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Sunbeam Tiger (1925)
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| manufacturer | Sunbeam of Wolverhampton |
| production | two |
| body_style | Open-wheel racing car |
| engine | 3976cc, 300 hp supercharged V12 Sunbeam, formed by mounting two 2 litre engines onto a common crankcase. |
| transmission | 4-speed pre-selector |
| designer | Louis Coatalen |
The Sunbeam Tiger is a racing car, built by Sunbeam of Wolverhampton during the 1920s. It was the last car to be competitive both as a land speed record holder, and as a circuit-racing car.{{cite book
Design and engine
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The chassis and bodywork of the Sunbeam were conventional for racing cars of their time.
The car's novelty lay with its engine. Sunbeam's 1925 Grand Prix engine had been a successful 2-litre straight-6 twin-overhead-cam. This car was to use a pair of the same block and head arrangements, mated to a single 75° vee crankcase to produce a 3976 cc V12, capacity 67 x. Supercharging brought the power up to 306 hp.
Land Speed Records

Henry Segrave was so keen to test the new car and engine that he took it to Brooklands in September 1925, still unpainted. A half-mile speed of 145 mi/h was recorded. Minor works, including the bright red paint still notable today, were done over the winter.
Spring 1926 saw Segrave on the wide, flat beach at Southport. On 16 March 1926, with little fuss and few spectators, he and the bright-red car now named Ladybird set a new land speed record at 152.33 mi/h. The Sunbeam was the smallest capacity internal combustion-engined car ever to hold the Land Speed Record.
Racing
After the land speed record, the car returned to Grand Prix racing at Brooklands,{{cite web
At the time of the land speed record attempt, the car was fitted with a narrow inlet cowling over the radiator,{{cite web |url-status = dead
''Tigress''
One sister car to Tiger was built and named Tigress.
It survives today, fitted with a Napier Lion engine and racing in British Vintage events as the "Sunbeam-Napier".
Today
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Tiger spent a period in preservation in Utah,{{cite web
In recent years (2023 onwards), Tiger is in the ownership of the Indian businessman, Vijay Mallya. The car is competing in historic motorsport events in the U.K. with the Vintage Sports Car Club and at Goodwood.{{cite web
In 1990, the then 65-year-old Tiger re-created its record attempt, this time at RAF Elvington, and succeeded in beating it at 159 mi/h.{{cite web
The 'Tiger' name
In 1964 and 1972 the "Tiger" name was revived within the marque, first for a V8 version of the Sunbeam Alpine, the Sunbeam Tiger. Later it appeared on the more mundane Hillman Avenger Tiger, which resembled a tiger by being orange with black stripes, if little else.
Photographs
References
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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