Lot Ended
Description
1934 Austin Seven 65 Sports
From a deceased
estate; rare aluminium-bodied sports Austin; only 100 miles on rebuilt
engine; new Blockley tyres; a very usable example ready for the 100th
Anniversary next year; scope for cosmetic TLC
Launched in June 1933, the aluminium-bodied Austin Seven 65 Sports
replaced the Ulster and was in turn replaced by the steel-bodied Nippy in late
1934, a very short production life which makes it one of the rarest Seven
variants. Named the 65 after its top speed, it cost £152 which made it by some
margin the cheapest mass-produced sports car available.
Its low-slung
stance and distinctive rounded tail had many upgrades over the standard Seven
including: revised lowered sports suspension; close-ratio 4-speed gearbox;
downdraught Zenith 30 VEI carburettor; high compression Chromidium cylinder head
and block; special inlet manifold; plugs positioned over the valves; high-lift
camshaft; extra-large sump with cooling ribs etc. The net result of all these
modifications was to raise the power output from 12bhp at 2,600rpm as standard
to a heady 23bhp at 4,800rpm.
As a dating certificate from the Midlands
Austin 7 Club confirms, this is a genuine Type 65 EB Sports which was first
registered in Birmingham in March 1934. Nothing is known of the car’s subsequent
history and its existence was not even known to the A7CA Surviving Austin 7
Register until the current owner discovered it in 2014, languishing on axle
stands at a property near Ludlow where it had been for perhaps 20 years or
more.
Coming from the same stable as the Austin 7 RP Box Saloon elsewhere
in this sale (Lot 26), it has been the subject of some sympathetic restoration
to get it into good running order including a rebuilt engine; recored radiator;
new clutch linings; new wiring; new seat covers; five new Blockley tyres and
tubes plus various other minor items. We are told that it has only covered some
100 miles since.
On offer here from a deceased estate, it comes with
various invoices and notes for work carried out to date; a 95-page ‘Guide to the
Austin 65 and Nippy’ by CSW Gould published in 2004; a December 1933 copy of
The Light Car with a road test of a 65 Sports; an original Austin Seven
handbook and an original parts list plus other technical literature relating to
the model.
As you can see in the photos, it appears to be in largely
original condition and would benefit from some further tidying. The paintwork is
tired and the hood and side screens will need to be recovered although the
frames are present. The wheel-changing kit and tryre pump are also still present
in the boot.
An extremely rare survivor of what has always been a rare
model, it is being offered here at a modest guide price which leaves ample scope
for the remedial works still required.
For more information contact James on 07970 309907 or
email james.dennison@brightwells.com
* All charges are subject to VAT