1948 to 1951 An introduction to the Bond Minicar

Short early film footage of the original 1948 Lawrie Bond designed Minicar, followed by pictures of the design modifications and improvements it went through before finishing with a 1951 film showing road testing, along with a tour of the Sharp's Commercials assembly line in Ribbleton Lane, Preston.

Пікірлер: 19

  • @Robert-yr1of
    @Robert-yr1of7 ай бұрын

    I bought a Bond Mark C for £5 when I was at school, I still have it now, 53 years later. Highest milage covered in one year: 12,000 miles. Highest milage covered in one weekend: 702 miles. Plus I have a second one owned for 44 years.

  • @sthildas4857
    @sthildas48577 ай бұрын

    I had a Bond 71' Villiers 250cc engine went well, great fun.

  • @stevedickson5853
    @stevedickson585310 ай бұрын

    They really do remind me of a 50s pedal car , brilliant things .

  • @raychambers3646
    @raychambers3646 Жыл бұрын

    I had a Bond Mk F with Dynastart ( dynamo / starter ) a bit of a pain to be honest , my dad had a Mk A wish we still had it !

  • @tristanvander-molen6030
    @tristanvander-molen603010 ай бұрын

    My friend nick got the original one second owner of it from the 70s mark A

  • @PeterCrosland
    @PeterCrosland11 күн бұрын

    Mk E when I was 17. Slower to stop than it was to accelerate - rod/cable brakes.

  • @lastminutesolutions
    @lastminutesolutions3 жыл бұрын

    This clip is priceless

  • @jaitv5915
    @jaitv59153 жыл бұрын

    👍👍👍

  • @johnfaulkner6776
    @johnfaulkner67763 жыл бұрын

    are there any left on our roads or just in museums?

  • @MrSpeedm4

    @MrSpeedm4

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yes, John, there are numbers into double figures in the Bond Owners' Club and several of those are regularly driven to Bond events. I can only think of two in museums; one in Preston and the other is in the Science Museum storage depot at Wroughton. Neither is on display but they are available for viewing by prior appointment.

  • @johnfaulkner6776

    @johnfaulkner6776

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@MrSpeedm4 thanks for that info and good to hear! Sorry the museums don't make better use though.

  • @johnfaulkner6776

    @johnfaulkner6776

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@MrSpeedm4 been watching Hubnut's videos of micro car meets inc one organised by the Bond club. No really old 'a' model but lots to see.

  • @Phiyedough
    @Phiyedough2 жыл бұрын

    I hoped they would show how you start it, putting your leg in the engine compartment. Not ideal for ladies in pencil skirts!

  • @MrSpeedm4

    @MrSpeedm4

    2 жыл бұрын

    The kickstart was only ever used as the secondary means of starting. Initially, there was a cable attached to a modified kickstart lever and connected to a floor-mounted lever inside the vehicle. By pulling on the lever whilst seated, the engine could be started without lifting the bonnet and 'putting your leg in the engine compartment'. Later, for Deluxe models only, a modified 6 volt car type starter motor mounted on top of the cyclinder head was connected to the engine flywheel via a 'vee' belt. Engaging the starter motor moved the 'vee' belt across from its idler pulley and onto the engine flywheel, thus spinning the engine over to start it. The Standard models still retained the cable and pull-lever starting system. In 1956 the 12 volt Siba Dynastart was introduced for the Deluxe model, dispensing with the often unreliable cyclinder head mounted starter motor. The Standard models still retained the cable and pull-lever starting system until the Siba Dynastart was introduced across the board for all models in 1957. The Bond Minicar continued through until the end of production in 1966 with the Siba Dynastart. From 1953 until 1966, all the Villiers engines fitted to the Bond Minicar retained the motorcycle kickstart. The early 6v starter motor system was very hungry for power from the battery and the magneto on the engine was often incapable for supplying enough power to recharge it. The later 12v Siba Dynastart equiped engines were less troublesome but, unfortunately, they did require a special tool to remove the flywheel and change the Dynastart brushes when they had worn down and needed renewing. Failure to change the brushes resulted in the engine receiving no electrical charge and running off the battery. This very quickly led to insufficient battery power to turn over the Dynastart. Hence, the kickstart lever could always be used as the secondary means of starting any Bond Minicar with a low battery.

  • @rileybenstead3574

    @rileybenstead3574

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@MrSpeedm4 I had two of them many years ago. The first one (MK C I believe) had the 6 volt starter that turned the flywheel and the second one was possibly a MK F with the 12 volt system and electric starter. Both of them had the kick starter option, but never had any cable mechanism or levers in the car to start them.

  • @MrSpeedm4

    @MrSpeedm4

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@rileybenstead3574 The floor mounted starting handles were omitted from all Deluxe models in December 1953. If there was an electric starter, then it was deemed unecessary to have a hand start lever as well. However, the non-electric start models which still used a magneto for the generating system all retained the starting handle until September 1957 when the Siba Dynastart became a standard fit item on all Minicars.

  • @rileybenstead3574

    @rileybenstead3574

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@MrSpeedm4 Thank you. I'm still young enough to learn. It was about 55 years ago when I had them.

  • @sthildas4857

    @sthildas4857

    7 ай бұрын

    kzread.info/dash/bejne/ZWp52dCSk8aXkZc.htmlsi=eQFbqpYwj3XXeO34