Lot Ended
Description
1936 Railton Cobham Deluxe
One of only around
six surviving; known history from new; largely original with few owners;
powerful straight-eight engine; recently went to Le Mans and back; VSCC
eligible; a fine example of this rare and potent saloon
One of the
most resonant names in British motoring history, Railton Cars was founded in
1933 by Noel Macklin, a gifted engineer who had already established his
credentials as a top rank car manufacturer with the Invicta marque which he had
previously founded in 1925.
Produced at the old Invicta works on
Macklin’s Fairmile estate in Cobham, the first Railton Straight Eights used a
modified Hudson Terraplane rolling chassis with a 94bhp 4,010cc straight-eight
engine fitted with tourer or saloon bodywork by Ranalah. Costing around £499
they offered exceptional performance for the era with a 0-60mph time of 13
seconds and a top speed approaching 100mph, and could be driven almost anywhere
in top gear alone.
From 1935 the Hudson Eight chassis was adopted with a
larger 113bhp 4,168cc engine and typically English-style bodywork by a range of
coachbuilders including Ranalah, REAL, Carbodies and Coachcraft. When fitted
with a lightweight body, the new Railton Eight proved startlingly quick,
accelerating to 60mph in just 8.8 seconds, prompting Macklin to hail it as ‘the
fastest production car in the world’. No wonder the police loved it, the Railton
Cobham saloon becoming a favourite with the Flying Squad in 1930s
London.
The 1936 models gained hydraulic brakes, improved front-axle
location and Andre Hartford Hydro-Telecontrol shock absorbers which could be
adjusted from the cabin. A DWS built-in jacking system was also included in the
new specification. Carbodies was the coachbuilder of choice for the factory
models, a substantial pressed-steel B-post effectively supporting the front and
rear doors. From 1937, the chassis was increased in width after which the cars
lost a little of their elegance.
Costing £433 in chassis form and
typically from £600 to £900 fully finished depending on coachwork, these were
expensive cars and Macklin did well to sell 1,379 Railton Eights before
production came to an end in 1940. He then turned his attention to the war
effort, making equally fine torpedo boats for the Royal Navy under the Fairmile
Marine banner for which he was awarded a knighthood in 1946.
Thought to
be one of the most original of the half-dozen or so survivors, this splendid
Cobham saloon was ordered in Deluxe specification and abounds with nice
details including a Leveroll tilt mechanism to the front seats, zip up door
pockets, commodious rear ashtrays, rear window blind, twin horns and a large
central fog light at the front.
DBH 137 was bought new in September 1936
by a Mrs Ethel Robarts of Lillingstone House, Bucks, who employed a chauffeur to
drive her around in the car. When she died in 1967, she left the Railton to her
son, Lt Col AVC Robarts, at which point it had covered some 61,000 miles. He
never really used it and in 1969 he wrote to the Railton Owners’ Club asking if
they could find a buyer for the car, although whether they did or not isn’t
clear. The Railton appears to have spent the next 16 years in storage before
being acquired by a Mr GA Boden of Barton Turf, near Norwich, in October
1985.
Mr Boden got the car running again before selling it to a Mr JA
Burdon-Cooper of Crieff, Perthshire, in December 1986. In 1989 he sent the car
to a professional motor engineer, Rolf Knoery of Aspatria, Cumbria, for a full
mechanical overhaul (engine, gearbox, brakes, suspension), the works carried out
being amply detailed in invoices on file.
In 1993 the car was sent to
Frank Dodgson of Bootle, Cumbria, for localised repairs to the bodywork,
following which it was treated to a bare metal repaint in black cellulose. The
exterior brightwork was all replated at the same time by Prestige Electro
Plating of Barnsley. The interior was sympathetically refurbished by Knoery
including new carpets, a new headlining, repairs to the leather seats and all
woodwork removed, cleaned, waxed and refitted.
The car was then driven to
the 1994 Railton Owners’ Club National Meeting where it won the Thompson &
Taylor Award in recognition of its high state of originality. It was then little
used and kept in Carcoon storage until being acquired by the Railton Owners Club
Secretary, Barrie McKenzie of Sheffield, in 1999. He used it more regularly,
getting it MOT’d most years, going to local shows and not being shy of
undertaking the odd longer journey, including trips to Shelsley Walsh and to the
Brooklands Centenary celebration in 2007, reporting that it always proved very
reliable.
During McKenzie’s 18-year ownership the car was initially
maintained by Knoery and then by his own son, Iain McKenzie, proprietor of
Railton specialists Fairmile Restorations of Worcestershire. Work included
replacing a cracked exhaust manifold with a new cast-iron one supplied by the
Railton Club spares scheme and rebuilding the front axle with new kingpins and
bushes. The radiator was recored by Serck of Birmingham and the brakes
overhauled with new cylinders etc. The front seat bases were showing their age
so new leather was carefully blended in by a skilled local trimmer.
The
next owner acquired the car from McKenzie in 2017, getting it looked over by
Fairmile Restorations who skimmed the head, fitted various new gaskets and
overhauled the carburettor. A new electronic fuel pump was also fitted along
with new HT leads, a new coil, new suspension fluid reservoirs and bushes and a
new set of tyres.
The car has provided sterling service ever since,
including a run to the Le Mans Classic and back in 2018 during which we are told
that it ran faultlessly, easily keeping up with modern traffic and being much
admired along the way and at the race track.
The car has been
sympathetically improved and renovated over the years rather than being fully
stripped and restored so it retains the honest charm of the original as a
result. The only non-standard feature are the extra rear lights on the back
wings which supplement the ‘D’ lights in the rear number plate box – a useful
upgrade. The original trafficators still function, powered by a clockwork
self-cancelling unit.
The speedo recently had a new cable and now works
as it should, although it seems from the old MOTs that the odometer
was previously stuck on the same reading for 30 years or
so.
At some stage the car has been fitted with
a new Club-supplied Power Dome aluminium cylinder head and has certainly been
starting promptly as we have moved it around on site, still pulling smoothly in
top gear from little more than walking pace, as intended by its maker, with
notably effective brakes and light steering. It comes with an interesting
history file, various show plaques, a copy of an original Instruction Manual,
some useful notes on driving, two sets of keys and a plain radiator cap plus a
more decorative bird mascot.
Offering bags of performance, originality
and good looks, this pre-war Railton is on the Post-War Thoroughbred list of the
VSCC so offers plenty of potential for its new owner to enjoy in competition
should they so wish. An interesting alternative to an Alvis or Bentley of the
same era, this sporting saloon is ready for a new owner to enjoy right away and
is on offer here at a fraction of the cost of its period rivals.
For
more information contact James on 07970 309907 or
email [email protected]
* All charges are subject to VAT