Marque: Bristol - Company History & Models - Cars By Brand

Bristol
It is almost a century since the Bristol Aeroplane Company started to produce aircraft (from1910), and the firm’s machines played vital roles in both the First and Second World Wars. During the 1939-45 War, the company produced over 14,000 aeroplanes, including the Beaufighter, Blenheim and Fighter (all names which have been used again in recent years for Bristol car models). The car division…
Bristol 603

PRICE: £3000+ - £12,000+
Fast Facts
- Produced:
1976-82 - Bodywork:
Two-door sports saloon - Engine:
Overhead valve V8 5211cc (603E) or 5900cc (603S); power outputs not quoted - 0-60 mph:
8.5+ sec - Top Speed:
140 mph - MPG:
5.2: 14-20+; 5.9 12-18mpg
If you are after a fast sports saloon of peerless qualities, the 603 ranks up there with the best. Current asking prices are cheap, too. Replacing the 411 series, the new 603 of 1976 was offered with a choice of a 5.2 V8, or with a much more powerful 5.9-litre unit. The 603’s elegant aluminium bodywork was mounted on a sturdy steel chassis. Features included leather or wool upholstery, self-levelling suspension, electrically operated windows, electrically controlled seat adjustment, a radio/cassette stereo system and a walnut facia. Second Series 603s with their updated interiors arrived in 1977; the model was discontinued in 1982.
Bristol 400-406

PRICE: £3000 - £19,000+
Fast Facts
- Produced:
1946-61 - Bodywork:
Two-door sports saloon; four-door saloon (405 only), drophead - Engine:
Overhead valve in-line six-cylinder 1971cc 85bhp (401 & 402); 1971cc 100bhp (404); 1971cc 105bhp (405); 2216cc 105bhp (406 - 0-60 mph:
Early (85 bhp ) cars 17+ sec; Later cars approx 14 sec - Top Speed:
Early (85 bhp ) cars 95 mph; Later cars 120 mph - MPG:
20-25
Introduced in 1946, the two-door Frazer-Nash Bristol sports saloon (based on the pre-War BMW 328) featured a triple carb, six-cylinder, two-litre; a BMW engine which had been improved by Bristol. The 401 arrived in 1948, with bodywork built on the Superleggera principle (steel cage clad with aluminium panels). For 1949, the new 402 drophead was offered. A re-engineered 403 followed in 1953, then came the 404, with wood-framed bodywork. The four-door 405 (403- based) arrived in ‘55; dropheads were also produced. The last Bristol to use the BMW-inspired power unit was the 1958 to 1961 406 (with a 2.2-litre variant). Zagato coupé also produced.