Austin 7

















































Austin 7

1922 Austin 7 -- Shanghai Automobile Museum 2012-05-26.JPG
Austin Seven 1922

Overview
Manufacturer Austin
Production 1922–1939
290,000
Body and chassis
Class Economy car
Body style 2-door tourer
2-door saloon
2-door cabriolet
2-door coupe
3-door van
Powertrain
Engine 747 cc straight-4
Dimensions
Wheelbase 75 inches (1.905 m)
Chronology
Predecessor None
Successor
Austin 8, Austin Big 7

The Austin 7 is an economy car that was produced from 1922 until 1939 in the United Kingdom by Austin. It was nicknamed the "Baby Austin" and was at that time one of the most popular cars produced for the British market and sold well abroad. Its effect on the British market was similar to that of the Model T Ford in the US, replacing most other British economy cars and cyclecars of the early 1920s.[1] It was also licensed and copied by companies all over the world.[2] The very first BMW car, the BMW Dixi, was a licensed Austin 7, as were the original American Austins. In France they were made and sold as Rosengarts. In Japan, Nissan also used the 7 design as the basis for their first cars, although not under licence.[2] This eventually led to a 1952 agreement for Nissan to build and sell Austins in Japan under the Austin name.


Many Austin 7s were rebuilt as "specials" after the Second World War,[3][4][5] including the first race car built by Bruce McLaren, and the first Lotus, the Mark I.


Such was the power of the Austin 7 name that the company re-used it for early versions of the A30 in 1951[6] and Mini in 1959.



Austin7 grill.png




Contents






  • 1 History


  • 2 Chassis


  • 3 Engine and transmission


  • 4 Gordon England


  • 5 Austin Seven saloon first by Gordon England


  • 6 Austin Seven Swallow


  • 7 Licensed production


  • 8 Australian-bodied Austin Sevens


  • 9 Layout


  • 10 Body styles


    • 10.1 Tourers


    • 10.2 Saloons


    • 10.3 Cabriolet


    • 10.4 Sports


    • 10.5 Coupés


    • 10.6 Vans




  • 11 Motorsport


  • 12 References


  • 13 External links





History




Austin 7 Saloon 1931


Until the First World War Austin built mainly large cars, but in 1909 they sold a single-cylinder small car built by Swift of Coventry called the Austin 7 hp.[7] After this they returned to bigger cars.


In 1920 Sir Herbert Austin commenced working on the concept of a smaller car, mainly to meet the needs of young families aspiring to own an affordable motor car. This idea was spurred on by the introduction of the Horsepower Tax in 1921. His design concept marked a departure from his company's conservative motoring past and Austin received considerable opposition from his board of directors and creditors. Because the company was in receivership Austin decided to carry out the project himself on his own account and in 1921 hired an 18-year-old draughtsman, Stanley Edge, from the Austin factory at Longbridge, Birmingham to aid in the drawing of detailed plans. This work was carried out in the billiard room of Austin's Lickey Grange home.


Edge convinced Austin to use a small four-cylinder engine. The original side valve engine design featured a capacity of 696cc (55mm x 77mm) giving a RAC rating of 7.2 hp, the cast cylinder block featured a detachable head and was mounted on an aluminium crankcase. The crankshaft used one roller and two ball bearings and the big-ends were splash lubricated.[8] Edge also carried out the design of other mechanical components such as the three speed gearbox and clutch assembly. Austin was largely responsible for styling the Seven's design, which was reportedly[citation needed] influenced by the design of the Peugeot Quadrilette. The "A" frame chassis design was believed to have been influenced by the design of an American truck used in the Longbridge factory in the early 1920s.


The design was completed in 1922 and three prototypes were constructed in a special area of the Longbridge factory, and announced to the public in July 1922.[8] Austin had put a large amount of his own money into the design and patented many of its innovations in his own name. In return for his investment he was paid a royalty of two guineas (£2, 2s), (£2.10) on every car sold.[2]


Nearly 2,500 cars were made in the first year of production (1923), not as many as hoped, but within a few years the "big car in miniature" had wiped out the cyclecar industry and transformed the fortunes of the Austin Motor Co. By 1939 when production finally ended, 290,000 cars and vans had been made.[8]



Chassis


The Austin 7 was considerably smaller than the Ford Model T. The wheelbase was only 6 ft 3 inches (1.905 m), and the track only 40 inches (1.016 m). Equally it was lighter – less than half the Ford's weight at 794 pounds (360 kg). The engine required for adequate performance was therefore equally reduced and the 747 cc sidevalve was quite capable with a modest 10 hp output.


The chassis took the form of an "A" with the engine mounted between the channel sections at the narrow front end. The rear suspension was by quarter elliptic springs cantilevered from the rear of the chassis while at the front the beam axle had a centrally mounted half elliptic transverse spring.[8] Early cars did not have any shock absorbers. Brakes were on all wheels but at first the front brakes were operated by the handbrake and the rear by the footbrake, becoming fully coupled in 1930.


In late 1931 the chassis was lengthened by 6" with a corresponding increase in the rear track. Steering is by worm and wheel mechanism.



Engine and transmission




1937 advertisement


The original 1922 four-cylinder Austin Seven engine had a bore of 2.125" (54mm) and stroke of 3" (76mm), giving a capacity of 696 cc and RAC rating of 7.2 hp. From March 1923 the bore was increased to 2.2" (56mm) giving 747 cc and 10.5 hp.[8] The side-valve engine was composed of an aluminium crankcase, cast iron cylinder block and cast iron cylinder head. Cooling was by thermosiphon, without a water pump, and the dynamo was driven from the timing gears.


The big end bearings were lubricated by jets from an oil gallery in the crankcase, the oil striking the crankshaft webs which were drilled accordingly. Originally the journal diameter was 1.125"; this was later increased to 1.3125". The three bearing engine (from 1936) used a white metal centre bearing.


The splash-lubricated crankshaft (pressure fed on some sports models) at first ran in two bearings (two ball bearings at the front, roller at the back) changing to three in 1936.[8] An electric starter was fitted from November 1923. The early cars used magneto ignition, but this was changed to coil in 1928.


The 3-speed and reverse gearbox was integral with the engine, and had a variety of ratios depending on application. A four-speed gearbox was introduced in 1932 and in 1933 synchromesh was added to third and top ratios extending to second gear in 1934.[8]


The back axle was of spiral bevel type with ratios between 4.4:1 and 5.6:1. A short torque tube ran forward from the differential housing to a bearing and bracket on the rear axle cross member.


Reliant used a derivative of the Austin Seven engine for their early three-wheelers, before developing an aluminium alloy engine (used as the replacement for the Austin Seven engine by the 750 Motor Club in their Formula 750 motor sport).



Gordon England




Gordon England Brooklands replica




Gordon England Sunshine saloon number 263


Herbert Austin's son-in-law, Arthur Waite, soon began to achieve remarkable sporting successes beginning at Brooklands in March 1923 and the next month at Monza. Another driver, E C Gordon England, persuaded Sir Herbert to provide him with a racing 7. Waite and Lou Kings (chief tester) then experienced a run of failure brought about by inadequate engine lubrication for racing conditions. Meanwhile, Gordon England flushed with success from establishing six new class records at Brooklands, had built a special lightweight 2-seater body weighing just 20 lb (9.1 kg) and entered it in the 1100 cc class for the Junior Car Club 200 mile race at Brooklands in October 1923. There Gordon England finished in second place and during the race won another five class records.[9]


So two new sports models were offered in January 1924, the Sports and the Brooklands Super-sports. The Brooklands Super-sports was a replica of Gordon England's record-breaker. Each car was sold with a Brooklands certificate proving a speed of 80 miles 0 chains (128.75 km) per hour. By 1925 Gordon England held nineteen 750 cc class records.[9]



Austin Seven saloon first by Gordon England


The first Austin 7 saloon was made by racing driver E C Gordon England's coachbuilding company. Gordon England had been an aircraft designer with the Bristol Aeroplane Company. His little fabric saloon body based on aircraft principles was said to be the smallest closed car in the world. Its body weighed 28 lb (13 kg) less than the tourer and at £210, almost double the £112 chassis price, it showed there would be a ready sale for an Austin-made steel panelled saloon which was introduced in September 1926 at £165[9] (equivalent to £9407 today)


Until fabric bodies fell from fashion in the early 1930s the Gordon England Fabric "de luxe" Saloon remained in Austin's catalogue at a £20 (14%) premium over Austin's standard steel saloon. It was accompanied by their 2-seater Gordon England Cup Model.[10]




Austin Seven Swallow




1931 Austin Seven Swallow saloon




1931 Austin 7 Swallow, rear quarter


In 1927, William Lyons, co-founder of the Swallow Sidecar Company, saw the commercial potential of producing a re-bodied Austin 7. Buying a chassis from dealer Parkers of Bolton Lyons commissioned Swallow's talented employee, coachbuilder Cyril Holland, to produce a distinctive open tourer: the Austin Seven Swallow. Holland (1895- ) who joined Swallow in late 1926 had served his apprenticeship with Lanchester and would become chief body engineer.[11][12] The height of saloon car fashion of the day was to have the back of the body fully rounded, this was called "dome" shaped.


With its bright two-tone colour scheme and a style befitting more expensive cars of the time, together with its low cost (£175), the Swallow proved popular and was followed in 1928 by a saloon version: the Austin Seven Swallow Saloon.


Approximately 3,500 bodies of various styles were produced up until 1932, when Lyons started making complete cars under the SS brand.


Such was the demand for the Austin Seven Swallows that Lyons was forced to move in 1928 from Blackpool to new premises in Coventry. It was, in part, the success of the Swallows that laid the foundations of what was to become, by 1945, Jaguar Cars.[13][14]



Licensed production


Versions of the Austin 7 were made under licence by American Austin from 1930, Dixi (later bought by BMW) in Germany from 1927 and Rosengart in France from 1928. Austin 7s were also manufactured by Nissan (Datsun) but reports differ as to whether these were built under licence or were unlicensed copies.[citation needed] In addition, rolling chassis were exported to Australia to have locally made bodies attached.




Australian-bodied Austin Sevens


In the aftermath of World War I the Australian Government imposed a tariff on imported vehicles, with tax concessions applying to rolling chassis, as a stimulus to develop a sovereign motor vehicle industry. The chassis concession acted as a financial incentive for local coach-builders to import factory built rolling chassis, and fit uniquely Australian designed and built bodies, leading to the establishment of an Australian motor vehicle bodybuilding industry in the early 1920s.




1929 Australian-bodied Austin 7 Meteor ( Coach-builder A. Robinson & Co. Castlereagh St, Sydney )


The largest and best known of these Australian coach-builders was Holden's Motor Body Builders. Holden built Australian-bodied Austin Seven tourer and roadster models from the mid 1920s.


However, several smaller coach-builders built limited numbers of Australian-bodied Austin Seven sports models between 1924-34. Some examples of these Australian-bodied sports models are; the Standard Sports, built by Flood Motor Body Works, St Kilda Road, Melbourne; the Wasp built by William Green, Parramatta Road, Petersham, Sydney; the Moth built by Geo Sykes, Gordon Road, Chatswood, Sydney; the Comet built by Bill Conoulty, Sydney; and the Meteor. The Meteor was built by several coach-builders (Flood Motor Body Works, St Kilda Road, Melbourne; Jack Lonzar, Kent Town Adelaide; and A Robinson & Co., 181 Castlereagh St, Sydney), with individual variations to the common design.



Layout


In 2007, during an episode of Top Gear, Jeremy Clarkson and James May studied a number of early car designs (including the Ford Model T and the De Dion-Bouton Model Q) and concluded that the Austin Seven was the first mass-market car to be fitted with a "conventional" control layout, as found on modern cars (although the earliest car they found to use this layout was a Cadillac Type 53 in 1916).



Body styles


[2]



Tourers




Austin 7 Chummy Tourer 1929




1934 Austin 7 PD Tourer (pre-Opal)




















































































































Type

Name

Description

From

To
XL

prototypes
1922

AB

Aluminium-bodied four-seater
1922
1924
AC


1924
1926
AD

Four seater
1926
1929
AE

Four seater. Two inches wider than AD
1929
1929


Two seater
1929
1930
AF

Steel-bodied four-seater
1930
1932
AH

Pressed-steel body. Four seater
1932

AAK
Open road Tourer
Cowled radiator

1934
AH

Pressed-steel body. Four seater
1932

PD

Two seater
1934

APD
Opal
Two seater
1934
1936
AAL
Open Road Tourer
Covered spare wheel
1935

AH

Pressed-steel body. Four seater
1932

APE
New Opal
Two seater
1936





Saloons




Austin 7 Box Saloon 1933




Austin 7 "New Ruby" saloon



































































Type

Name

Description

From

To
R

Aluminium or fabric saloon
1926
1927
RK

Aluminium or fabric saloon
1927

RL

Steel saloon
1930

RG

Fabric saloon
1930

RN

Long-wheelbase steel saloon


RP


1932

ARQ
Ruby
Saloon
1934

ARR
"New" Ruby
Saloon
1936






Cabriolet




Austin 7 Pearl Cabriolet 1935

























Type

Name

Description

From

To
AC
Pearl
Cabriolet version of ARQ Ruby.
1934

ACA
"New" Pearl
Cabriolet version of ARR New Ruby.
1936






Sports




Austin 7 Ulster 2-Seater Sports 1930




Austin 7 Nippy 2-Seater Sports 1934




























































Type

Name

Description

From

To
50 mph

Aluminium bodied. Long tail

1926
E Super Sports

Aluminium bodied. No doors
1927
1928
EA Sports
Ulster
Aluminium bodied. No doors


EB 65
65
Aluminium body, steel wings. Rounded tail.
1933
1934
AEB
Nippy
All steel
1934
1937
EK 75
Speedy
Aluminium body. Pointed tail.


AEK
Speedy
Redesignation of EK 75

1935





Coupés


















Type

Name

Description

From

To
Type B

Upper body fabric.
1928
1931





Vans



































































Type

Name

Description

From

To
AB, AC and AD

Converted tourer
1923
1927
AE


1929
1930
RK

Converted RK saloon


RM

Converted RL saloon


RN

Converted RN saloon


RP

Converted RP saloon
1933

AVH




AVJ and AVK

Converted Ruby

1939


Motorsport




Arthur Waite won the 1928 100 Miles Road Race (later known as the 1928 Australian Grand Prix) driving an Austin 7


Arthur Waite won the 1928 100 Miles Road Race driving an Austin 7.




References





  1. ^ Baldwin, N. (1994). A-Z of Cars of the 1920s. Bay View Books. ISBN 1-870979-53-2..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ abcd Mills, Rinsey (1996). Original Austin Seven. Bay View Books. ISBN 1-870979-68-0.


  3. ^ "Classic Motor Monthly: The Super Accessories". Classicmotor.co.uk. 27 December 1998. Archived from the original on 21 June 2012. Retrieved 23 June 2012.


  4. ^ "The Austin Seven Special". Pasttimesproject.co.uk. Retrieved 23 June 2012.


  5. ^ "Austin 7 Special". Tanygraig.force9.co.uk. Retrieved 23 June 2012.


  6. ^ Robson, Graham (2006). A-Z British Cars 1945–1980. Herridge & Sons. ISBN 0-9541063-9-3.


  7. ^ Georgano, N. (2000). Beaulieu Encyclopedia of the Automobile. HMSO. ISBN 1-57958-293-1.


  8. ^ abcdefg Cheetham, Craig (2004). Vintage Cars - The Finest Prewar Automobiles. Rochester, United Kingdom: Grange Books. p. 33. ISBN 1840136359.


  9. ^ abc Wyatt, R J (1981). The Austin 1905—1952. David & Charles, Newton Abbott. ISBN 0 7153 7948 8.


  10. ^ Display advertising—Austin. The Times, Tuesday, 20 Mar 1928; pg. xliv; Issue 44846.


  11. ^ Swallow. Automobile Quarterly p1939 volume 18, issue 4 1980


  12. ^ Brian Long Daimler V8 SP250 Veloce, p90, 2008,
    ISBN 9781904788775



  13. ^ Sedgwick, M. (1989). A–Z of Cars of the 1930s. Bay View Books. ISBN 1-870979-38-9.


  14. ^ "Jaguar History: Swallow Sidecar Company". Archived from the original on 30 June 2007. Retrieved 18 July 2007.








































































































































































External links
















  • Austin Seven Owners Club A meeting place for owners of Austin Sevens or those interested in old cars in London and the Home Counties.


  • The Austin 7 Clubs Association Details of the various A7 member clubs throughout the UK and the rest of the world.


  • The Pre-War Austin 7 Club The largest club purely for the Austin Seven.


  • A7 Components Spare parts for all models of Austin 7.


  • Austin Seven Special Register The Register for Austin 7 based Specials.

  • Autocar re-tests an Austin 7


  • Austin 7 racers at AustinMemories.com




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