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1931 Bentley 4½ Litre    
Original 1936 Numbers
Chassis No. RC41
Engine No. RC418E
Registration No. EMF 113

  This car - updated
Chassis No. RC41
Engine No.
Registration No. EMF 113

(Current owner / former owners, please come forward with further updates. - March 2019)
 
 

"Was talking to the new owner of EMF 113. He intends to have it fully restored to her former glory!"

 
     
     
  Source: Stephen Armstrong
Posted: May 08, 2019
 
     
March 2019
Click on thumbnail for larger view
 
 
 

April 2019: Sold for £444,375

Found on H&H website on March 06, 2019

LOT 72

20th March 2019
Imperial War Museum, Duxford

1936 Bentley 4.5 Litre Vanden Plas Tourer
Chassis No: RC41
Registration No: EMF 113
Estimate: £150,000 - £200,000
MOT: Exempt

- 1 of just 6 W.O. Bentley 4 1/2 Litre cars assembled by the Service Department from new old stock parts in 1936
- Matching numbers and original Vanden Plas Tourer coachwork
- Two owners from new (current since 1952)
- The ultimate Bentley 'barn find' in the marque's centenary year?

Rolls-Royce's takeover of Bentley Motors Ltd in 1931 prompted the founding of a new Service Department for the latter's existing customers (many of whose cars were still under warranty). Based at the Kingsbury Works, Hendon, North London and staffed by ex-Cricklewood stalwarts such as Nobby Clarke (former Racing Team Manager) and Hubert Pike (ex-Director), the new concern inherited a large cache of new old stock and reconditioned parts. Maintenance and repair work on W.O. Bentleys began to tail off during 1936 as the last of the five year guarantees expired. Determined to keep the Service Department busy, Clarke and Pike came up with the idea of building ten R.C. (Reconditioned Chassis) Series cars - six 4¢ Litres and four 3 Litres.

Writing to The Chief Officer, Local Taxation Department, Middlesex County Council, Dean Stanley Street, Westminster, SW1 on May 22nd 1936, Bentley Motors (1931) Ltd stated its intention to produce a series of 'reconditioned old type Bentleys constructed mainly from new parts and having therefore, no previous registration'. Allocated the chassis numbers RC41 - RC46, the six 4¢ Litre cars were built to a highly desirable specification incorporating a 10ft 10in wheelbase chassis, standard crank 4¢ Litre engine, D Type gearbox, 3.53 Speed Six-type rear axle, servo type self-wrapping front brakes with heavy type front axle and 4 Litre steering gear. Concessions to modernity included the fitment of twin SU electric fuel pumps (in place of an Autovac) and 19-inch road wheels.

Chassis RC41 - RC45 were clothed by Vanden Plas with handsome aluminium two-door, four-seater Tourer bodies, while RC46 was bodied by Corsica as a Four-Door Saloon. Proudly shown to first owner Colonel Guy Bedford in the Service Department whilst he was collecting a 3 Litre that he would later part-exchange for it, Chassis RC 41 was road registered as 'EMF 113' on September 1st 1936 and issued with a one-year guarantee. A wealthy businessman who ran the chemical giant Geigy UK Ltd (later Ciba Geigy and now Novartis) and was a frequent visitor to Switzerland, Colonel Bedford had the Bentley looked after by the Service Department up until 1939. Carefully stored during World War 2 and entrusted to H.R. Owen and S.J. Lawrence for fettling thereafter, the 4¢ Litre had flashing direction indicators installed on each side of the scuttle by order of the Swiss authorities when it was licensed there for nine months in about 1947.

Side-lined by a faulty drive gear train to its magnetos and water pump, the Tourer was purchased from Colonel Bedford by the late Charles Philip Blackham Esq. as a non-runner on March 14th 1952 for £260. A talented engineer and keen motorist, Mr Blackham collected 'EMF 113' from Salfords Garage, Brighton Road, Redhill, Surrey and soon had it running again. Used for daily travel as well as rally work and driving tests, Chassis RC41 was subject to various performance modifications. Re-bored and fitted with Specialloid pistons by the Service Department at 45,000 miles in 1939, the original engine had its compression ratio increased to approximately 6.75:1. The pistons had their skirts trimmed and the flywheel was lightened. An uprated water pump was installed, and the ignition system converted to coil and magneto.

No stranger to high velocities, Mr Blackham sourced a pair of Lucas P100 headlights and Desmo auxiliary driving lights for the Bentley and affixed a plaque to its dashboard which reads: 'Speed Must Not Exceed 170mph'. He also rewired the 4¢ Litre and crafted a bespoke switch plate for it which was featured in the Bentley Drivers' Club Review. The same publication ran a story on the Tourer in its April 1965 issue, Mr Blackham commenting: 'Continuous cruising speeds of 70, 75 and 80mph are used regularly on the motorways with much higher speeds maintained briefly on occasions . . . Handling on the road is superb, with complete freedom from roll, the whole car always feeling taut, but strong-arm techniques are needed at times when cornering fast on indifferent surfaces. This latter characteristic is to me one of the great joys of Vintage motoring . . . With a good power / weight ratio (weight is deceptively low at only 36cwt), immense torque at medium engine revs, and high-geared steering, even driving in busy towns can be a pleasure . . . As might be expected the engine is extremely lively in its response to the throttle and yet the car lacks nothing in tractability'.

Unhappy with the aesthetics of the hood Vanden Plas had designed, Mr Blackham devised his own frame that sat within the body when folded. He also shortened the gear / handbrake levers, lowered the radiator by three-quarters of an inch and fabricated a front valance panel. Importantly, however, he made no substantial changes to the essence of the car which his family christened 'Blob' on account of its 'blob, blob, blob' exhaust note when idling in London traffic! Actually resident in Stockport, Cheshire for most of Mr Blackham's tenure, the Bentley participated in The Daily Telegraph's 1969 Manchester to Blackpool Veteran and Vintage Car Run. MOT paperwork on file ranges from a Test Certificate issued by Joseph Cockshoot (Stockport) Ltd on 21st April 1962 through to an Inspection Report Pass granted on November 7th 1988. Dormant for the last thirty years, the 4¢ Litre is now in need of extensive restoration. Dr Clare Hay inspected Chassis RC41 on Friday March 1st and a copy of her findings will be made available to interested parties upon request. Our own investigations revealed the number 'RC 41' stamped into the front axle, front chassis cross member (behind the radiator), D Type gearbox, steering box and rear axle nosepiece. The engine is correctly numbered as 'RC418E', while the rear axle casing bears the number 'FW2618' which relates to a 6¢ Litre that (a) served as a showroom demonstrator and (b) was first registered to marque saviour and thrice Le Mans winner Capt. Woolf Barnato. The Vanden Plas coachwork still bears its correct plaques and the number '70' is clearly visible to one of the seat bases (the body number allocated to the car was 3470).

Human frailty means that it is now impossible to buy a W.O. Bentley from its original owner. The best one can hope for is to acquire one from its second keeper - or in this case his estate. Of the six RC Series 4¢ Litre cars completed, Chassis RC41 is the only one to retain its original coachwork (the other five has been rebodied as 'Le Mans' style Tourers). As such, 'EMF 113' is utterly unique. We believe it to be a 'matching numbers' car and doubt that another 'garage find' W.O. Bentley of such rarity and importance will emerge during this, the marque's centenary year. An absolutely unrepeatable opportunity for Bentley aficionados everywhere and a car that surely deserves to grace the lawns of the world's finest concours events once restored to its former glory.

 
     
     
  Source: H&H
Posted: Mar 06, 2019
 
     
January 2019
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"I had the opportunity to see this car recently. It hasn't run for some time but seemed (to a non-vintage Bentley person) to be reasonably complete. This photo of EMF 113 was taken by my friend Tony Cooke recently. The only validation I have that it is EMF 113 is the registration number shown in the photo."

 
     
     
  Source: Mike Edwards
Posted: Jan 31, 2019
 
     
1974
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Manchester to Blackpool Rally 1974.

 
     
     
  Source: Flickr, photo by user 'Terry Wha'
Posted: Jan 28, 2009
 
     
Click on thumbnail for larger view
   
 
 

 

 
     
     
  Source: H&H
Posted: Mar 06, 2019
 
     
EARLIEST RECORD OF HISTORICAL FACTS & INFORMATION
 
Chassis No. RC41
Engine No. RC418E
Registration No. EMF 113
Date of Delivery: Sep 1936
Type of Body: 4-seater
Coachbuilder: Vanden Plas
Type of Car: No info
   
First Owner: Mrs M Bedford
 
     
  More Info: According to original Vanden Plas Coachbuilder records, this car was originally fitted with Body No. 3470 with a 2-door, 4-seater Sports for Bentley; maroon / black; £182; 5/36.

Michael Hay, in his book Bentley: The Vintage Years, 1997, states: "Vanden Plas body no. 3470."
 
     
     
  Updated: Jul 06, 2007
Posted: Mar 01, 2007
 
     
 
 
 
Submit more information on this car
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Sep 30, 2020 - Info and photograph received from Simon Hunt for Chassis No. RL3439
Sep 30, 2020 - Info and photographs received from Dick Clay for Chassis No. 147
Sep 29, 2020 - Info and photographs received from Ernst Jan Krudop for his Chassis No. AX1651
Sep 28, 2020 - Info and photographs received from Lars Hedborg for his Chassis No. KL3590
Sep 25, 2020 - Info and photograph added for Registration No. XV 3207
Sep 24, 2020 - Info and photograph added for Registration No. YM 7165
[More]

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