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  2. Sunbeam Products - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunbeam_Products

    Website. www.sunbeam.com. Sunbeam Products is an American company founded in 1897 that has produced electric home appliances under the Sunbeam name since 1910. Its products have included the Mixmaster mixer, the Sunbeam CG waffle iron, Coffeemaster (1938–1964) [2] and the fully automatic T20 toaster. The company has endured a long history of ...

  3. Sunbeam CG - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunbeam_CG

    Introduced in 1955, the CG maintained the inner workings of the W-2, but had sleek modern styling. The CG features removable plates, allowing the waffle plate to be removed so it can be replaced by a sandwich grilling plate. The sandwich grilling plates also allow the CG to be used as a griddle or hot plate, in effect having three appliances in ...

  4. Sunbeam S7 and S8 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunbeam_S7_and_S8

    24 bhp (18 kW) @ 6,000 rpm. Wheelbase. 57-inch (1,400 mm) The Sunbeam S7 and S8 are British motorcycles designed by Erling Poppe with styling loosely based on the BMW R75 designs that were acquired as war reparations by BSA (full rights to the Sunbeam brand had been acquired from AMC in 1943). [1] Built in Redditch, the unusual engine layout ...

  5. Sunbeam Tiger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunbeam_Tiger

    Sunbeam Tiger. The Sunbeam Tiger is a high-performance V8 version of the British Rootes Group 's Sunbeam Alpine roadster, designed in part by American car designer and racing driver Carroll Shelby and produced from 1964 until 1967. Shelby had carried out a similar V8 conversion on the AC Cobra, and hoped to be offered the contract to produce ...

  6. Sunbeam side-valve aircraft engines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunbeam_side-valve...

    The Gurkha engine preserved at the Fleet Air Arm Museum, Yeovilton, Somerset, England, is the only surviving Sunbeam side-valve engine in the world. It is installed in the Short 184, aircraft number 8359, that played a minor role in the Battle of Jutland at the end of May 1916. The pilot on that occasion was Flight Lieutenant Frederick Rutland ...

  7. Sunbeam Rapier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunbeam_Rapier

    none. The Sunbeam Rapier is an automobile produced by Rootes Group from 1955 until 1976, in two different generations, the "Series" cars (which underwent several revisions) and the later (1967–76) fastback shape, part of the "Arrow" range. The first generation Rapier was the first of the "Audax" range of light cars produced by the Rootes ...

  8. Sunbeam 3-litre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunbeam_3-litre

    1926 Sunbeam 3-litre 4-door open tourer. The Sunbeam 3-litre is a 26 long cwt (2,912 lb; 1,321 kg) [1] sports car introduced by Sunbeam in October 1925 [3] at the London Motor Show, [2] and was offered from 1926 until 1930. It was seen at the time and subsequently as the retort of Louis Hervé Coatalen, Sunbeam's energetic chief engineer, to ...

  9. Sunbeam Motor Car Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunbeam_Motor_Car_Company

    John Marston Ltd. (1905–20) S.T.D. Motors (1920–34) Sunbeam Motor Car Company Limited was a British automobile manufacturer in operation between 1905 and 1934. Its works were at Moorfields in Blakenhall, a suburb of Wolverhampton in Staffordshire, now West Midlands. The Sunbeam name had originally been registered by John Marston in 1888 for ...