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Stanley
Mann, synonymous with Bentleys for many years, stands
beside 'Mother Gun', the Marker/Jackson Bentley
with which he and Vaughan Davis, with the help of
Prince Michael, recently broke records set by modern
cars |
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One of the
first people to specialise in selling, restoring and
racing just on emarque, Stanley Mann has seen the Bentley
business changes enormously. Gordon Cruickshank talks
to him about Crinklewood cars, and W.O. Bentley's view
of history.
Only those who possess determination and a good map
will find their way to the secluded rural base from
where Stanley Mann runs his operation. With every junction
the road diminishes until high hedges are brushing the
door mirrors on both sides. One final turn into a narrow
gate shows a dainty sign reading 'The Fruit Farm'. No
business name, no Bentley logo; like the best reataurants,
this is one of those places to where the cognossenti
will find their way, no matter what.
You can's be involved with old cars without knowing
of Stanley Mann. Purveyor, restorer amd racer of WO
Bentleys fro several decades, Mann has been at the centre
of just about every British Bentley meet, racing either
one of his own cars, something from his stock-in-trade,
or a car belonging to one of his clients. Over the years
his firm has handled a significant proportion of the
world's vintage Bentleys, either in sales, restoration
or simple maintenance, and the boss is obviously still
enraptured by them.
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Crankshaft
removed from Supercharged 4½ |
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As we walk into the sales building
to see the double line of Bentleys shimmering between
elaborate cast-iron lamp standards, an operatic aria
rolls out from the speakers. Stanley beams and flings
his arms wide: "All this and Jussi Bjorling too!"
He revels in being here, and in telling you the story
of each car. For they all have histories, and Stanley
knows them all. "That's Eddie Hall's Jarvis-bodied
in the 1960s, you wouldn't do that to it now. Look at
this 6½ I've built it twice so far."
By now some of these cars must regard The Fruit Farm
as thier home between owners.
We work down the line to a handsome
black 6½ litre H.J. Mulliner saloon. This one
has a superlight Weymann-pattern body whose fabric sides
conceal nothing but air; there is no panelling between
the timber framework, and as a result Stanley can pull
his party trick. "Go on, guess how much it weighs."
It turns out to be no heavier than the Le Mans-style
tourer alongside. "You can have a really fun day
out in that; it'll scare anything, even four up."
He just loves driving these cars on any possible occasion.
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Mann
team has worked on all variants of pre-war and Derby
cars even the odd Crewe-built example; Michael
McCormick, Stanley's partner since the raely days
in Edgware, checks the functioning of a 4½
radiator thermostat |
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He goes on: "I've saved this one
twice." From what? "From being turned into
another tourer". This is a tender point in Bentley
circles the conversion of normally slow saloons
into dramatic tourers, usually with Le Mans accoutrements.
Fingers are often pointed at Stamley, and he has done
his share, though frequently on instruction from owners.
But there are other views: these cars are no longer
for transport. They are preserved only for the pleasure
of driving, and, that HJM lightweight apart, a tourer
will always be a lighter, quicker car. A saloon is dearer
and harder to build; and of course he runs a business.
He makes a point to tell me: "That car there I
can probably sell as it stands for £140,000. But
as a tourer I could get another £100,000 fir it."
It says something for him that he has been known to
sell a saloon with a contract preventing the new owner
from removing the body.
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Unrestored
cars still surface after 70 years this gearbox
is ready for servicing |
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The company stock is on display in
a large metal building which, in a previous life, might
have been a barn. Inside, though, are touches of luxury
which don't seem to have come from this down-to-earth
man himself. That's because this building used to have
nothing to do with Mann. The cast-iron lamps and panelling
date back to when this was was the private car collection
of Ed Hubbard, the mysterious individual who sold Old
Number One Bentley and was taken to court by the purchasers,
who disputed its originality. They famously lost and
went bankrupt; Hubbard later disappeared, with Interpol
on his tail. In Hubbard's time this building was decorated
like a Parisian bordello, which Stanley showed me when
he had just taken it over. Behind the blank metal doors,
the sudden sight of gold-plated chandeliers and red
flock wallpaper was a disconcerting surprise.
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Pastoral
surroundings give little hint of precious metal
inside roomy workshop which easily accomodates several
customer cars as well as Man's team racers |
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Now it is more restrained, more suited
to Bentleys, with steering wheels and radiators on the
wall. It also liberates the whole of Mann's workshop
for restoration and maintenance. Here, as always, there
are WO Bentleys in every state on undress - the surprisingly
slender frame of a 4½ litre on trestles, an 8
litre crankcase looking more like a marine engine with
its massive cam-drive tower, conrods like locomotive
parts, a huge Le Mans fuel tank in a cradle on the floor.
A pair of 4½s loom alongside, and behind sit
'the team': the two Bentleys you're most likely to see
Stanley facing this season. On the right is 'Mother
Gun', the famous Marker/Jackson special rescued by the
late Vaughan Davis; on the left, 'Monty', the latest
incarnation of a car which was an ugly two-seater in
the 1960s, was raced by Victor Gauntlett in the '70s
and which Mann's team rebuilt a few years ago with a
300bhp single-seater with 8 litre engine. With its slender
body it looks like the early Barnato-Hassan, even though
the chassis remains the standard width.
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Speedometer
sits on racks of original
Bentley components awaiting
an appropriate new home |
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In between the two racers in their
polished aluminium is a surprise; a Veritas Meteor which
Stanley was preparing to race at the Monaco GP Historique.
Even though it's not from Cricklewood, he is just as
enthusiastic about this East German novelty. "Very
advanced for its time, you knwo. And it's small, light,
and it handles not like a Bentley at all."
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Mother
Gun, famous for setting
modern records, stands alongside
more modern Veritas Meteor |
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Mann pours out details of the histories
of all these cars without looking up any of it (even
though he has himself published a second edition of
Michael Hay's 'bible' on the WO cars). The history has
been in his blood since he was a small boy growing up
near the site of Cricklewood factory, and as soon as
he began to rebuild a Bentley for himself, it became,
he says, "like a religion". At that time the
central figures in the Bentley story were still alive,
and Mann made sure he met them Walter Hassan,
Billy Rockell and WOhimself, who he recalls said "I
can't understand people still being interested".
And that was 30 years ago.
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Stanley
Mann uses a combination of outside contractors and
in-house skills to restore and modify the cars with
which they have become so closely identified |
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Soon it was obvious that the family
meat business could not keep Mann from cars, and he
started his own company, moving to Radlett some 15 years
ago. One of the first one-make specialists, he was soon
to become almost synonymour with the marque; at the
same time he began racing, showing up as something of
an oddity at a time when Bentleys were beginning to
be locked away as they made the transition from old
cars raced by eccentrics to valuable property. Often
Stanley's was the only Bentley on the track, but gradually
a new breed of owners became more confident about using
their cars, until today no long-distance endurance event
would be complete without a vintage Bentley.
Apart from the machinery, Stanley's
contribution has been Benjafield's Racing Club, founded
with like-minded owners many, inevitably, Mann's
clients to recreate the more casual and sociable
world of pre-war racing. Visit the Club's chief event,
the Combury Park sprint, and you might have drifted
back decades.
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4½
litre chassis looks surprisingly light when stripped
for ground-up restoration |
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Nowadays Stanley is delighted that
the age of his clients is dropping. "They all used
to be 55; now many of them are 35. And whereas they
all used to be engineers, now they might be city types
who don't want to tinker. They want bulletproof engines,
and we're good at those." Not that this is in any
way a bulk market. "The worldwide turnover in Vintage
Bentleys is probably only 40 or 50 a year; but we handle
between 20 and 25 of those."
Despite the spacious premises, there
are only four permanent employees besides Stanley, although
the firm regularly calls on 25-30 contractors for maching
jobs and tasks like trimming. Not that they lack the
skill: 'Monty' was built here mainly by Stewart Fernside,
and in 1998 Stanley won the Itala Trophy with it. Despite
his extensive race record, he says he is not used to
victory because, until the new breed of 8-litre specials
arrrived, a massive Bentley usually lost out to lighter
competitors. "It was my big first win. I've never
bothered to read about what you do on the slowing-down
lap, so I nearly ran over the lady with the laurel wreath.
We don't win much, but you have to be out there doing
it. The car is the challenge can I stay on the
track and keep up with the little cars?"
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Forest
of valves hints at numbers of cars which have passed
through the Fruit Farm |
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What he can say with some pride is
that racing proves the quality of their work. "If
it lasts on the track, it'll be bomb-proof on the road.
And all our cars are roadworthy, even the racers."
Sure enough, there are tax discs on 'Mother Gun' and
'Monty'," says Stewart, busy fabricating an exhaust
bracket to make the job even quicker. Having done every
possible job on every type of Bentley, and developed
tweaks that give a vintage engine torque that would
tear the clutch out of most modern stuff, the team is
enjoying the new popularity of short-chassied, big-engined
specials. While it is satisfying to sort out the mixture
on a pair of sloper carbs, planning and building one
of these heavyweight rockets is a creative outlet.
Behind the workshop are the stores
where Bentley treasures are piled on shelves, from sidelights
to wings and engines, surrounding a nicely restored
Model A Ford van which says "Bentley Service Dept"
on the door. "And," says Stanley with glee,
"the phone number is the number of the Cricklewood
factory!" It's just the sort of detail which delights
a man in love with the marque.
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