Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Hillman-Humber cars, 1936. The 1930s saw a return to side valves with a 6-cylinder Wizard first produced in April 1931 and, in 1932, inspired by the Rootes brothers, the first car to carry the Minx name. This had a 1185 cc four-cylinder engine and went through a series of updates in body style and construction until the end of the Second World War.
This category is for vehicles made by the Hillman car company. Pages in category "Hillman vehicles" The following 19 pages are in this category, out of 19 total. ...
The Hillman Avenger is a five-passenger, front-engine, rear-drive B-segment/subcompact car originally engineered and manufactured by the Rootes Group in the UK and marketed globally [6] from 1970–1978 as a two- or four-door sedan and five-door wagon. At its introduction, the Avenger was called considered a crucial car for Rootes.
The Hillman Minx was a mid-sized family car that British car maker Hillman produced from 1931 to 1970. There were many versions of the Minx over that period, as well as badge engineered variants sold by Humber , Singer , and Sunbeam .
The Hillman Imp is a small economy car that was made by the Rootes Group and its successor Chrysler Europe from 1963 until 1976. Revealed on 3 May 1963, [6] after much advance publicity, it was the first British mass-produced car with the engine block and cylinder head cast in aluminium.
The Hillman Super Minx is a family car which was produced by Hillman from 1961 to 1967. It was a slightly larger version of the Hillman Minx, from the period when the long-running Minx nameplate was applied to the "Audax" series of designs. (The Minx underwent many changes throughout its history, and the Super Minx name was not used during ...
Coventry: Hillman Motor Car Co Ltd. 1936. OCLC 499777562. Hillman Sixteen, Hawk and "80": Service Parts Catalogue 1936, 1937, 1938 Models (1938 "80" Limousine only). Coventry: Hillman Motor Car Company Ltd. September 1945. OCLC 500340256. Hillman Present the Minx Magnificent and the "Hawk", "Sixteen" and "80" - includes a List of Models for 1936.
The first (or "Mark 1") Hillman Husky, introduced in 1954, was a small estate car based on the contemporary "Mark VIII" Hillman Minx. The two-door Husky entered the range alongside an existing Minx estate car, which had a 9-inch (230 mm) longer wheelbase. The Husky was not a hatchback, having instead a single side-hinged rear door.