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SALUTE TO STYLE, POWERED BY GLORIOUS ROLLS-ROYCE MERLIN ENGINES

June 26, 2014 by Salute to Style

SALUTE TO STYLE, POWERED BY GLORIOUS ROLLS-ROYCE MERLIN ENGINES◾From a Rolls-Royce Handlye Special to a Spitfire and a high-tech speedboat: Salute to Style gathers the many applications of the original Merlin engine, a piece of British history and engineering

◾Power and beauty on the road, water and in the air

The Capital's bijoux summer party, Salute to Style at The Hurlingham Club, presents a trio of displays that share the same historic powerplant to propel them on air, road and water.

A hand-built Handlye Special Rolls-Royce, sporting the 27-litre Merlin engine originally fitted to a Hawker Hurricane during WWII joins a hand-built unique Spitfire aircraft, created using original parts from other Spitfire planes and based on copies of the original Spitfire drawings from the archives of the RAF Museum, Hendon.

Both car and aircraft are going to be displayed alongside an original Merlin engine and a newly-produced model of the Aeroboat super-yacht created by powerboat design studio Claydon Reeves, which is to be powered by the famous Rolls-Royce V12 engine.

The Rolls-Royce is a Phantom II whose chassis carries the thunderous Merlin engine, and it is usually heard before it is seen in its natural habitat, whether at Brooklands, Dunsfold or on a driving holiday to France. It is the product of over 25 years of painstaking hand-building by its owner, Robin Beech, at his Handlye Farm workshop – hence the name. Two engines were purchased in 1985, a Merlin 3 and a Meteor Mk1: it took Robin Beech two years to create one functioning engine out of the two, for 'fast road competition' purposes. The next 23 years were spent building the car.

The Handlye Special has two gearboxes, one of which was made for the Merlin Meteor engine by famous engine builder Paul Jamieson. The all-alloy body was hand-made by Alan Jenner of Hastings Motor Sheet Metal, who effectively came out of retirement in order to preside over the project.

In its current configuration, the Rolls-Royce produces about 900bhp with 1550lb ft torque and has a fuel consumption of three miles per gallon. 'However, when we are careful, we can stretch to four,' laughs Robin Beech.


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The immortal lines of the famous Spitfire fighter also grace The Hurlingham Club's grounds during Salute to Style, as a reminder of one of the most iconic British aero-engineering designs of all time. Built from original parts over twenty years, the static display belongs to Terry Arlow of Simply Spitfire', and is inspired by the original MK805 produced by Vickers Armstrong in 1944. Those same lines are echoed in the stern and tail of the Aeroboat model which is also displayed at Salute to Style, though the futuristic speedboat's main materials are carbon-fibre and Kevlar instead of aluminium. Both aircraft and boat have the same heart, the Rolls-Royce Merlin engine.

As the lynchpin connecting prestigious automotive, nautical and aircraft machinery, the Merlin engine brings design and speed to Salute to Style, blending history with cutting edge technology.

Photo credit: Salute to Style
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