Guest raws89 Posted April 25, 2015 Share Posted April 25, 2015 Hey guys, we have a Voisin c7 in our family, with a body of copper, but we dont have any documentation before 1961, or atleast something around that time. But we would gladly get our hands on more information about the car. If you have any questions, feel free to ask!This car is in Sweden btw. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
alsancle Posted April 25, 2015 Author Share Posted April 25, 2015 Neat body. Is there a coachbuilders plate on it? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest raws89 Posted April 25, 2015 Share Posted April 25, 2015 Neat body. Is there a coachbuilders plate on it?Hm not sure if this is what you mean by coachbuilders plate, but if not it, I'ts atleast a picture from the inside! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
alsancle Posted April 26, 2015 Author Share Posted April 26, 2015 Sorry. I meant is it coachbuilt by an outside body builder or a in house body? Either way attractive. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest raws89 Posted April 26, 2015 Share Posted April 26, 2015 We don't really know, when my grandpa bought it in 1961, it had black paint on all the copperparts, but the car looked like this, except the paintjob. They also found out that it was made from copper. The car has been covered in a garage for the latest 20-something years. So that's why we dont have so much knowledge about itA few months ago, a swedish magazine wrote an article about it, and tried to find more info from france, but they didn't find anything that we already knew. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rusty_OToole Posted May 2, 2015 Share Posted May 2, 2015 I knew an old time car collector who used a 1924 Willys Knight 4 cylinder as a tour car in the sixties and seventies. He told me it burned a quart of oil in the first 60 miles, after that, nothing. Next day a quart in the first 60 miles, after that, nothing no matter how far he drove it. It seemed to take that long to completely warm up and work correctly.Whether this is typical or just his car I have no way of knowing. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
John_Mereness Posted May 10, 2015 Share Posted May 10, 2015 The good news is that the exhaust never rusts out.Spent years and years touring in the rumble seat of a 1929 Stearns Knight (starting about 1968 at age 3) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
alsancle Posted May 10, 2015 Author Share Posted May 10, 2015 John, was the Stearns an 8 or a 6? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rusty_OToole Posted May 24, 2015 Share Posted May 24, 2015 (edited) I don't know where you get the idea Voisin was an assembled car.Before turning to cars, Voisin had a completely equipped airplane factory. The car was a reconversion project after WW1, because he knew there would be little or no market for airplanes for years, considering the war was over and there were thousands of war surplus planes and engines going begging. The sleeve valve car was designed for one of France's major auto makers but they rejected it in favor of a more conventional model. So the designers took it to Voisin who siezed the opportunity to produce a brand new car with the design and development work already done. At that time car makers made only the chassis, the bodies being made by specialist coachbuilders. At least that was the rule in Europe, for the more expensive cars. So Voisin began turning out cars of unique design, heavily influenced by aircraft principles and the remorseless logic of the engineer. They weren't always pretty, but you could bet that every unusual feature had sound reasons behind it. You might call the Graham based cars "assembled" but that was the last gasp of a defunct company, after Gabriel Voisin left the firm. Edited May 24, 2015 by Rusty_OToole (see edit history) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
pughs Posted May 24, 2015 Share Posted May 24, 2015 Check out the new Knight Engines Forum in the Domestic Makes & Models Section Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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