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Austin 12/6


FieldValue
nameAustin Light Twelve-Six
imageAustin Six Saloon (1932) GS3184 5902656341.jpg
captionLight Twelve-Six Harley 6-light metal saloon
first registered May 1932
manufacturerAustin
production1931–1937
30,316 produced
body_style two seater Eton*
engine1496 or 1711 cc Straight-6
transmissionsingle-plate dry clutch, 3-speed centrally controlled gearbox taking the drive through an open propeller shaft to the spiral bevel driven three-quarter floating rear axle.
wheelbase106 in
Track 4' 2", 50 in
length146 in (1931)
width62 in
weightSaloon 19+1/2 long cwt
predecessorvariant of Austin Twelve
successorAustin Fourteen Goodwood
spuk

first registered May 1932 30,316 produced

  • tourer Open Road
  • saloons: metal – Harley :::::— Ascot
- sports saloons: *Kempton, Greyhound* - sports tourer *Newberry* (sic) **Track** 4' 2", 50 in 1496 Tax horsepower 13.96 1711 Tax horsepower 15.96 The **Austin Light Twelve-Six** is a 14 tax horsepower car with a 1496 cc engine that was introduced by Austin in January 1931. It was named by Austin *Light Twelve* to separate it from the well-established Austin Twelve. The general public then dubbed the original Twelve *Heavy Twelve* but Austin never used that name. The Light Twelve-Six remained in production until 1936. In August 1936 the Austin Goodwood 14 (of 16 tax horsepower) with its "sound insulated coachwork" took the place of the Twelve-Six saloons. The tourers remained available. The Goodwood was also available as a separate chassis. ## Six cylinders There was among British car makers in the early 1930s a vogue for small capacity six-cylinder engines and the Light Twelve-Six was Austin's version. The side-valve engine was new and initially of 1496 cc capacity. Thermostatic control of the cooling system was added in September 1932. An increased 65.5 mm bore, larger capacity 1711 cc option was available at no extra charge from August 1933. Further details of these engines are in the panels at the right. A three-speed gearbox was supplied at first but a new four-speed *Twin-Top* Top gear was always direct drive to avoid noise from the gearbox. Development of still expensive but "silent" gear sets provided a third gear as near quiet as top gear version was an option from 1932 and became standard in 1933. A new synchromesh gearbox was announced in August 1933 along with the availability of the large 1711cc engine to go with new chassis and bodywork. ## Brakes suspension steering The chassis was very conventional with semi-elliptic leaf springs on all wheels and rigid axles front and rear. The transmission brake has been discontinued in favour of brakes on the road wheels. Steering is by worm and wheel. At the top of the steering wheel there is an electric horn button and the headlamp control lever for the dip and switch mechanism. The electrical system for both lighting and starting is 12-volt. The chassis was shared from September 1932 with the four-cylinder Light Twelve-Four as well as the original Austin Twelve. - Austin Twelve aka Heavy Twelve or Heavy Twelve-Four (1660 cc later) 1861 cc - Austin Light Twelve-Six 1496 cc - Austin Light Twelve-Six 1711 cc - Austin Light Twelve-Four 1535 cc :share chassis and bodies for their four different engines but it does appear so-- In August 1933 a newly designed chassis was introduced for the Twelve-Six and Twelve-Four cars. It had a dropped and cross-braced frame under the new bodies. At the same time a new design for front and rear axles entered production fitted with new brakes and a new revised linkage to the driver's brake pedal. The back axle was modified and now has combined load and thrust journals to reduce weight. ## Extras Items supplied as standard include an air cleaner and an electric windscreen wiper in front of the driver and a big reflecting mirror together with a clock and a petrol gauge, motometer and retractable luggage carrier. From September 1932 bumpers and Magna wheels were provided on deluxe models without extra charge. ## Coachwork There were just two four-door six-light (three windows on each side) saloon bodies offered: a *Harley* pressed metal car and a *Clifton* fabric bodied saloon. ::data[format=table] | [[File:Austin Torpedo bodied first reg nov 1934 officially 1479 cc.JPG|thumb|left|Light Twelve-Six *Open Road* tourer registered November 1934]] | [[File:Austin 126 192758581.jpg|thumb|left|Light Twelve-Six *Clifton* 4-light fabric sports saloon c. 1931-1932]] | |---|---| :: ## Road test The review of the metal *Harley* was favourable. Of special note was the unusually good entrance by all doorways. The design of the rods and cables to the new brakes on the wheels was criticised though in use the brakes were excellent. Both the cooling and the clutch worked well. The lower gears were reasonably quiet. The steering is too sensitive though the action is light and the suspension would not disgrace a car of four times the price. With the driver and one passenger the top speed was 48 mph. A subsequent review 15 months later suggested that engine vibration might be damped by rubber insulation. The new *Twin-Top* gearbox has indirect gears that are a great improvement over Austin's previous offering. A change to a cam steering mechanism was recommended to improve the steering's steadiness. 60 miles an hour was the highest comfortable speed. ## Range development Bumpers and *Magna* wheels were standardised on all Austin's de luxe models in September 1932 and in addition there were all round price reductions. In August 1933 a new *Ascot* saloon was announced with chassis improvements and the same changes as made to the Twelve-Four range. The new Ascot had a new separate compartment for the spare tyre and its hinged panel forms a luggage platform when lowered. The chromium-plated radiator shell was succeeded in August 1934 by a radiator cowl painted in body colour and the body given more modern wings with valances for better protection. The Harley was dropped for 1935. ::data[format=table] | [[File:Austin 12-6 Ascot Saloon (1935) (14439604835).jpg|left|thumb|Light Twelve Six *Ascot* saloon registered April 1935 with *Magna* wire wheels]] | [[File:Austin.ascot.1935.750pix.jpg|thumb|left|Light Twelve-Six *Ascot* saloon and spare wheel compartment 1935 *Magna* wheels]] | |---|---| :: Sports variants were added in August 1933 with a lowered chassis and higher compression engine. A 4-seater sports tourer and a saloon named *Greyhound*. These cars carry a distinctive radiator shell. The sports models shared the new illuminated semaphore direction indicators and synchromesh gears. Current catalogue after August 1933 (cars supplied with either 13.9 hp or 15.9 hp engines for the same price): - saloons: standard £205, *Harley* £225 or *Ascot* £235, the last two with sliding heads (sunroofs) - open tourers *Eton* 2-seater £200 and *Open Road* 4-seater £200 - sports tourer £275 and *Greyhound* sports saloon £305 ::data[format=table] | [[File:WP9088 1935 Austin.jpg|thumb|left|Light Twelve-Six 1935 *Kempton* sports saloon, 1711cc also available with 1496 cc engine, both engines with a high compression cylinder head and high lift camshaft producing 41 bhp @ 3,800 or 37 bhp @ 3,800]] | [[File:Austin Light Twelve-Six 4-seater tourer 1935 (15228163192).jpg|thumb|left|Light Twelve-Six 1935 *Newbury* 4-seater tourer]] | [[File:Austin Ascot 12slash4 (1935), Dutch licence registration 81-TM-01 pic2.JPG|thumb|right|Ascot spare wheel compartment (12/4)]] | |---|---|---| :: ::data[format=table] | 1936 | Ascot saloon | Kempton sports saloon | Open Road tourer | Eton two-seater | |---|---|---|---|---| | length | 158 in (4013 mm) | 156 in (3962 mm) | 158 in (4013 mm) | 158 in (4013 mm) | | width | 61.5 in (1562 mm) | 62.0 in (1575 mm) | 61.5 in (1562 mm) | 61.5 in (1562 mm) | | height | 66.0 in (1676 mm) | 62.0 in (1575 mm) | 67.5 in (1715 mm) | 67.5 in (1715 mm) | :: Austin's Goodwood 14 took the place of the Twelve-Six saloons. The tourers remained available but briefly and were not replaced. ## Notes ## References ## References 1. Sedgwick, Michael. (1989). "A-Z of Cars of the 1930s". *Bay View Books*. 2. Austin, ''The Times'', Saturday, 24 Jan 1931; pg. 3; Issue 45729. 3. The Austin Motor Company Ltd. ''The Times'', Tuesday, 6 Sep 1932; pg. 9; Issue 46231. 4. Steering gear, previously worm and wheel, was changed in August 1935 to an hour-glass worm and sector.<ref>Cars Of 1936. ''The Times'', Tuesday, 13 Aug 1935; pg. 7; Issue 47141 5. <ref name=TT45779>Cars Of To-Day. ''The Times'', Tuesday, 24 Mar 1931; pg. 10; Issue 45779 6. Cars Of To-Day. ''The Times'', Tuesday, 10 May 1932; pg. 10; Issue 46129 7. Cheaper Motoring. ''The Times'', Tuesday, 6 Sep 1932; pg. 10; Issue 46231 8. Cars Of 1934. ''The Times'', Tuesday, 15 Aug 1933; pg. 8; Issue 46523 9. The New Austin. ''The Times'', Tuesday, 14 Aug 1934; pg. 7; Issue 46832. 10. New Austin. ''The Times'', Thursday, 30 Aug 1934; pg. 9; Issue 46846 ::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from [Wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Austin_12/6) and is available under the [Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the [article history page](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Austin_12/6?action=history). ::
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