Lot Ended
Description
Number 170 of only 374 made; believed to be the only
example in Europe; ex-BJ Pollard Collection; current owner 40 years;
interesting history; meticulously restored in the late 1980s/early
1990s and carefully maintained since
Hands up if you
have ever heard of The Grant Motor Co. of Detroit? Not many, we expect, which is
hardly surprising as we have unable to find any record of any type of Grant
being sold before, nor to find out how many survive today. There are definitely
a few still alive and well in America and perhaps a couple in Australia but, as
far as we know, this is the only Grant in Europe.
Founded by brothers George and Charles Grant in 1913, the first few
cars were made in Detroit, Michigan, but production soon moved to a larger
factory in Findlay, Ohio. Billed as “The first high grade motor car to be sold
under $500”, the initial Model M Roadster, a four-cylinder 12hp open two-seater,
cost $495 and was a great success, selling as fast as Grant could make them. It
was even popular in England where it was sold by Whiting Ltd of Euston Road,
London as the Whiting-Grant and cost £140.
In
1914 it was followed by the six-cylinder Model T, again billed as the first
quality six-cylinder car to sell for less than $1,000, which was equipped with
electric starting and lighting as standard and all for only $795.
But the outbreak of The First World War meant
the Model T could not be shipped abroad and when Henry Ford’s pioneering mass
production techniques came on stream in 1915, he was able to slash his prices
overnight and The Grant Motor Co, like so many other aspiring car makers, were
simply unable to compete and were soon in grave financial
difficulties.
Taken over by investors in 1916,
the company soldiered on as The Grant Motor Car Corporation with various new
models and some trucks for the war effort but the severe depression of 1921
brought things to a head and Grant finally closed its doors for good in
1922.
Dating
from 1915, this Grant Model TT has been in the current ownership for 40 years
and has an interesting story behind it. For many years it was owned by Barney
(BJ) Pollard of Detroit, a fascinating character who worked as an engineer in
the Packard Experimental Department in the early 1900s.
In the
early-1930s Barney began collecting vehicles that interested him, eventually
amassing over 2,000 cars that were housed mainly outdoors at his sprawling
scrapyard in Detroit, with the more valuable vehicles stored in barns. To keep
out prying eyes, he famously encircled the whole site in telegraph poles linked
by sections of railway track from which dozens of cars were hung pointing
skywards. He also stamped his initials into the chassis of every car
and all his tools and equipment were stamped: 'Stolen from BJ Pollard'!
When a fire caused by sparks from a passing
locomotive broke out at the scrapyard in the mid-1970s, many of the vehicles
were lost but many more were sold at auction, this Grant being one of them. It
was bought by a museum in Canada and when that collection was in turn dispersed
in the early 1980s, it was acquired by a VCC member in Yorkshire from whom our
vendor acquired it in c.1984.
A physicist by
profession but also a proficient engineer with much experience of working on
Veteran cars, our vendor commenced a meticulous restoration that ultimately took
some eight years to complete, doing much of the work himself but enlisting
professional help as required – the trimming and painting, for instance.
When he acquired the Grant, it was still in much
the same condition as it had been when Barney Pollard owned it (his initials are
still stamped into the front dumb iron). It even had a bullet hole in the
upper part of the windscreen which had also buckled the screen frame where the
driver sat. The horsehair stuffing of the front seat had rotted away where a
pool of congealed blood had lain for decades and the front stub axle was
bent so it had presumably run into a ditch after the driver had been shot, hence
why it ended up in Barney’s yard in the first place.
A grisly memento of some Prohibition-era ambush by the Feds perhaps,
lying in wait for the bootleggers using the Grant on some dark night to run
moonshine across the State line – if only cars could talk…
On a more
cheery note, when the vendor stripped down the engine he found that it showed
virtually no signs of wear, having been taken off the road in such dramatic
fashion so early in its life. We are told that the whole car was remarkably
solid, original and complete, as you can see in the historic photos shown.
Even the hickory wheels are original and bore traces of the original red paint
but our vendor elected to clean this off, soak the wheels in Cuprinol and
protect them with clear varnish so that he could monitor them for cracks in the
future.
Finally finished in 1992, the Grant
sailed through an MOT and was issued a V5C with the registration number DS 9729.
It has been MOT tested every year since, the vendor continuing to get a
certificate from his local garage stating that it has been tested to MOT
standard even after it became exempt in 2018, the reason being that he wanted to
be able to prove to his insurers that it was in roadworthy condition should it
ever be involved in an accident.
The
Stewart speedograph currently shows 6,164 miles, well over 4,000 of these
covered by the owner who has used it on many VCC events, including long
round-trips from his home on the Welsh borders to Norfolk, the Lake
District and The Isle of Wight. He reports that it has always proved totally
reliable and bowls along happily at 40-45mph with a top speed of
50mph.
Although there are no invoices to show the
extent of all the work carried out, the results speak for themselves and the
Grant is still in wonderful condition today, starting promptly and running
nicely on site, as you can see in the video.
During his long ownership the vendor has carried out much research
into The Grant Motor Co and has assembled an impressive number of manuals, parts
catalogues, period road tests and sales brochures etc, many of these being
kindly provided by James Grant, the grandson of George Grant himself, who
maintains a keen interest in the few surviving cars built by his
ancestor.
He has established that his car is
actually a Model TT which featured improvements including increasing the
cylinder bore of the six-cylinder OHV engine from 2 7/8-inch to 3-inch while
keeping the 4 ¼-inch stroke unchanged. The combustion chambers also had flat
tops in place of the earlier hemi-spherical tops, the capacity being
approximately 2.9-litres. The Mayer carburettor was replaced by a more
sophisticated Rayfield together with a heated air intake to ensure rapid
vapourisation of the fuel.
Serial numbers for the
Model TT ran from 6680 to 7053 when it was replaced by a new design for 1916 -
the Model V - which had a similar specification but different body styling and a
longer wheelbase. Thus the particular example offered here, which left the
production line in July 1915 with serial number 6850, is the 170th Model TT of
only 374 built.
The vendor has provided some
very detailed information about this car and the Model T in general, some of
which is reproduced here - although he is a physicist so it does get rather
technical in places!:
"I have only ever
used premium BP Ultimate petrol so the carburettor is very clean inside.
The car was built long before leaded petrol was introduced so it is quite happy
with unleaded but I never leave it standing with petrol in the tank, even for
only a few days. I also drain the cooling system if it is not going to
be used for a more extended period.
One of the good points about
the engine is that once it is warmed up, it is hardly necessary to change gear
unless you have a particularly steep hill to climb. The slow-revving and heavy
flywheel keep it rolling effortlessly along. The hand throttle acts rather like
cruise control so on a dual carriageway, for instance, you can just set it
at a comfortable speed, take your foot of the pedals and just steer.
The car is very original -
even including the original carbon brushes in the Allis-Chalmers starter-dynamo
which still has its original coils. I did get the ignition coil rewound many
years ago to be on the safe side. but the contact points are 110 years old and
still as good as new.
The only
significant change from original is the voltage regulator. The original one had
completely disintegrated but I still have it as found and it is included with
the car together with other bits and pieces, spare spark plugs etc. The
replacement is a Lucas 6v constant voltage regulator-cut-out which has never let
me down.
In the interests of safety, I have fitted LED brake lights
inside the original rear light housings, with flashing indicators also
discreetly fitted, the front ones being held in place by magnets so that no
holes were required for bolts to secure them.
The Model T was advertised as 33-36hp but the SAE rating was a
more modest 20hp. The engine cylinders and upper crankcase formed a single
casting with an integral water jacket and a detachable cylinder
head.
The transmission was via a
conventional cone clutch in an exposed flywheel to a three-speed plus reverse
gearbox bolted to the rear of the engine by means of a massive yoke embracing
the flywheel. Final drive was by shaft in an enclosed torque tube to a fully
floating rear axle. Semi-elliptic springs at the front and long cantilever
springs at the rear provided an easy riding suspension. No spring dampers were
fitted. The wheelbase was 106-inches with a track of
56-inches.
Ignition was provided by a 6v
battery and coil using the Atwater-Kent system which could generate strong
sparks at very low engine speeds making the starting process more certain even
when hand-cranking. Petrol consumption using a Mayer carburettor was claimed to
be 30mpg. For the Model TT the Mayer
carburettor was replaced by a more sophisticated Rayfield together with a heated
air intake to ensure rapid vapourisation of the fuel.
A particular novelty was the introduction of a reversing switch
in the primary circuit of the ignition system. This meant that each time the
ignition was switched on, the current went round the circuit in the opposite
direction to the previous time, thus neutralising the transfer of metal across
the contact points. The tungsten points were thereby meant to last indefinitely
since in theory at least, any metal transferred across the points during one
running period was transferred back during the next.
The ignition system itself is of interesting design in that
instead of the contact points being separated by a rotating cam in the
conventional way, they are very briefly brought together by a trigger action
giving such a rapid make-and-break that the movement of the parts cannot be
detected by the naked eye. The hardened steel trigger actually engages with
slots machined into the rotating distributor shaft, one for each cylinder, and
is held there by means of a light spring. As the shaft rotates the trigger
flicks out of each slot in turn and strikes a pivoted metal anvil which then
knocks the points briefly into contact with each other, the gap between the
points being a mere ten thousandths of an inch.
One advantage of this
arrangement is that, unlike the conventional system where the points are closed
until opened by a cam, they remain open until momentarily closed by the trigger.
This means that if the ignition system is inadvertently left switched on with
the engine stopped, no current passes through the system thus avoiding
discharging the battery if the car is unattended.
Lack of spares has never been a problem since the car has needed
very few in all the time I have owned it. When I was restoring the car, I found
that things like oil seals, bearings etc. were readily obtainable because those
from Ferguson tractors were exactly right for it. Tyres too are not difficult to
obtain.
Although
it will be a terrible wrench to part with it after some 40 years, I have
reluctantly had to concede that, at 91, I am unlikely to continue to be able to
drive it for much longer. I last took it out for a short drive to the local
classic car show last August after which it was laid up, only being started up
again to drive it onto the trailer which delivered it to
Brightwells.”
As you can probably tell by
now, this Grant is a much-loved machine in wonderful condition and only needs an
enthusiastic new custodian to preserve it for future generations to enjoy. You
will probably never see another for sale again so if a Grant has ever been on
your wish list, this may well be your one and only chance to bag one.
Just stay away from the moonshine and watch out for those trigger-happy
Federal Agents...
Consigned by James
Dennison – 07970 309907 – james.dennison@brightwells.com