The Perry was a British car made by the Perry Motor Company based in Tyseley, Birmingham who made cars between 1913 and 1916.
The company can trace its roots back to 1824 with James and Stephen Perry making pens in a workshop in London, later moving to Birmingham and building bicycles. By the late 1890s they were having financial problems and were bought by James William Bayliss, part owner of the Bayliss-Thomas car making company.[1].
Their first car, a three-wheeler, was made in 1899 [1] followed by a forecar in 1903. Cecil Bayliss, the son of the new owner, built a cyclecar in 1911 with 800 cc engine, and this was developed into the first Perry car to reach production.
Manufacturer | Perry Motor Company |
---|---|
Production | 1913-1915 approx 800 made |
Successor | none |
Class | cyclecar |
Body style | two-seat open with optional dickey seat. |
Engine | Perry twin-cylinder 875 cc[1] |
Transmission | 3-speed manual |
Wheelbase | 84 or 90 inches (2132 or 2284 mm)[1] |
Length | 123 inches (3124 mm)[2] |
Width | 56 inches (1422 mm)[2] |
Designer | Cecil Bayliss |
The engine for the car was built in-house and was a two-cylinder unit unusual in that both pistons rose and fell at the same time. Drive was to the rear wheels through a 3-speed gearbox and worm-drive axle. The basic body was an open two-seater, but a long-wheelbase version allowing a dickey seat was also available.
About 800 were made.[1]
Manufacturer | Perry Motor Company |
---|---|
Production | 1914-1915 approx 300 made |
Successor | Bean 11.9 |
Body style | two- or four-seat open with optional dickey seat. |
Engine | Perry 4-cylinder 1795 cc[1] |
Transmission | 3-speed manual |
Wheelbase | 102 inches (2591 mm)[1] |
Length | 157.5 inches (4000 mm)[2] |
Width | 62 inches (1575 mm)[2] |
Designer | Cecil Bayliss |
A full-sized car was introduced in 1914 with four-cylinder 1795 cc engine. The larger car allowed four seat bodies to be offered as well as two seaters and these were mainly made by Mulliners of Birmingham.[1].
About 300 were made before World War I curtailed car-building activities. A very few were made in 1919 when the design was sold to Bean Cars, who reintroduced it as the Bean 11.9.