Rolls-Royce Limited
For the present day company see Rolls-Royce plc. For other uses, see Rolls-Royce (disambiguation).Rolls-Royce Limited was a
British car and aero-engine manufacturing company founded by
Henry Royce and
C.S. Rolls in 1906 and was the result of a partnership formed in 1904. In 1971 Rolls-Royce was crippled by the development of the advanced
RB211 jet engine, resulting in the nationalisation of the company. In 1973 the car division was separated from Rolls-Royce Limited as
Rolls-Royce Motors. Rolls-Royce Limited continued as a nationalised company until it was privatised in 1987 as
Rolls-Royce plc.
In 1884
Frederick Henry Royce started an electrical and mechanical business. He made his first car, a "Royce", in his
Manchester factory in 1904. He was introduced to
Charles Stewart Rolls at the Midland Hotel in Manchester on
May 4 of that year, and the pair agreed to a deal where Royce would manufacture cars, to be sold exclusively by Rolls. A clause was added to the contract stipulating the cars would be called "Rolls-Royce". The company was formed on
March 15,
1906, and moved to
Derby in 1908.
The
Silver Ghost (1906-1925) was responsible for the company's early reputation. It had a 6-cylinder engine, 6173 were built. In 1921, the company opened a second factory in
Springfield, Massachusetts, in the
United States to help meet demand, where a further 1701 "Springfield Ghosts" were built. This factory operated for 10 years, closing in 1931. Its chassis was used as a basis for the
first British armoured car used in both
world wars.
In 1931 the company acquired rival car maker
Bentley, whose finances were unable to weather the
Great Depression. From then until 2002, Bentley and Rolls-Royce cars were often identical apart from the radiator grille and minor details.
Rolls-Royce and Bentley car production moved to
Crewe in 1946, and also
Mulliner Park Ward,
London, in 1959 as the company started to build bodies for its cars for the first time â€" previously it had built only chassis, leaving the bodies to specialist coachbuilders.
Cars
* 1904-1906
10 hp* 1905-1905
15 hp* 1905-1908
20 hp* 1905-1906
30 hp* 1905-1906
Legalimit* 1906-1925
40/50 Silver Ghost* 1922-1929
20 hp* 1925-1929
40/50 Phantom* 1929-1936
20/25* 1929-1935
Phantom II* 1936-1938
25/30* 1936-1939
Phantom III* 1939-1939
Wraith* 1946-1959
Silver Wraith* 1949-1955
Silver Dawn* 1950-1956
Phantom IV* 1955-1965
Silver Cloud* 1959-1968
Phantom V* 1968-1992
Phantom VI* 1965-1980
Silver ShadowBentley Models (from 1933)
* 1933-1937
Bentley 3½ L* 1936-1939
Bentley 4¼ L* 1940-1940
Bentley 4¼ L Mk V* 1949-1955
Silver Wraith* 1949-1955
Silver Dawn* 1950-1956
Phantom IV* 1955-1966
Silver Cloud* 1959-1968
Phantom VAero engines
The company's first aero engine was the
Eagle, built from 1914. Around half the aircraft engines used by the Allies in
World War I were made by Rolls-Royce. By the late 1920s, aero engines made up most of Rolls-Royce's business.
Henry Royce's last design was the
Merlin aero engine, which came out in 1935, although he had died in
1933. This was developed after the
R engine, which had powered a record-breaking
Supermarine S6B
seaplane to almost 400 mph in the 1931
Schneider Trophy. The Merlin was a powerful V12 engine and was fitted into many
World War II aircraft: the British
Hawker Hurricane,
Supermarine Spitfire,
De Havilland Mosquito (two-engine),
Avro Lancaster (four-engine),
Vickers Wellington (two-engine); it also transformed the American
P-51 Mustang into possibly the best fighter of its time, its Merlin engine built by
Packard under license. Over 160,000 Merlin engines were produced. The Merlin crossed over into military vehicle use as the
Meteor powering the
Centurion tank among others.
In the post-
World War II period Rolls-Royce made significant advances in
gas turbine engine design and manufacture. The Dart and Tyne
turboprop engines were particularly important, enabling
airlines to cut times for shorter journeys whilst
jet airliners were introduced on longer services. The Dart engine was used in Argosy,
Avro 748,
Friendship, Herald and
Viscount aircraft, whilst the more powerful Tyne powered the Atlantic, Transall and
Vanguard, and the
SRN-4 hovercraft. Many of these turboprops are still in service.
Amongst the
jet engines of this period was the RB163 Spey, which powers the
Trident,
BAC 1-11, Grumman Gulfstream II and
Fokker F28.
During the late 1950s and 1960s there was a significant rationalisation of in all aspects of British aerospace and this included aero-engine manufacturers, culminating in the merger of Rolls-Royce and
Bristol Siddeley in 1966 (Bristol Siddeley had itself resulted from the merger of
Armstrong-Siddeley and
Bristol in 1959). Bristol Siddeley, with its principal factory at
Filton, near
Bristol, had a strong base in military engines, including the
Olympus,
Viper,
Pegasus and
Orpheus. They also manufactured the
Olympus 593 Mk610 for
Concorde.
Nationalisation
Financial problems caused largely by development of the new
RB211 turbofan engine led â€" after several cash subsidies â€" to the company being
nationalised by the
Heath government in 1971. (Delay in production of this engine has been blamed for the failure of the technically advanced
Lockheed TriStar â€" it was beaten to launch by its competitor, the
Douglas DC-10.)
In 1973 the automobile business was spun off as a separate entity,
Rolls-Royce Motors. The main business of aircraft and marine engines remained in public ownership until 1987, when it was privatised as
Rolls-Royce plc, one of many
privatisations of the
Thatcher government.
Rolls-Royce cars timeline
*
Bentley*
Rolls-Royce of America*
Luxury vehicles*
Brewster*
Mountsorrel* Richard Feast,
Kidnap of the Flying Lady: How Germany Captured Both Rolls Royce and Bentley, Motorbooks, ISBN-7603-1686-4