2014_09_13-motor-uk

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MOTOR CARS | 303

‘It is not surprising that with the makers’ knowledge of racing...
it should be capable of giving as high a speed as 80mph. What
comes as a revelation is the ease with which on Brooklands that
speed is reached and held. The rev needle hovering between the
5,000 and 5,500 marks, the whole mechanism feeling as one, and
with no sense of adventure attached to such speeds.’ –
‘The Autocar’ on the N-type Magnette.

Small-capacity six-cylinder cars were much in vogue in the early
1930s and MG had duly climbed aboard the bandwagon in 1931
with launch of the Magna ‘F’. Maximum output of the Magna’s
1,271cc Wolseley Hornet-based overhead-camshaft engine
was later raised from a modest 37bhp to a much healthier 47
horsepower. An extensively revised and improved version of this
‘KD’ engine, tuned to produce 56bhp, was carried over to the ‘NA’
Magnette of 1934; the chassis too had come in for revision, being
lighter than hitherto.

Owned in its early days by Bellevue Garage Ltd of Wandsworth,
this N-Type Magnette was hired out by them to aspiring racers
to compete at Brooklands during 1935 and 1936. Manager of
Bellevue’s racing subsidiary, W E ‘Wilkie’ Wilkinson then rebuilt the
MG as an offset-bodied single-seater during the winter of 1936/37,
equipping the engine with six Amal Carburettors.

A contemporary news item in ‘The Sports Car’ magazine, written by
Bill Boddy, states that the chassis had been considerably lightened
by extensive drilling of frame members, pedals, shock absorber
brackets, etc, commenting that the body ‘embodies some very fine
panel-beating and a tail ending in a fine taper.’ The engine had been
linered down to under 1,100cc, and Boddy observed that in the
preceding year, with a high axle ratio and a two-seater body, the
MG had lapped at 108mph.

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Charles Mortimer, Brooklands, 1939

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