Английская Википедия:Austin A30

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Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Use British English Шаблон:Infobox automobile

The Austin A30 is a small family car produced by Austin from May 1952 to September 1956. It was launched at the 1951 Earls Court Motor Show as the "New Austin Seven" and was Austin's competitor with the Morris Minor.

At launch, the car cost £507 (equivalent to £15,793.36 in 2019) undercutting the Minor by £62.[1]

Styling

Though Austin had previously contracted the American industrial designer, Raymond Loewy in the task, the designs of Holden 'Bob' Koto were discarded and the car we know was eventually styled in-house by Ricardo 'Dick' Burzi.[2]

Features

The body structure was designed by T.K. Garrett, who had been an aeronautical engineer before joining Austin. It was of fully stressed monocoque chassis-less construction,[2] which made it lighter and stiffer than most contemporary vehicles, the first Austin to be made in this way. Inside there were individual seats at the front and a bench at the rear covered in PVC with an option of leather facings on the seats. Evidence of economy was seen in the original AS3 version only having a single windscreen wiper, central combined stop/tail/numberplate lamp and a sun visor in front of the driver only. A passenger-side wiper and sun visor, and a heater were available as optional extras. The AS3 was also different to later models with a round speedometer and side mounted fuel filler neck. A smaller grille was fitted and an Austin winged badge mounted just above.

Originally only offered as a 4-door saloon, 2-door variants were introduced in late 1953, and in 1954 a van and van-based "Countryman" estate were made available.[3] These later A30 had the trapezoidal speedo and dual brake/side lights. The fuel filler neck also moved to the rear panel as in the leter A35 models. Despite having a smaller loading capacity than the equivalent BMC O-type Minor based vans (60 cu ft / 1.70 m3 as opposed to 76 cu ft / 2.15 m3) the Austin van offered the same payload. Being slightly lighter and stiffer, it was favoured by businessmen, and saw long service for many. One prototype Sports Tourer was built but the vehicle was never put into production. That prototype is on display at the British Motor Museum at Gaydon in the UK.

The A30 was replaced by the Austin A35 in 1956, by which time 223,264 A30s had been built.[4][5]

The A30 had a smaller rear window than the A35 and trafficators instead of modern indicators, which popped out from the B pillar when operated by a knob mounted on the centre of the dashboard.

The car, along with the larger-engined (and hence faster) A35, was quite successful in 1950s saloon car racing, and some still appear in historic events.

Файл:Austin A30 mfd 1955 948cc.jpg
Austin A30 2-door saloon
Файл:Austin A30 4-door (1956) - 9136600669.jpg
Austin A30 4-door saloon
Файл:Austin A30 Countryman 1956.JPG
Austin A30 Countryman estate
Файл:Vintage Austin van outside the 'Railway Arms' at Downham Market station - geograph.org.uk - 1376486.jpg
Austin A30 5 cwt delivery van
Файл:The Austin A30 in Barmouth and Tal-y-llyn (16322549018).jpg
Promotional image of The Austin A30 in Barmouth (1956)
Файл:Austin A30 22 February 2014.jpg
Austin A30 with trafficator deployed

Performance

The car's newly designed A-Series straight-4 engine was state of the art for the time and returned an average fuel consumption of 42 mpg / under 7L/100 km. With spirited driving the A30 was able to attain a top speed of Шаблон:Convert (factory quoted). In its road test The Motor magazine achieved a top speed of Шаблон:Convert and a 0–60 mph time of 42.3 seconds. Braking was effected by a hybrid system, with Lockheed fully hydraulic drum brakes at the front and a body-mounted single cylinder operating rods to the rear wheels, which despite being heavily criticised as archaic and old-fashioned, were reported to be quite acceptable. The rod system provided good handbrake efficiency and was applied by a lever in an unorthodox position to the right of the driver's seat (Right hand drive vehicles). Bumps were handled by independent coil springs at the front end and beam axle/semi-elliptic leaf springs at the back.

A car tested by The Motor magazine in 1952 had a top speed of Шаблон:Convert and could accelerate from 0–Шаблон:Convert in 29 seconds. A fuel consumption of Шаблон:Convert was recorded. The test car cost £553 including taxes. The optional radio was an extra £43 and the heater £9.[6] Performance data need to be seen in the context of fuel availability. Early in the Second World War "branded fuel" disappeared from sale in the UK, and the nationally available fuel available at the beginning of 1952 had an octane rating of just 70, which enforced relatively low compression ratios: this reduced the performance available from all cars, especially small ones. In 1952 branded fuels returned to the forecourts, available octane ratings began to increase, and compression ratios were progressively improved along with the performance figures of cars such as the Austin A30 and its A35 successor.[7]

Australian production

The A30 was produced in Australia by the Austin Motor Company (Australia) Pty Ltd from 1952 to 1954 and by its successor, the British Motor Corporation (Australia) Pty Ltd from 1954 to 1956.[8]

Engine

  • 803 cc BMC A-Series engine inline 4.
  • 58 mm bore x 76 mm stroke
  • pushrod-operated overhead valves
  • compression ratio 7.2:1
  • single Zenith 26JS or 26VME carburettor
  • 28 bhp (21 kW) at 4400 rpm
  • 40 lbf·ft (54 Nm) at 2200 rpm

New Austin Seven and Austin A30 Seven

Early sales literature used the names New Austin Seven[9] and Austin A30 Seven.[10]

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Further reading

External links

Шаблон:Commons category

Шаблон:British Motor Corporation cars, 1952-1966