Phryne's Car:The Hispano-Suiza

Phyrne first gets her car in Cocaine Blues. The car a red 1923 46CV Hispano-Suiza is hired from the local garage for $50 a week after the mechanic refuses to sell it as he wants to race it.
Hispano Suiza's were manufactured in France but were named because in their early days they were made in Spain and had a Swiss designer  King Alfonso of Spain was a Hispano Suiza enthusiast and they were very popular in Hollywood.

Early years
In 1898 a Spanish artillery captain, Emilio de la Cuadra, started electric automobile production in Barcelona under the name of La Cuadra. In Paris, De la Cuadra met the Swiss engineer Marc Birkigt (1878–1953) and hired him to work for the company in Spain. La Cuadra built their first gasoline-powered engines from a Birkigt design. At some point in 1902, the ownership changed hands to J. Castro and became Fábrica Hispano-Suiza de Automóviles (Spanish-Swiss Car Factory) but this company went bankrupt in December 1903.

Yet another restructuring took place in 1904, creating La Hispano-Suiza Fábrica de Automóviles, under Castro's direction, also based in Barcelona. Four new engines were introduced in the next year and a half. 3.8-litre and 7.4-litre four-cylinder and a pair of big six-cylinder engines were produced. This company managed to avoid bankruptcy and its largest operations remained in Barcelona until 1946, where cars, trucks, buses, aero engines and weapons were produced.
France was soon proving to be a much larger market for their luxury cars than Spain. In 1911, a factory, called Hispano France, was set up in the Paris suburb of Levallois-Perret. In 1914, production was moved to larger factories at Bois-Colombes, under the name Hispano-Suiza.

World War I
With the start of World War I, Hispano-Suiza turned to the design and production of aircraft engines under the direction of Marc Birkigt. His chief engineer during this period was another Swiss, Louis Massuger. Birkigt's solution to building aero engines was ahead of its time. Traditionally, aircraft engines were manufactured by machining separate steel cylinders and then bolting these assemblies directly to the crankcase. Birkigt's novel solution called for the engine block to be formed from a single piece of cast aluminum, and into which thin steel liners were secured. Manufacturing an engine in this way simplified construction and resulted in a lighter, yet stronger more durable engine. Thus, Birkigt's new construction method created the first practical, and what are commonly known today as, "cast block" engines. His aluminum cast block V-8 design was also noteworthy for incorporating overhead camshafts, propeller reduction gearing and other desirable features that would not appear together on competitor's engines until the late 1920s. Another major design feature was the use of a hollow propeller shaft to allow projectile firing through the (reduction geared only) propeller spinner,[citation needed] avoiding the need for a synchronizer gear, a feature used in future Hispano-Suiza military engines. Hispano-Suiza's aero engines, produced at its own factories and under license, became the most commonly used aero engines in the French and British air forces, powering over half the alliance's fighter aircraft.

1918–1936
After World War I, Hispano-Suiza returned to automobile manufacturing and, in 1919, introduced the H6. The H6 featured an inline 6-cylinder overhead camshaft engine based on the features of its V8 aluminium World War I aircraft engines and a body design by the American coach designers Hibbard & Darrin.
Licences for Hispano-Suiza patents were much in demand from prestige car manufacturers world-wide. Rolls-Royce used a number of Hispano-Suiza patents. For instance, for many years Rolls Royce installed Hispano-Suiza designed power brakes in its vehicles.

Through the 1920s and into the 1930s, Hispano-Suiza built a series of luxury cars with overhead camshaft engines of increasing performance. On the other hand, in the 1930s, Hispano-Suiza's V-12 car engines reverted to pushrod valve actuation to reduce engine noise.
During this time, Hispano-Suiza released the 37.2 Hispano-Suiza car built at the Hispano works in Paris.
In 1923 the French arm of Hispano-Suiza was incorporated as the Societé Française Hispano-Suiza, the Spanish parent company subscribing to 71% of the share capital. The French subsidiary was granted a large degree of financial and project independence but the technical co-operation between the Spanish and French arms of the company was always closely maintained. Luxury car production was increasingly concentrated in France while the Spanish operations moved into the production of commercial vehicles.

The mascot statuette atop the radiator after World War I was the stork, the symbol of the French province of Alsace, taken from the squadron emblem painted on the side of a Hispano-Suiza powered fighter aircraft that had been flown by the World War I French ace Georges Guynemer.
In 1925, Carlos Ballester obtained permission to represent Hispano-Suiza in Argentina. The agreement consisted of a phase in which the chassis were imported, followed by complete domestic production in Argentina. Thus “Hispano-Argentina, Fábrica de Automóviles S. A. (HAFDASA)" was born, for the production of Hispano-Suiza motors and automobiles, and also the production of spare parts for other car, truck, and bus manufacturers.

Spanish Civil War and World War II
In 1936, the French arm of Hispano-Suiza was told to stop production of cars and turn solely to aircraft engines once again. At the time they had just introduced a new series of water-cooled V-12 engines and the Hispano-Suiza 12Y was in huge demand for practically every French aircraft. However Hispano was never able to deliver enough of these engines, and many French fighters sat on the ground complete but for the engine. Meanwhile, the Republic of Spain conscripted Hispano-Suiza's Spanish operations into war production of trucks, armoured vehicles and weapons for the civil war of 1936-1939. After the war, the company was severely affected by the devastated state of the Spanish economy and the trade embargoes imposed by the victorious allies. In 1946, Hispano-Suiza sold off its automotive assets to ENASA, the maker of Pegaso trucks.
A development of the era were a series of 20 mm autocannon, first the Hispano-Suiza HS.9, followed by the Hispano-Suiza HS.404. The 404 was licensed for production in Britain and equipped almost all RAF fighter aircraft during the war. Production was also set up in the US, but these versions never matured even though the USAAC and US Navy both wanted to use it in place of their existing .50 BMG weapons. A lesser-known success was the Hispano-Suiza HS.820, a higher performance 20 mm design that was also used in the US as the M139. A variation of the 20 mm guns used on the Lockheed P-38 Lightning aircraft were produced by International Harvester.[4] In 1970 Hispano-Suiza sold their armaments division to Oerlikon, the HS.820 becoming the KAD.
In 1940, Hispano-Suiza, together with the Spanish bank Banco Urquijo and a group of Spanish industrial companies, founded the 'Sociedad Ibérica de Automóviles de Turismo' (S.I.A.T.). This led to Spain's first mass-production car maker SEAT.

16 comments:

  1. Thankyou, Thankyou, Thankyou! I love the show almost as much as the books (which I have re-read at least three times each). Great to know more about the car. The '33 model I love recently sold for over one million, so I don't think I'll be getting one anytime soon.

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    1. Thanks Deb. It is a beautiful car, I was hoping that I would be able to drive one at some point but with only two in Australia it seems unlikely. I have many more Phryne posts to come so please keep following the blog x

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  2. Interesting facts about the aero engines!

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  3. Formidable automobile, nous en avons au Musée Français de Rochetaillée sur Saone

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  4. The video at the bottom of the entry doesn't work anymore :(

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    1. Strange it seems to be working for me

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    2. It's not working for me either. It may depend upon your location - I've found that sometimes the networks/footage owners block transmission in certain countries (I'm in the USA). :(

      Just discovered your blog after looking for more info on Phryne's fabulous car. My mother and I have been watching "Miss Fisher" together for about 9 months now - it's one of the few shows we can truly enjoy together! - and I think the production values are just amazing! Costumes, casting, acting, writing, action - it's all there on this show! I hope there will be a S4 eventually. I look forward to looking around your blog some more - I just know I'm going to find some terrific stuff! 😊

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    3. Hi Toni thanks for your lovely comment its always nice to get appreciation for my work on the blog as well as getting to speak to other fans of the show! I'm not sure if there will be a series 4, there is however talk of a movie in the pipeline that will be film in England so there's always that to look forward to!

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  5. Is there anywhere I can find a 1/43 model of Miss Fisher's car?

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    1. I'm not sure if you can find the exact model of Phryne's car but there are quite a few hispano suiza models at http://www.carmodel.com/brand/hispano-suiza?enc=1/

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  6. It is a common misconception that Hispano-Suiza was French, actually it was a Spanish company with a big factory in Paris. In Spain, it had several factory complexes spread around the country, making cars, aircraft engines, trucks, buses and weapons. The Paris factory was used for the largest luxury models, so it is likely Ms Phyrne's car was made in Spain.

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  7. Miss Fisher first gets her car in the Ballarat Train the second show of season 1, not in Cocaine Bues as stated above.

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  8. As the author of the blog wrote - she rents her first car (the Hispamo-Suizo) in the book Cocaine Blues for $50 from a guy at a garage, but he won't sell it because he plans on racing it.

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  9. I had never heard of this car until the hood ornament caught my eye and I decided to surf the net to find out about it. This car fits Miss Fisher's personality to a Tee! It is elegant, stylish and a show stopper.

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  10. Here is the story of the car:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SSrcMjADvss

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