Castle Three Explained

Castle Three
Manufacturer:Castle Motor Company
Production:1919-1922
Class:cyclecar
Engine:1094 cc Dorman or 1207 cc Peters in-line 4-cylinder
Transmission:two- or three-speed
Successor:In development[1]

The Castle Three was a British three-wheeled cyclecar made from 1919 to 1922 by the Castle Motor Company of Castle Mill Works, New Road, Kidderminster, Worcestershire.

History

The company was originally a car repair business founded in 1906 by brothers Stanley and Laughton Goodwin but grew to make munitions during World War I and entered the car building business with the coming of peace and the post-war boom.

The cars

The car was aimed at the top end of the Cyclecar market and so was fitted with a four-cylinder, water-cooled engine. The first batch of cars had side-valve, straight four, Dorman engines of 1094 cc with the remainder using Belgian Peters 1207 cc engines. These were in-unit with a gearbox, either of two-speed epicyclic or three-speed conventional type and drove the single rear wheel by a shaft and bevel gears.[2]

The open two-seater body with dickey seat had a smart nickel-plated radiator and electric lighting and was attached on a chassis with the suspension using quarter elliptic leaf springs at the front and semi elliptic at the rear. Unusually for a cyclecar, artillery wheels were used rather than wire-spoked ones.

The car was exhibited at the 1919 London Motor Show and a reputed 2,300 orders were taken. Not all these were confirmed and it is estimated that around 350 were made. Two are known to survive.[3]

A prototype of a four-wheel version was made but never went into production. The company closed in 1922, selling the works to a carpet maker.

Successor

Castle Three Motor
Manufacturer:Castle Three Motor Company
Predecessor:Castle Three
Class:Three-wheeler
Body Style:roadster
Layout:FR
Sp:uk

In August 2013 the Castle Three Motor Company Limited was incorporated in Alnwick, Northumberland with plans to develop, manufacture and sell new generation three-wheeled sports cars for the recreational and motor sport markets.[4]

While the original had 2+1 seating and a four-cylinder engine, the new three-wheeler will have two seats and use an externally sourced twin-pot — either in V or boxer form — to power the rear wheel via a largely proprietary drivetrain.[1]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Autocar Article (Dated 15 August) http://www.autocar.co.uk
  2. Book: Baldwin, N. . A-Z of Cars of the 1920s. 1994 . Bay View Books . Devon, UK . 1-870979-53-2.
  3. Book: G.N. Georgano, N. . G.N. Georgano . Beaulieu Encyclopedia of the Automobile . 2000 . HMSO . London . 1-57958-293-1.
  4. http://www.castlethree.co.uk/ Company website