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Alvis Speed 25

Alvis 4.3-litre
Bonhams - The Paris Sale 2012 - Alvis 4.3-Litre 'Long Bonnet' Sports Saloon - 1937 - 011.jpg
Sports coupé
by Mayfair Carriage Co 1937
Overview
Type car
Manufacturer Alvis
Production 198
Model years 1937 to 1940
Body and chassis
Class Full-size luxury car (F)
Body style
  • 4-door sports saloon
  • chassis only also supplied
Layout front-engine, rear-wheel-drive
Related Alvis Speed 25 3½-litre
Powertrain
Engine
  • 4,387 cc (268 cu in), 92 x 110 mm
  • Straight-6, Petrol
  • 137 bhp @3,600 rpm
  • 31.48 tax horsepower
Transmission

single plate clutch, separate 4-speed gearbox all-silent

and all-syncromesh, centre change lever, open tubular propellor shaft

with metal joints (arranged in a straight line), spiral bevel fully floating back axle
Dimensions
Wheelbase
  • 127 in (3,226 mm)
  • track 56 in (1,422 mm)
Length 191 in (4,851.4 mm)
Width 70 in (1,778.0 mm)
Kerb weight 4,144 lb (1,880 kg)
Alvis Speed 25 3½-litre
1937-alvis-automobile-archives.jpg
open two-seater
by Offord & Sons 1937
Overview
Manufacturer Alvis
Production 1937–40
Body and chassis
Class Full-size luxury car (F)
Body style
  • 4-door sports saloon
  • 4-seater drop head coupé
  • sports 4-seater
  • chassis for bespoke body
Powertrain
Engine
  • 3,571 cc (218 cu in) 83 x 110 mm
  • Straight-6 Petrol
  • 106 bhp @3,800 rpm
  • 25.63 tax horsepower
Transmission

single plate clutch, separate 4-speed gearbox all-silent and

all-syncromesh, centre change lever, open tubular propellor

shaft with metal joints (arranged in a straight line), spiral bevel fully floating back axle
Dimensions
Wheelbase
  • 123 in (3,124 mm)
  • track 56 in (1,422 mm)
Length 190 in (4,826.0 mm)
Width 70 in (1,778.0 mm)
Kerb weight 4,088 lb (1,854 kg)
Chronology
Predecessor Alvis Speed 20 3½-litre

single plate clutch, separate 4-speed gearbox all-silent

and all-syncromesh, centre change lever, open tubular propellor shaft

single plate clutch, separate 4-speed gearbox all-silent and

all-syncromesh, centre change lever, open tubular propellor


The Alvis 4.3-litre and Alvis Speed 25 were British luxury touring cars announced in August 1936 and made until 1940 by Alvis Car and Engineering Company in Coventry. They replaced the Alvis Speed 20 2.8-litre and 3½-litre. They were widely considered one of the finest cars produced in the 1930s.

The Speed Twenty’s 2½-litre, 2.8-litre or 3½-litre engines with four main bearings were replaced in the 4.3-litre and 3½-litre Speed Twenty-Five with a strengthened new designed six-cylinder in-line unit now with seven main bearings.

The clutch, flywheel and crankshaft were balanced together, which minimised vibration. The cylinder head was of cast iron but the pistons were of aluminium. Two electric petrol pumps fed the three SU carburettors, which were protected by a substantial air filter. A new induction system incorporated an efficient silencing device.

Rear springs were 15 inches longer than in the previous model. The brakes had servo assistance.

Alvis did not make any of the bodies for the Speed 25. The cars were supplied in chassis form and firms such as Cross & Ellis (standard tourer) Charlesworth (standard saloon and Drop Head Coupé) as well as Vanden Plas, Lancefield Offord and others would fit suitably elegant open touring or saloon car bodies. The car was built on a heavy steel chassis with a substantial cross brace. With its sporty low slung aspect, all-synchro gearbox, independent front suspension and servo-assisted brakes, this was a fast, reliable and beautifully made car, although at almost £1000 it was not cheap. The survival rate for what was after all a hand-built car is surprisingly good. Later models featured increased chassis boxing, and to reduce the car’s weight Alvis cut numerous holes in the chassis box sections, which was also a solution tried less successfully earlier in the decade by Mercedes-Benz when confronting the same challenge with their enormously heavy Mercedes-Benz SSKL.


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