Gordon-Keeble was a
British car marque, made first in Slough, then Eastleigh, and finally
in Southampton (all in England), between 1964 and 1967. The marque's
badge was unusual in featuring a tortoise — a pet tortoise walked
into the frame of an inaugural photo-shoot, taken in the grounds of
the makers. Because of the irony (the slowness of tortoises) the
animal was chosen as the emblem.
The Gordon-Keeble
came about when John Gordon, formerly of the struggling Peerless
company, and Jim Keeble got together in 1959 to make the Gordon GT
car, initially by fitting a Chevrolet Corvette V8 engine, into a
chassis by Peerless, for a USAF pilot named Nielsen. Impressed with
the concept, a 4.6 litre Chevrolet (283 c.i.) V8 was fitted into a
specially designed square-tube steel spaceframe chassis, with
independent front suspension and all-round disc brakes. The complete
chassis was then taken to Turin, Italy, where a body made of steel
panels designed by Giorgetto Giugiaro was built by Bertone. The
car's four five-inch headlights were in the rare, slightly angled
"Chinese eye" arrangement also used by a few other European
marques, generally for high-speed cars such as Lagonda Rapide, Lancia
Flaminia and Triumphs, as well as Rolls-Royce. The interior had an
old luxury jet feel, with white on black gauges, toggle switches, and
quilted aircraft PVC.
The car appeared on
the Bertone stand in March 1960, branded simply as a Gordon, at the
Geneva Motor Show. At that time problems with component deliveries
had delayed construction of the prototype, which had accordingly been
built at breakneck speed by Bertone in precisely 27 days. After
extensive road testing the car was shipped to Detroit and shown to
Chevrolet management, who agreed to supply Corvette engines and
gearboxes for a production run of the car.
The car was readied
for production with some alterations, the main ones being a larger
5.4-litre (327 c.i.) 300 hp (224 kW; 304 PS) Chevrolet V8 engine and
a change from steel to a glass fibre body made by Williams &
Pritchard Limited. Problems with suppliers occurred and before many
cars were made the money ran out and the company went into
liquidation. About 90 cars had been sold at what turned out to be an
unrealistic price of £2798. Each car had two petrol tanks.
In 1965 the company
was bought by Harold Smith and Geoffrey West and was re-registered as
Keeble Cars Ltd. Production resumed, but only for a short time, the
last car of the main manufacturing run being made in 1966. A final
example was actually produced in 1967 from spares, bringing the total
made to exactly 100. The Gordon-Keeble Owners' Club claim that over
90 examples still exist.
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