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Darracq
and Talbot Lago (1920 - 1959)
Darracq / Talbot Lago history courtesy of Bill Clark –
STD Register”
Alexandre Darracq originally started business in the
nineteenth century as a manufacturer of "Gladiator" bicycles. He sold out
this business in 1896 to form Alexandre Darracq et Cie, manufacturers of
bicycle components and horseless carriages. After flirtations with
electric vehicles and radial engined motor cycles, he finally settled for
a "proper" Léon Bollée designed horizontal engined motor car. 1900 saw a
change to vertical engines and an expansion of the range to include a 12
hp twin cylinder. A four cylinder 20 hp with pressed steel chassis was
introduced for 1902. Darracq was in the forefront of pioneers of
mechanical inlet valves, L-head engines, pressed steel chassis and proper
location of back axles using torque control arms.

The star of the film "Genevieve" was a
Darracq.
Darracq also joined in racing – they
built a 10 litre four cylinder monster for the 750kg formula of 1905 and a
200hp V8 driven by Hémery captured the Land Speed Record at 109.65 mph
later in 1905.

1910 Darracq
In 1912 the firm succumbed to the vogue for abolition of
the poppet valve with a near disastrous range of rotary valved cars under
Henriod patents. In 1913 Alexandre Darracq sold out again, this time to
the British financial interests who had previously taken over his British
subsidiary. A prime mover in this take over was Owen Clegg, who moved to
Paris to become Managing Director of the new company, with a capital of 20
million francs and its head office and works at 32 Quai Général Gallieni
in Suresnes, Paris. During the Great War, Darracq went over completely to
munitions production: weapons, ammunition and even complete aeroplanes -
in greatly expanded premises, of course. The initial post war Darracq was
a mildly updated version of the pre-war side valve 4 cylinder 3 litre Type
V to be joined by Owen Clegg's 24cv side valve 4½ litre V8 Type A in 1920.
However in 1919, Darracq took over English Talbot (Talbot
dated from 1903 when Charles Chetwynd-Talbot, the Earl of Shrewsbury,
Waterford and Talbot, had begun importing Clement-Bayard parts and
assembling Clement-Talbot cars in a factory at Ladbroke Grove in the West
of London) and the resulting company merged in 1920 with Sunbeam to form
the Sunbeam Talbot Darracq group which quickly came under the strong
influence of the personality and ideas of Sunbeam's Breton director, Louis
Coatalen.

Sir Henry Seagrave's Talbot-Darracq winning the first
British Long Distance race at Brooklands, 1921
From late 1921 and the introduction of
the Louis Coatalen inspired 1½ litre ohv Type DB, the Suresnes built cars
were renamed as Talbot in France, although still badged as Darracq when
imported into Britain. Owen Clegg's Type A was consigned to oblivion in
1922. Using the design work of Vincenzo Bertarione and Walter Becchia, who
had been poached from Fiat by Louis Coatalen, Suresnes built the
fabulously successful series of 1½ litre 2ohc "voiturette" racing cars,
variously badged as Darracq or Talbot-Darracq or Talbot, from 1921 to 1927
with numerous class, and sometimes overall, victories at Brooklands and on
the continent. Meantime the touring range built at Suresnes was expanded
with the pushrod ohv 2120 cc 4 cylinder DS and the 6 cylinder 2538cc DUS
and 2912cc TL. The range took a new direction in late 1927 with the
introduction of the 6 cylinder 1,997cc M67, replacing all of the 4
cylinder models and later spawning the larger K74, K75, P75, K78 and M75 6
cylinder models. Owen Clegg finally succeeded in re-introducing an eight
cylinder into the range in 1929 with the 3822cc H78 Pacific, which was as
spectacularly unprofitable as its Type A ancestor.
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M 67 |

K 78 |
The Suresnes works
struggled on through the depression until 1934 when there was a last
spasmodic attempt to revive the brand by adopting a pointlessly
pretentious "Packard" style radiator cowling and a thoroughly effective
and practical independent front suspension system patented by Coatalen in
1929.
Then Anthony Lago arrived at Suresnes.
Born in Italy, he trained as an engineer, rose to the rank of Major in the
Italian army during the Great War and re-invented himself as a director of
the Wilson Self Changing Gear Co Ltd in the 1920s. He joined the Sunbeam
board in the early thirties and, as the STD group started to founder
financially, he seized his opportunity to re-finance, or in modern
parlance lead a management buy-out of the Suresnes part of the group.
His impact at Suresnes was immediate and
effective. He fired Bertarione and promoted Walter Becchia. He
re-introduced an attractively raked version of the traditional Talbot
radiator and rationalised the range around a six cylinder image – Owen
Clegg's straight eights were half-heartedly updated with i.f.s. but only
staggered on until the stocks of built cars were remaindered in 1935. The
range eventually was composed of cars built with a choice of three
wheelbases, the Baby at 2.95m, the Master at 3.20m and the Major at 3.45m
into which could be fitted a choice of vertical pushrod ohv 6 cylinder
engines of 1997cc, or 2696cc, or 2996cc, or finally 3996cc. So, according
to the depth of your wallet, you could order a Baby with an engine of two
litres, or three litres or 4 litres. Only the smaller engine sizes came
with a "silent" 4 speed gearbox. As could be expected from his background,
and the source of his royalty income, the three and four litre cars were
universally fitted with the Wilson pre-selector gearbox. This of course
was available as an extra cost option on the smaller engined cars. A range
of appropriately elegant and stylish bodywork was produced by the factory
for these cars – two and four seat cabriolets and two and four door
saloons.

T 150 |

T 150 |
One of Lago's mainsprings was his
enthusiasm for competition and, even while he was engaged full time in
putting the production range in order, he was planning a return to the
race track for Talbot. His initial efforts centred on the T150C,
effectively an uprated 3 litre Baby with the cylinder head re-designed in
light alloy to provide hemispherical combustion chambers using asymmetric
rockers operating inclined valves, but retaining a single camshaft and
parallel pushrods. This head boosted the power output from 80bhp to 110
bhp. Capacity was soon increased to 3996cc for the Automobile Club de
France's "Formule Sport" in 1936 and output eventually approached 200bhp
for the engines fitted to the 2.65m wheelbase Lago SS models in 1937 to
1939. These cars had a distinguished competition career, winning numerous
continental "sports car" events and the TT at Donington in 1937. Their
chassis provided a base for some of the most fabulously elegant of pre-war
French coachwork. This was not just for show however, a Figoni et Falaschi
"goutte d'eau" coupé finished third at Le Mans in 1938. After WW 2 Lago
was quickly off the blocks with the mostly new 4½ litre 170bhp Lago
Record, on whose design he had been working since 1942. The capacity of
the new twin camshaft engine with short vertical pushrods to provide the
hemispherical combustion chambers had been chosen with a view to the 1½
litre supercharged / 4½ litre unsupercharged Grand Prix Formula
anticipated post war. The Lago Record followed on the Talbot tradition of
the thirties of providing relaxed high speed touring in works coachwork of
great quality and elegance, at the expense of less than nimble handling
and a fairly ruinous fuel consumption. It was joined by a 4 cylinder 2.7
litre Baby version in late 1949. Its initial success rapidly tailed off as
the motoring public realised that 2.7 litres could not do the job of 4.5
litres, given the modest reduction in wheelbase from 3.1m to 2.95m.
Lago had by this time taken his eye off
the ball somewhat to concentrate on his efforts in what was now Formula 1.
The 4½ litre Record engine was extensively re-designed in 1948 in light
alloy to give the engine for the T26C Grand Prix single seater and its two
seat sports T26GS derivative. Talbot built some sixteen of these cars
which were campaigned by the works and by private owners from 1948 to
1954, sometimes in competition with Lago SS or T150C cars from the
thirties, updated by private owners who found they could still be
competitive. Later versions of the engine with twin ignition eventually
produced some 250bhp. A T26C driven by Louis Rosier won the Belgian Grand
Prix in 1949 due to being vastly more economical than the 1½ litre
supercharged cars, some of which were burning fuel at six times the rate
of the Talbot. Rosier won Le Mans in a T26GS in 1950 after driving all but
two laps himself. From then on it was downhill for Talbot. The firm went
into administration in 1951, but falling sales due to the French fiscal
regime for luxury cars prevented a recovery. The 4½ litre Grand Sport
coupé gave way to its scaled down 2½ litre sister, the T14LS in mid 1955
but even the lighter tubular chassis and beautiful body of this car could
not keep Talbot afloat. A final attempt was made in 1959 to capture sales
in the American market with a BMW V8 engined version of the T14LS, the
Lago America, which was finally built with left hand drive. Despite good
press notices, this failed miserably and the remains were eventually sold
to Simca, who finished off the few Lago Americas in the works by fitting
side valve Ford V8s as provided in their Vedette saloons.

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