Description

  • Only surviving works entry from the 1928 Le Mans 24 Hours

  • Driven to second in class by former Le Mans winner ‘Sammy’ Davis

  • Huge history file with period photographs

  • Fully restored between 2019 and 2022

As the only survivor of the two factory-entered cars that represented Alvis on its first appearance in the Le Mans 24 Hours, this historic front-wheel-drive model holds a special place in marque history.

First registered in May 1928 on the Coventry plate WK 5492, chassis number 6794 was entered for Le Mans the following month, and would be driven by SCH ‘Sammy’ Davis and Bill Urquhart-Dykes. A second car was also entered for Major Maurice Harvey and Harold Purdy. 

Davis was returning to Le Mans having won the famous race for Bentley the previous year, and although he was unfamiliar with the cornering technique required for the front-wheel-drive Alvis, he soon got into the swing of things. 

There was a scare during practice when, under severe cornering, it was found that the steering drop link fouled the quarter-elliptic spring, with the result that the steering would get stuck on full lock. The problem was sorted in time for the race, and writing in The Autocar, Davis reported of the early stages that: ‘The car was held to a prearranged schedule just behind the team leader, and everything ran as beautifully as a clockwork mouse.’ 

He was delayed when he suffered a puncture at Mulsanne Corner – the car then twice slipped off the jack while they were changing the tyre back at the pits – but the more he drove, the more he came to appreciate the Alvis: ‘The front drive would take corners beautifully steadily, provided that the engine was pulling.’ 

There was another frustration in the shape of a blockage in the fuel system, which ruined the team’s fuel-consumption calculations, but Davis wrote that, during the night, ‘the car was running so well that the whole affair seemed almost too easy’. 

Patches of mist made life more difficult as dawn broke, and another puncture dropped WK 5492 from a probable seventh-place finish to ninth, three places behind the sister car, to give Alvis a one-two result in the 1.5-litre class. Davis noted that the cars ‘had averaged 58 and 59mph respectively, had won their class, given not a spot of bother of any sort [and] had both beaten the 1500cc record.’

Following its Le Mans outing, the factory sold WK 5492 in September 1928 to the Iliffe family, which owned a successful publishing house. By the mid-1930s, the Alvis had been acquired by Herbert Nelson, who, in 1985, wrote a letter explaining that he used to take it to Brooklands, ‘but never took part in any event – it was too expensive for a Second Lieutenant of the Royal Tank Corps to compete … We used to have races into Bournemouth amongst the young officers, which were pretty hair-raising at times.’

Nelson sold the Alvis in 1935 when he moved to Egypt, and subsequent owners included John Lloyd (1935), James Hutley (1937) and Philip Denney (1938). 

In 1964, Barry Cooke bought the Alvis from Keith Brettel and later said that it had been dismantled into ‘major component’ form. He started what would become a very long-term restoration and the work included building a new body and frame, but it hadn’t been finished by the time the car passed to Jeff Goodwin in 1982. 

After being in long-term ownership between 1995 and 2018, the Alvis was acquired by a US-based enthusiast who had the car restored in the UK over the course of three years. The work was carried out by SPB Historics, a frame up, body off total restoration with the Alvis Club Historian as constant advisor. When it was complete, the car was displayed at the 2022 Audrain Concours as well as the following year’s Amelia Island Concours d’Elegance.

Now being offered for sale in exceptional condition, this historic front-wheel-drive Alvis comes with a refuelling jug and funnel that were used by the factory team at Le Mans in 1928, plus a vast history file that includes period photographs (please see our website listing for copies of these) as well as documents, drawings, notes and invoices going back to the early 1960s. It’s a rare, innovative and fascinating piece of British motor-racing history.

Vehicle details

Vehicle data

Make
Alvis
Model name
12/50
First registration date
Not provided
Year of manufacture
1928
Mileage (read)
Not provided
Chassis number
Not provided
Engine number
Not provided
Gearbox number
Not provided
Matching numbers
No
Number of owners
Not provided

Technical details

Body style
Convertible (Roadster)
Power (kW/hp)
37/50
Cubic capacity (cm³)
1482
Cylinders
4
Doors
Not provided
Steering
Right (RHD)
Gearbox
Manual
Gears
Not provided
Transmission
Rear
Front brakes
Drum
Rear brakes
Drum
Fuel type
Petrol

Individual configuration

Exterior color
Green
Interior color
Brown
Interior material
Leather

Condition, registration & documentation

Has Report
Registered
Ready to drive

Location

Logo of The Classic Motor Hub

The Classic Motor Hub

Sales Team

Appointment Only

GL7 5NX Bibury

🇬🇧 United Kingdom

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