Bentley 3-Litre, 1923 | € 229.000,--
Bentley 3-Litre, year 1923. Chassis number 110, engine number 104. Registration KLY 3, nickname “Wilfred”. This Bentley was supplied new on June 4, 1923. The first dated work order reads: “Stripped for racing”. This Bentley 3-Litre was a Brooklands race winner in the hands of Captain Cecil Wingfield Twisleton‑Wykeham Fiennes. In 1923 Fiennes took first place in the Brooklands 90 mph Long Handicap race. Fiennes recorded two laps at an average speed of 92.23 mph. Another podium finish – third place – was secured in the Brooklands 35th 100 mph Short Handicap race. The Brooklands Automobile Racing Club (BARC) data of chassis 110 were checked and confirmed by the famous motorsport editor and Brooklands historian William “Bill” Boddy. The Bentley is documented in period photographs racing at Brooklands with a side‑exit exhaust and without wings. Other factory work orders mention the fitment of different rear axle ratios, the fitment of special high compression pistons, Hartford shock dampers etcetera. In December 1923 chassis 110 was ‘standardized’ by the factory and sold for 525 Pound Sterling to Mr. Angus Douglas Vickers (member of the Vickers family and owners of the famous Vickers aircraft factory located at Brooklands) on December 15, 1923. Vickers never raced the car, but he used it for personal transportation. In 1924 he had the car upgraded with additional front wheel brakes and the twin SU “Sloper” carburettors were fitted. In 1925 the engine was given a modest overhaul in the Kingsbury factory and later that year the car was sold to RAF Flight Lieutenant (and later squadron leader) John Brooke. In 1935 the last work order was entered in the factory maintenance register concerning a repair to the chassis. Then chassis 110 was still owned by John Brooke then living in Athens, Greece. Allegedly Mr. Brooke took the Bentley with him to Greece where he was stationed during the second World War. The Bentley survived the Second World War and was involved in an accident in 1947 that necessitated the installation of a replacement chassis frame from chassis 712. Despite this, the original identity of chassis 110 was retained, supported by surviving original components including the numbered switch plate, engine crankcase and petrol tank. After the repair, the car was submitted for reclassification to the road traffic authority to fall into a lower tax bracket and re‑registered as KLY 3. The previous owner (the late Mr. Lionel Burrell – founder of Classic Cars magazine, deceased March 2025) acquired the car in 1963 and cherished it for 60 years! In 1969, Mr. Burrell drove the famous “Bentley Boy” S.C.H. ‘Sammy’ Davis in KLY 3 to Le Mans for the marque's 50th anniversary! Mr. Burrell also had an interview with marque founder W.O. Bentley, and he took a photograph of him behind the wheel of the car that day! That photo was published on the cover of magazine The Autocar in January 1969. Later work on KLY 3 includes a body restoration in the 1980s and a valve gear overhaul in 2004 by Fopp d’Hane, with attention also given to the magnetos, tyres and carburettors. After 60 years of ownership the car moved on to the current owner in 2023. The current owner had the Bentley technically and mechanically checked over, serviced and prepared to take part in historic events. This fine Bentley 3-Litre has been maintained by marque specialists over the decades and retains a strong and well‑documented connection to its early competition history. The automobile shows a fantastic original patina, and the car runs and handles very well. We have never driven another pre‑war Bentley that allows the next gear to be selected almost by thought alone. The car is accompanied by extensive documentation from new, including its original Kingsbury factory service record, a handwritten log of the late‑1940s rebuild, a Three Litre Bentley handbook, Technical Facts of the Vintage Bentley manual, and numerous photographs and invoices. A unique opportunity to acquire a Brooklands race winning vintage Bentley!
This Bentley is for sale at Altena Classic Service.
Prijs: € 229.000, -.
Altena 2601
Technical specifications (Speed model)
Four cylinder in-line engine (OHC 16V*)
(*overhead camshaft and four valves per cylinder!)
cylinder capacity: 2.996 cc
capacity: 80 bhp at 3500 rpm
top speed: 90 mph (145 km/h)
gearbox: 4-speed manually operated
brakes: drum brakes around
weight: 1780 kg
Bentley history 1919 - 1931
The famous Bentley make, erected by Mr. W.O. Bentley, existed as a independent firm for only twelve years (1919-1931) before the proud firm was taken over by the Rolls Royce motor company. Those twelve exhilarating Bentley years were filled with racing successes and many important victories. The Bentley name as manufacturer of large, heavy, powerful and rugged sports cars has been imprinted in the human mind since the "roaring" 1920ies.
Bentley motorcars won the famous 24 hours of Le Mans race in the years 1924, 1927, 1928, 1929 and 1930. The years they did not win the long distance reliability race for production cars they finished second or third. Not only successes at Le Mans were counted but also victories in other long distance events like the Brooklands 500 mile race. The racing successes were mainly due to the rugged built of the cars and the meticulous preparation of the cars. In every race they learned and had the cars improved on small but important details (Head lamp covers, mesh gauze on the petrol tank, quick filler caps for engine oil and radiator, driver adjustable brakes.)
3-Litre
The Bentley 3 Litre was W.O. Bentley’s first design. The car was presented in 1919 but the first cars were sold in 1921. The four cylinder cars of rugged construction where in a class of their own for they combined the size and comfort of the big tourers and saloons with the road holding, and speed of the smaller sports- and racing cars. The Bentley was a true owner-driver car for the sporting motorist and connoisseur. The Bentley car could be had in three different types which were designated with three different radiator badges*. Red badge: short chassis speed model, Blue badge: the early short and then long chassis type for bespoke bodywork, Green badge: very rare and used for about eighteen 100 mph. These Green badge car won at Le Mans in 1924 and 1927 (Old Number Seven.) The 3-Litre was built from 1919 until 1929.
*The Bentley radiator and the logo were designed by the genius motoring artist Gordon Crosby. The logo is a ‘badge’ and not a ‘label’ as stated by AFC Hilstead in his book ‘Those Bentley Days’ (published 1953).
6.5 Litre and Speed Six
Then in 1926 the 6.5 Litre and the Speed Six were presented, these six cylinder models were in the eyes of W.O. Bentley the best cars the Bentley firm ever built. The bigger capacity was needed for many a customer had built a bespoke heavy saloon body on their chassis and thus eliminating the sporting element the chassis had to offer. The Speed Six brought Bentley the most racing successes and Le Mans victories. In the year 1929 the Speed Six came home first with Bentley 4.5 Litres second, third and fourth! In 1930 the same Bentley Speed Six 'Old Number one' came home a victor followed by another Speed six in second position!
4.5 Litre
Next came the upgraded four cylinder Bentley 4.5 Litre in the year 1927. The 4.5 Litre featured four valves per cylinder and two spark plugs per cylinder engine. Most of these cars were given open tourer and saloon bodywork and only nine short chassis were built.
4.5 Litre Supercharged (Blower)
The 4.5 Litre Blower was built in the ‘Barnato’ period. Financed by the Hon. Dorothy Paget Tim Birkin successfully experimented at Brooklands with his blower Bentley and even achieved the Brooklands lap record with his Blower Bentley. As Woolf Barnato was now in charge of the Bentley firm, and W.O. now only responsible for the development of the Bentley cars, Birkin convinced Barnato to enter a separate team of Blower Bentleys for the 1930 Le Mans race. This was against W.O. Bentley’s ideas for he was of the opinion that the supercharger would only add trouble to a perfectly good and reliable machine. The 1930 Le Mans race proved W.O. right as none of the blown cars finished and Barnato and Kidston won on a Speed Six model.
The supercharged 4.5 Litre engines were real "gas-guzzlers", the naturally aspirated 4.5 Litre engine used one litre of petrol every 5.6 kilometres, the supercharged engine used one litre for just 3.5 kilometres, a very large petrol tank was fitted additionally.
Another problem was that spark plugs in the supercharged engine wore out very quickly resulting in loss of power. Bentley engineer Nobby Clarke stated one day: "The blower eats spark plugs like a donkey eats hay". Only 55 Bentley 4.5 Litre ‘blower’ cars have been built by the firm of which 26 carried the Van den Plas open tourer bodywork.
8-litre
In 1931 the most impressive Bentley model ever saw the light of day; the 8-Litre. This car can be regarded as a real ‘super car’. Only 100 of these big cars have been built.
4- Litre
Also in 1931 a down scaled 8-Litre was introduced, the 4-Litre. The car was designed to sell more cars to improve the cumbersome financial situation at Bentley’s. The 1929 Wall Street crash affecting the firm immensely. The 4-Litre featured the chassis, transmission and brakes of the 8-litre. The newly constructed 120 bhp ‘Ricardo’ engine proved underpowered for the chassis and as a result the 4-litre never became the success Bentley hoped for. Only 50 chassis were built.
1931 Rolls Royce take over
In 1931 business prospects looked very black and the firm went into receivership. Napier & Son were negotiating with Bentley's receiver to take over the company. Then another interested party arrived at the scene named British Central Equitable Trust. They outbid Napiers in a sealed bid auction. The Trust later was found to be a front for Rolls-Royce Limited. Rolls Royce had cleverly defeated the threat of a firm that could become a very unwelcome competitor.
From 1933 all Bentley cars were based upon their Rolls Royce counterparts and production was then moved from Cricklewood to Derby. Purists tend to name the Rolls Royce produced cars – Rolls Royce Bentley’s. Rolls Royce took good care of the Bentley ‘marque’. Many magnificent automobiles were built with a distinctively different character than the Rolls Royce models.
© Marc Vorgers
