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Encyclopedia > Swift Motor Company

The Swift Motor Company made Swift Cars in Coventry, England from 1900 to 1931. Coventry is a city and metropolitan borough in the West Midlands of England. ...


Originating as a sewing machine and cycle company Swift made their first single cylinder car in 1900 using an MMC engine. It had an unusual transmission system involving an unsprung two ratio reart axle. This proved unreliable and was replaced by a more conventional layout in 1903.


The first Swift engined car was the twin cylinder 7, later 10, horse power of 1904. This was shortly afterwards joined by the four cylinder 12/14 which continued in a bewildering number of guises until the first world war.


In 1904 a single cylinder 700 cc cyclecar was produced by a separate company the Swift Cycle Comapany Ltd. This car was also sold by Austin as the first Austin 7. The Austin Motor Company was founded in Longbridge, Birmingham by Herbert Austin, the former manager of the Wolseley Tool and Motor Car Company in 1905. ... The Austin 7 was a vintage car produced from 1922 through 1939 in the United Kingdom. ...


A larger car, the 15, with 3 litre engine was added to the range in 1913 and this continued to just post war.


After WW1 the Cycle Car company was merged with the main company as Swift of Coventry. The range was simplified with the excellent 1100 cc 10 continuing and joined by a 2 litre 12 with a 4 speed gearbox. A new 10 was launched in 1923 as the Q type with coil ignition, electric starting, optional front wheel brakes and a top speed of 55mph. Standard front wheel brakes were added in 1926 and the engine was bored out to 1190 cc to become the P type. the engine grew again to 1307 cc in 1929 when the car became the P2.


The 12 was replaced by the 12/35 in 1925 with front wheel brakes, plate clutch and two feet extra in the wheelbase.


The final Swift car was the 1930 Cadet which was an attempt to compete with the £100 cars. This had an 850 cc Coventry Climax engine and a price of £149 for the tourer and £165 for the saloon but Swift was too small to compete with the like of Ford and Morris and closed in 1931. Coventry Climax was a British specialty engine manufacturer. ...


  Results from FactBites:
 
Swift, Jonathan - Columbia Encyclopedia article about Swift, Jonathan (937 words)
Disappointed of church preferment in England, Swift returned to Ireland, where he was ordained an Anglican priest and in 1695 was given the small prebend of Kilroot.
Swift became a national hero of the Irish with his Drapier Letters (1724) and his bitterly ironical pamphlet A Modest Proposal (1729), which propounds that the children of the poor be sold as food for the tables of the rich.
In his last years Swift was paralyzed and afflicted with a brain disorder, and by 1742 he was declared unsound of mind.
wcoty.com | World Car of the Year Awards (3808 words)
He has worked for a range of South African motoring publications, and is currently deputy editor of CAR (ABC circulation 110 000), the country's largest-selling automotive magazine.
Remaining at the company, he is editor-in-chief of what has become UK & International Press Automotive Magazines Division, Britain's largest group of technical car magazines, encompassing Engine Technology International, Testing Technology International, Tire Technology International, Electric & Hybrid Vehicle Technology International and the latest title, Vehicle Dynamics International.
While he may be exceptionally quick on the race track, he is highly respected in the industry as a motor journalist with rare insight into the intricacies of handling and performance.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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