DELAHAYE

DELAHAYE Automobiles and Trucks

for Delahaye Buses see : https://myntransportblog.com/2014/01/19/buses-delahaye-tours-france/

Industry Manufacturing
Founded 1894
Founder Emile Delahaye
Defunct 1954
Headquarters Tours (France)
Products Cars

Delahaye automobile was an automotive manufacturing company founded by Emile Delahaye in 1894, in Tours, France, his home town. His first cars were belt-driven, with single- or twin-cylinder engines mounted at the rear. His Type One was an instant success, and he urgently needed investment capital and a larger manufacturing facility. Both were provided by a new Delahaye owner and fellow racer, George Morane, and his brother-in-law Leon Desmarais, who partnered with Emile in the incorporation of the new automotive company, “Societe Des Automobiles Delahaye”, in 1898. All three worked with the foundry workers to assemble the new machines, but middle-aged Emile was not in good health. In January 1901, he found himself unable to capably continue, and resigned, selling his shares to his two equal partners. Emile Delahaye died soon after, in 1905. Delahaye had hired two instrumental men, Charles Weiffenbach and Amadee Varlet in 1898, to assist the three partners. Both were graduate mechanical engineers, and they remained with Delahaye their entire working careers. Weiffenbach was appointed Manager of Operations, and, with the blessing of both George Morane and Leon Desmarais, assumed control over all of Delahaye’s operations and much of its decision-making, in 1906. Amadee Varlet was the company’s design-engineer, with a number of innovative inventions to his credit, generated between 1905 and 1914, which Delahaye patented. These included the twin-cam multi-valve engine, and the V6 configuration. Varlet continued in this role until he eventually took over the Drawing Office, at 76 years of age, when much younger Jean Francois was hired in 1932 as chief design-engineer. In 1932, Varlet was instructed by Weiffenbach, under direction from majority shareholder Madam Desmarais, Leon Desmarais’ widow, to set up the company’s Racing Department, assisted by Jean Francois. <Club Delahaye archive>. Those who knew him well at the factory affectionately referred to Charles Weiffenbach as “Monsieur Charles”.

History

Delahaye 135 MS Pourtout cabriolet

Delahaye began experimenting with belt-driven cars while manager of the Brethon Foundry and Machine-works in Tours, in 1894. These experiments encouraged an entry in the 1896 Paris–Marseille–Paris race, held between 24 September-3 October 1896, fielding one car for himself and one for sportsman Ernest Archdeacon. The winning Panhard averaged 15.7 mph (25.3 km/h); Archdeacon came sixth, averaging 14 mph (23 km/h), while Delahaye himself was eighth, averaging 12.5 mph (20.1 km/h).

For the 1897 Paris-Dieppe, the 6 hp (4.5 kW; 6.1 PS) four-cylinder Delahayes ran in four- and six-seater classes, with a full complement of passengers. Archdeacon was third in the four-seaters behind a De Dion-Bouton and a Panhard, Courtois winning the six-seater class, ahead of the only other car in the class.

In March 1898, 6 hp (4.5 kW; 6.1 PS) the Delahayes of Georges Morane and Courtois came sixteenth and twenty-eighth at the Marseilles-Nice rally, while at the Course de Perigeux in May, De Solages finished sixth in a field of ten. The July Paris-Amsterdam-Paris earned a satisfying class win for Giver in his Delahaye; the overall win went to Panhard.

Soon after the new company was formed in 1898, the firm moved its manufacturing from Tours to Paris, into its new factory (a former hydraulic machinery plant that Morane and his brother-in-law Leon Desmarais had inherited from Morane’s father). Charles Weiffenbach was named Operations Manager. Delahaye would produce three models there, until the close of the 19th century: two twins, the 2.2-litre 4.5 hp (3.4 kW; 4.6 PS) Type 1 and 6 hp (4.5 kW; 6.1 PS) Type 2, and the lighter Type 0 (which proved capable of up to 22 mph (35 km/h)), with a 1.4-liter single rated between 5 and 7 hp (3.7 and 5.2 kW; 5.1 and 7.1 PS). All three had bicycle-style steering, water-cooled engines mounted in the rear, automatic valves, surface carburetors, and trembler coil ignition; drive was a combination of belt and chain, with three forward speeds and one reverse.

In 1899, Archdeacon piloted an 8 hp (6.0 kW; 8.1 PS) racer in the Nice-Castellane-Nice rally, coming eighth, while teammate Buissot’s 8 hp (6.0 kW; 8.1 PS) was twelfth.

Founder Emile Delahaye retired in 1901, leaving Desmarais and Morane in control; Weiffenbach took over from them in 1906. Delahaye’s racing days were over with Emile Delahaye’s death. Charles Weiffenbach had no interest in racing, and focused his production on responsible motorized automotive chassis, heavy commercial vehicles, and early firetrucks for the French government. Race-cars had become a thing of the past for Delahaye, until 1933, when Madam Desmarais caused her company to change direction a hundred-and-eighty degree, and return to racing.

The new 10B debuted in 1902. It had a 2,199 cc (134.2 cu in) (100 by 140 mm (3.9 by 5.5 in)) vertical twin rated 12/14 hp by RAC, mounted in front, with removable cylinder head, steering wheel (rather than bicycle handles or tiller), and chain drive. Delahaye also entered the Paris-Vienna rally with a 16 hp (12 kW; 16 PS) four; Pirmez was thirty-seventh in the voiturette class. At the same year’s Ardennes event, Perrin’s 16 hp (12 kW; 16 PS) four came tenth.

Also in 1902, the singles and twins ceased to be offered except as light vans; before production ceased in 1904, about 850 had been built.

Delahaye’s first production four, the Type 13B, with 24/27 hp 4.4-litre, appeared in 1903. The model range expanded in 1904, including the 4.9-litre 28 hp (21 kW; 28 PS) four-cylinder Type 21, the mid-priced Type 16, and the two-cylinder Type 15B. These were joined in 1905 by a chain-driven 8-litre luxury model, one of which was purchased by King Alfonso.

All 1907 models featured half-elliptic springs at the rear as well as transverse leaf springs, and while shaft drive appeared that year, chain drive was retained on luxury models until 1911. In 1908, the Type 32 was the company’s first to offer an L-head monoblock engine.

Protos began licence production of Delahayes in Germany in 1907, while in 1909, h. M. Hobson began importing Delahayes to Britain. Also in 1909, White pirated the Delahaye design; the First World War interrupted any efforts to recover damages.

Delahaye invented and pioneered the V6 engine in 1911, with a 30° 3.2-litre twin-cam, in the Type 44; the invention is credited to Amadee Varlet, Delahaye’s chief design-engineer at the time. The Type 44 was not a success and production stopped in 1914. It had been designed by Amadee Varlet, who had joined Delahaye at the same time that Charles Weiffenback was hired by Emile Delahaye, in 1898. The Type 44 was the only V-6 engine ever made by Delahaye, and it was the last time the company used a twin-cam engine.

Delahaye engineer Amadee Varlet designed the Delahaye “Titan” marine engine, an enormous cast-iron four cylinder engine that was fitted into purpose-built speedboat “La Dubonnet” which briefly held the World Speed Record on Water. With the ‘Titan’ Amadee Varlet had invented the multi-valve twin-cam engine in 1905, the same year that Emile Delahaye died.

At the Paris factory, Delahaye continued to manufacture cars, trucks, and a few buses. By the end of World War I, their major income was from their truck business that included France’s firetrucks.

After the war, Delahaye switched to a modest form of assembly line production, following the example of Ford, hampered by the “extensive and not particularly standardized range” of cars for Chenard et Walker, and itself, and farm machines for the FAR Tractor Company. The collaboration with FAR Tractor Company and Chenard-Walcker did not last long. This continued until continually reduced sales volume made a change necessary, for the company to survive. It has been alleged that Monsieur Charles met with his friend, competitor Ettore Bugatti, to seek his opinion on turning Delahaye around. Whether or not this meeting actually occurred, it is on record that Madam Leon Desmarais, the majority shareholder and Leon Desmarais’ widow, instructed Charles Weiffenbach to come up with a new higher quality automotive-chassis line with vastly improved horsepower, and re-establish a racing department. That pivotal decision was made in 1932, the year that Jean Francois was hired. By 1933, Delahaye was back in the racing game, and promptly went about winning events and setting records.

At the 1933 Paris Salon, Delahaye showed the Superluxe, with a 3.2-litre six, transverse independent front suspension, and Cotal preselector or synchromesh-equipped manual transmission. It would be accompanied in the model range by a 2,150 cc (131 cu in) four (essentially a cut-down six), and a sporting variant, the 18 Sport.

In 1934, Delahaye set eighteen class records at Montlhéry, in a specially-prepared, stripped and streamlined 18 Sport. They also introduced the 134N, a 12cv car with a 2.15-litre four-cylinder engine, and the 18cv Type 138, powered by a 3.2-litre six — both engines derived from their successful truck engines. In 1935, success in the Alpine Trial led to the introduction of the sporting Type 135 “Coupe des Alpes”. By the end of 1935, Delahaye had won eighteen minor French sports car events and a number of hill-climbs, and came fifth at Le Mans.

Racing success brought success to their car business as well, enough for Delahaye to buy Delage in 1935. Delage cars continued in production from 1935 to 1951, and were finally superseded by the Type 235, a modestly updated 135. The truck business continued to thrive. Some of the great coachbuilders who provided bodies for Delahayes include Figoni et Falaschi, Chapron, and Letourneur et Marchand, and Joseph Saoutchik, as well as Guillore, Faget-Varlet, Pourtout, and a few others less well known.

Delahaye ran four 160 hp (120 kW; 160 PS) cars (based on the Type 135) in the 1936 Ulster TT, placing second to Bugatti, and entered four at the Belgian 24 Hours, coming 2-3-4-5 behind an Alfa Romeo.

American heiress Lucy O’Reilly Schell approached the company with an offer to pay the development costs to build short “Competition Court” 2.70- metre wheelbase Type 135 cars to her specifications for rallying. Sixteen were produced, most having been uniformly bodied by “Lacanu” a small coachbuilding firm owned and operated by Olivier Lecanu-Deschamps. Joseph Figoni also bodied one of these chassis. Lecanu could respond quickly, build economically, and was favored by Delahaye for its race-cars. All four Type 145 race-cars were bodied by Lecanu, to a weirdly homely design by Jean Francois. Lecanu both designed and built the last of the four Type 145 bodies, this one on chassis 48775.

In 1937, René Le Bègue and Julio Quinlin won the Monte Carlo Rally driving a Delahaye. Delahaye also ran first and second at Le Mans. Against the government-sponsored juggernauts Mercedes-Benz and Auto Union, Delahaye brought out the Type 145, powered by a new, complicated 4½-liter V12 with three camshafts located in the block, with pushrod-actuated valves and four overhead rocker-shafts, dual Bosch magneto ignition, and triple Stromberg carburettors. Called “Million Franc Delahaye” after a victory in the Million Franc Race, the initial Type 145, chassis 48771, was driven by René Dreyfus to an average speed 91.07 mph (146.56 km/h) over 200 kilometres (120 mi) at Montlhéry in 1937, earning a Fr200,000 prize from the government. Dreyfus also scored a victory in the Ecurie Bleu Type 145, again number 48771 at Pau, relying on superior fuel economy to beat the more powerful Mercedes-Benz W154, in 1938. Third place in the same race was claimed by Gianfranco Comotti, driving Delahaye Type 145 number 48775. Dreyfus brought his Type 145 number 48771 to its second grand-prix win at Cork, in Ireland, but the German teams had boycotted this event, being another between-the-houses race where they could not exploit their superior power. Type 135s also won the Paris-Nice and Monte Carlo Rallys, and LeMans, that year, while a V12 model (Type 145 number 48773) was fourth in the Mille Miglia. These victories combined with French patriotism to create a wave of demand for Delahaye cars, up until the German occupation of France during World War II. The Type 145 was also the basis for five grand-touring Type 165s, three of which exist today. The other two were demolished during the second World War.

In early 1940, one hundred Type 134N and Type 168 chassis were built (Renault-bodied) as military cars under contract for the French army. The government had ordered private sales to cease in June, 1939, but small numbers of cars continued to be built for the occupying German forces until at least 1942.

After the Second World War

After World War II, the depressed French economy and an increasingly punitive luxury tax regime aimed at luxurious non-essential products, and cars with engines above 2-litres, made life difficult for luxury auto-makers. Like all the principal French automakers, Delahaye complied with government requirements in allocating the majority of its vehicles for export, and in 1947 88% of Delahaye production was exported (compared to 87% of Peugeot and 80% of Talbot output), primarily to French colonies, including those in Africa. Nevertheless, Delahaye volumes, with 573 cars produced in 1948 (against 34,164 by market-leader Citroën), were unsustainably low.

Production of the Type 135 was resumed, with new styling by Philippe Charbonneaux. The Type 175, with a 4.5-litre inline overhead-valve six, was introduced in 1948; this, and the related Type 178 and 180, proved unsuccessful. The Type 175, 178 and 180 were replaced by the Type 235 in 1951, with an up-rated 135 engine producing 152 hp (113 kW; 154 PS).

Until the early 1950s, a continuing demand for military vehicles enabled the company to operate at reasonable albeit low volumes, primarily thanks to demand for the Type 163 trucks, sufficient to keep the business afloat.

A 1-ton capacity light truck sharing its 3.5-litre six-cylinder overhead-valve engine with the company’s luxury cars (albeit with lowered compression ratio and reduced power output) made its debut at the 1949 Paris Motor Show. During the next twelve months, this vehicle, the Type 171, spawned several brake-bodied versions, the most interesting of which were the ambulance and 9-seater familiale variant. The vehicle’s large wheels and high ground clearance suggest it was targeted at markets where many roads were largely dust and mud, and the 171 was, like the contemporary Renault Colorale which it in some respects resembled, intended for use in France’s African colonies. The vehicle also enjoyed some export success in Brazil, and by 1952 the Type 171 was being produced at the rate of approximately 30 per month.

As passenger car sales slowed further, the last new model, a 2.0-litre jeep-like vehicle known as VLRD (Véhicule Léger de Reconnaissance (Delahaye)), sometimes known as the VRD, or VLR, was released in 1951. The French army believed that this vehicle offered a number of advantages over the “traditional” American built jeep of the period. It was in 1951 that Delahaye discontinued production of the Types 175, 178 and 180. During 1953 the company shipped 1,847 VRDs as well as 537 “special” military vehicles: the number of Delahaye- or Delage-badged passenger cars registered in the same year was in that context near negligible, at 36.

Financial difficulties created by an acute shortage of wealthy car buyers intensified. Delahaye’s main competitor, Hotchkiss, managed to negotiate a licensing agreement with American Motors, and obtained sanction to manufacture its Willys MB Jeep in France. The French army had learned to appreciate the simpler machine, available at a much lower price, and cancelled Delahaye’s contract for the more sophisticated VLR reconnaissance vehicle, dealing a hard blow to Delahaye. In August 1953 the company laid off more than 200 workers and salaried employees. Rumours of management discussions with Hotchkiss over some sort of coming together proved well founded. Hotchkiss were struggling with the same problems, but it was hoped that the two businesses might prove more resilient together than separately, and an agreement was signed by the two company presidents, Pierre Peigney for Delahaye and Paul Richard for Hotchkiss, on 19 March 1954. Delahaye shareholders agreed to the protocol, which amounted to a take over of Delahaye by Hotchkiss, less than three months later, on 9 June. Hotchkiss shut down Delahaye car production. By the end of 1954, for a brief period selling trucks with the Hotchkiss-Delahaye nameplate, the combined firm was itself taken over by Brandt, and by 1955, Delahaye and Hotchkiss were out of the automotive chassis business altogether, having their facilities absorbed by the giant Brandt organization with its own objectives for its captives’ assets. By 1956, the brands Delahaye, Delage, and Hotchkiss had forever disappeared.

Models

1899 Delahaye 0910

1899 built vehicle in 2006
1936 1937 1938 Delage DI-12 (Delahaye 134) France Car Photo Spec Sheet Info CARD 1936 Delahaye 134N Berline Autobineau at Monthléry 1938 Delahaye 134 N Chapron Delahaye 1939 134 G Berline Delahaye 1939 134 GDelahaye 134 – 1933-40

1935 Delahaye 135 roadster 1935-1936 Delahaye 135 Coupe des Alpes Car Photo Spec Sheet Stat French Card 1935-1950 Delahaye 135 Competition Le Mans Race Car 1935-1952 Delahaye 135 (1936 Coupe des Alpes) Car Photo Spec Sheet French Card 1936 Delahaye 135 Competition Court by Figoni & Falaschi 1936 Delahaye 135 DS Cabrio DV PBC 04 1936 Delahaye 135M Figoni & Falaschi Competition Coupe 1936 Franay Delahaye 135 Convertible 1936-1954 Delahaye 135 Convertible France Luxury Car Photo Spec Sheet Info CARD 1936-1954 Delahaye 135 MS (1948) Henri Chapron Car Photo Spec Sheet Info CARD

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1937 Delahaye 135M Figoni et Falaschi Torpedo Cabriolet 1937 Delahaye 135M Figoni 1937 Delahaye 135MS Competition 1937 Delahaye 135MS 1937, Delahaye 135M Saoutchik Cabriolet 1938 Delahaye 135 MS Competition Cabriolet by Figoni 1938 Delahaye 135m ad 1938 Delahaye Type 135M W-COA b 1939 Delahaye 135 M Drophead Coupe, Body by Chapron 1946 Delahaye 135 Guillore Break de Chasse 1946 DELAHAYE Cabriolet PININFARINA Design Car Rare Art Print a 1947 Delahaye 135 MS Cabriolet par Franay - 1947 1947 Delahaye 135 MS ChapronDelahaye 135 – 1935-54

 Delahaye 138 only 300 Lucy O’Riley Schell with the very first Delahaye 138 Sport, probably coach-built in a clumsy way by the small Delahaye racing department workshop.Right This was Lucy's favourite, coach-built by Figoni, a very elegant and fast roadster.
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Delahaye 168 – 1938-40
1947 DELAHAYE 175 COUPE - 1953 CHRYSLER THOMAS SPECIAL 1947 Delahaye 175 1947 Delahaye 175S Aerodynamic Coupe 1947 DELAHAYE TYPE 175S AERODYNAMIQUE Dream Cars CARD 1947 Delahaye Type 175S, Imperial Palace Co. LV, Car Trading Card - Not Postcard
1949 Delahaye 175S Roadster 1947 Delahaye 175S competition version Delahaye 175-175-180 Promo Poster 1949 Delahaye Type 175 Roadster Delahaye 175 Roadster 1949 Delahaye Type 175 Saoutchik Coupe de Ville c 1951 Delahaye 175S Franay 1949 DELAHAYE TYPE 175 SAOUTCHIK COUPE DE VILLE b 1949 Delahaye Type 175S coachwork by Saoutchik Delahaye 175S roadster bugnotti top
Delahaye 175 – 1948-51
1949 Delahaye 178 Drophead Coupé, once owned by Elton John.
Delahaye Chapron factory bodied 235 delahaye 235 08 delahaye 235 02 delahaye 235 01 delahaye 235 04 delahaye 235 07 delahaye 235 09 delahaye 235 06 1951 DELAHAYE 1951-1954 235 ADVERTISING BROCHURE a 1951-1954 Delahaye 235 Convertible Car Photo Spec Sheet Info CARD 1952 1953 1951. Delahaye 235 1951 Delahaye 235 M Chapron Cabriolet a 1951 Delahaye 235 M Chapron cabriolet 1953 Delahaye 235M Pillarless Coupe Delahaye 235 Cabriolet Chapron 1951 Delahaye 235 Saoutchik Roadster 1951 Delahaye 235 coupe von Henry Chapron 1954 Delahaye 235-chapron-saoutchik 1953 Delahaye 235-cabrio-chapron 1952 Delahaye 235-coupe-chapron-paris 1952 Delahaye 235-figoni-cabriolet 1952 Delahaye 235-letourneur-marchand 1951 Delahaye 235-coach-chapron 1951 Delahaye 235-letourneur-marchand 1951 Delahaye 235-cabrio-saoutchik 1950 Delahaye 235M Pillarless Saloon by Ghia 1951 Delahaye 235 Saoutchik Cabriolet - rvr 1951 Delahaye 235 Saoutchik Cabriolet 1951 Delahaye 235 Saoutciik Cabriolet delahaye 235 05Delahaye 235 – 1951-54

Picture gallery

References

  1. Jump up^ Hull, Peter. “Delahaye: Famous on Road and Race Track”, in Ward, Ian, executive editor. World of Automobiles (London: Orbis, 1974), Volume 5, p.521.
  2. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f Hull, p.521.
  3. Jump up^ Hull, p.521 caption.
  4. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f g h i j k l m Hull, p.522.
  5. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f g h i j Hull, p.523.
  6. Jump up^ Hull, p.522 caption.
  7. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f g h i j Hull, p.524.
  8. Jump up^ Hull, p.523 caption.
  9. Jump up^ “Automobilia”. Toutes les voitures françaises 1948 (salon Paris oct 1947) (Paris: Histoire & collections). Nr. 7: 26. 1998.
  10. ^ Jump up to:a b c “Automobilia”. Toutes les voitures françaises 1953 (salon Paris oct 1952) (Paris: Histoire & collections). Nr. 19: 23. 2000.
  11. ^ Jump up to:a b c “Automobilia”. Toutes les voitures françaises 1954 (salon [Oct] 1953) (Paris: Histoire & collections). Nr. 24: 24. 2002.

1895-1899 Delahaye Type 1 France Car Photo Spec Sheet Info CARD 1896 1897 1898 1898 Automobiles Delahaye Vintage Style Paris Auto Poster 1899 Delahaye 0910 1901-1956 Delahaye 1905 Delahaye Fire Truck 1905 Delahaye-6В 1906 Delahaye Fire Truck DSCF 1907 Delahaye Firebrigade 1907 delahaye ham-1 1910 Camion Delahaye 20cv en 1910 1910 Delahaye balayeuse a paris 1910 Delahaye Type 32 Roadster F 1910 Delahaye type-n-12 1911 Delahaye 48 Open Drive Opera Coupe '1911 1911 Delahaye Fire Truck outfitted by carrosserie et de charronnage paris 1911 Delahaye Fire Truck 1911 Delahaye Fire-Truck-outfitted-by-Carrosserie-et-de-Charronnage-Paris 1911 delahaye type-43-truck 1912 Delahaye transport 1912 Delahaye Type 47 10-12hp Estate Car by H.M. Hobson Ltd 1912 Engine Delahaye Type 32L Limousine 1912 1913 Delahaye Farcot Fire Truck Photo 1913 PUBLICITE AUTOMOBILES VEHICULES DELAHAYE AD 1913 - 1Hb 1913 PUBLICITE AUTOMOBILES VEHICULES DELAHAYE AD 1913 - 12G 1913 PUBLICITE AUTOMOBILES VEHICULES DELAHAYE AD 1913 a 1913 PUBLICITE AUTOMOBILES VEHICULES DELAHAYE AD 1913 1913 PUBLICITE AUTOMOBILES VEHICULES DELAHAYE GRANDS MAGASINS DU LOUVRE AD 1913 1913 PUBLICITE CAMIONS MILITAIRES DELAHAYE MILITARIA WWI RUSSE CAR AD 1913 1913 PUBLICITE DE 1913 VOITURE CITERNE SUR TRAIN DELAHAYE POUR ARMEE RUSSE WW1 AD PUB 1913 PUBLICITE VEHICULES DELAHAYE TAXI CAR AD 1913 1914 Delahaye Twin Winch WW1 Balloon Truck 1914 Publicite Automobile CAMION DELAHAYE 1915 Delahaye-78 with balloon winch 1918 Delahaye VTB Truck 1920 DELAHAYE AUTOMOBILE CAR PUBLICITE ~ 1920 FRENCH AD 1920 DELAHAYE AUTOMOBILE CAR PUBLICITE PUB ~ 1920 FRENCH AD 1922 Delahaye 'Genoveva' fire truck 1923-1927 Delahaye Type 87 10hp Car Photo Spec Sheet Info Stat French Atlas Card 1924 ANCIENNE PUBLICITE 1924 DELAHAYE AUTOMOBILE VOITURE 1925 DELAHAYE (France) 1925 Delahaye Tourer F 1925 Delahaye Type 87 with a 1.8 liter four-del-545 1926 Delahaye 10cv 1926 Delahaye 1926 Publicité Automobile Delahaye car vintage print ad 1926 1926 Publicite Camion Delahaye Truck AD 1926 1G 1927 Delahaye 1927 Fire truck, Sapeurs-pompiers 1927 Publicité Ancienne Voiture DELAHAYE Profil 1927 1927 PUBLICITE AUTOMOBILE DELAHAYE 10 CV 12 CV SPORT 16 CV CAMION DE 1927 FRENCH AD 1927 Publicité Automobile Delahaye car vintage ad 1927 1927 PUBLICITE CAMION A GAZOGENE DELAHAYE POIDS LOURDS TRUCK AD 1927 11G 1927 PUBLICITE VOITURE DE POMPIER DELAHAYE CAMION DE POMPIERS FIREMEN AD 1927 1927-1930 Delahaye Type 107 Car Photo Spec Sheet Info Stat French Card 1928 1929 1928 La Delahaye Type 107 1928 McConnachie-Delahaye Charab 1928 Publicité Automobile Delahaye Mascot car Mascotte vintage print ad 1928 1929 Delahaye VTB Truck

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1929 PUBLICITE AUTOMOBILE DELAHAYE CAR AD 1929 1929 PUBLICITE AUTOMOBILE DELAHAYE CHEVALIER SIGNE FELL DE 1929 FRENCH AD ART DECO 1929 Publicité Automobile Delahaye mascotte mascot car vintage print ad 1929 1929-34 DELAHAYE 5 PUBLICITES 1929 1934 LOT 40 AUTOMOBILE PUBLICITE ANCIENNE 1930 Delahaye ad a 1930 Delahaye ad 1930 Delahaye Six cylinder Madrid 1930 Publicité Automobile Delahaye car vintage print ad 1930 - 6 1930 Publicité Automobile Delahaye car vintage print ad 1930 a 1930 Publicité Automobiles Delahaye car vintage print ad 1930 1931 PUBLICITE ANCIENNE DE 1931 AUTOMOBILE DELAHAYE CAMION POMPIERS CAR TRUCK AD 1931 Publicité Automobile - DELAHAYE Type 108 6 Cyl 1931 PUBLICITE AUTOMOBILE DELAHAYE SES 4 ET 6 CYLINDRES SIGNE RENE RAVO DE 1931 AD 1931 PUBLICITE AUTOMOBILE DELAHAYE TYPE 108 CAR AD 1931 1931 Publicité Camions Delahaye Poids Lourds Trucks vintage print ad 1931 1932 bus delahaye etoile 1932 PUBLICITE AUTOMOBILE DELAHAYE CAR AD 1932 2E 1933 Delahaye Ad (3) 1933 Delahaye ad 1933 Delahaye Boek 1933 1933 PUBLICITE AUTOMOBILE DELAHAYE VICTOIRE TOUR DE FRANCE MEDAILLE D'OR DE 1933 AD 1933Publicité Automobile Delahaye car ad 1933

1934 Delahaye Sport October 1934 DELAHAYE..PUBLICITE PRESSE 1934..( automobile ) 1934 Publicité Automobile Delahaye Superluxe car vintage print ad 1934 1935 - Original DELAHAYE AUTOMOBILIA Ad RENE RAVO Vintage Advertising 1935 DELAHAYE PARIS NICE RENE RAVO AUTOMOBILE PUBLICITE ANCIENNE 1935 Delahaye 135 roadster 1935 Delahaye 135 1935 Delahaye Charab Buses-CN-McConnachie-Delahaye Charab 1935 PUBLICITE AUTOMOBILE DELAHAYE LA SUPERLUXE SIGNE RENE RAVO DE 1935 FRENCH AD CAR 1935 PUBLICITE AUTOMOBILE DELAHAYE SUPER LUXE WEEK END REVE R. RAVO DE 1935 FRENCH AD 1935-36 Delahaye 135 MS,(1978-08), D. v. d. Lof 1935-1936 Delahaye 135 Coupe des Alpes Car Photo Spec Sheet Stat French Card 1935-1950 Delahaye 135 Competition Le Mans Race Car 1935-1952 (1938) DELAHAYE 135 Car PHOTO SPEC SHEET BROCHURE BOOKLET a 1935-1952 (1938) DELAHAYE 135 Car PHOTO SPEC SHEET BROCHURE BOOKLET 1935-1952 Delahaye 135 (1936 Coupe des Alpes) Car Photo Spec Sheet French Card 1936 1937 1938 Delage DI-12 (Delahaye 134) France Car Photo Spec Sheet Info CARD 1936 1937 1938 Delahaye Type 165 France Car Photo Spec Sheet Info ATLAS CARD 1936 Bus Delahaye 140 1936 DELAHAYE MONTE CARLO C S AUTOMOBILE PUBLICITE ANCIENNE 1936 Delahaye - Nice 1936 Delahaye 134N Berline Autobineau at Monthléry 1936 Delahaye 135 Competition Court by Figoni & Falaschi 1936 Delahaye 135 competition court 1936 Delahaye 135 DS Cabrio DV PBC 04 1936 Delahaye 135 Figoni et Falaschi Torpedo Cabriolet F 1936 Delahaye 135 MS Pourtout Coupe Aerodynamique 1936 Delahaye 135 S Competition Roadster 1936 Delahaye 135M Figoni & Falaschi Competition Coupe 1936 Delahaye 135S by Figoni and Falaschi 1936 Delahaye 135s Competition 1936 Delahaye 135-S 1936 Delahaye ad 1936 DELAHAYE COUPE DES ALPES France Classic Car b 1936 DELAHAYE COUPE DES ALPES France Classic Car 1936 Delahaye Delahaye-135-MS-1936 1936 Delahaye 1936 Delahaye-135-MS-Chapron-Convertible-For-Sale-19503 1936 Franay Delahaye 135 Convertible 1936-1954 Delahaye 135 Convertible France Luxury Car Photo Spec Sheet Info CARD 1936-1954 Delahaye 135 MS (1948) Henri Chapron Car Photo Spec Sheet Info CARD

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1937 DELAHAYE 135 SPORT RENE RAVO AUTOMOBILE PUBLICITE ANCIENNE 1937 Delahaye 135 competition figoni & falaschi nr676 1937 Delahaye 135 CS Le Mans 1937 Delahaye 135 MS Cabriolet Pourtout

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1937 Delahaye 135 sport roadster 1937 Delahaye 135M Figoni et Falaschi Torpedo Cabriolet 1937 Delahaye 135M Figoni 1937 Delahaye 135MS Competition 1937 Delahaye 135MS Roadster 1937 Delahaye 135MS 1937 Delahaye 145 Chapron Coupe 1937 Delahaye 145 Franay Cabriolet 1937 delahaye ad 1937 Delahaye 'Bella Figura' Bugnotti Coupe 1937 delahaye hinlopen 1937 Delahaye t145 roadster 1937 delahaye type 103 1937 delahaye-type-103-1937 1937 delalhaye16 1937 PUBLICITE 38 x 28 AUTOMOBILE DELAHAYE 1937 STERLING SILVER METAL INGOT, Delahaye 1937 STERLING SILVER METAL INGOT, 1937, Delahaye 135M Saoutchik Cabriolet 1937-1938 Delahaye Type 145 France Race Car Photo Spec Sheet Info ATLAS CARD 1938 DELAHAYE Model 103 A (Fire truck) 1938 Delahaye 134 N Chapron 1938 Delahaye 135 figoni & falaschi 1938 DELAHAYE 135 M - 6 CILINDRI #63 IN BOX 1938 Delahaye 135 M Roadster - Mullin Automotive Museum 1938 Delahaye 135 M 1938 Delahaye 135 ms cabrio 1938 Delahaye 135 MS Competition Cabriolet by Figoni 1938 Delahaye 135 MS 1938 Delahaye 135 1938 Delahaye 135m ad 1938 Delahaye 135m roadster 1938 Delahaye 135m 1938 Delahaye 135ms cabrio 1938 Delahaye 148 1938 Delahaye 1938 ad a 1938 Delahaye Racing Pin Le Manns Racing Pin Auto Pins 1938 Delahaye Type 135 1938 Delahaye Type 135M Competition Roadster 1938 Delahaye Type 135M W-COA a 1938 Delahaye Type 135M W-COA b 1938 Delahaye Type 135M W-COA c 1938 Delahaye Type 135M W-COA d 1938 Delahaye Type 135M W-COA g 1938 Delahaye Type 135M W-COA h 1938 Delahaye-01 1938 Delahaye-103 1938 PUBLICITE DE PRESSE DELAHAYE AUTOMOBILE VICTOIRE A PAU ILLUSTRATION RENLUC 1938 1938 PUBLICITE DELAHAYE VEHICULE UTILITAIRE TRUCK AD 1938 1F 1938-46 Delahaye 145 Coupe Chapron. 1939 Delahaye 1 1939 Delahaye 2 1939 Delahaye 77 1939 Delahaye 134 G Berline 1939 Delahaye 134 G 1939 Delahaye 135 M Chapron coupé 1939 Delahaye 135 M Coupe F 1939 Delahaye 135 M Drophead Coupe, Body by Chapron 1939 Delahaye 135 M reklame 1939 Delahaye 135 MS Figoni & Falaschi 1939 Delahaye 135 MS Grand Sport Roadster 1939 Delahaye 135MS Speciale x4 1939 Delahaye 148 1939 Delahaye 165 figoni et falaschi 1939 Delahaye 165 V-12 Cabriolet 1939 Delahaye 165 1939 Delahaye 165-DV dashboard 1939 Delahaye 165M 1939 Delahaye cabrio figoni et falaschi 1939 Delahaye F

Highlites from early Road & Track issues
Highlites from early Road & Track issues

1939 Delahaye T165 1939 1939 Delahaye T165 1939 DELAHAYE Type 165 Car Stamp Keyring (Auto 100 Automobile) 1939 Delahaye Type 165 Figoni & Falaschi 1939 Delahaye Type 165 Silodrome 1939 Delahaye+165+M+1939+Figoni+et+Falaschi 1939 PUBLICITE DELAHAYE VOITURE LUXE FRENCH CAR AD 1939 4d 1940 DELAHAYE PUISSANCE AUTOMOBILE PUBLICITE ANCIENNE 1940 Delahaye 163 Friehöfer Truck 1946 Delahaye 135 Guillore Break de Chasse

1946 Delahaye 135 m pennock 1946 Delahaye 163 Besset 1946 DELAHAYE Cabriolet PININFARINA Design Car Rare Art Print a

Highlites from early Road & Track issues
Highlites from early Road & Track issues
Highlites from early Road & Track issues
Highlites from early Road & Track issues

1947 Delahaye 135 Franay Cabriolet Ticona April 1999 Reflections Calendar B8159 a 1947 Delahaye 135 M Cabriolet 2 1947 Delahaye 135 MS cabriolet Franay 1947 Delahaye 135 MS Cabriolet par Franay - 1947 1947 Delahaye 135 MS Cabriolet par Franay 1947 Delahaye 135 MS Chapron 1947 Delahaye 135 MS n 1947 Delahaye 135 MS 1947 DELAHAYE 135M 1947 Delahaye 163 Long 6cyl 3557cc 1947 DELAHAYE 175 COUPE - 1953 CHRYSLER THOMAS SPECIAL 1947 Delahaye 175 1947 Delahaye 175S Aerodynamic Coupe 1947 Delahaye 175S competition version 1947 Delahaye 178 1947 Delahaye CFA 163 essence ou diesel 1947 DELAHAYE TYPE 175S AERODYNAMIQUE Dream Cars CARD 1947 Delahaye Type 175S, Imperial Palace Co. LV, Car Trading Card - Not Postcard 1948 Delahaye 135 cabriolet Pourtout 1948 Delahaye 135 Cascogne dub7 1948 Delahaye 135 coach Chapron 1948 Delahaye 135 M (135M) 1948 Delahaye 135 M Figoni et Falaschi 3-Postion Cabriolet 1948 Delahaye 135 M Pourtout 1948 Delahaye 135 m 1948 Delahaye 135 MS cabriolet by coachbuilder Franay 1948 Delahaye 135 MS Cabriolet by Franay 1948 Delahaye 135 MS Figoni&Falaschi-Cabriolet 1948 Delahaye 135m cabriolet 1948 Delahaye 135MS Cabriolet Chapron 1948 Delahaye 163 Cottard Geo Ham 1948 Delahaye 180 (long wheelbase) 1948 Delahaye Gascogne 135dub7 1948 Delahaye Sales Sheet Brochure Selborne Mayfair Limited - Earls Court Motor a 1948 Delahaye Sales Sheet Brochure Selborne Mayfair Limited - Earls Court Motor 1948 Delahaye Type 135M Sales Sheet Brochure Selborne Mayfair Limited The Motor 1 1948 Delahaye Type 135M Sales Sheet Brochure Selborne Mayfair Limited The Motor 2 1948-1951 Delahaye Chaboud Special Race Car Photo Spec Sheet Info CARD 1949 1950 1949 Delahaye 135 m roadster figoni 1949 Delahaye 135m coach grand sport guillore 1949 Delahaye 135M 1949 Delahaye 135MS Roadster by Selborne 1949 Delahaye 163 Tank Dump Van Truck & Bus Brochure French wu7805 a 1949 Delahaye 163 Tank Dump Van Truck & Bus Brochure French wu7805 b 1949 Delahaye 163 Tank Dump Van Truck & Bus Brochure French wu7805 c 1949 Delahaye 163 Tank Dump Van Truck & Bus Brochure French wu7805 d 1949 Delahaye 175S Roadster 1949 Delahaye 178 Drophead Coupé, once owned by Elton John. 1949 Delahaye D1630 Autocar a 1949 Delahaye D1630 Autocar

Highlites from early Road & Track issues
Highlites from early Road & Track issues

1949 Delahaye ghia aigle 1949 Delahaye graber geneva 1949 Delahaye Roadster 1949 Delahaye type 148 L Berline Letourneur et Marchand front 1949 Delahaye Type 175 Roadster 1949 DELAHAYE TYPE 175 SAOUTCHIK COUPE DE VILLE b 1949 Delahaye Type 175 Saoutchik Coupe de Ville c 1949 Delahaye Type 175S coachwork by Saoutchik 1949 Delahaye type 178 Drophead Coupe 1949 Saoutchik Delahaye 175S Roadster fr 1949 Saoutchik Delahaye 175S Roadster 1949 Vintage Race Poster 1949-53 Delahaye-182 Delta, 4x4 1950 DELAHAYE 131 (50 places) 1950 Delahaye 135 M Letourneur & Marchand 1950 Delahaye 135 MS Vanden Plas (Vose) 1950 Delahaye 135 saoutchik paryz 1950 Delahaye 135M DHC 1950 Delahaye 135M Franay 1950 Delahaye 135m terenowy 1950 Delahaye 180 Cabriolet Franay Convertible Car Photo Spec Sheet French Card 1950 Delahaye 235M Pillarless Saloon by Ghia 1950 Delahaye saoutchik 1950 DELAHAYE Type 135 M - 148 L - 135 MS - 175 - French text - 8-pgs brochure 1 1950 DELAHAYE Type 135 M - 148 L - 135 MS - 175 - French text - 8-pgs brochure 2 1950 DELAHAYE Type 135 M - 148 L - 135 MS - 175 - French text - 8-pgs brochure 3 1950 DELAHAYE Type 135 M - 148 L - 135 MS - 175 - French text - 8-pgs brochure 4 1950 DELAHAYE Type 135 M - 148 L - 135 MS - 175 - French text - 8-pgs brochure 5 1950 DELAHAYE Type 135 M - 148 L - 135 MS - 175 - French text - 8-pgs brochure 6 1950 DELAHAYE Type 135 M - 148 L - 135 MS - 175 - French text - 8-pgs brochure 7 1950 DELAHAYE Type 135 M - 148 L - 135 MS - 175 - French text - 8-pgs brochure 8 1950 Delahaye VLRD (Wielka Enc. Sam. 87) 1950-1953 Delahaye VLR (Type 182) Army Jeep Car Photo Spec French Card 1951 1952 1950's DELAHAYE 1951 Delahaye 175S Franay 1951 Delahaye 235 coupe von Henry Chapron 1951 Delahaye 235 M Chapron Cabriolet a 1951 Delahaye 235 M Chapron cabriolet 1951 Delahaye 235 Saoutchik Cabriolet - rvr 1951 Delahaye 235 Saoutchik Cabriolet 1951 Delahaye 235 Saoutchik Roadster 1951 Delahaye 235 Saoutciik Cabriolet 1951 Delahaye 235-cabrio-saoutchik 1951 Delahaye 235-coach-chapron 1951 Delahaye 235-letourneur-marchand 1951 DELAHAYE 1951-1954 235 ADVERTISING BROCHURE a 1951 Delahaye Ad 1951 Delahaye b 1951 Delahaye Cape Rally-photo 1951 Delahaye 1951 Maes Delahaye b 1951. Delahaye 235 1951-53 Delahaye VLR, 4x4 1951-1954 Delahaye 235 Convertible Car Photo Spec Sheet Info CARD 1952 1953 1952 Delahaye 148 1952 Delahaye 235-coupe-chapron-paris 1952 Delahaye 235-figoni-cabriolet 1952 Delahaye 235-letourneur-marchand 1952 Delahaye Lourdes 1952 Delahaye vlr 1952 The station at Billy Montigny showing a Delahaye bus at the railway station. 1953 Delahaye 171 1953 Delahaye 235-cabrio-chapron

1953 Delahaye Lourdes 1953 Delahaye-185 Cob, 4x4 1954 Delahaye 235-chapron-saoutchik 1957 Delahaye 103 1960 DELAHAYE 103 1960's Delahaye & Dellow Logo Lapel Pin Tin Sixties 60's 1967 3.5 Litre DELAHAYE Type 135 a 1967 3.5 Litre DELAHAYE Type 135 b 1967 3.5 Litre DELAHAYE Type 135 c 1967 3.5 Litre DELAHAYE Type 135 d 1992 42nd Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance 1992 Poster Print Delahaye William Motta 2006 SIGNED Pebble Beach Concours Poster 1936 DELAHAYE 135 Comp Sport Coupe KOKA a 2016 Delahaye b Delahaye - Car Hood Ornament Lalique Delahaye 20 delahaye 83-03 delahaye 83-04 delahaye 83-05 delahaye 83-08 Delahaye 103 Bonneville Fire Truck delahaye 103 delahaye 103-01 delahaye 103-02 delahaye 103-04 delahaye 103-05 delahaye 103-06 delahaye 103-09 delahaye 103-10 Delahaye 104 delahaye 134-01 delahaye 134-02 delahaye 134-03 delahaye 134-05 delahaye 134-06 delahaye 134-07 delahaye 134-08 delahaye 134-09 delahaye 134-10 Delahaye 135 Art Deco on Wheels - Beautiful delahaye 135 competition 36

2009 Amelia Island Concours d'Elegance
2009 Amelia Island Concours d’Elegance

delahaye 135 coupé 02 delahaye 135 coupé 03 delahaye 135 coupé 04 Delahaye 135 Delahaye 135 Delahaye 135 m pennock 1946 Delahaye 135 MS Cabriolet Pourtout Delahaye 135 MS Vanden Plas (Vose) 1950 Delahaye 135 S Desplates Roadster Delahaye 135 S in action Delahaye 135 S Delahaye 135 sport drawing Delahaye 135, Alfetta Delahaye 135, Alfettaa Delahaye 135, Alfettab delahaye 135-competition 04 delahaye 135-cs-01 delahaye 135-cs-02 delahaye 135-cs-03 delahaye 135-cs-04 delahaye 135-cs-05 delahaye 135-cs-06 delahaye 135-cs-07 delahaye 135-cs-09 Delahaye 135dub delahaye 135m abbott roadster 08 Delahaye 135M DHC Delahaye 135M delahaye 135-m-cabriolet-03 delahaye 135-m-cabriolet-09 delahaye 135m-chapron-coupe-07 delahaye 135m-chapron-coupe-09 delahaye 135m-chapron-coupe-10 delahaye 135-ms-07 Delahaye 135-MS-Figoni-and-Falaschi-Cabriolet-8980 Delahaye 138 only 300 Delahaye 140 ambulance delahaye 143-01 delahaye 143-05 Delahaye 145 Chapron Coupe Delahaye 148 Labourdette delahaye 148-chapron-03 delahaye 148-chapron-05 delahaye 148-chapron-06 delahaye 148-chapron-07 delahaye 148-chapron-08 delahaye 148-chapron-09 delahaye 148-chapron-10 delahaye 155-03 delahaye 155-04 delahaye 163 besset autobus 01 Delahaye 163 in Le clan des Siciliens, 1969 delahaye 163-01 police delahaye 163-02 delahaye 163-03 delahaye 163-04 Postes delahaye 163-05 Firebrigade delahaye 163-06 Rizzla+ delahaye 163-07 autobus delahaye 163-10 autobus ad DELAHAYE 165 + single seater racer 2 color photo+specification CARDS, FREE POST a DELAHAYE 165 + single seater racer 2 color photo+specification CARDS, FREE POST b Delahaye 175 Roadster Delahaye 175-175-180 Promo Poster Delahaye 175S roadster bugnotti top Delahaye 175S Roadster delahaye 178 180-09 delahaye 178 chapron 01 delahaye 178 chapron 05 delahaye 178 chapron 07 delahaye 178 chapron 10 delahaye 180 chapron 05 Pebble Beach 2008 delahaye 180-01 delahaye 180-02 delahaye 180-03 ad delahaye 180-04 delahaye 180-06 delahaye 180-07 delahaye 180-08 delahaye 180-transformable-limousine-01 delahaye 180-transformable-limousine-02 delahaye 180-transformable-limousine-05 delahaye 180-transformable-limousine-06 delahaye 180-transformable-limousine-09 delahaye 235 01 delahaye 235 02 delahaye 235 04 delahaye 235 05 delahaye 235 06 delahaye 235 07 delahaye 235 08 delahaye 235 09 Delahaye 235 Cabriolet Chapron Delahaye 235 delahaye ad bl Delahaye Ad business cars Delahaye ad delahaye ambulance-12 Delahaye Automobiles Vintage Poster delahaye autopompe 42ap 09 delahaye autopompe 42ap 10

Maastricht Interclasics & Topmobiel
Maastricht Interclasics & Topmobiel
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Delahaye Bl Truck in Film Delahaye Bugnotti delahaye bus Delahaye by Laurent Durieux (Regular)

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Delahaye Car EMPTY Envelope Lot Paris France Stamps DELAHAYE CAR POSTER Antique Classic Car by EncorePrintSociety DELAHAYE CFA MODEL 163 FACTORY MECHANICAL PARTS BOOK a DELAHAYE CFA MODEL 163 FACTORY MECHANICAL PARTS BOOK b Delahaye Chapron factory bodied 235 Delahaye Digital Art delahaye emblem 6 Delahaye Figoni et Falaschi Delahaye Fire Engine '924 AP 62' Sapeurs Pompiers Ville de Therouanne Delahaye fire truck, a photo from Hordaland, South Delahaye fire truck delahaye firebrigade 83-02 delahaye firebrigade unknown-04 Delahaye Franay l Delahaye GFA a40 camion Le Chassis 163 delahaye gfa logo1 Delahaye GFA Delahaye grill Delahaye Hood Ornament Delahaye hood with ornamentation Delahaye Jeep Delahaye letter logo delahaye le-vlr DeLahaye logoCD Delahaye ma131a DELAHAYE MOTOR CAR CO.. - hat pin, lapel pin delahaye noger hand Delahaye Oldie DELAHAYE OWNERS CLUB French Magazines Mars 2000 and 2006 French 1 DELAHAYE OWNERS CLUB French Magazines Mars 2000 and 2006 French 2 DELAHAYE OWNERS CLUB French Magazines Mars 2000 and 2006 French 3 Delahaye Pickup truck Bl Delahaye Pin-speld Delahaye Racing Pin Le Manns Racing Pin Auto Pins (#543 Racing) Delahaye reloaded Delahaye roulant au gaz Delahaye S Delahaye Sapeurs Pompiers de paris Delahaye sketch brightdesign_05_resized Delahaye sketch Delahaye the hood ornament of all hood ornaments! Delahaye was a French company started in Tours in 1895 delahaye truck postcard 14 Delahaye Truck Delahaye trucks (Fire truck and the green one) and a Fiat truck Delahaye Type 103 Bonneville Firetruck Delahaye USA Bugnotti Coupe Ride in one of these someday, and model infront of-on it Delahaye USA - Cars Under Construction Delahaye USA - The Sultan Delahaye USA Bella Figura Type 57S Coupe delahaye usa bugnotti 09 Delahaye Van Fire truck - 6 Cylinders engine DELAHAYE VINTAGE SIGNS ADVERSTISING AUTO CAR RETRO - METAL PLATES delahaye vlr 03 delahaye vlr 04 delahaye vlr 05 delahaye vlr 06 delahaye vlr 08 delahaye vlr bretagne 09 delahaye vlr bretagne 10 delahaye vlr firebrigade 07 delahaye vlr-c12-03 Delahaye winch truck SPoelstra1150573 Delahaye winch truck delahaye-20171-20pick-img Delahaye-Auto-echelle de pompiers Dinky-Toys-F-n-32D- Delahaye's Awesome Car Hood Ornaments Delahaye-Truck Dinky-Toys-F-n-32D-Delahaye-Auto-echelle a FIGONI ET DELAHAYE - LA HAUTE COUTURE AUTOMOBILE - 9782726896761 gare de Dreux Lucy O’Riley Schell with the very first Delahaye 138 Sport, probably coach-built in a clumsy way by the small Delahaye racing department workshop. Right This was Lucy's favourite, coach-built by Figoni, a very elegant and fast roadster. Talbor or Delahaye

This is all i could find about Delahaye on the World Wide Web.

DUESENBERG Automobile & Motors Company, Inc

1927 Emblem Duesenberg

1923 Duesenberg Model A Winged Motometer a

Duesenberg Automobile & Motors Company, Inc. Saint Paul, Minnesota, 1913-1937

Duesenberg Automobile & Motors Company, Inc.
Industry
  • Automobile manufacturing
  • Engine manufacturing
Founded Saint Paul, Minnesota, United States (1913)
Founder
Defunct 1937; 79 years ago
Headquarters Auburn, Indiana, United States
Number of locations
Auburn, Indiana
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
August Duesenberg & Frederick Duesenberg
Products
Services Automobiles, ship and airplane engines
Website http://www.automobilemuseum.org/

Duesenberg Motors Company (sometimes referred to as “Duesy”) was an American manufacturer of race cars and luxury automobiles. It was founded in St. Paul,MN, United States by brothers August and Frederick Duesenberg in 1913, where they built engines and race cars. The brothers moved their operations to Elizabeth, New Jersey in 1916 to manufacture engines for WW I. In 1919, when their government contracts were cancelled, they moved to Indianapolis, Indiana, home of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, established the Duesenberg Automobile and Motors Company, Inc. (Delaware) and built outstanding automobiles. In late 1926, E.L. Cord added Duesenberg to his Auburn Automobile Company. With the market for expensive luxury cars severely undercut by the Depression, Duesenberg folded in 1937.

History

Duesenberg family with Fred and August in the middle, ca. 1886.

In 1913, brothers Fred and Augie Duesenberg founded Duesenberg Motors Company, Inc. on University Avenue in St. Paul, Minnesota, to build engines and race cars. The brothers were self-taught engineers and built many experimental cars. Duesenberg cars were considered some of the very best cars of the time, and were built entirely by hand. In 1914, Eddie Rickenbacker drove a “Duesy” to finish in 10th place at the Indianapolis 500, and Duesenberg won the race in 1924, 1925, and 1927. The fledgling company sidestepped into aviation engine manufacturing when Colonel R.C. Bolling and his commission acquired a license to produce the Bugatti U-16 for the U.S. Army Air Service. The end of World War I stopped this project before it could ever mature.

In 1921, Duesenberg provided the pace car for the Indy 500, driven by Fred Duesenberg. In 1923, Jimmy Murphy became the first American to win the French Grand Prix when he drove a Duesenberg to victory at Le Mans.

Products

Model A (1921–1927)

Main article: Duesenberg Model A

At the end of World War I, they ceased building aviation and marine engines in Elizabeth, New Jersey. In 1919 the Duesenberg brothers sold their Minnesota and New Jersey factories to John Willys and moved to a new headquarters and factory in Indianapolis, where the “Duesenberg Automobile and Motors Company, Inc.” was established in 1920 to begin production of passenger cars. The plant was located on a 17-acre (69,000 m2) site on West Washington street at Harding street until 1937.

1923 Duesenberg Model A touring car at the Louwman Museum

 1923 Duesenberg Model A touring car at the Louwman Museum NL

Although the Duesenberg brothers were world-class engineers, they were neither good businessmen nor administrators; they were unable to sell all the units of their first passenger car, the Model A. This had the first “mass-produced” straight eight engine in the U.S. It was an extremely advanced and expensive automobile (prices began at $6,500), offering features such as single overhead camshafts, four-valve cylinder heads, and the first four-wheel (16″) hydraulic brakes (designed by Fred in conjunction with Lockheed) offered on a passenger car anywhere (predating Adler‘s introduction to the European market in 1926 on the “Standard 6”). The Model A was a lighter and smaller vehicle than the competition. It was among the most powerful and the fastest cars of its time. Among the celebrities who purchased this model were Tom Mix and Rudolph Valentino.

The model experienced various delays going from prototype to production. Deliveries to dealers did not start until December 1921. Sales lagged and the goal of building 100 Duesenbergs each month proved far too high, as the Indianapolis plant struggled to roll out one a day. In 1922 no more than 150 cars were manufactured, and only 650 Model As were sold over a period of six years.

1922 Model A specifications

Engine Power Transmission Wheelbase Ground clearance Frame
260CID 1-bbl. I8 90-100 hp 3-speed manual 134 in (3,404 mm) 10 in (254 mm) Chrome Nickel steel 6.40-inch (163 mm) in depth

Winning races did not translate into financial success either, although that winning reputation would eventually attract new investors, who supplied the cash flow to prop up the production facility. The brothers continued to create excellent engines for cars, boats, and a few planes but only as employees of various capitalist investors who bought the rights to their famous family name.

1925 August and Fred Duesenberg

 Brothers Duesenberg pictured in 1925, August at left and Fred at right.

The firm had already acquired a considerable aura of prestige when in October 1919, Fred signed over the rights to his name, patents and drawings for a passenger car to a pair of promoters, Newton E. Van Zandt and Luther M. Rankin. On March 8, 1920, these men became president and vice president of the “Duesenberg Automobile and Motors Corporation of Indianapolis”. Fred was chief engineer and Augie his assistant, and both were salaried as employees.

Van Zandt quit after a year, and business went from bad to worse in 1923. In 1924 the company went into receivership, but somehow it survived that year. In 1925, the firm’s name was changed to “Duesenberg Motors Corporation” and Fred assumed the title of president. Fred and August struggled to keep the company, but to no avail, as they weren’t able to raise enough capital.

Model X (1926–1927)

Model X Duesenbergs are very rare. It was a sportier version of the model A with a heavier and longer (136 in (3,500 mm) wheelbase) chassis and 100 hp (75 kW) engine that enabled it to reach 100 mph (161 km/h). The most notable differences between the A and X were that the latter had hypoid differentials and all its valves were on one side; it sported the hydraulic brakes that Fred had originated on his 1914 racing cars. This braking system could have earned him a fortune if he had obtained a patent.

According to Randy Ema, the top Duesenberg authority in the United States, only 13 were built. They fit in between the Duesenberg Model A and the famous J; only four were known to survive until automobile preservationist Jay Leno found a fifth X in a neighborhood garage in 2005.

Model J (1928–1937)

Main article: Duesenberg Model J
1930 Duesenberg J Walker La Grande Torpedo Phaeton

 1930 J Walker La Grande Torpedo Phaeton

E.L. Cord bought the company on October 26, 1926 for the brothers’ engineering skills, talent and the brand name in order to produce luxury cars. He challenged Fred Duesenberg to design an automobile that would be the best in the world. Indeed, Cord wanted the biggest, fastest, and most expensive car ever made. He also ordered a large chassis to be able to compete with the biggest, most powerful, and most luxurious European cars of the era, such as Hispano-Suiza, Isotta Fraschini, Mercedes-Benz, and Rolls-Royce.

After Cord’s takeover, the new company was renamed “Duesenberg, Inc.” Fred would continue in the new organization, now with the title of vice president in charge of engineering and experimental work. Whereas Augie had played an important role in the development of the Model A and its variant, the very rare X, he had nothing to do with the J and had no formal connection with Duesenberg, Inc. until later. According to the expert Marshall Merkes, “Cord did not want Augie around.” However, all Duesenberg racing cars produced after 1926 were Augie-built in an enterprise that functioned separately, and in a building apart from the main Duesenberg plant. He was also responsible for a number of engineering achievements like the superchargers he developed for both the Auburn and Cord motorcars.

1931 Duesenberg J Murphy

 Duesenberg J Murphy 1931.

The newly revived Duesenberg company set about to produce the Model J, which debuted December 1 at the New York Car Show of 1928. In Europe, it was launched at the “Salon de l’automobile de Paris” of 1929. The first and — at the time of the New York presentation — only example made of the series, the J-101, was a sweep-panel, dual-cowl phaeton, with coachwork by LeBaron, finished in silver and black. By the time the Great Depression hit in October 1929, the Duesenberg Company had only built some 200 cars. An additional 100 orders were filled in 1930. Thus, the Model J fell short of the original goal to sell 500 cars a year.

Duesenberg Model J engine

 Model J engine

The Model J’s straight-eight was based on the company’s successful racing engines of the 1920s; designed by Duesenberg, they were manufactured by Lycoming, another company owned by Cord. In unsupercharged form, the eight produced an impressive (for the period) 265 horsepower (198 kW), aided by dual overhead camshafts and four valves per cylinder. The Model J was capable of a top speed of 119 mph (192 km/h), and 94 mph (151 km/h) in second gear. Other cars featured larger-displacement engines, but none surpassed its power. It was also both the fastest and most expensive American automobile in the market.

As was the custom among the luxury car brands, only the chassis and engine were displayed, since the interior and body of the car would be coachbuilt to the owner’s specifications. The chassis on most Model Js were the same, as was the styling of such elements as fenders, headlamps, radiator, hood and instrument panel.

Duesenberg bodies came from both the United States and Europe, and the finished cars were some of the largest, grandest, most beautiful, and most elegant cars ever created. About half the Model Js built by Duesenberg had coachworks devised by the company’s chief body designer, Gordon Buehrig. The rest were by independent coachbuilders from the United States, such as Derham, Holbrook, Judkins, Le Baron, Murphy, Rollston (later renamed Rollson), Walker, Weymann, and Willoughby, and from European works Fernandez et Darrin, Franay, Gurney Nutting, Saoutchik, etc. However, other coachworks were made by Duesenberg branches in Chicago, New York City, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Florida and Denver, as well as by smaller dealers. For the in-house bodies Duesenberg used the name of La Grande.

The chassis cost $8,500 ($9,500 after 1932); the completed base model cost between $13,000 and $19,000 (two of the American-bodied J’s reached $25,000), at a time when the average U.S. physician earned less than $3,000 a year. Figures are not available as to the prices charged by deluxe coachbuilders in Europe, but it is reasonable to assume the final selling price of the products mounted on the costly imported chassis were considerably higher than their all-American-built counterparts.

The J was available in two versions of chassis with a different wheelbase; a long one (153.54 in (3.90 m)) and a short one (about 141.73 in (3.60 m)). There were also other special sizes, like the only two SSJs with a wheelbase shortened to 125 in (3.18 m) and a couple of cars with the wheelbase extended to 4 m (160 in) and over.

The dashboard included lights that reminded the driver the oil needed changing and the battery should be inspected.

A series of minor modifications were carried out during the production life, but most of the design remained the same up until the factory closed in 1937. First to go was the four-speed gearbox, which proved unable to handle the engine’s power. It was replaced by an unsynchronized three-speed gearbox, which was fitted to all subsequent Duesenbergs. Unlike almost all American manufacturers, Duesenberg did not switch to a fully synchronized gearbox in the mid-1930s, which made the Model J difficult to drive and outdated. By 1937 the chassis and gearbox were ancient compared to the competition.

Regarding this model, it is necessary to emphasize that most of them (engine and chassis) were made in 1929 and 1930, but due to the Depression, high price, and other factors, were sold in subsequent years. The year it was bodied is used to date a particular J, though the chassis was made in an earlier year.

1935 Duesenberg Convertible SJ LA Grand Dual-Cowl Phaeton

1935 SJ LaGrande Dual-Cowl Phaeton.

The supercharged version, often referred to as the SJ, was reputed to achieve 104 miles per hour (167 km/h) in second gear and have a top speed of 135–140 miles per hour (217–225 km/h) in third gear. Zero-to-60 mph (97 km/h) times of around eight seconds and 0–100 mph (0–161 km/h) in 17 seconds were reported for the SJ in spite of the unsynchronized transmissions, at a time when even the best cars of the era were not likely to reach 100 mph (160 km/h). Duesenbergs generally weighed around two and a half tons; up to three tons was not unusual, considering the wide array of custom coachwork available. The wheelbase was 142.5 in (362 cm).

This rare supercharged Model J version, with 320 hp (239 kW) was also created by Fred Duesenberg. and introduced in May 1932, only 36 units were built. Special-bodied models, such as the later “Marmon Meteor” chassis, achieved an average speed of over 135 mph (217 km/h) and a one-hour average of over 152 mph (245 km/h) at Bonneville Salt Flats, Utah. The SJ’s supercharger was located beside the engine; to make room for it, the exhaust pipes were creased so they could be bent easily and extended through the side panel of the hood. These supercharged cars can be recognized by these shiny creased tubes, which Cord registered as a trademark and used in his other supercharged cars from Cord and Auburn.

Fred Duesenberg died of pneumonia on July 26, 1932, resulting from injuries sustained in an automobile accident in which he was driving a Murphy-bodied SJ convertible. His brother, Augie, took over Fred’s duties as chief engineer and Harold T. Ames became president of Duesenberg, Inc.

The SSJ is very similar to the SJ version, but with close to 400 hp (298 kW). The only two examples built in 1935, the SSJ Speedsters sported a lightweight open-roadster body produced by Central Manufacturing Company, an Auburn subsidiary in Connersville, Indiana. One of them belonged to the actor Gary Cooper, the other one was lent by the company to actor Clark Gable, who already owned a Duesenberg J. The inscription SSJ (same goes for SJ) has never been officially used by the company, but it eventually became commonly used among the car lovers. The second “S” stands for “short wheelbase” as the two SSJ are the only Duesenberg to have a chassis with the wheelbase shortened to 125 in (3,200 mm). The 420 cu in (6.9 l) straight eight engine of both SSJ models is equipped with two special carburetors and inlet ports of a special shape called “ram’s horn”, which was used in other SJs as well. Unlike the normal port, the “ram’s horn” is composed of two horns, with each of the two being split in two again. At the rear, the SSJ sported an external spare tire and smaller “later-style” round taillights. The external exhaust pipes sprouting out of the hood were an indication it was the “supercharged” version, but these were optional on J models as well.

There is another version of the model J known as the Duesenberg JN (a name never used by the company either). All JNs were sold with Rollston coachwork and only ten were produced in 1935. In an attempt to give a more modern look to an ageing design, the JN was equipped with smaller 17 in (43 cm)-diameter wheels (versus 19 in (48 cm)), skirted fenders, bullet-shaped taillights, and bodies set on the frame rails for a lower look. The battery box and tool box were redesigned slightly so that the doors could close over the frame. Supercharged JNs gained the logical SJN designation.

1930 Duesenberg J hibbard and Darrin Town Car and King of Spain Alfonso XIII

King Alfonso XIII of Spain standing next to his 1930 Model J Hibbard and Darrin Town Car.

The Model J quickly became one of the most popular luxury cars, as well as a status symbol in the United States and Europe, driven by the rich and famous, including Al Capone, Evalyn Walsh McLean, Greta Garbo, Howard Hughes, Mae West, Marion Davies, Tyrone Power, Clark Gable, Bill “Bojangles” Robinson, William Randolph Hearst, Powel Crosley, Jr., the families Mars, Whitney, and Wrigley; members of European royalty such as the Duke of Windsor, Prince Nicholas of Romania, Queen Maria of Yugoslavia, and the Kings Victor Emmanuel III of Italy and Alfonso XIII of Spain. The latter was very keen on motoring and chose his now-missing Duesenberg J, among his cars, to go to exile after the proclamation of the Second Spanish Republic. Father Divine had the last Duesenberg chassis built with an extra-long 178-inch wheelbase. It weighed 7,800 lb (3,500 kg) and accommodated ten passengers. J. Herbert Newport was the designer. Built by Bohman and Schwartz and delivered in October 1937, it was 22 ft (6.7 m) long and 7 ft (2.1 m) wide. It was known as Father Divine’s Throne Car, because it had a removable rear top section that exposed two raised rear seats.

Originally, New York supported the Model J. New York was the financial capital of the United States in 1929, and many of its people could afford such a very expensive car. As the Depression deepened, however, power shifted, and ultimately it was newly wealthy Hollywood that kept Duesenberg alive through much of the 1930s. It was so reputed and imposing that many Hollywood stars, such as James Cagney, posed next to the car to promote their careers.

1935 Duesenberg J advertisement published in the magazine Country Life
1935 Vanity Fair Magazine Duesenberg advertisement

Duesenberg advertising the Model J as “The World’s Finest Motor Car”. In their print ads, an elegant man or woman were seen together with a concise but meaningful sentence: “He/She drives a Duesenberg”. The campaign was a success.

There was a gradual evolution (up to the 1937 model) to preserve the “stately lines” while moving into a more integrated mode of styling. The final evolution of the Duesenberg engine was ram-air intakes, which were added to some of the last supercharged models to produce 400 hp (298 kW), referred to as “SSJ”. Of 481 Model Js built (including all its versions) produced between 1928 and 1937, about 378 survive.

Duesenberg ceased production in 1937 after Cord’s financial empire collapsed. However, between 1937 and 1940 two automobiles put the final touch to this historic marque. The first one was delivered by the coachbuilder Rollson to the German artist Rudolf Bauer in April 1940; it is both the longest Duesenberg and the last one delivered. The last one ever made was assembled from leftover parts between 1938 and 1940.

In 1940, Augie Duesenberg sold marine versions of the current 254-ci splash-oiled Hudson flathead inline eight.

Duesenberg became far less popular during World War II, by the end of which a few Model Js were advertised for around $300 to $400, with some ultimately selling for only $100 or $200. Business rebounded in the 1950s, when classic and vintage cars became popular among collectors. Several Model Js were advertised in the New York Times in 1951, at prices as low as $500. By 1959 a decent example could not be bought for less than $4,000.

A distinctive feature of the Duesenberg Model J was the “bowtie” style front bumper, which used two pieces of steel, with the top piece bent to resemble a bowtie.

Production summary

Name Years of production Units made
Model A 1921–1927 ~650
Model X 1926–27 13
Model Y (model J prototype) 1927 1
Model J (including SJ, SSJ, JN & SJN) 1929–37, SJ: (1932–37), SSJ: (1935), JN & SJN: (1935) Total: 481, S(36), SSJ (2), JN & SJN (10)

Revivals

After World War II, August Duesenberg tried to revive the Duesenberg name but was unsuccessful; several later attempts were also unsuccessful. The closest came in the mid-1960s with Fritz (August’s son) at the helm and Virgil Exner as the stylist using the chassis of a 1966 Imperial and a Chrysler engine. One of Exner’s Duesenberg designs was later produced as a replicar Stutz Bearcat.

A 1970s Duesenberg was also created, based on a contemporary Cadillac Fleetwood and with modern styling. Its production was a limited run.

A reproduction automobile called Duesenberg II was produced between 1978 and 2000 by the Elite Heritage Motors Corp and successor company Duesenberg Motors Inc. in Elroy, Wisconsin. Five body models of the original Duesenberg J were offered. Each one was copied from an original and visually almost identical, with Ford Lincoln drive train, Ford V8 engine and modern comfort features. These replicas sold for up to US$225,000. Fewer than 100 total were made.

In 2011 a new company with worldwide trademark rights was established as Duesenberg Motors Inc., with the intention of again restarting the manufacturing of the Duesenberg II replicas in 2012 in Baldwin, Wisconsin. This effort died quickly when the owner stopped the project because of lack of cash flow. There are no products currently for sale, and future cars are unlikely.

A Duesenberg SJ convertible coupe sold for $4.5 million in March 2013.

Etymological note

1929 Duesenberg J Murphy Convertible Coupé before house of birth duesenberg

A model J in front of Fred & Augie Duesenberg birthplace in Kirchheide, Germany.

The origin of the American slang word “doozy” or “doozie”, meaning something excellent or powerful, is unknown. Merriam-Webster completely rejects any origin in the automobile, noting doozy originally appeared as “dozy” in eastern Ohio in 1916 — four years prior to the production of the first Duesenberg vehicles. They also claim there is little evidence connecting the Duesenberg and doozy during the 1920s and 1930s, when the car was most popular. “Dozy” is akin to the verb “dozen” that is semantically and etymologically related to “daze” and that is attested in slang terms such as “the dozens.”

See also

My collection found by searching the world wide web:

DELAHAYE Cars Tours France 1895 – 1954

Delahaye

Industry Manufacturing
Founded 1895
Founder Emile Delahaye
Defunct 1954
Headquarters Tours (France)
Products Cars

Delahaye automobile was an automotive manufacturing company founded by Emile Delahaye in 1894, in Tours, France, his home town. His first cars were belt-driven, with single- or twin-cylinder engines mounted at the rear. His Type One was an instant success, and he urgently needed investment capital and a larger manufacturing facility. Both were provided by a new Delahaye owner and fellow racer, George Morane, and his brother-in-law Leon Desmarais, who partnered with Emile in the incorporation of the new automotive company, “Societe Des Automobiles Delahaye”, in 1898. All three worked with the foundry workers to assemble the new machines, but middle-aged Emile was not in good health. In January 1901, he found himself unable to capably continue, and resigned, selling his shares to his two equal partners. Emile Delahaye died soon after, in 1905. Delahaye had hired two instrumental men, Charles Weiffenbach and Amadee Varlet in 1898, to assist the three partners. Both were graduate mechanical engineers, and they remained with Delahaye their entire working careers. Weiffenbach was appointed Manager of Operations, and, with the blessing of both George Morane and Leon Desmarais, assumed control over all of Delahaye’s operations and much of its decision-making, in 1906. Amadee Varlet was the company’s design-engineer, with a number of innovative inventions to his credit, generated between 1905 and 1914, which Delahaye patented. These included the twin-cam multi-valve engine, and the V6 configuration. Varlet continued in this role until he eventually took over the Drawing Office, at 76 years of age, when much younger Jean Francois was hired in 1932 as chief design-engineer. In 1932, Varlet was instructed by Weiffenbach, under direction from majority shareholder Madam Desmarais, Leon Desmarais’ widow, to set up the company’s Racing Department, assisted by Jean Francois. <Club Delahaye archive>. Those who knew him well at the factory affectionately referred to Charles Weiffenbach as “Monsieur Charles”.

History

1938 Delahaye  135ms cabrio

Delahaye 135 MS Pourtout cabriolet

Delahaye began experimenting with belt-driven cars while manager of the Brethon Foundry and Machine-works in Tours, in 1894. These experiments encouraged an entry in the 1896 Paris–Marseille–Paris race, held between 24 September-3 October 1896, fielding one car for himself and one for sportsman Ernest Archdeacon. The winning Panhard averaged 15.7 mph (25.3 km/h); Archdeacon came sixth, averaging 14 mph (23 km/h), while Delahaye himself was eighth, averaging 12.5 mph (20.1 km/h).

For the 1897 Paris-Dieppe, the 6 hp (4.5 kW; 6.1 PS) four-cylinder Delahayes ran in four- and six-seater classes, with a full complement of passengers. Archdeacon was third in the four-seaters behind a De Dion-Bouton and a Panhard, Courtois winning the six-seater class, ahead of the only other car in the class.

In March 1898, 6 hp (4.5 kW; 6.1 PS) the Delahayes of Georges Morane and Courtois came sixteenth and twenty-eighth at the Marseilles-Nice rally, while at the Course de Perigeux in May, De Solages finished sixth in a field of ten. The July Paris-Amsterdam-Paris earned a satisfying class win for Giver in his Delahaye; the overall win went to Panhard.

Soon after the new company was formed in 1898, the firm moved its manufacturing from Tours to Paris, into its new factory (a former hydraulic machinery plant that Morane and his brother-in-law Leon Desmarais had inherited from Morane’s father). Charles Weiffenbach was named Operations Manager. Delahaye would produce three models there, until the close of the 19th century: two twins, the 2.2-litre 4.5 hp (3.4 kW; 4.6 PS) Type 1 and 6 hp (4.5 kW; 6.1 PS) Type 2, and the lighter Type 0 (which proved capable of up to 22 mph (35 km/h)), with a 1.4-liter single rated between 5 and 7 hp (3.7 and 5.2 kW; 5.1 and 7.1 PS). All three had bicycle-style steering, water-cooled engines mounted in the rear, automatic valves, surface carburetors, and trembler coil ignition; drive was a combination of belt and chain, with three forward speeds and one reverse.

In 1899, Archdeacon piloted an 8 hp (6.0 kW; 8.1 PS) racer in the Nice-Castellane-Nice rally, coming eighth, while teammate Buissot’s 8 hp (6.0 kW; 8.1 PS) was twelfth.

Founder Emile Delahaye retired in 1901, leaving Desmarais and Morane in control; Weiffenbach took over from them in 1906. Delahaye’s racing days were over with Emile Delahaye’s death. Charles Weiffenbach had no interest in racing, and focused his production on reeponsible motorized automotive chassis, heavy commercial vehicles, and early firetrucks for the French government. Race-cars had become a thing of the past for Delahaye, until 1933, when Madam Desmarais caused her company to change direction a hundred-and-eighty degree, and return to racing.

The new 10B debuted in 1902. It had a 2,199 cc (134.2 cu in) (100 by 140 mm (3.9 by 5.5 in)) vertical twin rated 12/14 hp by RAC, mounted in front, with removable cylinder head, steering wheel (rather than bicycle handles or tiller), and chain drive. Delahaye also entered the Paris-Vienna rally with a 16 hp (12 kW; 16 PS) four; Pirmez was thirty-seventh in the voiturette class. At the same year’s Ardennes event, Perrin’s 16 hp (12 kW; 16 PS) four came tenth.

Also in 1902, the singles and twins ceased to be offered except as light vans; before production ceased in 1904, about 850 had been built.

Delahaye’s first production four, the Type 13B, with 24/27 hp 4.4-litre, appeared in 1903. The model range expanded in 1904, including the 4.9-litre 28 hp (21 kW; 28 PS) four-cylinder Type 21, the mid-priced Type 16, and the two-cylinder Type 15B. These were joined in 1905 by a chain-driven 8-litre luxury model, one of which was purchased by King Alfonso.

All 1907 models featured half-elliptic springs at the rear as well as transverse leaf springs, and while shaft drive appeared that year, chain drive was retained on luxury models until 1911. In 1908, the Type 32 was the company’s first to offer an L-head monoblock engine.

Protos began licence production of Delahayes in Germany in 1907, while in 1909, h. M. Hobson began importing Delahayes to Britain. Also in 1909, White pirated the Delahaye design; the First World War interrupted any efforts to recover damages.

Delahaye invented and pioneered the V6 engine in 1911, with a 30° 3.2-litre twin-cam, in the Type 44; the invention is credited to Amadee Varlet, Delahaye’s chief design-engineer at the time. The Type 44 was not a success and production stopped in 1914. It had been designed by Amadee Varlet, who had joined Delahaye at the same time that Charles Weiffenback was hired by Emile Delahaye, in 1898. The Type 44 was the only V-6 engine ever made by Delahaye, and it was the last time the company used a twin-cam engine.

Delahaye engineer Amadee Varlet designed the Delahaye “Titan” marine engine, an enormous cast-iron four cylinder engine that was fitted into purpose-built speedboat “La Dubonnet” which briefly held the World Speed Record on Water. With the ‘Titan’ Amadee Varlet had invented the multi-valve twin-cam engine in 1905, the same year that Emile Delahaye died.

At the Paris factory, Delahaye continued to manufacture cars, trucks, and a few buses. By the end of World War I, their major income was from their truck business that included France’s firetrucks.

After the war, Delahaye switched to a modest form of assembly line production, following the example of Ford, hampered by the “extensive and not particularly standardized range” of cars for Chenard et Walker, and itself, and farm machines for the FAR Tractor Company. The collaboration with FAR Tractor Company and Chenard-Walcker did not last long. This continued until continually reduced sales volume made a change necessary, for the company to survive. It has been alleged that Monsieur Charles met with his friend, competitor Ettore Bugatti, to seek his opinion on turning Delahaye around. Whether or not this meeting actually occurred, it is on record that Madam Leon Desmarais, the majority shareholder and Leon Desmarais’ widow, instructed Charles Weiffenbach to come up with a new higher quality automotive-chassis line with vastly improved horsepower, and re-establish a racing department. That pivotal decision was made in 1932, the year that Jean Francois was hired. By 1933, Delahaye was back in the racing game, and promptly went about winning events and setting records.

At the 1933 Paris Salon, Delahaye showed the Superluxe, with a 3.2-litre six, transverse independent front suspension, and Cotal preselector or synchromesh-equipped manualtransmission. It would be accompanied in the model range by a 2,150 cc (131 cu in) four (essentially a cut-down six), and a sporting variant, the 18 Sport.

In 1934, Delahaye set eighteen class records at Montlhéry, in a specially-prepared, stripped and streamlined 18 Sport. They also introduced the 134N, a 12cv car with a 2.15-litre four-cylinder engine, and the 18cv Type 138, powered by a 3.2-litre six — both engines derived from their successful truck engines. In 1935, success in the Alpine Trial led to the introduction of the sporting Type 135 “Coupe des Alpes”. By the end of 1935, Delahaye had won eighteen minor French sports car events and a number of hill-climbs, and came fifth at Le Mans.

Racing success brought success to their car business as well, enough for Delahaye to buy Delage in 1935. Delage cars continued in production from 1935 to 1951, and were finally superseded by the Type 235, a modestly updated 135. The truck business continued to thrive. Some of the great coachbuilders who provided bodies for Delahayes include Figoni et Falaschi, Chapron, and Letourneur et Marchand, and Joseph Saoutchik, as well as Guillore, Faget-Varlet, Pourtout, and a few others less well known.

Delahaye ran four 160 hp (120 kW; 160 PS) cars (based on the Type 135) in the 1936 Ulster TT, placing second to Bugatti, and entered four at the Belgian 24 Hours, coming 2-3-4-5 behind an Alfa Romeo.

American heiress Lucy O’Reilly Schell approached the company with an offer to pay the development costs to build short “Competition Court” 2.70- metre wheelbase Type 135 cars to her specifications for rallying. Sixteen were produced, most having been uniformly bodied by “Lacanu” a small coachbuilding firm owned and operated by Olivier Lecanu-Deschamps. Joseph Figoni also bodied one of these chassis. Lecanu could respond quickly, build economically, and was favored by Delahaye for its race-cars. All four Type 145 race-cars were bodied by Lecanu, to a weirdly homely design by Jean Francois. Lecanu both designed and built the last of the four Type 145 bodies, this one on chassis 48775.

In 1937, René Le Bègue and Julio Quinlin won the Monte Carlo Rally driving a Delahaye. Delahaye also ran first and second at Le Mans.[4] Against the government-sponsored juggernauts Mercedes-Benz and Auto Union, Delahaye brought out the Type 145, powered by a new, complicated 4½-liter V12 with three camshafts located in the block, with pushrod-actuated valves and four overhead rocker-shafts, dual Bosch magneto ignition, and triple Stromberg carburettors. Called “Million Franc Delahaye” after a victory in the Million Franc Race, the initial Type 145, chassis 48771, was driven by René Dreyfus to an average speed 91.07 mph (146.56 km/h) over 200 kilometres (120 mi) at Montlhéry in 1937, earning a Fr 200,000 prize from the government. Dreyfus also scored a victory in the Ecurie Bleu Type 145, again number 48771 at Pau, relying on superior fuel economy to beat the more powerful Mercedes-Benz W154, in 1938. Third place in the same race was claimed by Gianfranco Comotti, driving Delahaye Type 145 number 48775. Dreyfus brought his Type 145 number 48771 to its second grand-prix win at Cork, in Ireland, but the German teams had boycotted this event, being another between-the-houses race where they could not exploit their superior power. Type 135s also won the Paris-Nice and Monte Carlo Rallys, and LeMans, that year, while a V12 model (Type 145 number 48773) was fourth in the Mille Miglia. These victories combined with French patriotism to create a wave of demand for Delahaye cars, up until the German occupation of France during World War II. The Type 145 was also the basis for five grand-touring Type 165s., three of which exist today. The other two were demolished during the second World war.

In early 1940, one hundred Type 134N and Type 168 chassis were (Renault-bodied) as military cars built under contract for France’s Army. Private sales had been ordered by the government to cease in June, 1939, but small numbers of cars continued to be built for the occupying German forces until at least 1942.

After the Second World War

After World War II, in late 1945, production of the Type 135 was resumed, all with new styling by Philippe Charbonneaux. The Type 175, with a 4.5-litre inline overhead-valve six, was introduced in 1948; this, and the related Type 178 and 180, proved unsuccessful.The Type 175, 178 and 180 were replaced by the Type 235 in 1951, with an up-rated 135 engine producing 152 hp (113 kW; 154 PS). After the war, the depressed French economy and an increasingly punitive luxury tax regime aimed at luxurious non-essential products, and cars with engines above 2-litres, made life difficult for luxury auto-makers. Like all the principal French automakers, Delahaye complied with government requirements in allocating the majority of its vehicles for export, and in 1947 88% of Delahaye production was exported (compared to 87% of Peugeot and 80% of Talbot output), primarily to French colonies, including those in Africa. Nevertheless, Delahaye volumes, with 573 cars produced in 1948 (against 34,164 by market-leader Citroen), were unsustainably low.

Until the early 1950s, a continuing demand for military vehicles enabled the company to operate at reasonable albeit low volumes, primarily thanks to demand for the Type 163 trucks, sufficient to keep the business afloat.

A 1-ton capacity light truck sharing its 3.5-litre six-cylinder overhead-valve engine with the company’s luxury cars (albeit with lowered compression ratio and reduced power output) made its debut at the 1949 Paris Motor Show. During the next twelve months, this vehicle, the Type 171, spawned several brake-bodied versions, the most interesting of which were the ambulance and 9-seater familiale variant. The vehicle’s large wheels and high ground clearance suggest it was targeted at markets where many roads were largely dust and mud, and the 171 was, like the contemporary Renault Colorale which it in some respects resembled, intended for use in France’s African colonies. The vehicle also enjoyed some export success in Brazil, and by 1952 the Type 171 was being produced at the rate of approximately 30 per month.

As passenger car sales slowed further, the last new model, a 2.0-litre Jeep-like vehicle known as VLRD (Véhicule Léger de Reconnaissance (Delahaye)), sometimes known as the VRD, or VLR, was released in 1951. The French army believed that this vehicle offered a number of advantages over the “traditional” American built Jeep of the period. It was in 1951 that Delahaye discontinued production of the Types 175, 178 and 180. During 1953 the company shipped 1,847 VRDs as well as 537 “special” military vehicles: the number of Delahaye- or Delage-badged passenger cars registered in the same year was in that context near negligible, at 36.

Financial difficulties created by an acute shortage of wealthy car buyers intensified. Delahaye’s main competitor, Hotchkiss, managed to negotiate a licensing agreement with American Motors, and obtained sanction to manufacture its JEEP in France. The French army had learned to appreciate the simpler machine, available at a much lower price, and cancelled Delahaye’s contract for the more sophisticated VLR reconnaissance vehicle, dealing a hard blow to Delahaye. In August 1953 the company laid off more than 200 workers and salaried employees. Rumours of management discussions with Hotchkiss over some sort of coming together proved well founded. Hotchkiss were struggling with the same problems, but it was hoped that the two businesses might prove more resilient together than separately, and an agreement was signed by the two company presidents, Pierre Peigney for Delahaye and Paul Richard for Hotchkiss, on 19 March 1954. Delahaye shareholders agreed to the protocol, which amounted to a take over of Delahaye by Hotchkiss, less than three months later, on 9 June. Hotchkiss shut down Delahaye car production. By the end of 1954, for a brief period selling trucks with the Hotchkiss-Delahaye nameplate, the combined firm was itself taken over by Brandt, and by 1955, Delahaye and Hotchkiss were out of the automotive chassis business altogether, having their facilities absorbed by the giant Brandt organization with its own objectives for its captives’ assets. By 1956, the brands Delahaye, Delage, and Hotchkiss had forever disappeared.

Models

1899 Delahaye 09101899 built vehicle in 2006

Picture gallery

1949 Saoutchik Delahaye 175S Roadster

Delahaye 175S Roadster (1949)

1935-36 Delahaye 135 MS recarrossée après guerreDelahaye 135 MS (1936)

1953 Delahaye 235MS CoupéDelahaye 235MS Coupé (1953)

1948 Delahaye 135Delahaye 135 (1948)

1939 Delahaye 165 Figoni et Falaschi a

Delahaye 165 Figoni et Falaschi (1939)

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERADelahaye Cabriolet (1937)

1948 Delahaye 135MS Cabriolet ChapronDelahaye 135

Delahaye cabriolet1948 Delahaye 135 Cabriolet Pourtout

1948 Delahaye 135 M PourtoutDelahaye 135 M Pourtout (1948)

1925 Delahaye Tourer  FDelahaye Tourer (1925)

Delahaye 135MDelahaye 135M

1953 Delahaye 235M Pillarless Coupe by SaoutchikDelahaye 235M Saoutchik (1953)

1949 Delahaye type 178 Drophead CoupeDelahaye 178 Drophead Coupé (1949), once owned by Elton John.

For the Buses from Delahaye you have to be Here:

http://myntransportblog.com/2014/01/19/buses-delahaye-tours-france/

Book Cover 1899 Delahaye 0910 1907 Delahaye 1910 Delahaye Type 32 Roadster  F 1910 delahaye2 1911 Delahaye Fire Truck Exif_JPEG_PICTURE 1914 Delahaye Trucks postcard. 1918 delahaye 103 ... 1919 delahaye logo 1923 Delahaye 1925 Delahaye Tourer  F 1925 Delahaye Type 97 Torpedo Open Tourer  F 1925 Delahaye- 1927-33 Delahaye 180 1928 692_002 1928 78388715_o 1930 Delahaye ad a 1930 Delahaye ad 1931 Delahaye Type 180 Brochure 1932 6359091373_5bb0dd07c1_z 1933 Delahaye Ad a 1933 Delahaye ad 1934 delah 1934 Delahaye  Sport October 1935 Delahaye 135 roadster 1935 Delahaye 135 1935-36 Delahaye 135 MS recarrossée après guerre 1936 Delahaye 1 1936 Delahaye 134N Berline Autobineau at Monthléry http://www.autogaleria.hu - 1936 Delahaye 135 competition court 1936 Delahaye 135 compétition 1936 Delahaye 135 Engine 3557cc S6 1936 Delahaye 135 Figoniet Falaschi Torpedo Cabriolet 1936 Delahaye 135-S 1936 Delahaye Boyd Coddington OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA 1937 Delahaye 135 competition figoni & falaschi nr.676 1937 Delahaye 135 MS roadster x octavio 1937 Delahaye 135 sport roadster 1937 Delahaye Cabriolet Torpedo 1937 Delahaye t145 roadster 1937 Delahaye type 134 N Chapron convertible 1937 Delahaye_em 1937 delahaye-hinlopen 1938 Delahaye  135ms cabrio 1938 Delahaye 135 figoni & falaschi 1938 Delahaye 135 ms cabrio 1938 Delahaye 135 1938 Delahaye 135m roadster 1938 Delahaye 135m 1938 delahaye_135_m_emblem_36 1938-46 Chapron Delahaye 145 Coupe A 1939 Delahaye 1 1939 Delahaye 2 1939 Delahaye 7 LA165 1939 Delahaye 134 G Berline 1939 Delahaye 134 G 1939 Delahaye 135 M Coupé 1939 Delahaye 135 M par Figoni & Falaschi 1939 Delahaye 135 M reklame 1939 Delahaye 135M Coupe  F 1939 Delahaye 165 Figoni et Falaschi a 1939 Delahaye 165 figoni et falaschi 1939 Delahaye 165 M Figoni+et Falaschi 1939 Delahaye 165M A 1939 Delahaye cabrio figoni et falaschi 1939 Delahaye F 1939 Delahaye Le 148 1939 Delahaye Roadster 1939 delahaye_wood-Ken Eberts 1939-Delahaye-135M_B50E7B8 1942 delahaye_emblem_6 1946 Delahaye 135 Guillore Break de Chasse 1946 Delahaye 135 m pennock 1946 Delahaye 135M Coupe by Dubos 1946 delahaye-logo 1947 Cabriolet Delahaye 135 MS Pourtout A A 1947 Delahaye 175 1947 Delahaye Type 175 catalog cover. 1947 Delahaye Type 178 catalog cover. 1947 Delahaye Type 180 catalog cover. 1947 delahaye_logo2 1948 Delahaye 8-page catalog cover. (for models 135-M, 148-L, 135 MS, 175, 178 and 180). 1948 Delahaye 135 Cabriolet Pourtout 1948 Delahaye 135 cabriolet Pourtout 1948 Delahaye 135 M Pourtout 1948 Delahaye 135 m 1948 Delahaye 135 1948 Delahaye 135m cabriolet 1948 Delahaye 135MS Cabriolet Chapron 1948 Delahaye 135-MS Figoni&Falaschi Cabriolet 1948_DELAHAYE_(GFA)_01 1949 Delahaye 135 coach 1949 Delahaye 135 m roadster figoni 1949 Delahaye 135 MS Coach Ghia Aigle Ghia 1949 Delahaye 135m coach grand sport guillore 1949 Delahaye 135M DHC 1949 Delahaye 135MS Roadster by Selborne A 1949 Delahaye ghia aigle 1949 Delahaye graber geneva 1949 Delahaye Type 175S coachwork by Saoutchik 1949 Delahaye type 178 Drophead Coupe 1949 delahaye_logo 1949 Delahaye-175-deVille-DV-12-PBC 1949 Saoutchik Delahaye 175S Roadster 1950 Delahaye 135 M Letourneur & Marchand 1950 Delahaye 135 MS Vanden Plas (Vose) 1950 Delahaye 135 MS, 3 carburettors Convertible by Chapron 1950 Delahaye 135 saoutchik paryz 1950 Delahaye 135M 3 carburettors Convertible by Guilloré 1950 Delahaye 135m terenowy 1950 Delahaye 235M Pillarless Saloon by Ghia 1950 Delahaye saoutchik 1950 Delahaye VLRD (Wielka Enc. Sam. 87) 1950 DELAHAYE-08 1950 Slide-logo 1951 Delahaye 235 coupe von Henry Chapron 1951 Delahaye 235 Saoutciik Cabriolet 1951 Delahaye 235-cabrio-saoutchik 1951 Delahaye 235-coach-chapron 1951 Delahaye 235-letourneur-marchand 1951 Delahaye Cape Rally-photo 1952 Delahaye  vlr 1952 Delahaye 148 Labourdette 1952 Delahaye 148 1952 Delahaye 235 coupe chapron 1952 Delahaye 235-coupe-chapron-paris 1952 Delahaye 235-figoni-cabriolet 1952 Delahaye 235-letourneur-marchand 1952 delahaye5 1953 Delahaye 235 Cabriolet 1953 Delahaye 235-cabrio-chapron 1953 Delahaye 235M Pillarless Coupe by Saoutchik 1953 Delahaye 235MS Coupé 1953 Delahaye VLR ayant participé à un rallye 1953 Delahaye-185 Cob, 4x4. 1954 Delahaye  235-chapron-saoutchik 1954 Delahaye VLR, 4x4. 1954 LogoCD Delahaye 77 Delahaye 135 sport drawing Delahaye 135M Delahaye 175S roadster bugnotti top Delahaye Figoni et Falaschi Delahaye limousine used by Crown Prince of Thailand logo-delahaye-370x370