Lot Ended
Description
Genuine Hyper with an
interesting history; Cozette blower rebuild in 2016; VSCC papers; extremely
competitive car in fine order
Richard Lea and Graham Francis set up
in a small workshop in Coventry in 1895 to produce high quality bicycles. These
were in great demand and the little firm soon moved to larger premises and made
the obvious move into motorcycles.
By 1919 they had introduced a car of
their own design, although they had an agreement with Southport-based Vulcan to
share many components in order to keep costs to a minimum.
Lea-Francis
also chose Meadows engines to power their cars, which proved a shrewd move as
they were extremely well-engineered – the later 4ED having enormous tuning
potential.
A sporting image began to appear from around 1925, leading to
the introduction of the Cozette-blown S-Type Hyper. Britain’s first supercharged
production car, a Hyper won the 1928 Ulster TT, a 30-lap race over 13.5 miles on
the roads of Northern Ireland, in the hands of the legendary racing driver, Kaye
Don. The race was watched by a record 250,000 spectators and the victory placed
Lea-Francis firmly on the map, humbling rival machines from the likes of
Bentley, Lagonda and Frazer Nash.
Hyper chassis 14062 was erected in June
1928 and fitted with a Cross & Ellis two-seater body. The Lea-Francis
owner's club confirm that this body was removed in August 1928 and sold on, the
rolling chassis being exported to a wealthy meat exporter and grazier in Sydney
by the name of Mr T Field. He had a ‘rather attractive’ four-seat tourer body
built locally, which was to remain on the car until the early 1970s by which
time it had passed through the hands of at least one further owner, a Mrs Jones,
possibly of Perth, who still had the car in 1972.
By 1975 it had been
repatriated and was in the hands of well-known racer Roddy McPherson. He
commissioned Barrie Price to rebuild it for racing and rebody it with replica
1929 TT coachwork.
They managed to get the car UK registered as KD 7361,
a number originally on Hyper chassis 14139 – one of the 1929 Team cars which was
subsequently scrapped.
Peter Harper took over the car in 1976, then Len
Potter, before acquisition by one-time Lea-Francis apprentice Roy Beebee. He
rebuilt the engine, first with the original roller-bearing crank – later with a
solid crank and plain bearings. It is believed that at around this time, the
original crankcase 9050 was swapped with 8912 which came from a P-Type which is
still fitted today. Beebee developed the car extensively, making it the quickest
S-Type for a period, complete with No.8 Cozette blower and twin-port
head.
After his death in 1996, the car fell into disuse until it was sold
to, and enthusiastically campaigned by, Andrew Dixey. Maintained to exacting
standards by Brewster Mudie and a regular contender in all forms of VSCC
competition, it spent a year with another active VSCC competitor before coming
into the vendor’s hands in 2013.
Since then, he has continued to maintain
it on a no-expense-spared basis and has used it regularly, predominantly for
hill-climbs at which these nimble and powerful cars excel.
Other than
regular servicing, he has rebuilt the shock absorbers, had the car completely
rewired by specialists Vehicle Wiring Services and treated the Cozette blower to
a full rebuild in 2016 since when it has had very little use. It had a new set
of Blockley tyres in 2018 and a rebuild of the Dewandre brake servo more
recently in 2019.
Included in the thick file of paperwork is a current
(non-transferable) VSCC Buff Form. The car also comes with a full windscreen
(not fitted), spare propshaft, two halfshafts, a silencer and an extra
wheel.
Running like the proverbial Swiss watch when it was driven to
Brightwells for the auction, this correct and competitive car is ready to enter
the fray at the highest level.
Contact [email protected]
* All charges are subject to VAT