Here are some images of Entex's 1/16 scale 1939 Jaguar SS100.
From Wikipedia"
The Jaguar SS100 is a British 2-seat sports car built between 1936 and 1940 by SS Cars Ltd of Coventry, England. The last one is thought to have been delivered in 1941.
The SS Cars Ltd Model 100 "Jaguar" was so named as the '100' 
reflecting the capability of the 3.5-litre model to exceed 100 mph - 
then a remarkable speed for a production vehicle. In common with many 
products of the thirties, the adoption of an animal name was deemed 
appropriate, and once approved by Sir William Lyons the name "Jaguar" 
was given to a new saloon car in 1936, and from that point to all the 
cars.
Following the Second World War, because of the connotations then attached to the initials "SS", the company was renamed Jaguar in 1945.
The chassis had a wheelbase of 8 feet 8 inches (2.64 m), and was 
essentially a shortened version of the one designed for the 2.5-litre 
saloon, a car produced in much greater numbers, and first been seen in 
the SS 90 of 1935. When leaving the factory it originally fitted 5.50 or 5.25 × 18 inch tyres on 18 inch wire wheels. Suspension was on half-elliptical springs all round with rigid axles. The engine was a development of the old 2.5-litre Standard pushrod unit converted from side valve to overhead valve with a new cylinder head designed by William Heynes and Harry Weslake. The power output was increased from 70 bhp (52 kW) to 100 bhp (70 kW). Twin SU
 carburettors were bolted directly to the cylinder head. In 1938 the 
engine was further enlarged to 3.5 litres and the power increased to 
125 bhp (93 kW). The four-speed gearbox had synchromesh on the top 3 
ratios. Brakes were by Girling. The complete car weighed just over 23 cwt (2600 pounds, 1150 kg).
On test by the Autocar magazine in 1937 the 2.5-litre (20 RAC hp
 rating) car was found, with the windscreen lowered, to have a maximum 
speed of 95 mph (153 km/h) and a 0–60 mph (97 km/h) time of 
13.5 seconds. With the 3.5-litre (25 RAC hp rating) the top speed 
reached the magic 100 mph (160 km/h) with a best of 101 mph (163 km/h) 
over the quarter mile and the 0–60 mph (97 km/h) coming down to 
10.4 seconds.
In 1937 the 2.5-litre car cost £395 and in 1938 the 3.5-litre £445.
 The coupé, of which only one was made, was listed at £595. A few 
examples were supplied as chassis-only to external coachbuilders.
Widely considered to be one of the most aesthetically pleasing Jaguar
 cars it is also one of the rarest, with only 198 of the 2.5-litre and 
116 of the 3.5-litre models being made. Most stayed on the home market 
but 49 were exported. Cars in good condition will now regularly fetch in
 excess of £300,000. A near concours example was sold by auctioneers Bonhams at the Goodwood Festival of Speed back in 2007 for £199,500 but largely because of the rarity, auction prices for the SS100 have risen very strongly since then.
More recently a perfectly restored example and former Pebble Beach concours
 winning 1937 S.S. Jaguar 100 3½ Litre Roadster - was sold by Gooding 
& Co. on 17 August 2010 at their Pebble Beach auction. It fetched an
 astonishing £666,270 ($1,045,000).
It was on an SS100 that the famous Jaguar 'leaper' was first 
prominently displayed, despite an inauspicious start. In mid 1936 the 
first version of the Jaguar vehicle mascot was apparently described by 
the founder of the company as "looking like a cat shot off a fence". A 
later publicity photograph of the new Model 100 "Jaguar" (registration 
mark CKV 250) parked outside the offices of SS Cars Ltd in early 1937 
shows a revised Jaguar 'leaper' mascot mounted on he radiator cap. It is
 this more stylised 'leaper' that became the basis for subsequent 
mascots and the trade mark for Jaguar Cars Ltd that has been used to the
 present day.
The unnamed owner of the Belgravia vintage car dealer in James Leasor's
 'Aristo Autos' novels, 'They Don't Make Them Like That Any More', 
'Never Had a Spanner on Her' and 'Host of Extras' drives an SS100, and 
the car features prominently in the books.
The late Alan Clark
 MP owned a Jaguar SS100, and during his time in Margaret Thatcher's 
government was often to be seen piloting his SS100 away from the House 
of Commons after late Parliamentary sittings.
A number of replica and re-creations of the Jaguar SS100 have also been manufactured since the 1960s.
The Suffolk Sportscars 
 replicas/re-creations of the SS100 have been described as being the 
most visually and dimensionally accurate of the genre, with painstaking 
attention to detail. Acceptance of the Suffolk SS100 vehicles by both Jaguar clubs and specialist classic car registers 
 gives some credence to the description. Suffolk Sportscars are based in
 Woodbridge, Suffolk, United Kingdom, and the SS100 may be ordered and 
individually built by hand at the factory to the customer's own 
specifications or alternatively may be ordered in component form for 
skilled home assembly.
The Suffolk SS100 uses the Jaguar XK6
 engine, and commonly the 4-speed Jaguar 'Short Compact' gearbox as the 
drivetrain, and is still in limited production today with 8-12 cars 
being produced each year. With exports to a number of countries 
worldwide which include the USA, several European nations, Australia and
 New Zealand, the Suffolk Sportscars SS100 is probably the most prolific
 replica of the Jaguar SS100. The Suffolk SS100 was designed from the 
outset to create an exacting 'visual facsimile' of the genuine car. The 
accurate dimensions and such features as the original Lucas QK596 
headlamps, dummy Andre Hartford friction dampers, the original design 
windscreens and fly screens mean that it takes a real enthusiast to spot
 the differences in a passing car. Because of the increasing rarity and 
high value that a genuine Jaguar SS100 can command, a small number of 
owners with these cars have commissioned the building of identical 
Suffolk SS100's, allowing the owners the use of an almost identical 
vehicle without risking damage to the original. Suffolk Sportscars also 
manufacture a replica of the famous C-Type
 Jaguar that is similarly designed to be visually and dimensionally 
accurate, and uses the original 'live axle' setup of the original car 
for authenticity.
The Steadman TS100 is described as a 'reproduction'
 of the SS100 manufactured by Ottercraft Ltd in Hayle, Cornwall, United 
Kingdom, during the late 1980s and early 1990s. The actual build numbers
 for this car is unknown, but it is thought that a maximum of 
twenty-eight of these vehicles were assembled, and were also referred to
 as the Jaguar Steadman TS100. The Steadman TS100 was never intended to 
be a replica of the SS100 of the 1930s, but was designed to be a sports 
car in its own right.
With a hand-built aluminium body, the Steadman TS100 used unadapted 
Jaguar XJ6 running gear and was sold as a high quality, more modern 
version of the Jaguar SS100. Dimensionally and visually, the Steadman 
TS100 was quite different from the original Jaguar SS100. These 
differences occurred because the manufacturers were forced to change the
 original proportions to both accommodate the wider track of the donor 
car and allow the use of more readily available smaller, wider wheels. 
Attention was paid to styling detail during design (such as the use of 
appropriately large headlights) and at the time of production, the 
Steadman TS100 was regarded as more successful than most other 
evocations. With an unknown number surviving, this re-creation is a rare sight at classic car events.
The Steadman TS100 Enthusiasts Club was established in 2011  to maintain the vehicle's marque and to bring together owners from around the world.
SS Cars Ltd was a British car maker. It grew out of the Swallow Sidecar Company and was first registered under the new name in 1934. Some conjecture to the origins of the SS name exist,[citation needed]
 It was John Black who when asked the meaning of SS said it has always 
stood for Standard Swallow. William Lyons when asked, bearing in mind he
 was in the company of the suppliers of chassis for his run of the mill 
production cars was noncommittal, until, after the exclusive use of 
Standard Chassis began at which point he concurred. In 1945 the company 
changed its name to Jaguar Cars Ltd, because of the connotations of the use of the SS name by Nazi Germany.[citation needed]
The Swallow Sidecar Company had moved from its roots making stylish sidecars to become first a coachbuilder
 adding new bodies to other makers chassis and running gear and in 1932 
launched a car of its own, the SSI. It had also moved in 1928 from Blackpool to Coventry, in the heart of the British motor industry.
Under the guidance of the chairman, William Lyons,
 the company survived the depression years by making a series of 
beautifully styled cars offering exceptional value for money although 
some enthusiasts criticised them at the time for being "more show than 
go". The engines and chassis were supplied by the Standard Motor Company
 with a large design input to the latter from SS with the bodywork being
 added in the Coventry works. In 1929 John Black (standard motor 
company) and William Lyons realised a long standing dream and produced a
 one of a kind sports car, This "First" SS ( standard Swallow ) was a 
sleek Boat Tail Roadster, Its flowing design and streamlining, points to
 an obvious attempt at making a fast car, possibly with the intention of
 venturing into racing. This car is believed to have been shipped to 
Australia in the late 1940s.
The first of the SS range of cars available to the public was the 1932 SSI with 2- or 2 1⁄2-litre
 side-valve, six-cylinder engine and the SSII with a four-cylinder 
1-litre side-valve engine. Initially available as coupé or tourer a 
saloon was added in 1934, when the chassis was modified to be 2 inches 
(50 mm) wider.
The first of the sports cars came in 1935 with the SS90, so called 
because of its 90 mph (140 km/h) top speed. This car used the 2 1⁄2-litre side-valve, six-cylinder engine. Only 23 were made.
To counteract the "more show than go" criticism Lyons engaged William Heynes and Harry Weslake. Weslake was asked to redesign the 2 1⁄2-litre
 70 bhp side-valve engine to achieve 90 bhp. His answer was an 
overhead-valve design that produced 102 bhp and it was this engine that 
launched the new SS Jaguar sports and saloon cars in 1936.
The sports car carried the title: SS Jaguar "100". One of the finest looking cars of all time, only 198 of the 2 1⁄2-litre and 116 of the 3 1⁄2-litre
 models were made and with a 100 mph (160 km/h) top speed and 0-60 mph 
time of 11 seconds the survivors are highly sought after, rarely coming 
on the market.
The SS Jaguar 2 1⁄2-litre
 saloon with its 102 bhp six-cylinder Weslake-designed engine caused a 
sensation when it was launched to the press and dealers at the Mayfair 
Hotel, London.
The audience were asked to write down the UK price for which they 
thought the car would be sold: the average of their answers was £765.Even in that deflationary period, the actual price at just £395would have been a pleasant surprise for many customers. Also available was a similar looking but scaled-down version using a 1 1⁄2-litre four-cylinder side-valve engine.
In 1938 production moved from coachbuilt (wood framed) to all steel construction. A 3 1⁄2-litre was also added to the range at this point. The 2 1⁄2- and 3 1⁄2-litre cars shared the same chassis and body design although it was necessary to use a wider radiator for the 3 1⁄2-litre. The new 1 1⁄2-litre
 for 1938 used the same body shell as the six-cylinder cars but on a 
shorter chassis. The engine was also increased to 1776 cc and had 
overhead valves.
Car production stopped in 1940. After the war SS Cars Ltd dropped 
their SS identity and adopted the Jaguar model name as the company name 
and when production restarted the saloons were simply named Jaguar 1 1⁄2-, 2 1⁄2- or 3 1⁄2-litre.
 The model that followed these cars was called the Jaguar Mark V and so 
the immediate post war trio have become known unofficially as the Mark 
IV Jaguars. The sidecar making business along with the Swallow trademark
 was sold, the new company making the Swallow Doretti sports car.
Swallow Coachbuilding Co. (1935) Ltd. #07720862 is owned by Canadian 
Peter Schömer of Chichester, West Sussex England. Swallow trade mark 
#2591789 and the winged SS logo is registered at the Intellectual 
Property Office, that is also owned by the Swallow Coachbuilding 
Co.(1935) Ltd.
 






What a pretty car. Jags always make me think of the way English people say it: jag-you-are.
ReplyDeleteHey you Whitehouse. Ha ha a jag you are. LOL!!
ReplyDeleteGo gorgeous. I find these models to be done here. I have one set but I bought metal in 1:43 scale and paint again
ReplyDeleteMe gustaría tener la real.
ReplyDelete