2.6 - 4 100 | Carmine Red | ||||
BN1 | Black | ||||
Right Hand Drive | |||||
Magnus Motors Limited | |||||
1B/139363 | |||||
4407415 | |||||
2 October 1953 | New Zealand | ||||
1953 | Carmine Red | ||||
2023 | Black | ||||
Nice Driver | |||||
Original | |||||
Original |
| ||||
1AH100 |
71 more photos below ↓
Record Creation: Entered on 4 April 2023.
Photos of BN1145426
Click slide for larger image. This car has 72 photos. (Dates are when image was uploaded.)
Exterior Photos (10)
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Uploaded December 2014:
Interior Photos (1)
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Action Photos (2)
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Details Photos: Exterior (41)
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Detail Photos: Interior (12)
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Detail Photos: Engine (4)
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Detail Photos: Other (2)
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Comments
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2014-12-07 11:27:11 | pauls writes:
Car was at auction 11/14
www.bonhams.com/auctions/21985/lot/129/
Auction description:
Lot 129
1953 Austin-Healey 100 Sports
Registration no. 1 AH 100 (New Zealand)
Chassis no. BN1/145426
Engine no. 1B/139363
Sold for £68,700 (US$ 107,761) inc. premium
Auction 21985:
Collectors' Motor Cars and Motorcycles
12 Nov 2014 15:00 GMT
Harrogate, Great Yorkshire Showground
This historic Austin-Healey 100 BN1 is that rare beast: a sports car that has competed in an international Grand Prix event alongside single-seaters, in this instance the 1954 New Zealand GP at Ardmore where the favourite to win was Ken Wharton's works-entered supercharged BRM V16 Formula 1 car. The rest of the British entry comprised the Ferrari of Peter Whitehead, Tony Gaze's HWM, Fred Tuck's Cooper-Bristol and Horace Gould's Cooper Bristol, while the Australian entry included the Redex Special of future triple Formula 1 World Champion Jack Brabham.
Held on 9th January 1954, the race was won by the 3.8-litre Maybach Special of Australian Stan Jones (father of future Formula 1 World Champion Alan Jones) after Wharton's BRM had been delayed by a broken brake pipe, eventually finishing 2nd. Of the three Austin-Healey 100s entered, Ross Jensen's finished 7th, David Crozier's 12th and Keith Roper's (the car offered here) 13th. A polished driver, having previously raced motorcycles, Roper also raced an MG TA and a Cooper-JAP in period.
All three Healeys had arrived in New Zealand in late 1953, this car's BMIHT certificate revealing that it had been completed on 2nd October of that year and despatched to Magnus Motors Limited in Wellington, its entrant in the Grand Prix, The certificate shows that this car, which retains matching chassis and engine numbers, was originally finished in Carmine Red with black interior trim and equipped with a heater, Smiths speedometer and 16" racing tyres, which would have involved fitting larger wheels (production Austin-Healey 100s had 15" wheels). It was also supplied with an extra spare wheel and tyre. Keith Roper registered the Healey in Nelson on 4th December 1953.
Following its Grand Prix outing, the Healey was driven by Roper in the C W F Hamilton Trophy Race at Mairehau on 20th February 1954, finishing 3rd, and then at the Havelock meeting where it was one of only two cars to record a speed of 100mph in the flying quarter-mile event, the other being a Jaguar XK120. Sold in October 1954, the car subsequently passed through the hands of several owners up to 1971 when it was placed in storage. Copies of the New Zealand ownership records are on file. '14526' remained in storage for the next 24 years before being restored by Cliff Everson of Kaukapakapa in 2005. The car was repatriated from New Zealand in 2014.
Accompanying documentation consists of copies of the aforementioned NZ ownership records and first registration certificate; copy extracts from the 1954 Grand Prix programme and season roundup; Keith Roper career statistics; BMIHT certificate; and current MoT.
As an Austin-Healey with in-period international race history at Grand Prix level a most unusual accolade for a sports car '14526' will no doubt be a most welcome addition to the entry at the most prestigious historic motor sports events including the Goodwood Revival, Mille Miglia, Le Mans Classic, etc.
2018-04-06 00:07:16 | Hank Leach writes:
very strange-this car has the same engine number as my car #146433 body #588- built 10-53. I have the BMIHT certificate for my car stating 139363 engine number for the car. My car was apart in 1970. When restoring the 100, the original engine plate was missing. I wonder if the documentation for each car is correct?
2021-05-02 15:01:13 | Hank Leach writes:
I stand corrected-this car has engine #139363 and my car is #139563 - 200 numbers later. Documentation is correct. HL
2023-04-04 10:29:42 | pauls writes:
Car to return to auction 4/23
www.bonhams.com/auction/27996/lot/70/1953-austin-healey-100-competition-roadster ...
Auction description:
Lot 70
The ex-Keith Roper, 1954 New Zealand Grand Prix
1953 Austin-Healey 100 Competition Roadster
Goodwood Members' Meeting
16 April 2023
£140,000 - £180,000
Registration no. to be advised
Chassis no. BN1/145426
Engine no. 1B/139363
• Delivered new to New Zealand
• Considerable in-period competition history
• Stored for 34 years
• Repatriated to the UK in 2014
• Present ownership since 2014
• Restored by JME Healeys in 2017-2018
• Eligible for some of the most prestigious Historic motor sports events (Goodwood Revival, Mille Miglia, Le Mans Classic, etc)
This historic Austin-Healey 100 BN1 is that rare beast: a sports car that has competed in an international Grand Prix event alongside single-seaters, in this instance the 1954 New Zealand GP at Ardmore where the favourite to win was Ken Wharton's works-entered supercharged BRM V16 Formula 1 car. The rest of the British entry comprised the Ferrari of Peter Whitehead, Tony Gaze's HWM, Fred Tuck's Cooper-Bristol and Horace Gould's Alfa Romeo, while the Australian entry included the Redex Special of future triple Formula 1 World Champion Jack Brabham.
Held on 9th January 1954, the race was won by the 3.8-litre Maybach Special of Australian Stan Jones (father of future Formula 1 World Champion Alan Jones) after Wharton's BRM had been delayed by a broken brake pipe, eventually finishing 2nd. Of the three Austin-Healey 100s entered, Ross Jensen's finished 7th, David Crozier's 12th and Keith Roper's (the car offered here) 13th. A polished driver, having previously raced motorcycles, Roper also raced an MG TA and a Cooper-JAP in period.
All three Healeys had arrived in New Zealand in late 1953, this car's BMIHT certificate revealing that it had been completed on 2nd October of that year and despatched to Magnus Motors Limited in Wellington, its entrant in the Grand Prix, The certificate shows that this car, which retains matching chassis and engine numbers, was originally finished in Carmine Red with black interior trim and equipped with a heater, Smiths speedometer and 16" racing tyres, which would have involved fitting larger wheels (production Austin-Healey 100s had 15" wheels). It was also supplied with an extra spare wheel and tyre. Keith Roper registered the Healey in Nelson on 4th December 1953.
Following its Grand Prix outing, the Healey was driven by Roper in the C W F Hamilton Trophy Race at Mairehau on 20th February 1954, finishing 3rd, and then at the Havelock meeting where it was one of only two cars to record a speed of 100mph in the flying quarter-mile event, the other being a Jaguar XK120. Sold in October 1954, the car subsequently passed through the hands of several owners up to 1971 when it was placed in storage. Copies of the New Zealand ownership records are on file. '14526' remained in storage for the next 34 years before being restored by Cliff Everson of Kaukapakapa in 2005. The car was repatriated from New Zealand in 2014 and purchased by our vendor at Bonhams' Harrogate Sale in November that same year. Despatched to renowned marque specialists JME Healeys for restoration in 2017, it comes with related bills totalling circa £80,000. The car was ready in time for the Goodwood Revival Meeting in 2018 where it was driven by Rauno Aaltonen in the Freddie March Memorial Trophy for sports cars 1952-1955.
Accompanying documentation consists of copies of the aforementioned NZ ownership records and first registration certificate; copy extracts from the 1954 Grand Prix programme and season round-up; Keith Roper career statistics; and a BMIHT Certificate.
As an Austin-Healey with in-period international race history at Grand Prix level – a most unusual accolade for a sports car – '14526' will no doubt be a most welcome addition to the entry at the most prestigious historic motor sports events including the Goodwood Revival, Mille Miglia, Le Mans Classic, etc.