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  2. Hillman Imp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hillman_Imp

    The Hillman Imp is a small economy car that was made by the Rootes Group and its successor Chrysler Europe from 1963 until 1976. Revealed on 3 May 1963, [6] after much advance publicity, it was the first British mass-produced car with the engine block and cylinder head cast in aluminium.

  3. Sunbeam Motor Car Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunbeam_Motor_Car_Company

    Sunbeam Motor Car Company Limited was a British automobile manufacturer in operation between 1905 and 1934. Its works were at Moorfields in Blakenhall, a suburb of Wolverhampton in Staffordshire, now West Midlands. The Sunbeam name had originally been registered by John Marston in 1888 for his bicycle manufacturing business. Sunbeam motor car ...

  4. Category:Sunbeam vehicles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Sunbeam_vehicles

    Sunbeam Sport; Sunbeam Stiletto; T. Sunbeam Tiger; Sunbeam Tiger (1925) V. Sunbeam Vogue This page was last edited on 9 September 2023, at 06:41 (UTC). Text is ...

  5. Chrysler Sunbeam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chrysler_Sunbeam

    The Chrysler Sunbeam is a small supermini three-door hatchback manufactured by Chrysler Europe at the former Rootes Group factory in Linwood in Scotland, from 1977 to 1981. The Sunbeam's development was funded by a UK Government grant with the aim of keeping the Linwood plant running, and the small car was based on the larger Hillman Avenger, also manufactured there.

  6. Rootes Arrow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rootes_Arrow

    The sportiest Sunbeam was the Rapier H120 model, though this shared its specially tuned Holbay engine with the Hillman Hunter GLS. Sunbeam Arrow, Sunbeam Break de Chasse, Sunbeam Hunter, Sunbeam Minx, Sunbeam Sceptre and Sunbeam Vogue were used for export markets where the Sunbeam name was more familiar or deemed more likely to succeed.

  7. Sunbeam Rapier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunbeam_Rapier

    The traditional Sunbeam grille, already stylised for the Series II, was further modified to give a lower, more square shape with a pronounced convex profile. New headlamp rims were fitted, in fact Sunbeam Alpine items but chromed for the Rapier, and a new front bumper using the same shape and profile as the rest of the Light Car range. At the ...

  8. Sunbeam-Talbot 90 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunbeam-Talbot_90

    A Sunbeam Mk III was outright winner of the 1955 Monte Carlo Rally. In the Alpine Rally, Stirling Moss won a 'Coupe d'Or' (Gold cup) for three consecutive penalty-free runs in 1952, 1953 and 1954. The first in a Sunbeam-Talbot 90 Mk II and the latter two in the Sunbeam Alpine derivative. The Sunbeam-Talbot team of Mk IIs won the team prize in 1952.

  9. Sunbeam Commercial Vehicles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunbeam_Commercial_Vehicles

    It is a Sunbeam F4A model, with British Thompson Houston electrical equipment and bodywork by Willowbrook, built in 1955. Sunbeam Commercial Vehicles was sold to the Brockhouse Group in August 1946. [7] In September 1948 the Sunbeam Trolley Bus Company was sold on to Guy Motors but Brockhouse kept Sunbeam's machine-tool section. [8]