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

Humber
The origins of the Humber car company date back to 1868, with Thomas Humber’s bicycle building business. The firm was later involved with producing the three wheeled Pennington, and Humber motor tricycles, quadricycles and cars were built. In 1901 came a 4.5hp model, powered by a De Dion engine and featuring a steering wheel plus shaft drive – both innovative features which were ahead of their…
Humber Humber Sceptre (1963 To 1967)

PRICE: £500 - £3000+
Fast Facts
- Produced:
1963-67 - Bodywork:
Four-door saloon - Engine:
Overhead valve in-line four-cylinder Mark I: 1592cc 80bhp; Mark II: 1725cc 85bhp - 0-60 mph:
Mark I: 18 sec; Mark II: 13 sec - Top Speed:
Mark I: 90+ mph;Mark II: 98 mph - MPG:
23-30+ mpg
It may have been a Minx in posher clothes but the Sceptre was one of the most competent sporting family saloons of the 1960s and a useful shot in the arm to the staid Humber name. The compact Sceptre (differing slightly from the Super Minx on which it was based), was instantly recognisable by its four headlamps and sloping rear roof line. Under the bonnet was Rootes’ 1592cc engine with high compression ratio and twin Zenith carbs, giving 80bhp. Overdrive was standard. Mark II Sceptres (from 1965) had more powerful five main bearing 1725cc engines, with an aluminium cylinder head and a twin choke Solex carb. A BMW 3 Series of its day perhaps?
Humber Humber Hawk (From 1957)

PRICE: Saloon/estate: £400 - £4000+; Touring Limousine: £500 - £5000+
Fast Facts
- Produced:
1957-67 - Bodywork:
Four-door saloon; five door estate Touring Limousine - Engine:
Overhead valve in-line four-cylinder 2267cc 73bhp - 0-60 mph:
20+ sec - Top Speed:
85+ mph - MPG:
20-25mpg
Much more modern in concept than their predecessors, the unitary construction ‘New Hawks’ from 1957 were lower and had a sleeker appearance. The wonderful Touring Limousine version featured a winddown glass partition between the front and rear seats. Powering all variants was Humber’s proven four-cylinder, 2.3-litre overhead valve engine giving respectable performance and economy. Today these large Humbers are ideal classics for those seeking space and luxury at a price much, much cheaper than an equivalent Jaguar. During the1960s Hawks were equipped with an all-synchromesh gearbox and - at last!- disc brakes.