Jump to content

Recommended Posts

  • HMC changed the title to HMC NEW wolseley
Posted

What a beauty! Such a cracking looking side profile to these big old girls. 

Posted
On 31/08/2025 at 22:21, dave j said:

I saw you this afternoon! I was in the Trout and Tipple car park and saw you drive past in this. 

Another Tavi shiter? 

I'm coming down weekend of 20/21 BTW, staying in Bere Ferrers

Posted

Having very little exposure to British car of that vintage I have to say thats a pretty badass looking car right there! Great purchase.

Posted

Those Palmer Wolseleys certainly are lovely looking cars !

Are they as stodgy to drive as I imagine them to be ?

Posted

The Wolseley is lovely, I do not have much knowledge of cars from this era but it is a very good looking car. Is it the same era as the Riley Pathfinder?  It looks similar to me from the side profile but I see the handbrake is in a different place. I am fairly sure the Riley has the handbrake to the right of the driver seat on the floor whereas the Wolseley appears to have it on the bulkhead left of the steering column? Another great car from HMC 

Posted

Similar era to the Pathfinder - in fact the Pathfinder's replacement, the 2.6, was basically a rebadged 6/90.  (The Pathfinder had the twin cam from the RM rather than the C series.  And dodgy rear suspension.)

Posted

I salute you. This is amazing. 🫡

Also dibs, if it doesn’t get swapped for a Lancia in two weeks 😄

Posted
2 hours ago, grogee said:

Another Tavi shiter? 

I'm coming down weekend of 20/21 BTW, staying in Bere Ferrers

I'm in Plymouth so not far away at all!

Posted

Ah, I've been watching that one's progress for years now and have come close to buying it a couple of times. Please, please do let me know when you want to move it on.

Really needs the crossplies putting back on, not sure what the last owner was thinking there, but it cant be doing the ride & handling any favours. Regardless, it's a lovely lovely lovely thing. The British Aurelia! (perhaps)

Posted
20 minutes ago, vtec-e said:

Nice car.

Was the MG Magnette also part of this family ?

I think they were still separate firms, Wolseley was a touch above MG, and I think a bit more modern? Less sporty, moar Lux

Posted
28 minutes ago, vtec-e said:

Nice car.

Was the MG Magnette also part of this family ?

You're probably thinking of the Wolseley 4/44, which was the base for the MG Magnette ZA. 

Gerald Palmer was responsible for both cars, which explains the visual similarities. But the 4/44 was smaller and cheaper than the 6/90.

  • Like 3
Posted
On 05/09/2025 at 08:53, HMC said:

out for an early morning walk…

IMG_9336.jpeg.5c8db9c3569020bb7735aac0fd0fecdc.jpeg

IMG_9338.jpeg.ec7bf2201eadbb2fa1803398bf9dd0cd.jpeg

I've only ever seen one Swift in person and that was an entirely random aerodrome car park encounter back in 2014.  Looks like yours is the sporty model.

201407-03.jpg.c9b72f8205a8606d09113e0ecb01b757.jpg

201407-05.jpg.932d202505ed467b20c19522ae2bb4af.jpg

201407-07.jpg.80f88846e614b6b2d26feae1b32fd4b7.jpg

 

  • Like 2
Posted

That's a good looking car, if you'd told me it'd been roof chopped I'd have believed you.

Is it ex-police or just had some accessories fitted?

Posted
3 hours ago, bunglebus said:

That's a good looking car, if you'd told me it'd been roof chopped I'd have believed you.

Is it ex-police or just had some accessories fitted?

I think its just been accessorised. Thanks to @LightBulbFun we now know its original number was 597GFM - ive had a quick google but not seen any period photos

image.jpeg.65d37da639ce81c1b2d7e5bd2f68acc1.jpeg

  • Like 4
Posted

IIRC wolseley and riley names of the time often related to cylinders / bhp- or displacement and bhp roughly

hence

4/44

6/80

15/50 (not 15 cylinders but 1.5L)

6/90

4/72

etc

Posted
3 hours ago, bunglebus said:

That's a good looking car, if you'd told me it'd been roof chopped I'd have believed you.

I thought that too, it's a great shape!

  • Agree 2
Posted

The Wolseley system of model numbers changed over the years.  In all cases the second number is the actual horsepower of the engine. 

The first number was originally taxable horsepower. When that taxation system ended the first number became the number of cylinders.  Later it became displacement, expressed for some reason in tenths of a litre, like the 15/50 that HMC mentioned with its 1.5 litres and (approx) 50hp.

Eventually they gave up on all that, so the 18/85 (1800 Landcrab) was replaced by the "Six" (2200 Landcrab) and finally the "Wolseley saloon" (Wedge/Princess) in recognition that there was now only one model.

Posted
On 09/09/2025 at 23:46, Sigmund Fraud said:

Gerald Palmer was responsible for both cars, which explains the visual similarities. But the 4/44 was smaller and cheaper than the 6/90.

Palmer was one of the great British designers, but unfortunately fell foul of the foul mouthed idiot Leonard Lord, a typical "old school" boss. Issigonis replaced him, sowing the seeds for the downfall of BMC.

  • Like 1
Posted
14 minutes ago, artdjones said:

Palmer was one of the great British designers, but unfortunately fell foul of the foul mouthed idiot Leonard Lord, a typical "old school" boss. Issigonis replaced him, sowing the seeds for the downfall of BMC.

There's never been a shortage of brilliant engineers in this country. The problem has always been with how much freedom they were given by management - it tended to either be too little, or too much. In the case of Issigonis, it was definitely far too much.

  • Like 1

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...