1956 Other Makes Lago T14LS

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I love these cars because you never ever see them ! This one has been Vintage raced and has a nice roll cage built in. Get it back on the track !

Seller States:

1956 TALBOT LAGO T14LS

The number of exotic and exciting cars being built by the French soon after World War II was rather limited. Talbot Lago, one of the more famous names in Grand Prix and car history on the other hand, introduced such a car at the Paris Auto Salon in 1955. Designed by Carlo Delaisse who was the chief designer for Letourneur et Marchand. Typical of many French cars the detail found can be intoxicating, the gas cap being a perfect example of fine design. This Talbot Lago is a 1956 T14LS, chassis number 140019. The history, as we know it is as follows. In 1971 the car was imported into England and registered with OUG2 license plate, considered a cherished number. It was registered to a Simon Francis Phillips, from London SW7, around this time. That plate got removed and presumably placed on another of his cars and it became registered with PRK38K around 19th Feb 1976. The next registered owner was Mrs. Hilda Lewis, 47 Grosvenor Square, London W1A, a very posh and expensive part of London. The next owner was from here, John Heil. John bought the car in 1988 and imported it to the USA. John Vintage raced the car a little at some of the Palm Springs Vintage car races in that time period. At that time he had the car set up for that purpose, including a roll bar (removable) and competition seat belts and the obligatory catch and vent tanks for oil and water capture. The car remained in his and his family’s possession until we acquired the car from his estate recently. The car has a BMW V8 of the BMW 507 style, the same as what went into the Talbot Lago America. This engine has been in it since prior to arriving in England in 1971, as the original English log book shows it as having this motor with engine number 21900, the same number as it has today. We have redone the interior completely and it is superb, finished in very nice leather and Wilton Wool style carpeting. We have redone the interior to what we believe is back to original style and standards. The paint is very good but is by all accounts about 20 years old. It is finished in French Blue with Black interior. Because of the nature of the cars history we took the liberty of changing the wheel colour to Black to give the car a more masculine look and posture, which it has done admirably. This car is a perfect candidate for somebody who wants to not only have a very rare car, as it is 1 of only about 60 built, how many are left we don’t know, (quoted production numbers do vary slightly) but a car they can utilize in many of the Historic driving events that are available, such as the California Mille Miglia, Colorado Grand etc (please verify eligibility for any events if this is impoortant to you). We have copies of the English registrations and the build sheet from Talbot along with numerous records and articles relating to the car.

Find the 1956 Talbot Lago for sale here

Lee Roy Hartung Collection

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We featured the videos of the Lee Roy Hartung Collectiont he Auction is now less than a month away and Auctions America now has the lot list with pictures up. This is an awesome collection, with lots of memorabilia and old fords, bikes, signs, licence plates and tons more.

1934 Armstrong Siddeley Four Door Sedan
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1959 Bentley Saloon
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1949 BMW Veritas
The vehicle retains its correct and complete BMW chassis, number 5098, with its original engine, number 97812. The …read more

1958 Cadillac Eureka Hearse
This custom-built Cadillac has been fitted with a Eureka hearse body. A very original and solid car in need of rest…read more

1947 Crosley Station Wagon
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1960 Edsel Ranger Sedan
This vehicle is in poor overall condition but would be a good source for parts.

1950 Edwards R-26 Roadster
This vehicle is in excellent original condition with only one repaint, original upholstery and brightwork. It is cu…read more

1932 Essex Super Six Terraplane Four Door Sedan
A solid and complete car with an original interior.

1959 Fiat Spyder
A very original and complete car showing approximately 90,000 miles, which are believed to be original. This vehicl…read more

1909 Ford Model T Chassis
A scarce and very desirable early 1909 Ford Model T Chassis is complete with its original open valve engine having …read more

1914 Ford Model T Express Truck
This original truck has been fitted with a 1916 engine. The body is a period accessory, wood express truck body and…read more

1915 Ford Model T Touring Car
A very correct and authentic car that has been well preserved in good, original condition.

1916 Ford Model T Touring Car
This vehicle is missing the rear half of the body and has many missing and incorrect parts.

1922 Ford Model T Touring Car
This is an assembled car using an original 1922 Model T Ford touring car body and fenders which have been mounted o…read more

1923 Ford Model T Fordor Sedan
An original and complete, aluminum-bodied, Model T Ford Fordor sedan that is in fair overall condition and in need …read more

1924 Ford Model T Fordor Sedan
A mostly complete and very solid original car which could be preserved or easily restored.

1924 Ford Model TT “C” Cab Express Truck
A desirable Model TT “C” Cab truck with its original express body. A later, gasoline or water tank assembly has bee…read more

1926 Ford Model T Tudor Sedan
A very solid and mostly complete car with a good and original interior and a rare set of Hayes wire wheels.

1928 Ford Model A Fordor Sedan
This vehicle has the Briggs-built Fordor sedan body and is in very restorable condition.

1928 Ford Model A Phaeton
This rare and desirable Model A Ford phaeton is very complete with a very solid body and good fenders—a very worthw…read more

See all the cars for auction here

1944 Bugatti Type 73 C Monoposto Race Car

MonoPosto Race Car, a man and a machine, This is awesome !

Seller states:

1944 Bugatti Type 73C Monoposto race car Chassis number 73002

The production of the Bugatti Type 73 began in 1943, right before the onset of World War II. Production was postponed during the war but began again in 1947 with the introduction of the Type 73A. Ettore Bugatti’s death on August 21, 1947 spelled the demise of the Type 73.

The Type 73, Type 73B, and

Type 73A were touring cars that came with seating for either two or four people. All the Type 73 (A, B, C) were given, or intended to have, four-cylinder engines. The Type 73 had twin overhead camshafts with four valves per cylinder. The Type 73B was similar but had single overhead camshafts. The Type 73A had single overhead camshafts with three valves per cylinder.

Five chassis of the Grand Prix, single seater Type 73C were constructed with only one (73002) receiving an engine and testing by the factory. The chassis numbers were 73001 through 73005. The supercharged engine was a 1.5 liter straight-four with twin overhead camshafts and four-valves per cylinder. It featured a detachable cylinder head, wet cylinder liners, and a exhaust manifold constructed of cast iron. The rest of the chassis were sold off as the company ceased production. Most of the chassis were later completed, some being given bodies true to the original Bugatti design.

Ettore Bugatti had founded his reputation as a manufacturer of high quality performance automobiles with his earliest four cylinder models before WWI. He introduced his first eight cylinder cars in 1922, and within ten years his entire range was of this configuration. However, whilst attending the Bugatti Owners’ Club’s International Prescott meeting in July 1939 Ettore’s talented son Jean had intimated that a new four cylinder racing car was planned for the following season. Tragically this was destined not to materialize because within the next two weeks Jean was killed in a testing accident, and some three weeks later Europe was once again plunged into war.

Bugatti, assisted by his designers Noel Domboy and Antoine Pichetto, spent the war years planning future models, one a 1,500cc car to be produced in a wide variety of forms ranging from a five-seater sedan to a single-seater racing car. By 1944 his plans for production were well advanced and he detailed his intentions in a letter dated February 1945 to Eric Giles, the Secretary of the B.O.C. The car was to have a supercharged 1500cc 16-valve engine, with a single overhead camshaft for the road cars but twin camshafts for the racing model.

Further details were released once the war had ended. In a letter dated 27 September 1945 to Laurence Pomeroy, the editor of The Motor, Monsieur R.A. Bouchard of the Bugatti Company in Paris advised that the racing chassis was to be of ultra-low build, being derived from that of the pre-war 4.7 liter Type 59/50 B racing car, whilst its engine was to feature all-alloy construction with detachable wet cylinder liners, a detachable head (a first for Bugatti) and a five-bearing crankshaft. Transmission was to be by a four speed all synchromesh gearbox, and the car’s total weight was not to exceed 600kg.

No more than twenty examples were to be built in the old La Licorne factory in the Paris suburb of Levallois at a price of 500,000 French francs each. Five were to be delivered in April 1946, with five more during each of the next three months. Already fifteen French racing drivers had each lodged deposits of 25,000 francs, and English readers of The Motor were invited to order the remaining five planned. Inevitably this ambitious timetable floundered against the troubled post-war economic background when materials required for motor car construction were all in extremely short supply, and several orders were cancelled.

Eventually a batch of five complete sets of parts for the racing model was produced, whilst an artist’s impression of a planned aerodynamic sports saloon appeared in several Continental motor magazines and at least two of their chassis were produced. However Ettore Bugatti died in August 1947 before a single example of either type had been fully assembled. The 1947 Paris Motor Show was held at the Grand Palais in early October and Bugatti displayed on their stand an engineless example of their Type 73 sports chassis together with a standard single-cam Type 73 and a racing twin-cam Type 73C engine. One hopeful racing car buyer, Serge Pozzoli, who had placed his order at the Paris Motor Show, recalled later that he had visited the Works and seen several chassis, and one complete racing car with a running engine. However, without Ettore’s impetus the whole project slowly ground to a halt, the unfinished cars were dismantled, all their parts were stored at Molsheim and deposits were returned to the would-be owners.

All these parts and many others remained in storage at Molsheim for several years until one set of Type 73C parts was acquired in late 1960 by Belgian Bugatti dealer Jean de Dobbeleer of Brussels. There he assembled and fitted with a monoposto body featuring a typical Bugatti radiator shell based on one of a pair of 1945 Type 73C body drawings by Pichetto. After selling the finished car to a Frenchman, de Dobbeleer returned to Molsheim in 1961 and acquired the parts for another Type 73C, Chassis No 73002, which he proceeded to assemble, after which he sold its body-less chassis to the US via his American agent Gene Cesari.

This car was the only Type 73C to be listed in Hugh Conway’s 1962 Bugatti Register, in which its owner was listed as Jerry Sherman of Pennsylvania. Thereafter it passed in 1969 to Eric Richardson, the leading American Bugatti authority of his day, before passing in 1973 by Tom Wheatcroft who was then in the process of both purchasing and assembling what was to become his famous Donington Collection of Grand Prix racing cars. The car was fully restored in the Donington workshops to the extremely high mechanical and cosmetic standard invariable achieved by Wheatcroft, who has always insisted his cars should perform and drive as well as they look.

The car was then fitted with a copy of the second of Pichetto’s 1945 73C body designs, this one featuring a cowled radiator grill typical of the late pre-war and early post-war period.

Tom Wheatcroft often invited his many racing driver friends to private test sessions at his Donington Park track, and accordingly this particular car was driven from time to time on such occasions by Wheatcroft and his associates throughout his period of ownership. However, wishing to accommodate a selection of much more recent racing cars, Wheatcroft decided to sell several of the exhibits displayed in his Donington Collection, and in 1994 he sold his Type 73C Bugatti to Alberto Lenz of Mexico. Lenz in turn sold the car in 2002. Over the last few years he has meticulously carried out numerous improvements, including fitting the car with piano wire wheels and hubs by Crosthwaite & Gardiner and cycle wings to make the car road-legal.

Type 73C Bugatti was the very last racing car designed by perhaps the greatest and certainly the most successful racing car designer of all time – Ettore Bugatti.

Find it here on Ebay