1931 Bentley 8-Litre Le Mans-Style Tourer

Only 100 examples left Cricklewood before bankruptcy overtook the original Bentley company in 1931. The 8-Litre debuted at the 1930 London Motor Show as the largest-engined car produced in the UK at the time, with a chassis price of Β£1,850 placing it in direct competition with the Rolls-Royce Phantom II.

W.O. Bentley’s advertising boldly claimed β€œ100mph without noise,” and The Autocar proved it, recording 101.12 mph in December 1930. This remained the fastest production Bentley until the arrival of the R-Type Continental in the early 1950s.

The massive double-drop chassis frame featured seven tubular cross members for rigidity and was available in 12-foot or 13-foot wheelbases (144 or 156 inches).

A spiral-bevel rear axle was used, and the revised suspension incorporated longer road springs, out-rigged at the rear, with Bentley & Draper shock absorbers.

W.O. Bentley enlarged the proven 6Β½-Litre engine by increasing the bore size from 100 mm to 110 mm rather than extracting more power through higher stress. The new F-type gearbox was redesigned to handle the greatly increased power and torque while maintaining near-silent operation.

Even burdened with weighty formal coachwork, the 8-Litre proved fully capable of exceeding 100 mph, cementing its reputation as one of the most refined high-speed touring cars of its era.


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