Tamplin Explained

Tamplin
Manufacturer:Tamplin Motors
Production:1919-1924
Class:Cyclecar
Body Style:2-seat open
Engine:980 cc
Width:34 inches (860 mm)[1]
Wheelbase:84 inches (2134 mm)
Designer:Sir John Carden
Tamplin Light Car
Production:1924-1925
Class:Cyclecar
Body Style:2-seat
Engine:964 cc
Length:114 inches (2896 mm)
Width:42 inches (1067 mm)
Wheelbase:84 inches (2134 mm)

The Tamplin was an English automobile manufactured by Tamplin Motors from 1919 to 1923 in Kingston Road, Staines, Middlesex [2] and from 1924 to 1925 in Malden Road, Cheam, Surrey.[3]

Edward Alfred Tamplin,[4] a member of the Sussex brewing family but with no direct involvement in the business, ran the Railway Garage in Staines. He was an agent for the Carden cyclecar and in 1919, after contracting to take the entire output, purchased the rights to manufacture it. The car was powered by a JAP V-twin, air-cooled engine mounted on the side of the body and coupled by chain drive to a Sturmey-Archer three-speed-and-reverse gearbox and then by an exposed belt to the rear wheels. To avoid the need for a differential, drive was to the left-side rear wheel. The engine was started by a kick starter from the driver's seat. The clutch pedal, when fully depressed, operated the brakes. The wheels were close together, giving the car a very narrow track. The independent front suspension used coil springs and the rear had quarter elliptical leaf springs. Some cars were fitted with Blackburne engines.

The open body was made of fibreboard which was made waterproof by soaking it in linseed oil. The car seated two people, one behind the other. The body tub also acted as the chassis.

In 1924 a new, more conventional, version was announced with a front-mounted engine and a much wider body, allowing side-by-side seating. A centrally mounted chain replaced the belt drive to the rear axle. The new model also had a separate chassis.

Total production of the cars is uncertain. Tamplin claimed 1896 were made,[2] but this is not supported by known chassis numbers.[5] At the busiest times up to 14 cars a week may have been made.

By 1925 the market for cyclecars was effectively over and Tamplin returned to the garage business becoming a truck dealer.[2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Culshaw . Horrobin . Complete Catalogue of British Cars . 1974 . Macmillan . London . 0-333-16689-2.
  2. Book: Georgano, N. . G.N. Georgano. Beaulieu Encyclopedia of the Automobile . 2000 . HMSO . London . 1-57958-293-1.
  3. Book: Worthington-Williams, M. . The Automobile (magazine) - "The Tale of the Tamplin". March 2001. Enthusiast Publishing . UK . 0955-1328.
  4. Web site: Grace's Guide . Tamplin Motors .
  5. Book: Baldwin, N. . A-Z of Cars of the 1920s. 1994 . Bay View Books . Devon, UK . 1-870979-53-2.