Lot Ended
Description
1934 Singer Nine Le Mans
Only 2,000 miles
since major restoration; local Worcestershire car with possible period
competition history; very appealing indeed
From the late
1920s to the mid ‘30s the Singer Car Company made a prolific range of machines
and by 1928 had become the third largest manufacturer of cars in England behind
Morris and Austin.
In 1932 Singer introduced
the immortal Nine, one of the most fondly remembered and successful pre-war
British sports cars. What really set the Nine apart was its success in the
trials and reliability events of the day. As with many sports cars in the early
1930s, Singers were thinly disguised competition cars that could be driven as
normal transport during the week, but with little more preparation than the
removal of a spare wheel, could be winning on the track at the
weekend.
In 1933 Singer entered a field of 9hp
Sports models at Le Mans with considerable success. To celebrate this, the firm
introduced a new two-seater ‘Le Mans’ version with a lowered chassis,
hydraulic brakes, twin spare tyres, large rear-mounted fuel tank, close-ratio
gearbox and tuned engine which sold for £215.
Its 34bhp engine gave it
70+mph performance, the car acquitting itself well against the all-pervading MG
J2s and racking up no fewer than 495 awards by the end of the 1934 season
including eight premier awards in the London-Exeter Trial, eleven in the
London-Land’s End, twelve in the London-Edinburgh and four silver cups in the
Scottish Six Days.
First registered in
Worcestershire in November 1934, this Le Mans appears to have spent most of its
life in that county, an old buff log book showing that it was owned by local man
Roger Taylor by 1962. It seems that the car was then put into dry storage where
it was to remain for the next four decades until being rescued by the previous
owner in the summer of 2006.
As photos on file
confirm, the car was still in remarkably sound condition and the new owner
treated it to a full and sympathetic restoration which was to take two years to
complete. When acquired the car was fitted with a single SU carb and had a
specially made copper bulge on the left side of the bonnet which hints that the
Singer had previously been used in competition and possibly had a supercharger
fitted. While the bonnet bulge has been retained, the SU has been replaced with
a pair of the correct twin Solex carbs, which have been fully
rebuilt.
The engine was overhauled and fitted
with Boyer-Bransden electronic ignition and the cylinder head sent to Moss
Engineering of Ledbury for a full rebuild including new valves, seats etc. The
steering box was also overhauled along with the braking system, while a new
clutch, radiator core, exhaust system, wiring loom, battery and Andre Hartford
shock absorbers were also fitted. The wheels were checked and balanced with new
tyres and tubes fitted.
The bodywork was
restored as necessary and repainted in the original British Racing Green, the
brightwork replated, new headlights fitted and the instruments refurbished. The
interior was also refreshed with new carpets and new black leather upholstery by
an ex-Morgan trimmer.
Back on the road by
2009, the car then clocked up around 1,500 miles before being acquired by our
vendor in 2017. He has only added a couple of hundred miles since and reports
that the car runs and drives well. It has certainly been starting promptly and
running nicely as we have moved it around on site with good 30psi oil
pressure.
A most appealing car all round, this
rare and sporting Singer is ready for immediate action and its potential period
competition history could well merit further investigation.
For more information contact James on 07970 309907 or email
[email protected]
* All charges are subject to VAT