1947 Talbot-Lago T26 Figoni et Falaschi pictures and wallpaper 1947 Talbot-Lago T26 Figoni et Falaschi pictures and wallpaper 1947 Talbot-Lago T26 Figoni et Falaschi pictures and wallpaper 1947 Talbot-Lago T26 Figoni et Falaschi pictures and wallpaper 1947 Talbot-Lago T26 Figoni et Falaschi pictures and wallpaper
1947 Talbot-Lago T26 Figoni et Falaschi pictures and wallpaper 1947 Talbot-Lago T26 Figoni et Falaschi pictures and wallpaper 1947 Talbot-Lago T26 Figoni et Falaschi pictures and wallpaper 1947 Talbot-Lago T26 Figoni et Falaschi pictures and wallpaper 1947 Talbot-Lago T26 Figoni et Falaschi pictures and wallpaper
1947 Talbot-Lago T26 Figoni et Falaschi pictures and wallpaper 1947 Talbot-Lago T26 Figoni et Falaschi pictures and wallpaper 1947 Talbot-Lago T26 Figoni et Falaschi pictures and wallpaper 1947 Talbot-Lago T26 Figoni et Falaschi pictures and wallpaper



1947 Talbot-Lago T26 Figoni et Falaschi news, pictures, and information

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Cabriolet
Designer: Figoni & Falaschi
Chassis Num: 100109
 
Talbot-Lago was a company formed by the collapse of Sunbeam-Talbot-Darracq in 1935. Anthony Lago, founder of the company, set-out to produce a line of exclusive and expensive sports cars. The cars initially used six-cylinder engines, but later models featured eight-cylinder engines, and the occasional cheaper engines to help increase sales.

Giuseppe Figoni's was a brilliant artist who worked with metal to produce some of the most unique and flowing coach-bodies of all time. His designs amplified his hatred of the wind; the force that caused drag and crippled the cars power. His creations often centered around this hatred, evident by the streamlined designs, flush door handles, steeply raked windshield, sloping fastback, and enclosures for wheels and tires.

The featured Talbot-Lago T26 chassis 100109 was given a hemispherical cylinder head design engine, courtesy of Anthony Lago, that is capable of producing 170 horsepower. Drum brakes provided stopping power while a live rear- and independent front-suspension provided support. The engine was matted to a Wilson four-speed preselector gearbox.

Figoni created the design and manufactured it with Ovidio Falaschi. This exceptional piece of rolling art was sold to movie director George Sidney

The beautiful Talbot-Lago is efficient, beautiful, flamboyant, graceful, and gorgeous. It was truly different from any other vehicle on the American road at the time. When William Lyons, the creator of Jaguar, first saw a Figoni & Falaschi teardrop design, he remarked 'That car is positively indecent.' The profound effect the car had on Lyons is evident in his post-WWI designs.

This one-off creation had a frame-off restoration by RM Coachworks in 2003 and later debuted at the 2003 Pebble Beach Concours. Since that time, it has been continuing to win awards and recognition at major events and concours throughout America.
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Cabriolet
Designer: Figoni & Falaschi
Chassis Num: 100109
 
The 4.5-liter engine of the Talbot Lago T26 delivered 170 horsepower and the chassis was state of the art in the postwar period.

This 1947 Talbot Lago T26 Drophead Coupe by Figoni et Falaschi was first owned by George Sidney, the famous Hollywood director. Perhaps it's no accident that a couple generations of Hollywood characters, from Mighty Mouse to Roger Rabbit, drove extravagant cartoon cars with fat fenders.

Sidney was on a roll during his directing years, and this magnificent creation of Figoni and Tony Lago made a striking statement. From its flamboyant fenders through its artful chrome trim to the subtle decklid spine, Sidney's Talbot Lago drophead coupe expresses the style, flash and confidence of postwar Hollywood.

Talbot-Lagos have become a top-prized car at various auctions, fetching as musch as $3.685 million in 2005.
Almost all of the T26 Grand Sport automobiles received custom coachwork from various coachbuilders. Many were used to display their artistic creations at Motor Shows while others sat atop shortened chassis and used for sporting events.

Anthony Lago had taken over control of the Talbot factory in Suresnes after the merger with Sunbeam and Darracq had collapsed in 1936. By 1937 he had introduced a new line of vehicles, two of which were entered in the grueling 24 Hours of Le Mans. He continued his racing endeavors by moving to single-seat racers and by 1939 a purpose-built Grand Prix car had been completed. The onset of World War II slowed the racing endeavors but after the war, and with the assistance of Carlo Marchetti, an overall win at Le Mans was achieved.

Marchetti and Lago created a 4.5-liter version of the six-cylinder engine, and used it in the T26 Record and T26 Grand Sport cars. The 4.5-liter displacement size was selected because it meant requirements for Grand Prix competition. A 1.5-liter displacement size limit was placed on vehicles that were aided by superchargers.

The 4.5-liter engine produced 165 horsepower, which made it inadequate in comparison to the competition, which was producing over 300 horsepower from their engines. The engine would require more tuning if it were to compete in Grand Prix Competition. Marchetti and Lago began work on a revised head for the engine. The new design had two lateral camshafts partway up the block, and shortened pushrods to operate the twelve valves. The modifications improved the engines output to 240 horsepower. Further improvements pushed that figure to around 260 and in range of its competition.

In 1948, the Talbot Lago T26C made its racing debut at the Monaco Grand Prix. The car was fitted with large drum brakes, a Wilson Pre-Selector four-speed gearbox, and a conventional box-section chassis. Shortly after the race began, it became clear that the Talbot Lago was no-match for the Maserati's and their two-stage supercharged 4CLTs. The main advantage that the T26C employed was their ability to run the entire race without refueling or changing tires. The Maserati cars pitted half-way through the race, which gave the Talbot-Lago T26Cs a chance to regain some ground. As the checkered flag fell, Nino Farina and his Maserati were in the lead followed closely by a T26C driven by Louis Chiron.

The Talbot-Lago T26C competition career continued during the 1949 season. Their superior fuel mileage and reliability gained them two major Grand Prix victories. In 1950, the T26C's did well in non-championship competition.

For the 1950 running of the 24 Hours of LeMans, Anthony Lago entered a T26C for competition. The LeMans race is a grueling race that tests driver, car, and team for 24 hours of competition. Just finishing the race is a victory, itself. Anthony was convinced that the T26C's proven reliability would reward them with a strong finish. The car was slightly modified for the race to comply with regulations; it was given lights, fenders, and a wider body to allow for a driver and co-driver.

At the 1950 24 Hours of LeMans, the T26C was driven by Louis Rosier and his son Jean-Louis Rosier. At the end of the race, the T26C had captured its most important victory of its career.

The T26 road-going cars were powered by a six-cylinder, DOHC Cam engine with triple carburetors that produced nearly 200 horsepower. There was a four-speed Wilson Preselector gearbox, four-wheel drum brakes and a live-axle with semi-elliptic leaf springs rear suspension. This setup provided the necessary power, performance, and comfort required by cars of this caliber.

The Talbot-Lago T26 models were exquisite creations outfitted with coach work provided by some of the world's greatest coachbuilders. Never produced in large numbers, these T26 models are extremely rare and exclusive by today's standards. In total there were around 750 examples of the T26 constructed, with only 23 being the T26C version. There were about 30 examples of the T26 GS (Grand Sport) constructed with eight built atop the short chassis of 2.65M. This was the same chassis used for the Grand Prix cars.
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1947 Talbot-Lago models
Talbot-Lago T-26 GS Franay
Talbot-Lago T-26 Record
Talbot-Lago T-26 SS
 

 
Talbot-Lago: 1941-1950
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