CONTENTS
Foreword Introduction Bentley 100 Years Timeline Chapter 1 - W.O.
The founder of the company begins his career in railway engineering
before joining his brother in a company selling DFP cars - which he
soon modifies for greater performance. Bentley Motors Limited is
formed in 1919.Chapter 2 - Glory Years Bentley builds fine 3-Litre,
41/2-Litre, 61/2-Litre and 8-Litre cars, including the famed
41/2-Litre 'Blower'. Its strong, reliable racing cars win five
times in the new 24-hour race at Le Mans. Diamond heir Woolf
Barnato becomes Bentley's financial backer.Chapter 3 - Crisis and
Rescue Following the Great Depression of 1929 Bentley struggles
financially, until rescued by Rolls-Royce in November 1931.
Production moves to Derby, then to Crewe after the Second World
War.Chapter 4 - Going Continental Bentley introduces the new R-type
saloon and then a fastback car which was to become one of its most
famous - the R-type Continental. The S-type follows in three
phases, but the S3 is destined to be the last Bentley with a body
style not shared with Rolls-Royce until the 1980s.Chapter 5 - Badge
Engineering Bentley's T-series is a Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow with
different badges. There are two-door and convertible variants, but
Bentleys remain rare compared to their Rolls-Royce
equivalents.Chapter 6 - R for Revival Signs of revival for Bentley
begin with the Mulsanne Turbo, which has no Rolls-Royce equivalent.
The Turbo R accelerates the trend, offering better roadholding and
handling, and there's a cut-price Eight saloon. At the other end of
the scale a new Continental becomes the most expensive car on
sale.Chapter 7 - From Vickers to Volkswagen Vickers, Bentley's
parent company since 1980, sells Rolls-Royce/Bentley in 1998. BMW
and Volkswagen vie for ownership, and eventually BMW takes over
Rolls-Royce (ultimately establishing a new factory at Goodwood)
while Bentley and the Crewe facility come under the ownership of
Volkswagen.Chapter 8 - Back to Le Mans Bentley returns to racing
with the EXP Speed 8 designed and built by Racing Technology
Norfolk in Hingham. On its third attempt in 2003 it wins the Le
Mans 24-hour race with a car driven by Tom Kristensen, Dindo
Capello and Guy Smith.Chapter 9 - Building the Bentley Brand
Bentley introduces a new model line, the Continental GT, powered by
a W12 engine, which establishes Bentley as a major player in the
luxury car market. A Flying Spur saloon, a GT3 racing car and a new
V8 engine follow.Chapter 10 - Onwards and Upwards Bentley
diversifies with a new flagship saloon, the Mulsanne, and the
controversial Bentayga SUV, alongside a new-generation Continental
GT. Electrification begins with a plug-in hybrid Bentayga, with big
plans for the future.Model Specifications Index
Andrew Noakes is an award-winning motoring writer and automotive journalism lecturer. Andrew trained as an automotive engineer but decided to move into motoring journalism and has been writing about cars for over 20 years. He is the Chairman of the Guild of Motoring Writers and is the author of more than 20 books on cars and motorsport, including Aston Martin DB - 70 Years (Aurum Press, 2017).
"...its huge, weighs a lot...and is, overall, a wonderful experience. You know, sort of like Bentleys themselves." * Automoblog *
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