Bean
GB, 1919 – 1929
(1) A. Harper, Sons & Bean Ltd, Tipton, Dudley, Worcs., 1919 – 1926
(2) Bean Cars Ltd, Tipton, Dudley, Staffs., 1926 – 1929
The Bean was a remodeling of the Perry light car, whose manufacturers were taken over by Harper Sons & Bean, motor components makers, after World War 1. The Bean was to be mass-produced, in one 11.9hp model only. Its makers were members of a consortium of firms, including the famous, old-established names of Swift and Vulcan, Hadfields, the engineers of Sheffield, Gallay Radiators and Marles Steering, that was intended to achieve efficient quantity production by rationalization of parts. In fact, Bean carried cost cutting too far with this car. Its 4-cylinder, side-valve 1794cc engine was rough, the gear change difficult and the suspension harsh. The Bean four-seater open body cost only £80. However, 1922 customers were car-starved and undiscriminating, and 80 Bean cars a week were made that year, even if the first target of 50.000 Beam cars per annum remained a dream. The bigger, 2.3-litre Bean Fourteen introduced for 1924 was more modern machine, with its unit construction of engine and gearbox.
Hadfields took over Bean early in 1926. For 1927, the Bean company followed fashion by introducing a six, the ‘Bean 18/50’. Its 2.7-litre, overhead-valve engine was made by Meadows, and a rather square radiator replaced the well-known rounded Bean shape. Also new in 1927 was the Bean Imperial Six, the first Bean designed specifically for export. Unlike the Bean 18/50 for sale this had a Bean-built engine of 3.8-litres with a Ricardo cylinder head. The Australian explorer Francis Birtles drove a disintegrating Bean prototype from England to India, and in fact the Bean Imperial Six was never put into production. From 1927 all cars were called Hadfield-Beans. The 2.3-litre 14/40 Hadfield-Bean, which joined the range in 1928, was no better, with its unreliable engine and overhead-worm drive rear axle, bad brakes and difficult clutch- and gear-change. It was also old-fashioned in that it used a fairly large, long-stroke, side-valve 4-cylinder engine. The latter was economical, and the 14/40 Hadfield-Bean for sale was cheap, but cost cutting presumably dictated the fitting of quarter-elliptic rear springs, which cannot have improved comfort. There was a Bean 14/70hp sports version, which had better brakes, with Dewandre vacuum servo assistance, but the only good car in the range, the old Hadfield-Bean Fourteen for sale, was desperately out-dated and no Hadfield-Beans at all were made after 1929.
Source: Georgano, encyclopedia of motorcar; TRN
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