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Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost

The Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost name refers both to a car model and one specific car from that series.

Rolls-Royce 40/50 Silver Ghost
AX201, Roi-des-Belges tourer by Barker
Overview
ManufacturerRolls-Royce Ltd (UK)
Rolls-Royce of America (US)
Also called40/50
Production1906–1926
7874 made[1]
AssemblyDerby, England
Springfield, Massachusetts[2]
Body and chassis
ClassLuxury car
RelatedRolls-Royce armoured car
Powertrain
Enginestraight 6
7036cc (429.4cid) (1906–1910)
7428cc (453.3cid) (from 1910)
Transmission3-speed manual (1909–1913)
4-speed manual (from 1913)
Dimensions
Wheelbase135.5 in (3,442 mm) (1906—1913)
143.5 in (3,645 mm) (1913—1923)
144 in (3,658 mm) and
150.5 in (3,823 mm) (from 1923)
Chronology
PredecessorRolls-Royce 30 hp
SuccessorPhantom I
AX201 at Cat and Fiddle Hill during the Scottish Reliability Trial 1907
1920 Silver Ghost with limousine coachwork
40/50 hp Silver Ghost
7,428cc side-valve six-cylinder engine.

Originally named the "40/50 h.p." the chassis was first made at Royce's Manchester works, with production moving to Derby in July 1908, and also, between 1921 and 1926, in Springfield, Massachusetts. Chassis no. 60551, registered AX 201, was the car that was originally given the name "Silver Ghost". Other 40/50 hp cars were also given names, but the Silver Ghost title was taken up by the press, and soon all 40/50s were called by the name, a fact not officially recognised by Rolls-Royce until 1925, when the Phantom range was launched.

The Silver Ghost was the origin of Rolls-Royce's claim of making the "best car in the world" – a phrase coined not by themselves, but by the prestigious publication Autocar in 1907.[citation needed]

The chassis and engine were also used as the basis of a range of Rolls-Royce Armoured Cars.

In December of 1923, four friends of Woodrow Wilson chipped in to buy the former President a Silver Ghost, just weeks before Wilson's death in February of 1924. The car was modified so that Wilson, who was disabled, could enter and exit the car more easily.

History

 
T.E. Lawrence in Blue Mist, 1918

In 1906, Rolls-Royce produced four chassis to be shown at the Olympia car show, two existing models, a four-cylinder 20 hp and a six-cylinder 30 hp, and two examples of a new car designated the 40/50 hp. The 40/50 hp was so new that the show cars were not fully finished, and examples were not provided to the press for testing until March 1907.[3]

The car at first had a new side-valve, six-cylinder, 7036 cc engine (7428 cc from 1910) with the cylinders cast in two units of three cylinders each as opposed to the triple two-cylinder units on the earlier six. A three-speed transmission was fitted at first with four-speed units used from 1913. The seven-bearing crankshaft had full pressure lubrication, and the centre main bearing was made especially large to remove vibration, essentially splitting the engine into two three-cylinder units. Two spark plugs were fitted to each cylinder with, from 1921, a choice of magneto or coil ignition.[4] The earliest cars had used a trembler coil to produce the spark with a magneto as an optional extra which soon became standard - the instruction was to start the engine on the trembler/battery and then switch to magneto. Continuous development allowed power output to be increased from 48 bhp (36 kW) at 1,250 rpm to 80 bhp (60 kW) at 2,250 rpm. Electric lighting became an option in 1914 and was standardised in 1919.[1] Electric starting was fitted from 1919[4] along with electric lights to replace the older ones that used acetylene or oil.

Development of the Silver Ghost was suspended during World War I, although the chassis and engine were supplied for use in Rolls-Royce Armoured Cars.[5] A blue 1909 Silver Ghost known as Blue Mist, previously owned by an Irish lord, was used by Lawrence of Arabia as his personal staff car during the Arab Revolt.[6][7] Construction of a replica Blue Mist began in 2018.[8]

The chassis had rigid front and rear axles and leaf springs all round. Early cars only had brakes on the rear wheels operated by a hand lever, with a pedal-operated transmission brake acting on the propellor shaft. The footbrake system moved to drums on the rear axle in 1913. Four-wheel servo-assisted brakes became optional in 1923.[4]

Despite these improvements the performance of the Silver Ghost's competitors had improved to the extent that its previous superiority had been eroded by the early 1920s. Sales declined from 742 in 1913 to 430 in 1922. The company decided to launch its replacement which was introduced in 1925 as the New Phantom.[9] After this, older 40/50 models were called Silver Ghosts to avoid confusion.

A total of 7874 Silver Ghost cars were produced from 1907 to 1926, including 1701 from the American Springfield factory. The documented chassis price listed for the 1921 American version was US$11,750 ($178,508 in 2021 dollars [10]).[4][2] Many of them still run today. A fine example is on display at the National Motor Museum, Beaulieu.

The Alpine Eagles

A 40/50 was privately entered in the prestigious 1912 Austrian Alpine Trial by James Radley, but its 3-speed gearbox proved inadequate for the ascent of the Katschberg Pass. A factory team of four cars were prepared for the 1913 event with four-speed gearboxes, and engine power increased from 60 bhp (45 kW) to 75 bhp (56 kW) by an increase in compression ratio and larger carburettor. The team gained six awards including the Archduke Leopold Cup. Replicas of the victorious cars were put into production and sold officially as Continental models, but they were called Alpine Eagles by chief test driver (and later Rolls-Royce Managing Director) Ernest Hives, and this is the name that they have kept.[citation needed]

The Silver Ghost

In 1907 Claude Johnson, commercial and managing director of Rolls-Royce, ordered a car to be used as a demonstrator by the company. With chassis no. 60551 and registered AX 201, it was the 12th 40/50 hp to be made,[3] and was painted in aluminium paint with silver-plated fittings. The car was named the "Silver Ghost" to emphasise its ghost-like quietness, and a plaque bearing this name adorned the bulkhead. An open-top Roi-des-Belges body by coachbuilder Barker was fitted, and the car readied for the Scottish reliability trials of 1907 and, immediately afterwards, another 15,000-mile (24,000 km) test which included driving between London and Glasgow 27 times.

The aim was to raise public awareness of the new company and to show the reliability and quietness of their new car. This was a risky idea: cars of this time were notoriously unreliable, and roads of the day could be horrendous. Nevertheless, the car set off on trials, and with press aboard, broke various records. Even after 7,000 miles (11,000 km), the cost to service the car was a negligible £2 2s 7d (£2.13).[3] The reputation of the 40/50, and Rolls-Royce, was established.

AX201 was sold in 1908 to a private customer, who used it for his annual holiday to Italy, and recovered by the company in 1948. Since then, it has been used as a publicity car and travelled worldwide. In 1991, the car was restored.

In 2005 it was noted to be the world's most valuable car, its insured value was placed at US$35 million.[11]

After the 1998 sale of Rolls-Royce Motors Ltd the car passed into the ownership of Bentley Motors.[3]

Gallery

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b The Rolls-Royce Motor Car. Anthony Bird and Ian Hallows. Batsford Books. 2002 ISBN 0-7134-8749-6
  2. ^ a b Kimes, Beverly R. (1996). Clark, Henry A. (ed.). The Standard Catalog of American Cars 1805-1945. Kraus Publications. pp. 1307–1308. ISBN 0873414780.
  3. ^ a b c d Evans, Michael (2004). In the Beginning-the Manchester Origins of Rolls-Royce. Derby, UK: Rolls-Royce Heritage Trust. ISBN 1-872922-27-9.
  4. ^ a b c d Baldwin, N. (1994). A-Z of Cars of the 1920s. Devon, UK: Bay View Books. ISBN 1-870979-53-2.
  5. ^ Chariots of war
  6. ^ Well Here We Are
  7. ^ Cambridge News
  8. ^ PR Web
  9. ^ Pugh, Peter (2001). The Magic of a Name - The Rolls-Royce Story: The First 40 Years. Icon Books. ISBN 1-84046-151-9.
  10. ^ 1634–1699: McCusker, J. J. (1997). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1700–1799: McCusker, J. J. (1992). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1800–present: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Retrieved 16 April 2022.
  11. ^ Schaffels, Brandy; Markus, Frank. . Motor Trend. Archived from the original on 18 February 2006.

Bibliography

  • Holmes, Mark (2007). Ultimate Convertibles: Roofless Beauty. London: Kandour. pp. 142–147. ISBN 978-1-905741-62-5.

External links

  • "Ambassador Extraordinary - A History of 'The Silver Ghost'", reprint from Queste, 1990
  • Rolls-Royce and Bentley Models

rolls, royce, silver, ghost, silver, ghost, redirects, here, other, uses, silver, ghost, disambiguation, luxury, sedan, produced, rolls, royce, motor, cars, introduced, 2009, rolls, royce, ghost, name, refers, both, model, specific, from, that, series, rolls, . Silver Ghost redirects here For other uses see Silver Ghost disambiguation For the luxury sedan produced by Rolls Royce Motor Cars and introduced in 2009 see Rolls Royce Ghost The Rolls Royce Silver Ghost name refers both to a car model and one specific car from that series Rolls Royce 40 50 Silver GhostAX201 Roi des Belges tourer by BarkerOverviewManufacturerRolls Royce Ltd UK Rolls Royce of America US Also called40 50Production1906 19267874 made 1 AssemblyDerby EnglandSpringfield Massachusetts 2 Body and chassisClassLuxury carRelatedRolls Royce armoured carPowertrainEnginestraight 67036cc 429 4cid 1906 1910 7428cc 453 3cid from 1910 Transmission3 speed manual 1909 1913 4 speed manual from 1913 DimensionsWheelbase135 5 in 3 442 mm 1906 1913 143 5 in 3 645 mm 1913 1923 144 in 3 658 mm and 150 5 in 3 823 mm from 1923 ChronologyPredecessorRolls Royce 30 hpSuccessorPhantom IAX201 at Cat and Fiddle Hill during the Scottish Reliability Trial 1907 1920 Silver Ghost with limousine coachwork 40 50 hp Silver Ghost7 428cc side valve six cylinder engine Originally named the 40 50 h p the chassis was first made at Royce s Manchester works with production moving to Derby in July 1908 and also between 1921 and 1926 in Springfield Massachusetts Chassis no 60551 registered AX 201 was the car that was originally given the name Silver Ghost Other 40 50 hp cars were also given names but the Silver Ghost title was taken up by the press and soon all 40 50s were called by the name a fact not officially recognised by Rolls Royce until 1925 when the Phantom range was launched The Silver Ghost was the origin of Rolls Royce s claim of making the best car in the world a phrase coined not by themselves but by the prestigious publication Autocar in 1907 citation needed The chassis and engine were also used as the basis of a range of Rolls Royce Armoured Cars In December of 1923 four friends of Woodrow Wilson chipped in to buy the former President a Silver Ghost just weeks before Wilson s death in February of 1924 The car was modified so that Wilson who was disabled could enter and exit the car more easily Contents 1 History 2 The Alpine Eagles 3 The Silver Ghost 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Notes 6 2 Bibliography 7 External linksHistory Edit T E Lawrence in Blue Mist 1918 In 1906 Rolls Royce produced four chassis to be shown at the Olympia car show two existing models a four cylinder 20 hp and a six cylinder 30 hp and two examples of a new car designated the 40 50 hp The 40 50 hp was so new that the show cars were not fully finished and examples were not provided to the press for testing until March 1907 3 The car at first had a new side valve six cylinder 7036 cc engine 7428 cc from 1910 with the cylinders cast in two units of three cylinders each as opposed to the triple two cylinder units on the earlier six A three speed transmission was fitted at first with four speed units used from 1913 The seven bearing crankshaft had full pressure lubrication and the centre main bearing was made especially large to remove vibration essentially splitting the engine into two three cylinder units Two spark plugs were fitted to each cylinder with from 1921 a choice of magneto or coil ignition 4 The earliest cars had used a trembler coil to produce the spark with a magneto as an optional extra which soon became standard the instruction was to start the engine on the trembler battery and then switch to magneto Continuous development allowed power output to be increased from 48 bhp 36 kW at 1 250 rpm to 80 bhp 60 kW at 2 250 rpm Electric lighting became an option in 1914 and was standardised in 1919 1 Electric starting was fitted from 1919 4 along with electric lights to replace the older ones that used acetylene or oil Development of the Silver Ghost was suspended during World War I although the chassis and engine were supplied for use in Rolls Royce Armoured Cars 5 A blue 1909 Silver Ghost known as Blue Mist previously owned by an Irish lord was used by Lawrence of Arabia as his personal staff car during the Arab Revolt 6 7 Construction of a replica Blue Mist began in 2018 8 The chassis had rigid front and rear axles and leaf springs all round Early cars only had brakes on the rear wheels operated by a hand lever with a pedal operated transmission brake acting on the propellor shaft The footbrake system moved to drums on the rear axle in 1913 Four wheel servo assisted brakes became optional in 1923 4 Despite these improvements the performance of the Silver Ghost s competitors had improved to the extent that its previous superiority had been eroded by the early 1920s Sales declined from 742 in 1913 to 430 in 1922 The company decided to launch its replacement which was introduced in 1925 as the New Phantom 9 After this older 40 50 models were called Silver Ghosts to avoid confusion A total of 7874 Silver Ghost cars were produced from 1907 to 1926 including 1701 from the American Springfield factory The documented chassis price listed for the 1921 American version was US 11 750 178 508 in 2021 dollars 10 4 2 Many of them still run today A fine example is on display at the National Motor Museum Beaulieu The Alpine Eagles EditA 40 50 was privately entered in the prestigious 1912 Austrian Alpine Trial by James Radley but its 3 speed gearbox proved inadequate for the ascent of the Katschberg Pass A factory team of four cars were prepared for the 1913 event with four speed gearboxes and engine power increased from 60 bhp 45 kW to 75 bhp 56 kW by an increase in compression ratio and larger carburettor The team gained six awards including the Archduke Leopold Cup Replicas of the victorious cars were put into production and sold officially as Continental models but they were called Alpine Eagles by chief test driver and later Rolls Royce Managing Director Ernest Hives and this is the name that they have kept citation needed The Silver Ghost EditIn 1907 Claude Johnson commercial and managing director of Rolls Royce ordered a car to be used as a demonstrator by the company With chassis no 60551 and registered AX 201 it was the 12th 40 50 hp to be made 3 and was painted in aluminium paint with silver plated fittings The car was named the Silver Ghost to emphasise its ghost like quietness and a plaque bearing this name adorned the bulkhead An open top Roi des Belges body by coachbuilder Barker was fitted and the car readied for the Scottish reliability trials of 1907 and immediately afterwards another 15 000 mile 24 000 km test which included driving between London and Glasgow 27 times The aim was to raise public awareness of the new company and to show the reliability and quietness of their new car This was a risky idea cars of this time were notoriously unreliable and roads of the day could be horrendous Nevertheless the car set off on trials and with press aboard broke various records Even after 7 000 miles 11 000 km the cost to service the car was a negligible 2 2s 7d 2 13 3 The reputation of the 40 50 and Rolls Royce was established AX201 was sold in 1908 to a private customer who used it for his annual holiday to Italy and recovered by the company in 1948 Since then it has been used as a publicity car and travelled worldwide In 1991 the car was restored In 2005 it was noted to be the world s most valuable car its insured value was placed at US 35 million 11 After the 1998 sale of Rolls Royce Motors Ltd the car passed into the ownership of Bentley Motors 3 AX 201 in a photo from 1990 prior to restoration AX 201 with body amp chassis separated AX 201 rear end showing ash frameGallery Edit 1909 landaulet by Hooper Science Museum London 1910 tourer National Automobile Museum Reno 1913 Silver Ghost at Stahls Automotive Collection 1914 tourer in Museo Nazionale dell Automobile Torino 1920 chassis 40FW tourer by Labourdette A 1922 half track owned by Vladimir Lenin at Gorki LeninskiyeSee also Edit Cars portalRolls Royce Armoured CarReferences EditNotes Edit a b The Rolls Royce Motor Car Anthony Bird and Ian Hallows Batsford Books 2002 ISBN 0 7134 8749 6 a b Kimes Beverly R 1996 Clark Henry A ed The Standard Catalog of American Cars 1805 1945 Kraus Publications pp 1307 1308 ISBN 0873414780 a b c d Evans Michael 2004 In the Beginning the Manchester Origins of Rolls Royce Derby UK Rolls Royce Heritage Trust ISBN 1 872922 27 9 a b c d Baldwin N 1994 A Z of Cars of the 1920s Devon UK Bay View Books ISBN 1 870979 53 2 Chariots of war Well Here We Are Cambridge News PR Web Pugh Peter 2001 The Magic of a Name The Rolls Royce Story The First 40 Years Icon Books ISBN 1 84046 151 9 1634 1699 McCusker J J 1997 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States Addenda et Corrigenda PDF American Antiquarian Society 1700 1799 McCusker J J 1992 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States PDF American Antiquarian Society 1800 present Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Retrieved 16 April 2022 Schaffels Brandy Markus Frank 2005 Concours at Cranbrook Motor Trend Archived from the original on 18 February 2006 Bibliography Edit Holmes Mark 2007 Ultimate Convertibles Roofless Beauty London Kandour pp 142 147 ISBN 978 1 905741 62 5 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rolls Royce Silver Ghost Ambassador Extraordinary A History of The Silver Ghost reprint from Queste 1990 Rolls Royce and Bentley Models Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rolls Royce Silver Ghost amp oldid 1151470042, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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