Larmar Engineering Company Limited is a British engineering company and former manufacturer of automobiles.[1] [2]
Mr. Larcombe founded the company in Ingatestone in 1919.[3] On July 9, 1942, it became a Limited company. In the summer of 1946, the production of automobiles began with the brand name of Larmar. In 1951, the production ended.
On offer were small cars that were specially designed for the physically disabled. The vehicle was only 80cm wide. Its body was made of plywood and aluminum. It had a side door, a seat, windshield and soft top. A single-cylinder two-stroke engine from BSA with 249 cc displacement and 8hp was mounted in the rear and drove one of the rear wheels via a chain. From 1950, a two-cylinder four-stroke engine with 350 cc displacement and 10hp was available. An example is currently held in the Lane Motor Museum, Nashville.[4]
There was also a van model called Lorret. This had an engine with a displacement of 490cm3. The auction house Sotheby's auctioned an example for $4,600 in 2013.