01-01-2022, 01:24 AM
The elbow item is definately a hand operated horn, my guess for the underfloor item is friction damper, one can see it has front mounted ones.
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Teaser
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01-01-2022, 01:24 AM
The elbow item is definately a hand operated horn, my guess for the underfloor item is friction damper, one can see it has front mounted ones.
01-01-2022, 05:42 AM
01-01-2022, 06:09 AM
(This post was last modified: 01-01-2022, 06:16 AM by Bob Culver.)
Thanks Squeak
Novel application of s.as. I had lever hydraulics which protruded similarly. I wonder how the horn compared with a simple rubber bulb type .Hopefully it had a lock pin for when parked. Anyone ever seen and heard one? Although some way fron boyhood I would not be able to resist. Presumably a large leather washer or somesuch. The high headlights on the later sv Morris Minor were reckoned to cost 1 1/2 mph. What would the horn have trimmed?
01-01-2022, 09:17 AM
(01-01-2022, 05:42 AM)Tony Press Wrote:(30-12-2021, 12:03 PM)Mike Costigan Wrote: Twin carbs and pressure-fed lubrication; I think Cutler's number 13 entry at Le Mans was the only car to have the spare wheel mounted under the tail like that. The carbs aren't drawn, but the twin inlet stacks are visible. As Russell has identified, the Le Mans cars have friction dampers, more clearly seen on the Waite car photograph: 1923 Boulogne car at Le Mans 1 Waite & Depper (2).jpg (Size: 52.52 KB / Downloads: 142) The horn is a standard Klaxon unit, considerably louder than the little grunt one gets from the standard Rist or Benjamin horn.
01-01-2022, 05:38 PM
Interesting details such as the correct gearbox/propshaft universal and forward-placed gearbox oil filler...
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