1954 Warrior Bristol news, pictures, and information | ||
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![]() | ![]() | ![]() | Sports Racer Chassis Num: BR-001 Engine Num: 3230 |
Rod Nuckey was a racing driver whose family owned the Warrior Tap & Die Company in Hertfordshire. In 1953, he raced a Cooper-Bristol F2 car which he had some success with before it was involved in a crash. The chassis was destroyed, but the engine and transmission were salvaged.
Nuckey went searching for an indivdual to create a sports car racer using the salvaged components. He turned to Bernie Roger to create the 'Warrior-Bristol.' The car was given a tube chassis with a DeDion suspension setup in the rear. In the front were transverse leaf springs which were soon changed to torsion bars. The body was done by Williams and Pritchard.
The car raced during the 1954 and 1955 season at such venues as Crystal Palace and Silverstone, among others. It was piloted by Nuckey, Roger Biss, and J.D. Lomas.
In 1955 the car was sold to Bernie Arnold who had it shipped to Malaysia. It raced in the Macao Grand Prix in 1956, 1957, and 1958.
The car would pass through several owners before coming into the possession of Ian Boughton of Western Australia in 1980, who would give the car an extensive restoration. At the time, the car was powered by a 2.4-liter Jaguar engine.
The car would pass through several more owners over the years, before coming to the United States in 1999.
It is seen here at the 2009 Monterey Historics.
By Daniel Vaughan | Dec 2009
Rod Nuckey was a young English driver whose family owned the Warrior Tap & Die Company in Hertfordshire. In 1953 he acquired a Cooper-Bristol Formula 2 Mark II, chassis CB MK2 3/53. Nuckey won several races during 1953, in the Cooper racing for Ecurie Richmond. However at the final Snetterton meeting of the year the car was seriously crashed, ruining the chassis. The engine and transmission were removed from the Cooper and used in a new car to be run in sports car races.
The new car was known as the Warrior-Bristol. Its designer, Bernard 'Bernie' Roger, was a talented 35 year old engineer who designed and built a number of one-off specials in the 1950's. The Warrior is believed to be his first from the ground-up. Roger had spent his early years apprenticed wîth Alta Car and Engineering Company. He later became chief mechanic for Mike Hawthorn in 1952 and Ecurie Richmond in 1953 working primarily on Cooper MKI and MKII formula 2 cars. In 1953 he designed and built the first Cooper-Bristol sports car, utilizing the Alan Brown Cooper MKI chassis wîth a Ferrari Barchetta style body by Wakefield's of Byfleet. It had a de-Dion suspension and preceded Cooper's own prototype Cooper-Bristol sport car by several months. Roger was later associated wîth Francis Beart, constructing the Beart-Roger sports racer in 1956. Later Roger was connected wîth the design of the Peerless GT and the ill-fated Gordon-Keeble.
As Rod Nuckey wanted a sports racer, Bernie Roger obliged by creating the Warrior-Bristol wîth an entirely new chassis, of the tube frame Superlegerra type. It was similar in many respects to the H-frame tube chassis built by John Tojeiro in 1953 for Cliff Davis. The Tojeiro chassis eventually became the basis for the A.C. Ace. However the Roger design utilized a de-Dion rear suspension wîth torsion bars, a lighter tube frame and Cooper 4-lug wheels. It was bodied by Williams and Pritchard of North London who also developed similar bodies for the Tony Crook-Jack Walton ex-Cooper MKII and the Bristol 450 sports racers. Originally the front suspension utilized a transverse leaf spring. However it was soon changed to torsion bars. The head faring and wrap around screen were added in 1955. The car was registered SAR 336.
The Warrior was raced extensively in 1954 and 1955 by Nuckey, Roger Biss and J.D. Lomas at Silverstone, Crystal Palace, Aintree and Snetterton. At the 9th British Grand Prix for sports cars in 1954 the car was driven by Nuckey to 9th place overall, third in the 2 liter class. He placed behind such drivers as Peter Collins (Aston Martin), Roy Salvadori (Aston Martin) Carol Shelby (Aston Martin), Reg Parnell (Lagonda) and Archie Scott-Brown (Lister Bristol).
The car was sold in 1955 to Bernie Arnold who shipped it to Malaysia. It participated in the Macao Grand Prix driven by Arnold in 1956, 1957 and 1958 (10th place in 1956). In 1959 Arnold set a course record for 2 liter cars at a sprint meeting in Malaysia. The car was still being raced by Arnold in 1960 when he took 1st place overall at the Johore Coronation Grand Prix. The car was registered NA3. At one point Arnold powered the car wîth a Jaguar 2.4 liter engine following the demise of the original Bristol. This particular motor was an experimental motor which had disappeared from Jaguar's shops years prior. In that form it won the sports car event at the 1970 Singapore Grand Prix driven by Tim Robertson.
Bernard Arnold died in 1964 and the car passed through no less than four owners before being restored by Ian Boughton of Western Australia in 1980. After restoration the car passed through another four owners and engaged in intensive historic racing in Eastern Australia before being brought to the Únited States in 1999.Source - Vehicle Owner
The new car was known as the Warrior-Bristol. Its designer, Bernard 'Bernie' Roger, was a talented 35 year old engineer who designed and built a number of one-off specials in the 1950's. The Warrior is believed to be his first from the ground-up. Roger had spent his early years apprenticed wîth Alta Car and Engineering Company. He later became chief mechanic for Mike Hawthorn in 1952 and Ecurie Richmond in 1953 working primarily on Cooper MKI and MKII formula 2 cars. In 1953 he designed and built the first Cooper-Bristol sports car, utilizing the Alan Brown Cooper MKI chassis wîth a Ferrari Barchetta style body by Wakefield's of Byfleet. It had a de-Dion suspension and preceded Cooper's own prototype Cooper-Bristol sport car by several months. Roger was later associated wîth Francis Beart, constructing the Beart-Roger sports racer in 1956. Later Roger was connected wîth the design of the Peerless GT and the ill-fated Gordon-Keeble.
As Rod Nuckey wanted a sports racer, Bernie Roger obliged by creating the Warrior-Bristol wîth an entirely new chassis, of the tube frame Superlegerra type. It was similar in many respects to the H-frame tube chassis built by John Tojeiro in 1953 for Cliff Davis. The Tojeiro chassis eventually became the basis for the A.C. Ace. However the Roger design utilized a de-Dion rear suspension wîth torsion bars, a lighter tube frame and Cooper 4-lug wheels. It was bodied by Williams and Pritchard of North London who also developed similar bodies for the Tony Crook-Jack Walton ex-Cooper MKII and the Bristol 450 sports racers. Originally the front suspension utilized a transverse leaf spring. However it was soon changed to torsion bars. The head faring and wrap around screen were added in 1955. The car was registered SAR 336.
The Warrior was raced extensively in 1954 and 1955 by Nuckey, Roger Biss and J.D. Lomas at Silverstone, Crystal Palace, Aintree and Snetterton. At the 9th British Grand Prix for sports cars in 1954 the car was driven by Nuckey to 9th place overall, third in the 2 liter class. He placed behind such drivers as Peter Collins (Aston Martin), Roy Salvadori (Aston Martin) Carol Shelby (Aston Martin), Reg Parnell (Lagonda) and Archie Scott-Brown (Lister Bristol).The car was sold in 1955 to Bernie Arnold who shipped it to Malaysia. It participated in the Macao Grand Prix driven by Arnold in 1956, 1957 and 1958 (10th place in 1956). In 1959 Arnold set a course record for 2 liter cars at a sprint meeting in Malaysia. The car was still being raced by Arnold in 1960 when he took 1st place overall at the Johore Coronation Grand Prix. The car was registered NA3. At one point Arnold powered the car wîth a Jaguar 2.4 liter engine following the demise of the original Bristol. This particular motor was an experimental motor which had disappeared from Jaguar's shops years prior. In that form it won the sports car event at the 1970 Singapore Grand Prix driven by Tim Robertson.
Bernard Arnold died in 1964 and the car passed through no less than four owners before being restored by Ian Boughton of Western Australia in 1980. After restoration the car passed through another four owners and engaged in intensive historic racing in Eastern Australia before being brought to the Únited States in 1999.Source - Vehicle Owner
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