolls-Royce Silver Spirit
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