(Redirected from Bentley Motors Limited): ''For other uses of "Bentley", see
Bentley (disambiguation).''

Bentley's winged "B" badge and hood ornament
'Bentley Motors Limited' is an
English manufacturer of
luxury automobiles and
Grand Tourers. Bentley Motors was founded in
England on
January 18,
1919 by
Walter Owen Bentley, known as W.O. Bentley or just "W.O." (
1888–
1971). He was previously known for his successful range of
rotary aero-engines in
World War I, the most famous being the
Bentley BR1 as used in later versions of the
Sopwith Camel. Since
1998 the company has been owned by the
Volkswagen Group.
Bentley as a separate company
A group of wealthy British automobile aficionados known as the "
Bentley Boys" (
Woolf Barnato, Sir
Henry Birkin,
steeplechaser George Duller,
aviator Glen Kidston, automotive journalist
S. C. H. "Sammy" Davis, and Dr.
Dudley Benjafield among them) kept the car's reputation for high performance alive. At one point, on a bet, Barnato raced ''Le Train Bleu'' from
Cannes to
Calais, then by ferry to
Dover and finally
London, travelling on public highways with normal traffic, and won ; the special-bodied 6.5L car became known as the ''
Blue Train Bentley''. Thanks to the dedication of this group to serious racing, the company, located at Cricklewood, north
London, was noted for its four consecutive victories at the
24 hours of Le Mans from
1927 to
1930. Their greatest competitor at the time,
Bugatti, whose lightweight, elegant, but fragile creations contrasted with the Bentley's rugged reliability and durability, referred to them as "the world's fastest lorries". Perhaps the most iconic model of the period is the 4.5L "Blower Bentley", with its distinctive
supercharger projecting forward from the bottom of the grille. Uncharacteristically fragile for a Bentley, however, it was not the racing workhorse the 6L was. It became famous in popular media as the vehicle of
James Bond in the original novels, but not in film; rather,
John Steed in the television series ''
The Avengers'' did drive a Bentley.
A great deal of Barnato's fortune went to keeping Bentley afloat after he became chairman in 1925; but the
Great Depression destroyed demand for the company's expensive products, and it was finally sold to
Rolls-Royce in
1931. It should be noted Bentley was a very serious competitor and the 8L was probably a better machine than any contemporary Rolls-Royce.
Early Bentleys
★ 1921–1929
3L
★ 1926–1930
6½L
★
★ 1928–1930
Speed Six
★ 1926–1930
4½L
★
★ 1928–1930
Blower
★ 1930–1931
8L
★ 1931
4L
Bentleys of the Rolls-Royce era

Bentley Mulsanne 1980
Rolls-Royce merged the Bentley line into its own, so that the Bentley marque became just a Rolls-Royce without the distinctive grille and with a lower price tag. In the
1980s, however, Bentley became a separate, high performance car line once again. The most notable car in the Rolls-Royce period was probably the
Bentley Continental, which appeared in various forms from
1952 to
1965, and again in
1992 with production ending in
2003. The Bentley factory in Crewe, Cheshire, is still known in the town by the name "Royce's". For more on Bentley Motors from 1931 to 1998, see
Rolls-Royce and
Rolls-Royce Motors.
★ 1933–1937
3½ L
★
★ 1936–1939
4¼ L
★ 1939–1941
Mark V
★
★ 1939
Corniche
★ 1946–1952
Mark VI
★ 1952–1955
R Type and Continental
★ 1955–1959
S1 and Continental
★ 1959–1962
S2 and Continental
★ 1962–1965
S3 and Continental
★ 1965–1980
T-series
★
★ 1965–1977
T1
★
★ 1977–1980
T2
★ 1971–1984
Corniche
★
★ 1984–1995
Continental — convertible
★
★
★ 1992–1995
Continental Turbo
★ 1975–1986
Camargue
★ 1980–1987
Mulsanne
★
★ 1984–1988
Mulsanne L limousine
★
★ 1982–1985
Mulsanne Turbo
★
★ 1987–1992
Mulsanne S
★
★ 1984–1992
Eight — lower-priced model
★
★ 1985–1995
Turbo R —
turbocharged performance version
★
★ 1991–2002
Continental R — turbocharged 2-door model
★
★
★ 1999–2003
Continental R Mulliner — performance model
★
★
★ 1994–1995
Continental S —
intercooled
★
★ 1992–1998
Brooklands — improved Eight
★
★
★ 1996–1998
Brooklands R — performance Brooklands
★
★ 1994–1995
Turbo S — limited-edition sports model
★
★ 1995–1997
Turbo R — updated Turbo R
★
★
★ 1996
Turbo R Sport — limited-edition sports model
★
★ 1995–2003
Azure — convertible Continental R
★
★
★ 1999–2002
Azure Mulliner — performance model
★
★ 1996–2002
Continental T — short wheelbase performance model
★
★
★ 1999
Continental T Mulliner — firmer suspension
★
★ 1997–1998
Bentley Turbo RT — replacement for the Turbo R
Volkswagen Group ownership

2003 Bentley Azure Mulliner Final Series
In
1998, Rolls-Royce and Bentley Motors was purchased from
Vickers (its owner since
1980) by
Volkswagen for £430 million, after bidding against
BMW. BMW had recently started supplying components for the new range of cars, notably
V8 engines for the
Bentley Arnage and
V12 engines for the
Rolls-Royce Silver Seraph. The Rolls-Royce name was not included in VW's purchase; it was instead licensed to BMW (for £40 million) by the Rolls-Royce aero engine company.
BMW and Volkswagen came to an agreement whereby Volkswagen would manufacture both Bentley and Rolls-Royce cars until the end of
2002, whereupon the right to build Rolls-Royce cars would be BMW's alone. During this period, Volkswagen reduced its reliance on BMW as a supplier: as of 2003, BMW engines are not used in Bentley cars.
Modern Bentleys
In 2002, Bentley presented
Queen Elizabeth II with an official
State Limousine to celebrate the
Golden Jubilee. In
2003, Bentley's 2-door convertible, the
Bentley Azure, ceased production, and the company introduced the
Bentley Continental GT, a large luxury coupe. The car is powered by a version of VW's
W-12 engine.
Demand had been so great that the factory at
Crewe,
Cheshire, had been unable to satisfy it despite installed capacity of approximately 9500 vehicles a year. There was a waiting list of over a year for new cars to be delivered. Consequently, production of the new
Flying Spur, a four-door version of the Continental GT, was assigned to the
Transparent Factory, where the
VW Phaeton luxury car is also assembled. This arrangement ceased at the end of 2006, all car production reverted to the Crewe plant.
In April, 2005, Bentley confirmed plans to produce a 4-seat convertible model, the
Azure, derived from the
Arnage Drophead Coupe prototype, at Crewe beginning in
2006. By the fall of 2005, the convertible version of the successful Continental GT, the
Continental GTC was also presented.
These two models were successfully launched in late 2006.
Bentley sales have been strong in
2005 with 8,627 sold worldwide, 3,654 of these vehicles were sold in the United States.
★ 1998–
Arnage saloon
★ 1999–
Hunaudieres Concept
★ 2002–
State Limousine
★ 2003–
Continental GT coupé
★ 2005–
Continental Flying Spur saloon
★ 2006–
Azure convertible
★ 2006–
Continental GTC convertible
★ 2007–
Bentley Brooklands coupé
★ 2009–
Bentley SUV SUV
The current Board of Management consists of Dr.
Franz-Josef Paefgen, Chairman and Chief-Executive, Dr.
Ulrich Eichhorn, Engineering,
Stuart J. McCullough, Sales & Marketing,
Douglas G. Dickson, Manufacturing,
Christine A. Gaskell, Personnel and
Juergen Hoffmann Finance.
Current Bentley racing
In
2001-
2003, the
Bentley Speed 8 enjoyed a successful racing streak in the
Le Mans series.
Timeline
See also
★
List of automobile manufacturers
Further reading
★ Richard Feast - ''Kidnap of the Flying Pooing Lady: How Germany Captured Both Rolls-Royce and Bentley'' (Motorbooks, 2003) ISBN 0-7603-1686-4
★ Andrew Frankel - ''Bentley - the Story'' (Redwood Publishing, 2005) ISBN 0-9517751-9-7
External links
★
Bentley Motors
★
★
Bentley Arnage T microsite
★
★
Bentley Arnage R microsite
★
★
Bentley Arnage RL microsite
★
★
Bentley Azure microsite
★
★
Bentley Continental GT microsite
★
★
Bentley Continental GTC microsite
★
★
Bentley Continental Flying Spur microsite
★
Bentley Motors Media Relations
★
Rolls-Royce and Bentley enthusiasts' website
★
Vintage Bentleys Website
★
Bentley Drivers Club Website
★
Inside the Bentley factory - Jorn Madslien, BBC News