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The 3.5L SS100 was produced by the Swallow Sidecar 'SS' company. 117 were built between 1937 and 1939. Production ceased as WWII broke out. After the war, SS Cars changed their name to Jaguar, and production of SS models never resumed. The larger 3.5-liter engine, unlike the previous 2.5-liter version, comfortably achieved the namesake 100mph, hence SS100.
This car is rare because it is fitted with a pre-war competition cylinder head and block modified by John Heath of HWM Jaguar fame. Pre-war, the car competed in RAC rallies at Blackpool and Edinburgh. Post-war, it saw action at Brands Hatch and Brighton. The car was considered the fastest SS100 in the United Kingdom. The car has undergone an extensive restoration completed in 2018. It is finished in suede green a precursor to British Racing Green.
This car is rare because it is fitted with a pre-war competition cylinder head and block modified by John Heath of HWM Jaguar fame. Pre-war, the car competed in RAC rallies at Blackpool and Edinburgh. Post-war, it saw action at Brands Hatch and Brighton. The car was considered the fastest SS100 in the United Kingdom. The car has undergone an extensive restoration completed in 2018. It is finished in suede green a precursor to British Racing Green.
William Lyons and William Wamsley set up the Swallow Sidecar Company in 1922 in Blackpool, England. The six-man shop made motorcycle sidecars and by 1927 they began offering special sporting bodies on popular chassis for Austin, Fiat, Standard, and other small cars of the period. They moved to Coventry one year later, marketing their first car in 1931. That car was introduced to the public at the Olympia Motor Show in London in October 1931, instantly becoming a sensation. A Standard chassis and engine were used on the first SS1, and on this chassis was built a stunning coupe body with elongated bonnet and an extremely low-slung body. It was underpowered and Lyons immediately set about resolving the lack of power.
The name Jaguar debuted in 1935, coinciding when the first six-cylinder SS 90 was introduced on a shortened SS1 chassis. The roadster was a stunning looking vehicle with numeral 90 used to refer to the top speed. It was a smash hit, but speed merchants immediately wanted more horsepower, so 10 months later the SS 100 was introduced and remained in production to November of 1940. The initial version introduced in 1936 was powered by a 2.5-liter engine, upsized to 3.5-liters in 1938.
In 1936 the first SS 100 was produced. The SS 100 was the first true 100 mph sports car available to the public. In four years of production, the SS100 earned an exceptional reputation in winning road races, endurance contents and rallys. This car has a six-cylinder 3.8 liter engine generating 125 horsepower. The original selling price was $1,925.
The SS 100 was a British 2-seat sports car built between 1936 and 1940 by SS Cars Ltd of Coventry, England. The last one is thought to have been delivered in 1941.
In 1936 the name Jaguar was given to a new saloon car and from then on to all the car. Following World War II, due to the connotations then attached to the initials SS, the company was renamed Jaguar.
The chassis with a wheelbase of 8 feet 8 inches, was essentially a shortened version of the one designed for the 2.5-liter saloon, a car produced in much great numbers, and had first been seen in the SS 90 of 1935. Suspension was half elliptical springs all around with rigid axles.
The engine was a development of the old 2.5-liter Standard unit converted from side valve to overhead valve with anew cylinder head designed by William Heynes. The power output was increased from 70 to 100 horsepower. Twin SU carburetors were bolted directly to the cylinder head.
Widely considered to be one of the most aesthetically pleasing Jaguar cars, it is also one of the rarest with only 198 of the 2.5-liter and 116 of the 3.5 liter models being made. Most stayed on the market but 49 were exported.
This rear-wheel-drive car is powered by a 212.7 cubic-inch, inline six-cylinder engine, fitted with twin SU carburetors, developing 125 horsepower and coupled to a four-speed manual gearbox. The 2,575-pound vehicle is capable of 101 mph and sold for $1,925.
This SS100 Roadster was purchased by Malcolm S. Pray Jr. in 1998. It is a 3½-Litre model, although the present 3½-Litre engine was installed at a later day. The engine is equipped with a performance-oriented, bronze-coated cylinder head, which is believed to have been installed by the factory only on cars intended for competition use. The car was originally finished in black with red leather upholstery before being delivered to its first owner, a Mr. J. M. Archer, in Scotland.
This car was the poster car for the 1999 Greenwich Concours d'Elegance, and it was Best in Class at Meadow Brook in 1999, Bridgehampton in 2004, and Cranbrook in 2005.
The body has been refinished in British Racing Green with biscuit-toned seats. There are Lucas headlamps, fender lights, dual fog lights, and both a folding windscreen and Brooklands racing windscreens.
The name Jaguar debuted in 1935, coinciding when the first six-cylinder SS 90 was introduced on a shortened SS1 chassis. The roadster was a stunning looking vehicle with numeral 90 used to refer to the top speed. It was a smash hit, but speed merchants immediately wanted more horsepower, so 10 months later the SS 100 was introduced and remained in production to November of 1940. The initial version introduced in 1936 was powered by a 2.5-liter engine, upsized to 3.5-liters in 1938.
In 1936 the first SS 100 was produced. The SS 100 was the first true 100 mph sports car available to the public. In four years of production, the SS100 earned an exceptional reputation in winning road races, endurance contents and rallys. This car has a six-cylinder 3.8 liter engine generating 125 horsepower. The original selling price was $1,925.
The SS 100 was a British 2-seat sports car built between 1936 and 1940 by SS Cars Ltd of Coventry, England. The last one is thought to have been delivered in 1941.
In 1936 the name Jaguar was given to a new saloon car and from then on to all the car. Following World War II, due to the connotations then attached to the initials SS, the company was renamed Jaguar.
The chassis with a wheelbase of 8 feet 8 inches, was essentially a shortened version of the one designed for the 2.5-liter saloon, a car produced in much great numbers, and had first been seen in the SS 90 of 1935. Suspension was half elliptical springs all around with rigid axles.
The engine was a development of the old 2.5-liter Standard unit converted from side valve to overhead valve with anew cylinder head designed by William Heynes. The power output was increased from 70 to 100 horsepower. Twin SU carburetors were bolted directly to the cylinder head.
Widely considered to be one of the most aesthetically pleasing Jaguar cars, it is also one of the rarest with only 198 of the 2.5-liter and 116 of the 3.5 liter models being made. Most stayed on the market but 49 were exported.
This rear-wheel-drive car is powered by a 212.7 cubic-inch, inline six-cylinder engine, fitted with twin SU carburetors, developing 125 horsepower and coupled to a four-speed manual gearbox. The 2,575-pound vehicle is capable of 101 mph and sold for $1,925.
This SS100 Roadster was purchased by Malcolm S. Pray Jr. in 1998. It is a 3½-Litre model, although the present 3½-Litre engine was installed at a later day. The engine is equipped with a performance-oriented, bronze-coated cylinder head, which is believed to have been installed by the factory only on cars intended for competition use. The car was originally finished in black with red leather upholstery before being delivered to its first owner, a Mr. J. M. Archer, in Scotland.
This car was the poster car for the 1999 Greenwich Concours d'Elegance, and it was Best in Class at Meadow Brook in 1999, Bridgehampton in 2004, and Cranbrook in 2005.
The body has been refinished in British Racing Green with biscuit-toned seats. There are Lucas headlamps, fender lights, dual fog lights, and both a folding windscreen and Brooklands racing windscreens.
2015 RM Sotheby's : Monterey
Pre-Auction Estimates :
USD $550,000-USD $750,000
Sale Price :
USD $583,000
2014 RM Auctions - Amelia Island
Pre-Auction Estimates :
USD $300,000-USD $400,000
Sale Price :
USD $451,000
1938 SS Cars SS 100 Auction Sales
Recent Sales of the SS Cars SS 100
(Data based on Model Year 1938 sales)
1938 SS 100 Jaguar 3.5-Litre Roadster Chassis#: 39016 Sold for USD$434,000 2022 Broad Arrow Auctions : The Passion for the Drive | |
1938 SS 100 Jaguar 3½-Litre Roadster Chassis#: 39032 Sold for USD$415,000 2021 RM Sothebys : Arizona | |
1938 SS 100 Jaguar 3½-Litre Roadster Chassis#: 39048 Sold for USD$474,500 2018 RM Sothebys : Monterey | |
1938 SS 100 Jaguar Roadster Chassis#: 49049 Sold for USD$572,000 2016 RM Sotheby's : Monterey | |
1938 Jaguar SS100 3½-Litre Roadster Chassis#: 39064 Sold for USD$462,375 2016 Bonhams : The Goodwood Festival of Speed Sale | |
1938 SS 100 Jaguar 3½-Litre Roadster Chassis#: 39010 Sold for USD$583,000 2015 RM Sotheby's : Monterey | |
1938 Jaguar SS100 2½ Liter Roadster Chassis#: 49049 Sold for USD$231,000 2015 Bonhams : Greenwich Concours | |
1938 SS 100 Jaguar 3½-Litre Roadster Chassis#: 39032 Sold for USD$852,500 2014 RM Auctions at Monterey | |
1938 SS 100 Jaguar 3½-Litre Roadster Chassis#: 39010 Sold for USD$451,000 2014 RM Auctions - Amelia Island | |
1938 SS 100 Jaguar 3½-Litre Roadster Chassis#: 39039 Sold for USD$852,500 2014 RM Auctions - Automobiles of Arizona | |
1938 SS 100 Jaguar 2½-Litre Roadster Chassis#: 49028 Sold for USD$396,142 2013 RM Auction - London | |
1938 SS100 Jaguar 3½-Litre Roadster Chassis#: 39065 Sold for USD$402,737 2012 Bonhams - Collectors' Motor cars and Automobilia | |
1938 Jaguar SS 100 3.5-Litre Roadster Chassis#: 39032 Sold for USD$423,752 2011 RM Auctions - London | |
1938 Jaguar SS100 3.5-Liter Roadster Chassis#: 39048 Sold for USD$687,500 2011 RM Auctions at Monterey | |
1938 Jaguar SS100 3.5 Roadster Chassis#: 39058 Sold for USD$242,000 2010 RM Auctions - Sports & Classics of Monterey | |
1938 Jaguar SS Coupe Chassis#: 30182X Sold for USD$385,000 2010 RM Auctions - Sports & Classics of Monterey | |
1938 Jaguar SS100 3.5 Litre Sold for USD$368,500 2010 Gooding and Company - Pebble Beach Auctions | |
1938 SS100 Jaguar 3½-Litre Roadster Chassis#: 39051 Sold for USD$330,313 2010 Bonhams - Les Grandes Marques a Monaco | |
1938 SS Jaguar 2½-Litre Drophead Coupé Chassis#: 46131 Sold for USD$154,408 2010 Bonhams - Collectors' Motor Cars and Automobilia | |
1938 Jaguar SS 100 Chassis#: 39032 Sold for USD$341,000 2009 Sports & Classics of Monterey |
SS Cars SS 100s That Failed To Sell At Auction
1938 SS Cars SS 100's that have appeared at auction but did not sell.
Vehicle | Chassis | Event | High Bid | Est. Low | Est. High |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1938 Jaguar SS100 2 ½ L Roadster | 49044 | 2024 Artcurial : Retromobile | $200,000 | $300,000 | |
1938 SS100 Jaguar 3½-Litre Roadster | 39083 | 2022 Bonhams : Goodwood Revival | $400,000 | $500,000 | |
1938 Jaguar SS100 2½-Litre Roadster | 49028 | 2018 Bonhams : Goodwood Members Meeting | $250,000 | $300,000 | |
1938 Jaguar SS 100 3 1/2 Litre | 39067 | 2017 Gooding & Co. : Scottsdale, AZ | $450,000 | $525,000 | |
1938 JAGUAR SS100 3½ LITRE ROADSTER | 39083 | 2015 Bonhams : The Frederiksen Auction | |||
1938 Jaguar SS100 2½ Litre The Kuala Lumpur SS100 | 49034 | 2013 Coys Techno Classica | $265,000 | $285,000 | |
1938 Jaguar SS Coupé by Graber | 30182 | 2011 RM Auctions Villa d'Este | $210,000 | $300,000 | $400,000 |
1938 Jaguar SS 100 | 39027 | 2010 Bonhams Automobiles d'Exception á Rétromobile | $200,000 | $250,000 | |
1938 Jaguar 1.5-Liter | 2007 Christie's Exceptional Motor Cars at the Monterey Jet Center | $50,000 | $60,000 |
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1938 SS Cars SS 100
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