- Lagonda 2.6-Litre
Infobox Automobile
name = Lagonda 2.6-Litre
manufacturer =Aston Martin Lagonda
production = 1948–1953
510 produced cite book |last=Robson |first= G|title=A-Z of British Cars 1945-1980|year= 2006 |publisher=Herridge |location=Devon, UK |id=ISBN 0-9541063-9-3]
class =Luxury car
body_style = 4-door saloon
2-door 4-seatconvertible
successor =Lagonda 3-Litre
engine = 2.6 L "Lagonda" I6
width = Auto in|68|0
length = Auto in|188|0
height = Auto in|61|0
wheelbase = Auto in|113.5|0The first new automobile produced by
Lagonda after its purchase by David Brown in 1947 was the 2.6-Litre. It was named for the new high-techstraight-6 engine which debuted with the car. The so-calledLagonda Straight-6 engine was designed byWalter Owen Bentley and would propel Lagonda's new parent company,Aston Martin , to fame.The 2.6-Litre was a larger car than the Aston Martins and was available as either a 4-door closed car or from 1949 2-door convertible "Drophead Coupe", both with 4 seats. The drophead was bodied by
Tickford , at the time not part of Aston Martin. A Mark II version appeared in 1952, in closed form only, with engine power increased to 125 bhp .The car sold reasonably well, in spite of being an expensive car and being launched so soon after the war, with 510 examples made when production ended in 1953.
The car had a separate chassis and all independent suspension using coil springs at the front and torsion bars at the rear. The Lockheed brakes had Auto in|12|0 drums at the front and Auto in|11|0 at the rear with the latter being mounted inboard. Rack and pinion steering was used.
A drophead version tested by The Motor magazine in 1949 had a top speed of convert|90.2|mph|km/h|abbr=on and could accelerate from 0-convert|60|mph|km/h|abbr=on in 17.6 seconds. A fuel consumption of convert|17|mpgimp|L/100 km mpgus was recorded. The test car cost £3,420 including taxes. cite journal | authorlink = Unsigned |title = The 2.5 litre Lagonda Drophead Road Test| journal =The Motor| volume = | pages = | date = 1949]
References
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