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1924 Bentley 3 Litre    
Original 1923 Numbers
Chassis No. 392
Engine No. 401
Registration No. EL 8790

  This car - updated
Chassis No. 392
Engine No. 401
Registration No.

(Updated with information from RM Sotheby's. - January 2019)
 
January 2019
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March 2019: Sold For $434,000

Found on RM Sotheby's website on January 4, 2019

Offered without reserve
AMELIA ISLAND 8 - 9 MARCH 2019 - The Richard L. Burdick Collection - Offered on Saturday

1924 Bentley 3-Litre Two-Seater by Chalmer & Hoyer
Chassis No. 392
Engine No. 401
$200,000 - $300,000

- Offered from the Richard L. Burdick Collection
- Perennial winner of the Great American Race
- Ideal candidate for future vintage tours
- Iconic Red Label Bentley

Every Bentley boy has his favorite model. Some celebrate Bentley’s recent liberation from Rolls-Royce with the new Continentals; others revere the timeless R- and S-Type models. The pre-war 3½- and 4 ¼-Litre “Silent Sports Cars” have their adherents, but for many enthusiasts, a Bentley is not a Bentley unless it was built when W.O. himself was in charge. For them, one of the most prized “W.O.” models is the Red Label, the short-chassis three-liter car built from 1924 to 1929.

For its engine, Bentley chose a long-stroke four with four valves per cylinder, operated by a shaft-drive overhead camshaft. The cylinder head was fixed, a feature of subsequent cars until the 1930s. Announced in The Autocar in May 1919, the car was christened “3-Litre,” said to be the first use of engine capacity as a model name. The introductory illustrations were by Bentley’s friend F. Gordon Crosby, the renowned artist, who also designed the car’s iconic radiator shell and famed “Winged B” emblem.

At £1,060 for the chassis alone it was expensive, but sales were encouraging, growing to 402 in 1924. Most cars were sent to nearby coachbuilder Vanden Plas for four-seater touring bodies. By the mid-1920s the Bentley was accepted as the archetypal British sports car and achieved considerable racing success. The 3-Litre remained in production through 1929, by which time 1,622 had been built.

The cars are characterized by their radiator emblems, which changed in color over the years. The “standard model” on either short or long chassis used a blue background and came to be called “Blue Label.” Extra-short wheelbase 1924–¬1926 cars with high compression were called “Green Label,” and high-compression short-wheelbase (117.5-in.) 1924– 1929 models were “Red Label.”

Once owned by F.L. Regnery, this 3-Litre ‘Red Label’ boattail two-seater was acquired by Arthur Lieberman of Skokie, Illinois, in the 1970s. It came to the Burdick Collection in 1984. From then until 1992, it was a regular competitor in the Great American Race. The Great Race, as it is commonly known, is a long-distance time-distance rally for vintage cars. First run from Buena Park, California, to Indianapolis in 1983, it became an annual event, and continues to this day.

In its first race, 1985, the Bentley managed a 7th-place finish. The following year it managed to place 2nd, just two seconds behind the 1st-place scorers. Over the next six contests it managed one 3rd-place finish, two managed Best Overall Cumulative Scores, and three Grand Championship 1st-place wins. Dick Burdick driving and Wayne Bell navigating are the only three-time winners in the history of the Great Race. Burdick, Bell, and the Bentley retired from competition after 1992.

Well conserved and preserved since its competition retirement, this Red Label longs to race again. The 2019 Great Race takes place in June. There is still time to register.

 
     
     
  Source: RM Sotheby's
Updated: Feb 15, 2019
Posted: Jan 04, 2019
 
     
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Winner of The Great Race 1992. At a Texas museum.

 
     
     
  Source: MySpace, user 'scuba'
Posted: May 04, 2009
 
     
2007
In USA in 2007 / Owned by a BDC & RROC member
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Vertical Column (lower, facing engine) No. HP376.

 
     
     
  Source: Robert McLellan
Posted: Sep 19, 2007
 
     
1988
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1924 Bentley 3 Litre in Dakota, Movie, 1988

 
     
     
  Source: Internet Movie Cars Database
Posted: Aug 29, 2012
 
     
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This photograph was found on a postcard.

 
     
     
  Source: eBay
Posted: Nov 29, 2010
 
     
1986
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Photograph was taken in Nov. 1986 in front of Dick Burdick's office.

Left to right: W. E. Chadwick, Richard "Dick" Burdick, R. G. Wiltshire and Don Weber at 1986 ceremony when Dick Burdick is presented the Peter Yarwood Memorial Trophy for winning the "Great American Race".

The Peter Yarwood
Memorial Trophy

On display at the Central Texas Museum of Automotive History in Rosanky, Texas, in 1986.

Dick Burdick's 3 Litre in the
"Great American Race" — poster
for the event
 
 
 

Car is owned by Richard "Dick" Burdick and was restored at the Central Texas Museum of Automotive History in Rosanky, Texas. It then won the "Great American Race" across the U. S. in 1986.

O'Neil Ford, the architect who designed Hemisfair, sold car to the Central Texas Museum of Automotive History.

 
     
     
  Source: Robert McLellan
Posted: Mar 10, 2007
 
     
EARLIEST RECORD OF HISTORICAL FACTS & INFORMATION
 
Chassis No. 392
Engine No. 401
Registration No. EL 8790
Date of Delivery: Nov 1923
Type of Body: 2-seater
Coachbuilder: CHALMER & HOYER
Type of Car: SP
   
First Owner: LYLE Sir L
 
     
  More Info: Michael Hay, in his book Bentley: The Vintage Years, 1997, states: "In USA."  
     
     
  Posted: Mar 01, 2007  
     
 
 
 
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Sep 30, 2020 - Info and photograph received from Simon Hunt for Chassis No. RL3439
Sep 30, 2020 - Info and photographs received from Dick Clay for Chassis No. 147
Sep 29, 2020 - Info and photographs received from Ernst Jan Krudop for his Chassis No. AX1651
Sep 28, 2020 - Info and photographs received from Lars Hedborg for his Chassis No. KL3590
Sep 25, 2020 - Info and photograph added for Registration No. XV 3207
Sep 24, 2020 - Info and photograph added for Registration No. YM 7165
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