Exceedingly rare and handsome AC; one of perhaps 10 made and
three surviving; recent £35k mechanical overhaul and only 8,000 miles
since; current owner since 2005; always in regular use; large history file;
forced sale due to illness
"Experience
has taught us that a large and increasing number of discerning motorists dislike
the full saloon with its frequently empty seats, and yet there are many who
appreciate the privacy of the Coupe type of body, but who occasionally require
to provide accommodation for four and sometimes even six passengers. This new
2-4-6 fixed head Coupe fills that want and is undoubtedly the car for theatre,
dinner or golf.
When being used as a
two-seater, the luggage space is amazingly capacious, allowing even for a trunk
to be accommodated owing to the sensible wide doors. If the weather is
inclement, two can be carried in a novel hammock type of seat still under the
roof; when the sun shines two more can be comfortably seated in a very spacious
and extremely comfortable dickey. An important factor is the extremely large
rear window which opens so that outside passengers do not feel excluded from the
social amenities of the party."
As the
marketing blurb rather laboriously explained, the AC 2-4-6 Fixed Head
Coupe was so named because it could carry two, four or six passengers – not
because it was a two-door, four-seater, six-cylinder car, as is often stated.
Launched in 1937, it had AC’s famous John
Weller-designed, 1,991cc overhead-camshaft, six-cylinder engine under its
elegant bonnet. With an RAC rating of 16hp, it produced around 60bhp – 80bhp
depending on the state of tune and was mated to a four-speed synchromesh gearbox
which gave it a top speed of 70mph – pretty impressive for the period.
The 2-4-6 sat on the improved, under-slung, 9'
7" wheelbase Two-Litre chassis which had been unveiled at the London Motor
Show in October 1933. Other noteworthy features included an opening front
windscreen, automatic chassis lubrication, built-in jacks, Bendix brakes and
Telecontrol shock absorbers, all of which were incorporated in the contemporary
16/60hp and 16/70hp models.
Exact production
figures are uncertain, but it seems likely that no more than 10 were made in
this particular body style, of which only three are thought to survive today.
First registered in Surrey in December 1937,
this particular 2-4-6 Coupe comes with a large and interesting history file
including a notebook which names all the previous recorded keepers (six in
total, all within a 60-mile radius of the AC factory in Thames Ditton) plus
details of any significant maintenance known to have been carried out over the
last 80 years or so.
It is
often said that no two AC cars are exactly alike as they were usually made to
special order and the factory were well-used to tailoring each car to fit the
owner’s particular requirements.
GPA 984 is no
exception to this rule and has several special features requested by the
original owner, a Mr Smith of Slough. It is the only known Coupe with a sliding
sunroof – most had a solid roof although there is a reference in the history
file to a period photo of another 2-4-6 also fitted with a sunroof so it was
presumably not unique in this regard.
It also
has the ENV ‘back-to-front’ change gearbox to the right of the driver (with a
gated lock on reverse) which was purposely specified by Mr Smith instead of the
centre-change Moss gearbox also offered. He also specified a bench seat rather
than individual front seats.
Originally fitted
with a single carb, Mr Smith had it converted to SU triple-carb spec at the AC
factory in the late-1940s, also having a modern electric choke fitted at the
same time – a recent innovation adopted by other prestige post-war car marques
and mighty fine it still works today. Mr Smith had actually gone to AC to trade
the 2-4-6 in for a newer model but was unconvinced by what was on offer and
elected to upgrade his Coupe instead.
The
documents on file suggest that the car has never been taken apart and fully
restored, just kept in good running order with any issues attended to as
required. It seems that the bodywork was sympathetically restored in the
late-1960s/early-70s when the car was repainted in dark blue (originally AC
Grey/Blue). The interior was also refurbished at around the same time.
Our vendor acquired GPA 984 at a BCA auction in
2005 (for £17,740) at which point the car had been owned for the last 15 years
by a Mr R Waldron Brown of Newbury. Although it was in running order, it was in
need of recommissioning having been parked up in storage for 11
years.
He promptly sent the car to West Hoathly
Garage of Sussex for a thorough recommissioning and a new MOT which it passed in
October 2005 with just one advisory for a worn front tyre, the bill for this lot
coming to £3,455. The indicated mileage at this point was 6,298
miles.
To better suit modern road conditions, it was also fitted with
flashing indicators discreetly incorporated into the front side lamps and either
side of the rear number plate (the original semaphore trafficators were in
working order but have been disconnected). Much of the wiring and associated
electrical components were also replaced or updated for safety reasons and the
charging system has been uprated with electronic voltage control and a two-brush
dynamo.
In 2006 it became apparent that the
engine was down on power so, on the advice of the owner’s club, it was sent to
AC guru John Sichel of Tonbridge for a full rebuild with instructions to:
“Please do whatever is necessary to bring it back to a reliable touring engine,
so that it will last at least another 70 years”.
As so often happens, one thing soon led to another and Sichel was to
work on the car for the next two years, a quick tot-up of the bills showing that
some £35,000 was spent during this time.
Apart
from a full engine rebuild with new pistons, liners, bearings etc, other work
included: cylinder head rebuilt and upgraded to run on unleaded fuel; gearbox
service; clutch and flywheel balanced; propshaft rebuilt and balanced; splined
hubs and drive shafts replaced or repaired; drive shafts restored; brakes
overhauled; complete new exhaust system; reconditioned starter motor and dynamo;
axle/diff rebuilt with cwp ratio changed from 5:1 to 4.5:1 for more relaxed high
speed cruising. A new set of Excelsior 475/500X19 tyres were also
fitted.
The car has been in regular use ever
since, the MOT history showing the mileage rising from 6,583 in 2007 to today’s
total of 14,967 miles. Well-known to the AC Owner’s Club, there are many
souvenirs of events attended including the ACOC Sprint at Goodwood in 2007;
Prescott Vintage in 2009 (a 320-mile round trip); 73rd GRRC Goodwood
Members Meeting in 2015; the AC Reunion gatherings at Brooklands in 2015 and
2016; the VSCC 85th Anniversary Celebration at Brands Hatch in August
2019, regular trips to the Goodwood
Revival Meeting, the last in 2023 and almost annual trips to see the
London-Brighton run, the last in 2025.
Always
driven to these events from the owner’s home in East Sussex, correspondence on
file relates how the AC was usually the ‘go to’ car of several owned by the
vendor during this period as it has “much better performance than my Alvis
12/50”.
Old insurance certificates show that it
had an agreed value of £35,000 in 2013 and there are various invoices for more
recent upkeep, including a new windscreen in 2017 and a service and thorough
grease-up of the suspension and all the grease points in September 2021.
Supplied with a large and interesting history
file, it also comes with much useful technical literature relating to the model
plus two instruction manuals and a book on the AC marque.
As you can see in the photos, this exceedingly handsome AC Coupe has
the odd blemish to the paintwork here and there and a slightly
tired interior which would respond well to some sympathetic TLC. More
importantly though, it has only covered around 8,000 miles since it was so
extensively and expertly overhauled by the late John Sichel so it should be
fighting fit mechanically.
It has been starting
easily and running sweetly as we have moved it around on site, with healthy oil
pressure and a notably smooth and quiet engine, although we did note a
slight tapping from underneath at idle which sounds like nothing more
than a loose exhaust mounting.
Last driven three
months ago to attend the London-Brighton Run, the vendor is now well into his
90s and has recently suffered a fall which means that he can no longer work on
the car, let alone drive it, hence the reason for sale.
The only other 2-4-6 Coupe we could find a record of selling in the
last 20 years or so was chassis number L554 which was sold by Bonhams in 2018
for just under £40k but had a Jaguar XK 3.4 engine fitted in place of the
original AC two-litre unit.
One of only three
such cars known to survive in the UK, with perhaps another couple hiding in
private collections on the Continent, this supremely elegant and
well-historied AC is on offer here at a very modest guide price. All
it needs now is an enthusiastic new owner who can add their own chapter to
its interesting 89-year-life to date and continue to preserve it for future
generations to enjoy.
Consigned by James
Dennison – 07970 309907 – [email protected]