13-01-2021, 05:06 PM
As I was bored and, like many, in this Groundhog Day scenario, I decided to do a bit of digging and do an analysis on one of my Sevens...an AG tourer. So bear with me.
AG's seem to be a bit of a "missing link" in the Seven world...neither fish nor fowl. They were produced on the 6ft 3in chassis when Short Chassis frames were supposed to be ending production and continued to be made for more than 12 months into the "Long Chassis" era. They are late (wider) Chummy shaped, but the bodies are made from steel with some wood framing, not from aluminium around mostly wood. The three big rear panel pressings have distinctive vertical seams (made from rolled, curved overlapping ends). The sills are also steel and this makes for a very strong body. When I got mine my first thought was to turn it into a trials car...It would stand a lot of serious bouncing!
Rinsey Mills doesn't mention the AG in his book covering" all passenger car and sports models.."...AE, AF, milk delivery(!) AH tourers, all get their place in the sun! Close reading reveals a mention under the AF label..."a steel bodied version of this style replaced the aluminium one having a slightly shorter bonnet....No half beading around the door edge." this HAS to be the mythical AG!
I now moved on to that remarkable resource...the Chassis Register and was instructed by the keeper of the files how to download a section (many thanks!) I now had a list of some 47 cars purporting to be AG's! With nothing better to do I interrogated the DVLA "Tax your car" site and came up with these numbers (E & OE Excepted as they used to say) - and may still do-:
Cars not in the UK seven
Cars Taxed in UK nineteen
Cars on SORN four
Untaxed/un-SORNed nine - All a bit naughty, should be SORN surely!
Not on the DVLA database seven. Lost and gone forever perhaps?
Turned into a Volvo ! one
Now the anorak goes on: Colours where identified showed
Maroon eight (mine appeared to be originally maroon under the petrol tank, but is now blue)
Blue eight
Yellow five
Red three
Black three
Green three
Another extraordinary fact was that many engine capacities were not "747cc".. ..885, (4) 858(2) Mind you the DVLA tried to make one of mine an 848cc Austin Seven as in Mk1 Mini.... It is easy to correct with the DVLA.
Using chassis numbers, but remember the Association records only cover "known" cars, some approximate production dates can be established. If anyone has REAL numbers or production volumes "ye are to declare them!!"
I suggest the AG was in production from around Q1 1931 until end of Q4 1932.
Concurrent with it were the AF: mid 1930 to end Q3 1932, and
AH from Q1 1931 to end Q2 1934. Even the AJ may have started production as the AG was ending.
What I cannot establish is how many AG were made. Were they using up Chassis? perhaps, but I believe Vans on short chassis were built for some years...Someone will know. A good story would be that Herbert was walking found the factory and saw a pile of Chassis and said "Turn 'em into something useful" and the AG was the result, but press tools would have been needed, so not a cheap exercise.
I have brought four Austin Sevens back from the USA, none went out there as new cars. One was a 1928AD Chummy, another a 1929 RK alloy saloon and no less than two very disreputable AG tourers. So at one time recently I owned about 10% of the running AG's in the UK!
What we do to pass the time!
AG's seem to be a bit of a "missing link" in the Seven world...neither fish nor fowl. They were produced on the 6ft 3in chassis when Short Chassis frames were supposed to be ending production and continued to be made for more than 12 months into the "Long Chassis" era. They are late (wider) Chummy shaped, but the bodies are made from steel with some wood framing, not from aluminium around mostly wood. The three big rear panel pressings have distinctive vertical seams (made from rolled, curved overlapping ends). The sills are also steel and this makes for a very strong body. When I got mine my first thought was to turn it into a trials car...It would stand a lot of serious bouncing!
Rinsey Mills doesn't mention the AG in his book covering" all passenger car and sports models.."...AE, AF, milk delivery(!) AH tourers, all get their place in the sun! Close reading reveals a mention under the AF label..."a steel bodied version of this style replaced the aluminium one having a slightly shorter bonnet....No half beading around the door edge." this HAS to be the mythical AG!
I now moved on to that remarkable resource...the Chassis Register and was instructed by the keeper of the files how to download a section (many thanks!) I now had a list of some 47 cars purporting to be AG's! With nothing better to do I interrogated the DVLA "Tax your car" site and came up with these numbers (E & OE Excepted as they used to say) - and may still do-:
Cars not in the UK seven
Cars Taxed in UK nineteen
Cars on SORN four
Untaxed/un-SORNed nine - All a bit naughty, should be SORN surely!
Not on the DVLA database seven. Lost and gone forever perhaps?
Turned into a Volvo ! one
Now the anorak goes on: Colours where identified showed
Maroon eight (mine appeared to be originally maroon under the petrol tank, but is now blue)
Blue eight
Yellow five
Red three
Black three
Green three
Another extraordinary fact was that many engine capacities were not "747cc".. ..885, (4) 858(2) Mind you the DVLA tried to make one of mine an 848cc Austin Seven as in Mk1 Mini.... It is easy to correct with the DVLA.
Using chassis numbers, but remember the Association records only cover "known" cars, some approximate production dates can be established. If anyone has REAL numbers or production volumes "ye are to declare them!!"
I suggest the AG was in production from around Q1 1931 until end of Q4 1932.
Concurrent with it were the AF: mid 1930 to end Q3 1932, and
AH from Q1 1931 to end Q2 1934. Even the AJ may have started production as the AG was ending.
What I cannot establish is how many AG were made. Were they using up Chassis? perhaps, but I believe Vans on short chassis were built for some years...Someone will know. A good story would be that Herbert was walking found the factory and saw a pile of Chassis and said "Turn 'em into something useful" and the AG was the result, but press tools would have been needed, so not a cheap exercise.
I have brought four Austin Sevens back from the USA, none went out there as new cars. One was a 1928AD Chummy, another a 1929 RK alloy saloon and no less than two very disreputable AG tourers. So at one time recently I owned about 10% of the running AG's in the UK!
What we do to pass the time!