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Jensen Motors

Jensen Motors Limited was a British manufacturer of sports cars and commercial vehicles in West Bromwich, England. Brothers Alan and Richard Jensen gave the new name, Jensen Motors Limited, to the commercial body and sports car body making business of W J Smith & Sons Limited in 1934. It ceased trading in 1976. Though trading resumed in 1998, Jensen Motors Limited was dissolved in 2011.

Jensen Motors Limited
#00182205
IndustryAutomotive
Founded1922; 101 years ago (1922) (as W J Smith & Sons Limited)
Defunct2011 (2011) (ceased trading 1976 resumed trading in 1998)
Fatedissolved 2011
HeadquartersWest Bromwich, England
Key people
Richard and Alan Jensen
ProductsAutomobiles
Alan Jensen's first Avon Special

Jensen Motors built specialist car bodies for major manufacturers alongside cars of their own design using engines and mechanicals of major manufacturers Ford, Austin and Chrysler.

The rights to Jensen's trademarks were bought with the company and it briefly operated in Speke, Liverpool, from 1998 to 2002. Under subsequent owners, a new version of the Jensen Interceptor was announced in 2011. It was planned to bring manufacture of that new model back to the former Jaguar motor plant in Browns Lane, Coventry.

Jensen brothers

 
1935 Jensen-Ford "woodie" Shooting brake
 
1938 Jensen S-type drophead, 3.5 litre

In 1926 young Alan Jensen[1] (1906-1994) and his brother Richard Jensen[2] (1909-1977)[note 1] built a new boat-tailed sporting body on one of the first Chummy baby Austins. It was seen by Alfred Herbert Wilde, (1891-1930) chief engineer of Standard Motor Company. He persuaded Alan Jensen to join New Avon Body Co, a Standard Motor associate and under Wilde’s aegis Alan Jensen designed the first Standard Avon open two-seaters produced from 1929 to 1933. He went on to design two more cars for Avon then moved with his brother Richard to Austin dealers Edgbaston Garage Limited, Bournbrook, in a building still standing next to the University of Birmingham campus. Edgbaston Garage, a car servicing business, had been bought for his son in 1929 by J A M Patrick's father. Young Joe Patrick, involved in all fields of motor sport, was setting up a coachbuilding operation. For his Edgbaston Garage the Jensen brothers made handsome bodies for the new Wolseley Hornet and Hornet Special chassis. To the concern of the brothers their cars were widely advertised as The Patrick Special and so in 1931 the brothers moved again. Edgbaston Garage became Patrick Motors Limited.[3][4][5]

The Jensen brothers had gone to work for lorry body maker W J Smith & Sons in Carters Green in West Bromwich again to build bodies for small sports cars including more Wolseley Hornet Specials. This was a quite separate development which Smith named on their account Jensen Motors. Their own name was on the product. In 1934 Smith died and the brothers managed to buy a controlling shareholding in Smith & Sons. They later changed the name of W J Smith & Sons to Jensen Motors Limited.[3][4][5]

Smith's announced an open 4-seater and a lowered 2-seater in May 1931 both to be known as Jensen Wolseley Hornets. They later expanded to build exclusive customised bodies for standard cars produced by several manufacturers of the day including Morris, Singer, Standard, as well as Wolseley. In 1934 they were commissioned by American film actor Clark Gable to design and build a car for him based on a Ford V-8 chassis.[6] The resultant car won them much acclaim and stimulated huge interest in their work, including a deal with Ford to produce a run of Jensen-Fords with Jensen bodywork with a Ford chassis and engine.[7] In 1934 they also started to design their first true production car under the name White Lady. This evolved into the Jensen S-type which went into production in 1935.

Commercial vehicles

 
JNSN lorry

In the late 1930s Jensen diversified into the production of commercial vehicles under the marque JNSN, including the manufacture of a series of innovative lightweight trucks, built with unrestricted aluminium alloys, for Reynolds Tube and the prototype for the articulated Jen-Tug which went into production in the late 1940s.

During the Second World War Jensen concentrated on the war effort and produced components for military vehicles including the turrets for tanks, and on the production of specialised ambulances and fire-engines.

After the war production of the Jen-Tug thrived and Jensen also produced a new range of JNSN lightweight diesel trucks and chassis which were used for a variety of vehicles including pantechnicons and buses. A handful of Jensen buses and coaches were produced for independent operators into the 1950s, with Perkins diesel engines, David Brown gearboxes, and bodywork by a variety of bodybuilders of the time, which had the distinctive large JNSN marque cut into the sheet metal on the front of the bus, below the windscreen. In the 1950s Jensen were chosen by the British Motor Corporation (BMC) to build the bodies for the four-wheel-drive Austin Gipsy. In 1958 they built a small number of Jensen Tempo light commercial vans, pick-ups and minibuses, a German original design, built under licence in the UK, Chassis number 5 that was the 1958 commercial motor-show vehicle, fitted with a Ruthmann cherry picker, is the only known survivor and is currently being restored.

Sports cars

 
1960 Jensen 541R

Production of cars ceased during the war years, but by 1946 a new vehicle was offered, the Jensen PW (a luxury saloon). Few were produced since raw materials were carefully limited by the new government's central planning. Also in 1946 body designer Eric Neale joined Jensen Motors from Wolseley and his first project was the more modern coupé which followed in 1950, named the Interceptor, which was built until 1957.

In 1955, Jensen started production of Neale's masterpiece, the 541, which used the then-revolutionary material of fibreglass for its bodywork. The radiator grille was covered by an unusual driver-controlled swivelling flap.

The 541S was replaced by another Neale design, the C-V8 in October 1962, which replaced the Austin-sourced straight-6 of the previous cars with a 6-litre American Chrysler V8. This large engine in such a lightweight car made the Jensen one of the fastest four-seaters of the time.

For its eventual replacement, the Interceptor, Jensen turned to the Italian coachbuilder, Carrozzeria Touring, for the body design, and to steel for the material. First displayed alongside the production C-V8 FF in October 1965[8] and put into production in the second half of 1966 the bodyshells themselves were built by Vignale of Italy and later by Jensen. The same 383 cu in (6.3 L) Chrysler wedge-head powerplant was used in the earlier cars with the later cars moving to the 440 cu in (7.2 L) in engine. The Interceptor was offered in fastback, convertible and (rare) coupé versions. The fastback was by far the most popular with its large, curving wrap-around rear window that was hinged for access to the storage area, making the Jensen an early form of liftback.

FF — All wheel drive and ABS

 
Jensen FF Mk.II

The Jensen Motors stand at the October 1964 Earls Court Motorshow displayed a Jensen FF car equipped with all wheel drive and ABS as publicised but not displayed in February 1964.[3] At the following Show in October 1965 a production ready CV-8 FF was displayed, priced almost 50 per cent more than the standard car and three inches longer.[3] However, it remained a prototype[citation needed] and instead the Interceptor-based Jensen FF entered production in 1966. The FF is apparently externally identical to the Interceptor, although it was four inches longer in the bonnet (all ahead of the windscreen) and it had a second row of air vents behind the front wheels.[citation needed]

The extra letters stood for Ferguson Formula, Ferguson Research being the inventor of the full-time all wheel drive system adopted, the first on a production sports car. Also featured was the Dunlop Maxaret anti-lock braking system in one of the first uses of ABS in a production car.[citation needed]

Just 320 FFs were constructed and production ceased in 1971.[citation needed]

Other projects

 

Austin A40 Sports: As one in a series of collaborations between Austin and Jensen, the Austin A40 Sports originated when Austin's chairman Leonard Lord, upon seeing the Interceptor, requested that Jensen, and their designer Eric Neale, develop a body that could use the A40 mechanicals.

The resulting body-on-frame A40 Sports – which debuted at the 1949 London Motor Show[9] – had been designed by Eric Neale, an ex-Wolseley stylist who had joined Jensen in 1946.[10] During production, the A40 Sports' aluminium bodies were built by Jensen and transported to Austin's Longbridge plant for final assembly.[11] The A40 Sports had been intended as more of a sporty touring car and not a sports car per se,[9] and over 4000 examples were manufactured from 1951–1953.

Austin-Healey 100: Although Jensen's design for a new Austin-based sports-car was rejected by the British Motor Corporation (BMC) in 1952 in favour of a design provided by Donald Healey, Jensen did win the BMC contract to build the bodies for the resultant Austin-Healey 100 and the rest of the "big Healey" cars. At the end of 1960 Austin-Healey cars occupied about 350[12] of the 850 men in Jensen's factory.[13]

Volvo P1800: In 1960 Jensen won a contract from Volvo to assemble and finish the bodies for their P1800 coupé. Pressed Steel manufactured the body-shells at their Linwood plant in Scotland and shipped them to Jensen in West Bromwich to be finished, painted and trimmed and made ready for distribution. The first batch for evaluation came off the production line in May 1961. The engine and gearbox were from Sweden, the back axle from USA and the electrical system from Germany, otherwise the car was all British.[14] By March 1962 1,100 men were busy in Jensen's West Bromwich works making Austin-Healey bodies and Volvo and Jensen cars.[15] By 1963 the contract was ended early due to quality concerns and P1800 production was moved to Gothenburg, Sweden.

Sunbeam Tiger: In the early 1960s Jensen was also involved in the development and production of the Sunbeam Tiger.

Jensen-Healey

 
Mark II 5-speed

Jensen was bought by Norcros Limited, "an industrial holding company" in June 1959.[16] Alan Jensen retired from the positions of joint managing director and alternate chairman in October 1964 though he remained on the board.[17] Richard Jensen "relinquished" his appointment as joint managing director in November 1965 but remained chairman.[18] Following disagreements Alan and Richard Jensen resigned from the board in 1966.[6] Richard retired to Malta and died back in London in September 1977.[5] Alan died in Brighton in 1994.[19]

In September 1967 Jensen announced they had been hit by the US car safety regulations which were going to come into force the following January. They expected there would have to be many redundancies resulting from the drop in demand for the Austin-Healey 3000 and Sunbeam Tiger though both had been modified to meet the regulations.[20] At the end of the year they advised their shareholders that Austin-Healey and Sunbeam Tiger contracts had now ended. An American management consultant, Carl Duerr, replaced the chief executive. It was decided that from now on Jensen Motors would be a full-time car manufacturer.[21] In mid 1968 following a disastrous 1967 year Norcros decided to sell their automotive subsidiary whose products "cost about the same as small houses". Current production rate was 12 Interceptors and FFs a week. In 1968 it was bought by a merchant bank William Brandts.[22]

The Norwegian-American West Coast car distributor Kjell Qvale became the majority shareholder in 1970 and brought in Donald Healey who was appointed chairman in April 1970[23] and they brought in a new chief executive in May. They were able to announce the new Jensen-Healey in March 1972.[24] By the end of May the next year 3,356 of the new cars had been manufactured but the factory's performance disappointed the owner and sales volume was mediocre.

In October 1974 Kjell Qvale appointed himself chief executive as well as chairman.[25] Production was cut back from 25 to 12 a week to match sales. A Jensen GT was announced in July 1975, a Jensen-Healey with a coupé/estate body[26] then the business's future came under threat which meant redundancy for 700 workers – two thirds of its workforce.[27]

A receiver was appointed by the Bank of America in September.[28] Kjell Qvale laid great emphasis on the part played by the unions in bringing about the downfall of the business.[29] The financial pundits said that in his attempt to mass-produce a small sports car Qvale installed production capacity far in excess of market demand.[30] The empty premises were auctioned off in mid-August 1976.

Two new companies: Jensen Special Products (JSP) and Jensen Parts & Service Limited (JP&S) were created to pick up the pieces of Jensen Motors. JSP was created as a specialist engineering and design business from Jensen's development department. JP&S was created to provide parts and service to the existing Jensen customer base.[6] JP&S then turned into a company called International Motors, who gained the UK franchise for Subaru and Maserati, as well as Hyundai from 1982.[31] Both JSP and JP&S were bought by a holding company, Britcar Holdings. In 1982 JP&S, with the rights to use the Jensen brand names, was sold to Ian Orford who put the Interceptor back into production as the Mk IV.[32]

Jensen Parts and Service was renamed Jensen Cars Limited and an average 11 cars were made every month during the 1980s always in small numbers before the company was sold to Unicorn Holdings of Stockport and a Mk V Interceptor was proposed but never materialised although a few more Mk IVs were built.[6]

Brief revival

 
Jensen S-V8

A revival in 2001 was short lived. By the end of 2002 production on their only model – the £40,000 S-V8 – had ceased.[33]

After a £10 million investment, with contributions from Liverpool City Council and the Department of Trade and Industry, a two-seater convertible, the Jensen S-V8, had been launched at the 1998 British International Motor Show, with an initial production run of 300 deposit paid vehicles planned at a price of £40,000 each, but by October 1999 it was confirmed that 110 orders had been placed.[34]

The new Liverpool factory in Speke commenced production in August 2001[35] but troubles with manufacture meant production ceased with only 20 leaving the factory and another 18 cars left partially completed. The company went into administration in July 2002. The Jensen name and partially completed cars were later sold to SV Automotive of Carterton, Oxfordshire, in 2003 who decided to complete the building of 12 of the cars, retaining the others for spare parts, and finally selling them for £38,070.[33]

Jensen International Automotive

In April 2010 Jensen International Automotive (JIA) was founded. This new company will buy old Jensen Interceptors, and sell them as new cars after a complete restoration, with new engine and interior trim.[36]

In September 2011 CPP, a specialist sports car manufacturer announced they were planning to make a new Jensen, expected to go on sale to the public sometime in 2014.[37] The new Interceptor was to be based around an all-aluminium chassis and to feature alloy panels, "echoing the four-seat grand tourer layout of the much-loved original", according to the official press release.

The Jensen Group

On the 25 February 2015, Autocar published a report stating that the Jensen name is officially being revived with two models expected by 2016. The first model, shown in clay on the same article, shows a vehicle called the Jensen GT. This model will be built in bespoke numbers and cost around £350,000 outside the UK. Also in 2016, Jensen is expected to launch the successor to the famous Jensen Interceptor, called the Interceptor 2. These revival announcements are completely different from those announced by CPP in 2011 and are "officially sanctioned" by the company leading the project, "The Jensen Group", who have said they have established complete ownership over the Jensen marque. The interim Jensen GT will be produced under an agreement between the Jensen Group and Jensen International Automotive, a small British company that builds modified Interceptor R models. [38]

Jensen cars

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Frank Alan Jensen and Richard Arthur Jensen

References

  1. ^ "Index entry". FreeBMD. ONS. Retrieved 27 March 2021.
  2. ^ "Index entry". FreeBMD. ONS. Retrieved 27 March 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d "Jensen To Produce Car With Four-Wheel-Drive". The Times. London, UK (56152): 6. 26 October 1964.
  4. ^ a b Motoring. ‘’The Times’’, Thursday, Aug 26, 1976; pg. 23; Issue 59792
  5. ^ a b c Mr Richard Jensen. The Times, Wednesday, Sep 14, 1977; pg. 18; Issue 60108
  6. ^ a b c d Georgano, N. (2000). Beaulieu Encyclopedia of the Automobile. London: HMSO. ISBN 1-57958-293-1.
  7. ^ Norman Mort. Anglo-American Cars: From the 1930s to the 1970s. p. 15. Retrieved 23 March 2021.
  8. ^ Power Continues To Climb. The Times, Wednesday, Oct 20, 1965; pg. 17; Issue 56457
  9. ^ a b Vance, Bill (15 June 2007). . Canadian Driver. Archived from the original on 17 November 2009.
  10. ^ . Wolverhampton Museum of Industry. Archived from the original on 24 May 2010.
  11. ^ . Austin Memories. Archived from the original on 5 January 2009.
  12. ^ Dunlop Introduce Short Time. The Times, Saturday, Nov 19, 1960; pg. 5; Issue 54933
  13. ^ Export Orders Held Up, Say Motor Firm. The Times, Saturday, Sep 02, 1961; pg. 6; Issue 55176
  14. ^ Swedish Sports Coupé an International Project. The Times, Tuesday, Jun 06, 1961; pg. 16; Issue 55100
  15. ^ News in Brief. The Times, Thursday, Apr 05, 1962; pg. 5; Issue 55358
  16. ^ Norcros Acquires Jensen Motors. The Times, Thursday, Jun 18, 1959; pg. 16; Issue 54490
  17. ^ Two Hudson's Bay Appointments. The Times, Wednesday, Oct 14, 1964; pg. 19; Issue 56142
  18. ^ Glaxo Fills Board Vacancies. The Times, Wednesday, Nov 10, 1965; pg. 18; Issue 56475
  19. ^ Latest wills. The Times, Thursday, June 02, 1994; pg. 18; Issue 64970
  20. ^ Briefly From Industry. The Times, Saturday, Sep 09, 1967; pg. 17; Issue 57042
  21. ^ American to head Jensen. The Times, Saturday, Jan 06, 1968; pg. 9; Issue 57142
  22. ^ Not so much a luxury. The Times, Wednesday, Jun 12, 1968; pg. 27; Issue 57275
  23. ^ Business diary. The Times, Monday, Apr 06, 1970; pg. 23; Issue 57836
  24. ^ News in Brief. The Times, Wednesday, Mar 08, 1972; pg. 2; Issue 58421
  25. ^ Jensen Motors chairman now managing director. The Times, Friday, Oct 25, 1974; pg. 24; Issue 59227
  26. ^ New high-performance car from Jensen. The Times, Wednesday, Jul 16, 1975; pg. 4; Issue 59449
  27. ^ "Those were the days". Expressandstar.com. Retrieved 5 January 2012.
  28. ^ The Times, Tuesday, Sep 16, 1975; pg. 1; Issue 59502
  29. ^ Receiver is called in at Jensen Motors. The Times, Tuesday, Sep 16, 1975; pg. 17; Issue 59502
  30. ^ Buying interest shown in Jensen Motors. The Times, Friday, Sep 19, 1975; pg. 18; Issue 59505
  31. ^ Kennett, Pat, ed. (September 1982). "What's New: Budget-price pick-up". TRUCK. London, UK: FF Publishing Ltd: 11.
  32. ^ "Jensen Cars". historywebsite. Retrieved 9 December 2020.
  33. ^ a b Dron, Tony (14 June 2003). . Daily Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 12 June 2008. Retrieved 6 May 2010.
  34. ^ "Jensen roars back". BBC News. 12 October 1999. Retrieved 10 October 2012.
  35. ^ Dron, Tony (25 August 2001). "New Jensen S-V8 enters production". The Telegraph. Retrieved 10 October 2012.
  36. ^ Charles Dunstone invests in Jensen Interceptor relaunch, BBC, accessed 23 March 2021
  37. ^ Knapman, Chris (20 September 2011). "New Jensen Interceptor to be built in Britain". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 5 January 2012.
  38. ^ Jensen name returns on new GT model 25 February 2015 www.autocar.co.uk, accessed 23 March 2021
  • Keith Anderson (1989). Jensen. Haynes Publishing Group. ISBN 0-85429-682-4.
  • Keith Anderson (1998). Jensen & Jensen-Healey. Sutton Publishing. ISBN 0-7509-1808-X.
  • Richard Calver (1991). A History of Jensen: The Chassis Data. Richard Calver. ISBN 0-646-03563-0.

External links

jensen, motors, limited, british, manufacturer, sports, cars, commercial, vehicles, west, bromwich, england, brothers, alan, richard, jensen, gave, name, limited, commercial, body, sports, body, making, business, smith, sons, limited, 1934, ceased, trading, 19. Jensen Motors Limited was a British manufacturer of sports cars and commercial vehicles in West Bromwich England Brothers Alan and Richard Jensen gave the new name Jensen Motors Limited to the commercial body and sports car body making business of W J Smith amp Sons Limited in 1934 It ceased trading in 1976 Though trading resumed in 1998 Jensen Motors Limited was dissolved in 2011 Jensen Motors Limited 00182205IndustryAutomotiveFounded1922 101 years ago 1922 as W J Smith amp Sons Limited Defunct2011 2011 ceased trading 1976 resumed trading in 1998 Fatedissolved 2011HeadquartersWest Bromwich EnglandKey peopleRichard and Alan JensenProductsAutomobilesAlan Jensen s first Avon Special Jensen Motors built specialist car bodies for major manufacturers alongside cars of their own design using engines and mechanicals of major manufacturers Ford Austin and Chrysler The rights to Jensen s trademarks were bought with the company and it briefly operated in Speke Liverpool from 1998 to 2002 Under subsequent owners a new version of the Jensen Interceptor was announced in 2011 It was planned to bring manufacture of that new model back to the former Jaguar motor plant in Browns Lane Coventry Contents 1 Jensen brothers 2 Commercial vehicles 3 Sports cars 3 1 FF All wheel drive and ABS 4 Other projects 5 Jensen Healey 6 Brief revival 6 1 Jensen International Automotive 6 2 The Jensen Group 7 Jensen cars 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksJensen brothers Edit 1935 Jensen Ford woodie Shooting brake 1938 Jensen S type drophead 3 5 litre In 1926 young Alan Jensen 1 1906 1994 and his brother Richard Jensen 2 1909 1977 note 1 built a new boat tailed sporting body on one of the first Chummy baby Austins It was seen by Alfred Herbert Wilde 1891 1930 chief engineer of Standard Motor Company He persuaded Alan Jensen to join New Avon Body Co a Standard Motor associate and under Wilde s aegis Alan Jensen designed the first Standard Avon open two seaters produced from 1929 to 1933 He went on to design two more cars for Avon then moved with his brother Richard to Austin dealers Edgbaston Garage Limited Bournbrook in a building still standing next to the University of Birmingham campus Edgbaston Garage a car servicing business had been bought for his son in 1929 by J A M Patrick s father Young Joe Patrick involved in all fields of motor sport was setting up a coachbuilding operation For his Edgbaston Garage the Jensen brothers made handsome bodies for the new Wolseley Hornet and Hornet Special chassis To the concern of the brothers their cars were widely advertised as The Patrick Special and so in 1931 the brothers moved again Edgbaston Garage became Patrick Motors Limited 3 4 5 The Jensen brothers had gone to work for lorry body maker W J Smith amp Sons in Carters Green in West Bromwich again to build bodies for small sports cars including more Wolseley Hornet Specials This was a quite separate development which Smith named on their account Jensen Motors Their own name was on the product In 1934 Smith died and the brothers managed to buy a controlling shareholding in Smith amp Sons They later changed the name of W J Smith amp Sons to Jensen Motors Limited 3 4 5 Smith s announced an open 4 seater and a lowered 2 seater in May 1931 both to be known as Jensen Wolseley Hornets They later expanded to build exclusive customised bodies for standard cars produced by several manufacturers of the day including Morris Singer Standard as well as Wolseley In 1934 they were commissioned by American film actor Clark Gable to design and build a car for him based on a Ford V 8 chassis 6 The resultant car won them much acclaim and stimulated huge interest in their work including a deal with Ford to produce a run of Jensen Fords with Jensen bodywork with a Ford chassis and engine 7 In 1934 they also started to design their first true production car under the name White Lady This evolved into the Jensen S type which went into production in 1935 Commercial vehicles Edit JNSN lorry In the late 1930s Jensen diversified into the production of commercial vehicles under the marque JNSN including the manufacture of a series of innovative lightweight trucks built with unrestricted aluminium alloys for Reynolds Tube and the prototype for the articulated Jen Tug which went into production in the late 1940s During the Second World War Jensen concentrated on the war effort and produced components for military vehicles including the turrets for tanks and on the production of specialised ambulances and fire engines After the war production of the Jen Tug thrived and Jensen also produced a new range of JNSN lightweight diesel trucks and chassis which were used for a variety of vehicles including pantechnicons and buses A handful of Jensen buses and coaches were produced for independent operators into the 1950s with Perkins diesel engines David Brown gearboxes and bodywork by a variety of bodybuilders of the time which had the distinctive large JNSN marque cut into the sheet metal on the front of the bus below the windscreen In the 1950s Jensen were chosen by the British Motor Corporation BMC to build the bodies for the four wheel drive Austin Gipsy In 1958 they built a small number of Jensen Tempo light commercial vans pick ups and minibuses a German original design built under licence in the UK Chassis number 5 that was the 1958 commercial motor show vehicle fitted with a Ruthmann cherry picker is the only known survivor and is currently being restored Sports cars Edit 1960 Jensen 541R Production of cars ceased during the war years but by 1946 a new vehicle was offered the Jensen PW a luxury saloon Few were produced since raw materials were carefully limited by the new government s central planning Also in 1946 body designer Eric Neale joined Jensen Motors from Wolseley and his first project was the more modern coupe which followed in 1950 named the Interceptor which was built until 1957 In 1955 Jensen started production of Neale s masterpiece the 541 which used the then revolutionary material of fibreglass for its bodywork The radiator grille was covered by an unusual driver controlled swivelling flap The 541S was replaced by another Neale design the C V8 in October 1962 which replaced the Austin sourced straight 6 of the previous cars with a 6 litre American Chrysler V8 This large engine in such a lightweight car made the Jensen one of the fastest four seaters of the time For its eventual replacement the Interceptor Jensen turned to the Italian coachbuilder Carrozzeria Touring for the body design and to steel for the material First displayed alongside the production C V8 FF in October 1965 8 and put into production in the second half of 1966 the bodyshells themselves were built by Vignale of Italy and later by Jensen The same 383 cu in 6 3 L Chrysler wedge head powerplant was used in the earlier cars with the later cars moving to the 440 cu in 7 2 L in engine The Interceptor was offered in fastback convertible and rare coupe versions The fastback was by far the most popular with its large curving wrap around rear window that was hinged for access to the storage area making the Jensen an early form of liftback FF All wheel drive and ABS Edit Jensen FF Mk II The Jensen Motors stand at the October 1964 Earls Court Motorshow displayed a Jensen FF car equipped with all wheel drive and ABS as publicised but not displayed in February 1964 3 At the following Show in October 1965 a production ready CV 8 FF was displayed priced almost 50 per cent more than the standard car and three inches longer 3 However it remained a prototype citation needed and instead the Interceptor based Jensen FF entered production in 1966 The FF is apparently externally identical to the Interceptor although it was four inches longer in the bonnet all ahead of the windscreen and it had a second row of air vents behind the front wheels citation needed The extra letters stood for Ferguson Formula Ferguson Research being the inventor of the full time all wheel drive system adopted the first on a production sports car Also featured was the Dunlop Maxaret anti lock braking system in one of the first uses of ABS in a production car citation needed Just 320 FFs were constructed and production ceased in 1971 citation needed Other projects Edit Austin A40 Sports ca 1951 Austin A40 Sports As one in a series of collaborations between Austin and Jensen the Austin A40 Sports originated when Austin s chairman Leonard Lord upon seeing the Interceptor requested that Jensen and their designer Eric Neale develop a body that could use the A40 mechanicals The resulting body on frame A40 Sports which debuted at the 1949 London Motor Show 9 had been designed by Eric Neale an ex Wolseley stylist who had joined Jensen in 1946 10 During production the A40 Sports aluminium bodies were built by Jensen and transported to Austin s Longbridge plant for final assembly 11 The A40 Sports had been intended as more of a sporty touring car and not a sports car per se 9 and over 4000 examples were manufactured from 1951 1953 Austin Healey 100 Although Jensen s design for a new Austin based sports car was rejected by the British Motor Corporation BMC in 1952 in favour of a design provided by Donald Healey Jensen did win the BMC contract to build the bodies for the resultant Austin Healey 100 and the rest of the big Healey cars At the end of 1960 Austin Healey cars occupied about 350 12 of the 850 men in Jensen s factory 13 Volvo P1800 In 1960 Jensen won a contract from Volvo to assemble and finish the bodies for their P1800 coupe Pressed Steel manufactured the body shells at their Linwood plant in Scotland and shipped them to Jensen in West Bromwich to be finished painted and trimmed and made ready for distribution The first batch for evaluation came off the production line in May 1961 The engine and gearbox were from Sweden the back axle from USA and the electrical system from Germany otherwise the car was all British 14 By March 1962 1 100 men were busy in Jensen s West Bromwich works making Austin Healey bodies and Volvo and Jensen cars 15 By 1963 the contract was ended early due to quality concerns and P1800 production was moved to Gothenburg Sweden Sunbeam Tiger In the early 1960s Jensen was also involved in the development and production of the Sunbeam Tiger Jensen Healey Edit Mark II 5 speed Jensen was bought by Norcros Limited an industrial holding company in June 1959 16 Alan Jensen retired from the positions of joint managing director and alternate chairman in October 1964 though he remained on the board 17 Richard Jensen relinquished his appointment as joint managing director in November 1965 but remained chairman 18 Following disagreements Alan and Richard Jensen resigned from the board in 1966 6 Richard retired to Malta and died back in London in September 1977 5 Alan died in Brighton in 1994 19 In September 1967 Jensen announced they had been hit by the US car safety regulations which were going to come into force the following January They expected there would have to be many redundancies resulting from the drop in demand for the Austin Healey 3000 and Sunbeam Tiger though both had been modified to meet the regulations 20 At the end of the year they advised their shareholders that Austin Healey and Sunbeam Tiger contracts had now ended An American management consultant Carl Duerr replaced the chief executive It was decided that from now on Jensen Motors would be a full time car manufacturer 21 In mid 1968 following a disastrous 1967 year Norcros decided to sell their automotive subsidiary whose products cost about the same as small houses Current production rate was 12 Interceptors and FFs a week In 1968 it was bought by a merchant bank William Brandts 22 The Norwegian American West Coast car distributor Kjell Qvale became the majority shareholder in 1970 and brought in Donald Healey who was appointed chairman in April 1970 23 and they brought in a new chief executive in May They were able to announce the new Jensen Healey in March 1972 24 By the end of May the next year 3 356 of the new cars had been manufactured but the factory s performance disappointed the owner and sales volume was mediocre In October 1974 Kjell Qvale appointed himself chief executive as well as chairman 25 Production was cut back from 25 to 12 a week to match sales A Jensen GT was announced in July 1975 a Jensen Healey with a coupe estate body 26 then the business s future came under threat which meant redundancy for 700 workers two thirds of its workforce 27 A receiver was appointed by the Bank of America in September 28 Kjell Qvale laid great emphasis on the part played by the unions in bringing about the downfall of the business 29 The financial pundits said that in his attempt to mass produce a small sports car Qvale installed production capacity far in excess of market demand 30 The empty premises were auctioned off in mid August 1976 Two new companies Jensen Special Products JSP and Jensen Parts amp Service Limited JP amp S were created to pick up the pieces of Jensen Motors JSP was created as a specialist engineering and design business from Jensen s development department JP amp S was created to provide parts and service to the existing Jensen customer base 6 JP amp S then turned into a company called International Motors who gained the UK franchise for Subaru and Maserati as well as Hyundai from 1982 31 Both JSP and JP amp S were bought by a holding company Britcar Holdings In 1982 JP amp S with the rights to use the Jensen brand names was sold to Ian Orford who put the Interceptor back into production as the Mk IV 32 Jensen Parts and Service was renamed Jensen Cars Limited and an average 11 cars were made every month during the 1980s always in small numbers before the company was sold to Unicorn Holdings of Stockport and a Mk V Interceptor was proposed but never materialised although a few more Mk IVs were built 6 Brief revival Edit Jensen S V8 A revival in 2001 was short lived By the end of 2002 production on their only model the 40 000 S V8 had ceased 33 After a 10 million investment with contributions from Liverpool City Council and the Department of Trade and Industry a two seater convertible the Jensen S V8 had been launched at the 1998 British International Motor Show with an initial production run of 300 deposit paid vehicles planned at a price of 40 000 each but by October 1999 it was confirmed that 110 orders had been placed 34 The new Liverpool factory in Speke commenced production in August 2001 35 but troubles with manufacture meant production ceased with only 20 leaving the factory and another 18 cars left partially completed The company went into administration in July 2002 The Jensen name and partially completed cars were later sold to SV Automotive of Carterton Oxfordshire in 2003 who decided to complete the building of 12 of the cars retaining the others for spare parts and finally selling them for 38 070 33 Jensen International Automotive Edit In April 2010 Jensen International Automotive JIA was founded This new company will buy old Jensen Interceptors and sell them as new cars after a complete restoration with new engine and interior trim 36 In September 2011 CPP a specialist sports car manufacturer announced they were planning to make a new Jensen expected to go on sale to the public sometime in 2014 37 The new Interceptor was to be based around an all aluminium chassis and to feature alloy panels echoing the four seat grand tourer layout of the much loved original according to the official press release The Jensen Group Edit On the 25 February 2015 Autocar published a report stating that the Jensen name is officially being revived with two models expected by 2016 The first model shown in clay on the same article shows a vehicle called the Jensen GT This model will be built in bespoke numbers and cost around 350 000 outside the UK Also in 2016 Jensen is expected to launch the successor to the famous Jensen Interceptor called the Interceptor 2 These revival announcements are completely different from those announced by CPP in 2011 and are officially sanctioned by the company leading the project The Jensen Group who have said they have established complete ownership over the Jensen marque The interim Jensen GT will be produced under an agreement between the Jensen Group and Jensen International Automotive a small British company that builds modified Interceptor R models 38 Jensen cars EditJensen S type 1936 1941 Jensen H type 1938 1945 Jensen PW 1946 1952 Jensen Interceptor 1950 1957 Jensen 541 1954 1959 Jensen 541R 1957 1960 Jensen 541S 1960 1963 Jensen C V8 1962 1966 Jensen P66 1965 prototype only Jensen Interceptor 1966 1976 Jensen FF 1966 1971 Jensen SP 1971 1973 Jensen Healey 1972 1975 Jensen GT 1975 1976 Jensen S V8 2001 See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jensen Motors Austin Healey 100 Austin Healey 3000 Volvo P1800 Sunbeam Tiger List of car manufacturers of the United KingdomNotes Edit Frank Alan Jensen and Richard Arthur JensenReferences Edit Index entry FreeBMD ONS Retrieved 27 March 2021 Index entry FreeBMD ONS Retrieved 27 March 2021 a b c d Jensen To Produce Car With Four Wheel Drive The Times London UK 56152 6 26 October 1964 a b Motoring The Times Thursday Aug 26 1976 pg 23 Issue 59792 a b c Mr Richard Jensen The Times Wednesday Sep 14 1977 pg 18 Issue 60108 a b c d Georgano N 2000 Beaulieu Encyclopedia of the Automobile London HMSO ISBN 1 57958 293 1 Norman Mort Anglo American Cars From the 1930s to the 1970s p 15 Retrieved 23 March 2021 Power Continues To Climb The Times Wednesday Oct 20 1965 pg 17 Issue 56457 a b Vance Bill 15 June 2007 Motoring Memories Austin A40 Sports 1951 1953 Canadian Driver Archived from the original on 17 November 2009 Jensen Cars Wolverhampton Museum of Industry Archived from the original on 24 May 2010 Austin A40 Sports Austin Memories Archived from the original on 5 January 2009 Dunlop Introduce Short Time The Times Saturday Nov 19 1960 pg 5 Issue 54933 Export Orders Held Up Say Motor Firm The Times Saturday Sep 02 1961 pg 6 Issue 55176 Swedish Sports Coupe an International Project The Times Tuesday Jun 06 1961 pg 16 Issue 55100 News in Brief The Times Thursday Apr 05 1962 pg 5 Issue 55358 Norcros Acquires Jensen Motors The Times Thursday Jun 18 1959 pg 16 Issue 54490 Two Hudson s Bay Appointments The Times Wednesday Oct 14 1964 pg 19 Issue 56142 Glaxo Fills Board Vacancies The Times Wednesday Nov 10 1965 pg 18 Issue 56475 Latest wills The Times Thursday June 02 1994 pg 18 Issue 64970 Briefly From Industry The Times Saturday Sep 09 1967 pg 17 Issue 57042 American to head Jensen The Times Saturday Jan 06 1968 pg 9 Issue 57142 Not so much a luxury The Times Wednesday Jun 12 1968 pg 27 Issue 57275 Business diary The Times Monday Apr 06 1970 pg 23 Issue 57836 News in Brief The Times Wednesday Mar 08 1972 pg 2 Issue 58421 Jensen Motors chairman now managing director The Times Friday Oct 25 1974 pg 24 Issue 59227 New high performance car from Jensen The Times Wednesday Jul 16 1975 pg 4 Issue 59449 Those were the days Expressandstar com Retrieved 5 January 2012 The Times Tuesday Sep 16 1975 pg 1 Issue 59502 Receiver is called in at Jensen Motors The Times Tuesday Sep 16 1975 pg 17 Issue 59502 Buying interest shown in Jensen Motors The Times Friday Sep 19 1975 pg 18 Issue 59505 Kennett Pat ed September 1982 What s New Budget price pick up TRUCK London UK FF Publishing Ltd 11 Jensen Cars historywebsite Retrieved 9 December 2020 a b Dron Tony 14 June 2003 The tragic tale of the Jensen S V8 Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 12 June 2008 Retrieved 6 May 2010 Jensen roars back BBC News 12 October 1999 Retrieved 10 October 2012 Dron Tony 25 August 2001 New Jensen S V8 enters production The Telegraph Retrieved 10 October 2012 Charles Dunstone invests in Jensen Interceptor relaunch BBC accessed 23 March 2021 Knapman Chris 20 September 2011 New Jensen Interceptor to be built in Britain The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 5 January 2012 Jensen name returns on new GT model 25 February 2015 www autocar co uk accessed 23 March 2021 Keith Anderson 1989 Jensen Haynes Publishing Group ISBN 0 85429 682 4 Keith Anderson 1998 Jensen amp Jensen Healey Sutton Publishing ISBN 0 7509 1808 X Richard Calver 1991 A History of Jensen The Chassis Data Richard Calver ISBN 0 646 03563 0 External links EditCatalogue of the Jensen Motors archives held at the Modern Records Centre University of Warwick Jensen Motors Limited Jensen Motors Limited website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jensen Motors amp oldid 1089248867, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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