Austin 10 hp

The Austin 10 hp is a small car produced between 1910 and 1915[1] by the British car manufacturer Austin at their Longbridge, Worcestershire plant near Birmingham. 1,336 cars were made, 213 with the 1125 cc engine and 1,123 with the 1615 cc engine.[5] Like the 1087 cc Austin 7 hp produced by both Austin and Du Cros's Swift Motor Company it was not very successful when sold with the small engine.

Austin 10-hp
Open 2-seater 1913
Chassis 10835, body by Tasmanian Motor Co, Launceston, Tasmania
Overview
ManufacturerAustin
Production1910–15[1]
AssemblyLongbridge Works, Birmingham[2]
Body and chassis
Body style
  • Courier open 2-seater
  • open tourer
  • Sirdar phaeton
  • chassis for bespoke body
Powertrain
Engine
  • 1125 cc vertical inline four cylinder[1]
  • 1615 cc vertical inline four cylinder[1]
Transmission
  • 3-speed gearbox
  • Austin segmental cone clutch, 4-speed gearbox, propellor shaft with universal joints to live rear axle through bevel gears.[3]
Dimensions
Wheelbase
  • 96 in (2,438 mm)
  • 99 in (2,515 mm) or
    111 in (2,819 mm)
track 48 in (1,219 mm)[1]
Length
  • 130 in (3,302 mm)
  • 147 in (3,734 mm)[1]
Width
  • 55.5 in (1,410 mm)
  • not reported[1]
Kerb weight
  • 10 12 long cwt (1,176 lb; 533 kg)
  • not reported[1]
Chronology
PredecessorAustin 7 hp
Austin 10–12
T-head
Engine 10835, 1913
Overview
ManufacturerAustin
Layout
Configurationvertical inline four cylinder[1]
Displacement
  • 1,125 cc (69 cu in)[1]
  • 1,615 cc (99 cu in)[1]
Cylinder bore
Piston stroke3½" 88.9 mm[1]
Valvetrainsidevalves[1]
Combustion
Fuel systemClaudel carburettor[1]
Fuel typepetrol
Oil systempressure
Cooling systemwater
Output
Power output
  • not reported
  • 16 bhp at 1,500 rpm[4]
  • Tax horsepower 10
  • Tax horsepower 14.32
Chronology
PredecessorAustin 7 hp 1087 cc single cylinder
Successornone

The original small 4-cylinder 1125 cc engine was replaced in 1913 with a larger 14.32 horsepower 1615 cc engine.[6] Though rated for tax at 14.3 horsepower this larger engined model is sometimes referred to as the Austin 10/12.

In 1913, the 10 hp was the cheapest model in the Austin range, costing £260 for a chassis with tyres.[7] The 10 hp (of 14.32-h.p.) was renamed 12–14 hp before midsummer 1915[8] but production was limited due to the war.

Ten horsepower

The high-speed type vertical straight four-cylinder engine has a bore and stroke of 63.5 mm × 88.9 mm (2 12 in × 3 12 in) giving a capacity of 1125 cc and an RAC and fiscal rating of 10.0 horsepower.

Fourteen horsepower

The new car with the 42 per cent larger engine was described in the Daily Mail newspaper in October 1912. Throttle and ignition levers are mounted on the top of the steering wheel, a foot accelerator is also being fitted. The petrol tank is mounted on the dash.[6]

The high-speed type "T"-head vertical straight four-cylinder engine has a bore and stroke of 76 mm × 88.9 mm (3 in × 3 12 in) giving a capacity of 1615 cc and an RAC and fiscal rating of 14.32 horsepower. The cylinders are cast separately in spite of the general trend to monobloc engines. As before the engine is arranged to have interchangeable exhaust and inlet valves on opposing sides of the engine.[6] Engine output was quoted as 12.5 brake horsepower at 1,000 r.p.m. and fully 16 brake horsepower on acceleration to 1,500 r.p.m.[4]

There is a cooling fan for the honeycomb radiator and the engine incorporates a pump to ensure the flow of coolant. Lubrication is forced by pump to all the bearings. A float indicator shows the depth of oil in the crank chamber. Ignition is by High Tension Bosch magneto and may be manually advanced or retarded. The carburettor is by Claudel.[6]

L to R: clutch, bottom of pedals, gearbox, pedal brake on drive-shaft

The thin steel-cone clutch engages with the Ferodo lined flywheel. The Ferodo linings are in sections which may be replaced individually. The gearbox is suspended at four points. It is operated by a hand lever controlled by a gate and now has four speeds forward and reverse.[3][6]

Drive is taken by propeller shaft with universal joints to a live axle, the actual drive being by bevel gearing. The detachable steel wheels are by Austin-Sankey.[6]

Brakes suspension steering

The usual foot (transmission) and hand (back wheels) brake levers are provided. The pressed steel frame is suspended by three-quarter elliptic springs at the rear and semi-elliptic in front. The steering gear incorporates a provision to take up wear.[6]

Road test

John Phillimore of the Daily Mail took out a car with a four-seater body complete with hood and screen – there was no attempt to reduce weight. The engine's running he said was very pleasing giving the impression of an engine of much larger dimensions. No vibration was felt up to about 37 or 38 miles per hour when a slight but by no means annoying vibration appeared. The engine was very flexible in traffic though the sensitive throttle lever must be worked smoothly. The car tested had the old-type clutch and three-speed gearbox. Brakes are powerful and smooth but the hand lever for the wheel brakes is outside. Steering was stiff at low speed. The back axle was quiet, the only noise when running was a slight hum when using the indirect speeds.[6]

The car's switch and oil gauge are mounted below the petrol tank on the dash, where Phillimore considered they stood a good chance of getting severe kicks from passengers' feet. Prices were £240 or £250 for the chassis depending on wheelbase which may be 8 ft 3 in or 9 ft. The shorter body was priced at £55, the longer £65. Hood and screen were extra.[6]

Bodies

Open 2-seater with dickey

2-seater 1913, body by Dalgety
car 10942, engine 11051

Tourer

Tourer 1914, body by Peters
Car 11165, engine 11294
The only brakes on the (rear) wheels are controlled by the lever visible behind the spare wheel

Sirdar phaeton

Austin's 10-h.p. four-seater phaeton was called Sirdar. It was supplied fitted with leather upholstery and horsehair cushions. A Cape hood was fitted and side curtains. There was a double folding glass screen with brass fittings, a spare wheel and tyre, Lucas paraffin side and tail lamps and Solar mirror lens acetylene headlamps with separate generator. A speedometer and mileage recorder, horn, tyre pump, lifting jack, kit of tools and accessories were all supplied.[4]

1912 Sirdar phaeton canvas taut
1913 Sirdar phaeton canvas slack
Car 10605, engine 10694

Production

  • All numbers extracted from data in the publication by Ian Dimmer, The Edwardian Austin, the survivors, The Vintage Austin Register Limited, 2014
calendar year
total

production

1125 cc 1615 cc 3-speed

gearbox

4-speed

gearbox

1910
10
9
1
10
1911
153
153
153
1912
294
51
243
146
148
1913
495
495
495
1914
269
269
269
1915
115
115
1
114
1336
213
1123
310
1026
gollark: Surely this would imply that you should break rules in a way which is *non-obviously* beneficial to you, as well.
gollark: Huh, I skimread that as "at least" and got completely the wrong idea.
gollark: I think this is one of those things where relative ability matters more than absolute ability.
gollark: It seems that some people are consistently more likeable across domains, for whatever reason.
gollark: "Magically be likeable to people who have power in whatever area you're doing stuff" in then.

References

  1. David Culshaw, Peter Horrobin, The Complete Catalogue of British Cars 1895–1975, Veloce Publishing, Dorchester UK, 1974 ISBN 9781874105930
  2. Austin The Times, Wednesday, 2 October 1912; pg. 33; Issue 40019.
  3. The Olympia Motor Show. The Times, Tuesday, 12 November 1912; pg. 5; Issue 40054
  4. S. A. Mining Journal, Johannesburg, 4 October, l9l3
  5. Ian Dimmer, The Edwardian Austin, the survivors, The Vintage Austin Register Limited, 2014
  6. Motoring, John Phillimore. Daily Mail, Wednesday, 23 October 1912; Issue 5163
  7. "Austin advertisement". The Autocar. 10 May 1913.
  8. Display advertisement, Austin. Illustrated London News, [Saturday], [12 June 1915]; Issue 3973
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