The Bentley 6½ Litre and the high-performance Bentley Speed Six were rolling chassis[3] produced by Bentley from 1926 to 1930. The Speed Six, introduced in 1928, became the most successful racing Bentley. Two Bentley Speed Sixes became known as the Blue Train Bentleys after their owner Woolf Barnato raced the Blue Train in 1930.

Bentley 6½ Litre & Speed Six
Speed Six Mulliner drophead coupé 1930
Overview
ManufacturerBentley Motors Limited
Production1926–1930
544 produced[1][2]
AssemblyCricklewood, UK
DesignerWalter Owen Bentley
Body and chassis
Classrolling chassis
Body styleas arranged with coachbuilder by customer[3]
LayoutFR layout
Powertrain
Engine6.5 L I6
Dimensions
Wheelbase132 in (3,353 mm)[4][5]
138 in (3,505 mm)[6]
140.5 in (3,569 mm)[5]
144 in (3,658 mm)
145.5 in (3,696 mm)
150 in (3,810 mm)[4]
151.5 in (3,848 mm)
152.5 in (3,874 mm)[4][5]
Chronology
SuccessorBentley 8 Litre

Background

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By 1924 Bentley had been in business for five years. He decided to build a larger chassis than the 3 Litre, with a smoother, more powerful, engine. The new chassis would be more suitable for the large and heavy limousine bodies that many of his customers were then putting on his sports car chassis. The resulting car would be more refined and better suited for comfortable general motoring.[1][7][8]

Prototype race

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Bentley built a development mule with a 4¼ L straight-six engine[7][8] derived from the 3 Litre's four cylinder engine.[9] To disguise the car's origin, it had a large, wedge-shaped radiator[8][9][10] and was registered as a "Sun".[8][9] The chassis was given a large very lightweight Weymann-type[9] tourer body built by Freestone and Webb.[7]

W. O. Bentley combined one of his road tests of the Sun with a trip to see the 1924 French Grand Prix in Lyon.[7] On his return trip to the ferry at Dieppe, W. O. encountered another disguised car at a three-way junction. W. O. and the Rolls-Royce test driver recognized each other and began racing each other along the routes nationales.[7][9] This street race continued until the Rolls-Royce driver's hat blew off and he had to stop to retrieve it.[8][9] The Sun's tyres were heavily worn when W.O. got to the ferry at Dieppe.[8]

6½ Litre

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1927 Bentley 6½ Litre
with H. J. Mulliner & Co. limousine body
 
Rear view

Realizing from the impromptu race that the Sun had no performance advantage over Rolls-Royce's latest development,[7] W. O. increased the bore of his six-cylinder engine from 80 millimetres (3.1 in) to 100 millimetres (3.9 in).[8][9] With a 140 mm (5.5 in) stroke, the engine had a displacement of 6.6 L (6,597 cc (402.6 cu in))[1][9][11] Like the four-cylinder engine, Bentley's six included an overhead camshaft, 4 valves per cylinder,[9] and a single-piece engine block and cylinder head cast in iron, which eliminated the need for a head gasket.[12] In base form, with a single Smiths 5-jet carburettor,[1] twin ignition magnetos,[1][8][9] and a compression ratio of 4.4:1, the Bentley 6½ Litre delivered 147 horsepower (110 kW) at 3500 RPM.[8][11]

Although based on the 3 Litre's engine, the 6½ engine incorporated many improvements. The 3 Litre's cone-type clutch[13] was replaced by a dry-plate design[5] that incorporated a clutch brake for fast gear changes,[citation needed] and the car had power-assisted[1] four-wheel brakes with finned drums. The front brakes had 4 leading shoes per drum.[citation needed] By operating a patented compensating device, the driver could adjust all four brakes to correct for wear while the car was moving, which was particularly advantageous during races.[citation needed]

A variety of wheelbases were provided ranging from 132 to 152.5 in (3,353 to 3,874 mm); the most popular was 150 inches.[4]

Speed Six

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Old Number One, winner of the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1929 and 1930
 
Speed Six tourer with original body by coachbuilder Hooper

The Bentley Speed Six chassis was introduced in 1928[5] as a more sporting version of the Bentley 6½ Litre.[12] With a single-port block, two SU carburettors,[5][8][11] a high-performance camshaft,[14] and a compression ratio of 5.3:1, the Speed Six's engine produced 180 hp (130 kW) at 3500 rpm.[5][11] The Speed Six chassis was available to customers with wheelbases of 138 inches (3,505 mm),[6] 140.5 inches (3,569 mm), and 152.5 inches (3,874 mm).[5] The 138 inch wheelbase was the most popular.[6]

The Criminal Investigation Department of the Western Australia Police operated two saloon-bodied examples as patrol cars.[4]

In March 1930, Barnato raced against the Blue Train in a Speed Six with H. J. Mulliner saloon coachwork, reaching his club in London before the train was due in the station at Calais. It had generally been believed that the car in the race was a Gurney Nutting Sportsman Coupé, but that car was delivered to Barnato in May 1930, more than a month after the race.[15][16]

Factory racing cars

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The racing version of the Speed Six had a wheelbase of 11 feet (132 in; 3,353 mm)[5] and an engine with a compression ratio of 6.1:1 that produced 200 hp (150 kW) at 3500 rpm.[17] Successful in racing, these cars won the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1929 and 1930[18][19] with Bentley Boys drivers "Tim" Birkin, Glen Kidston, and Woolf Barnato, the chairman of Bentley Motors.[19]

Production

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  • 6½ Litre: 362[1]
  • Speed Six: 182[20]
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Notes

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References

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Print
  • Brooks, Philip C. (2009). Carpenter, Rhonda; Iwalani, Kahikina (eds.). "The Mighty Sixes". The International Club for Rolls-Royce & Bentley Owners Desk Diary 2010. Tampa, FL USA: Faircount: 26–35.
  • Culshaw, David; Horrobin, Peter (2013) [1974]. "Bentley". The Complete Catalogue of British Cars 1895 - 1975 (e-book ed.). Poundbury, Dorchester, UK: Veloce Publishing. pp. 80–84. ISBN 978-1-845845-83-4.
  • Feast, Richard (2004). The DNA of Bentley. St. Paul MN USA: MotorBooks International. ISBN 9780760319468. Retrieved 24 December 2013.
  • Johnson, Harvey (Fall 2011). Verschoor, Ron (ed.). "The Eight-Litre: Bentley's Last is Bentley's Best". The Classic Car. LIX (3). Beverley Hills, CA US: Classic Car Club of America: 3–11. ISSN 0009-8310.
  • Posthumus, Cyril (1977) [1977]. The Story of Veteran & Vintage Cars. John Wood, illustrator. Feltham, Middlesex, UK: Hamlyn. p. 102. ISBN 0-600-39155-8.
  • Robson, Graham (2001). The Illustrated Directory of Classic Cars. St. Paul, MN USA: MBI Publishing. pp. 66–69. ISBN 0-7603-1049-1. Retrieved 27 December 2013.
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