A German silver and guilloche enamel box (af), decorated with laurel swags on a turquoise ground, with Russian import marks, Riga, miniature silver hand mirrors, one stamped 925, the other with a miniature compact, by Crisford & Norris, Birmingham 1921, a stamped 925 and enamel chamberstick, a coin brooch made up of 6 Victoria 2 Annas, a white metal novelty pocket watch, the body with embossed geometric floral decoration, surrounding a blank escutcheon shaped cartouche, a pewter pin cushion modelled as a boot (7) Condition Report:Available upon request
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A GEORGE IV MAHOGANY COMPACT BOOKCASE, stamped Gillows, the three-tiered shelf top above a cupboard with twin felted doors on splayed supports. 139cm high, 69cm wide, 43cm deep.Condition Report: Very good overall condition The top shelf back panel has a horizontal split The surfaces have scratches and scuff marks consistent with age and use Nicely polished and generally soundThe covering of the lock on the inside is lacking
Modern Diecast Farm Models, a boxed collection of vintage and modern vehicles in various scales, 1:32 scale ERTL 641 Case International 9150 four wheel drive tractor, 1691 Massey Ferguson 4900 four wheel drive tractor, 4180 Case International 1963 David Brown 990 Implematic, 1:43 scale Vintage Vehicles, 1929 Case L, Case 500 tractors, Joal Compact 240 New Holland TX-34 Combine Harvester, Siku 1:32 scale 2554 triple roller set, 2552 two axled trailer, G-E, boxes F-E, (8)
9CT GOLD, SILVER, COSTUME & OTHER JEWELLERY & COLLECTABLES GROUP - in a vintage lidded jewellery case, items include two 9ct gold mounted carved shell cameo brooches, 43 x 34mm and 32 x 21mm, four pairs of 9ct gold marked earrings and a St Christopher pendant, 4.6grms gross, a possibly gold (cut) signet ring, 2grms, Charles Horner Chester silver chase decorated bangle, various other necklaces and brooches, circular compact, Stratton lipstick holder with fan shaped mirror, simulated pearls in a fitted Lotus box and other interesting items
A SILVER VESTA CASE AND A COMPACT, the vesta of a rounded rectangular form, polished design with engraved monogram to the front, striker to the base, fitted with a suspension ring to the side, approximate dimensions length 55.2mm x width 44.2mm, hallmarked 'Colen Hewer Cheshire' Birmingham 1897, the compact of a wavy oval outline, engine turned pattern to both sides with engraved cartouche, opens to reveal a mirror, the powder is missing, hallmarked 'R Davis & Co' Birmingham 1944, approximate gross weight 122.9 grams, 3.95 ozt (condition report: the vesta has some small dinks, moderate tarnishing all round, opens and closes with ease, the compact opens and closes with ease, the powder is missing, overall condition good)
Trio of Jewellery & Ladies' Accessories inc a 1940s Enamel part Powder Compact/Cigarette case with leopard print panels & scarlet reserves, a Hand-Painted Limoges brooch featuring an 18th century style couple and finally, a Carved Moss Agate Clenched fist pendant with white metal mounts, akin to a Jade decorative piece
Offered from the estate of the late Ernie Hall 1958 Triumph 199cc Tiger CubRegistration no. not registeredFrame no. 27804Engine no. none visibleWith the introduction of the 149cc Terrier in 1952, Triumph re-entered the market for lightweight commuter machines. A simple, compact, unitary construction four-stroke with four-speed gearbox, the Terrier was joined in 1954 by an enlarged version - the 200cc Tiger Cub - that offered 60mph-plus performance and 100mpg. A huge success for Triumph, particularly with younger riders, the Tiger Cub spawned a host of derivatives including sports, trials, scrambles, enduro and trail versions. The Cub underwent continual development for the next 16 years, finally ending up with BSA Bantam cycle parts before being dropped in 1970. The model remains a favourite with today's collectors, many of whom would have commenced their riding career on a Cub, and is well served by an extensive network of parts suppliers and other specialists. This Tiger Cub was used for racing by Ernie's brother. There is not much more information available and there are no documents present. It should be noted that the registration hitherto associated with this machine, '571 JPU', is not recorded in the HPI/DVLA databases and thus the machine is considered unregistered. Sold Strictly as viewed.Offered without keyFootnotes:All lots are sold 'as is/where is' and Bidders must satisfy themselves as to the provenance, condition, age, completeness and originality prior to bidding.Lot to be sold without reserve.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
Offered from The Forshaw Speedway Collection 1933 Martin-Rudge JAP 500cc Speedway Racing MotorcycleEngine no. JOS/232921•A highly original and truly unique example of a Martin-Rudge•Catalogue specification down to the original tyres•An example of a JAP engine in a Rudge design frame and one of the most successful speedway machines of the pre-war yearsEngines from the John A Prestwich factory in Tottenham, North London, were well established in motorcycle racing. Record breaking and general motorcycle engine production by the time the 'dirt track' (initially referred to, pejoratively as 'dirt track' but later became recognised as 'speedway') racing phenomenon arrived in England in 1928. Although dubious at first about any possible future in the new sport it would appear that it was when Bill Bragg, captain of the financially successful Stamford Bridge Team, met one of the Prestwich brothers, Vivian at the 1929 MotorCycle Show at Olympia in November that attitudes changed. Vivian had been very interested in the series of special racing engines that Bert Le Vack had developed a few years earlier and was now shrewd enough to realise that 'dirt track' racing really did have a future and, as such, persuaded his doubting father to change his mind. This led to Stan Greening, design engineer, working with Bill Bragg to produce an engine with suitable characteristics. A prototype engine was ready within three months but initial tests in early 1930 were not successful and further development followed. At this time it would appear that the bench mark was moving towards Rudge, the compact lightweight 4 valve TT based engine ousting the Douglas monopoly. This is where Wal Phillips enters the story. Wal had worked at JAP with his uncle, Bert Le Vack on the experimental racing engines between 1922 and 1925, he was also an accomplished rider on the cinder tracks. By 1930 he had changed his allegiance from Douglas to Rudge. Wal still visited the JAP factory and Stan Greening, hearing about this latest news, asked Wal to lend him the Rudge engine. Whilst the new JAP engine was a rather different concept and without any intention of following the 4-valve route it was the concentration of port design with gas flow coupled with cam profiles that was the breakthrough that Greening was seeking with Wal working with him. The final contribution was made by Lodge producing a suitable range of racing plugs and finally Amal with their special twin float track carburettor. By August 1930 the revised engine was ready for testing at Bill Bragg's Stamford Bridge track.George Wallis had heard about the proposed trial and persuaded Wal to use one of his frames. Wallis frames were showing some success and on that first trial Wal Phillips easily broke the track record. However, the handling was not at all satisfactory. George Wallis redesigned his frame more on the lines of Rudge geometry and finally the Wallis JAP was a resounding success. Over the years more developments took place but the Tottenham factory decided that with this highly specialised engine it would be advisable to set up a separate operation.Victor Martin had been involved from the beginning with the development of the new JAP engine and was now entrusted to take over the project. Thus, in 1932, Victor Martin & Co was formed as an offshoot of the Prestwich factory in Cheshunt, Hertfordshire. Frames, with the JAP engine, were made to the Rudge design under special license and the new machine was marked as the Martin-Rudge. This became one of the most successful speedway machines of the pre-war years.This Martin-Rudge is truly unique. The name of the original owner is unknown but in 1935 the machine was tucked away into a cupboard under the stairs of his house in Fleetwood, Lancashire. It would appear that the machine was little used until it was enshrined in this blissful slumber for more than half a century when it was finally exhumed in 1989. This was when the house was cleared presumably on the death of the owner. By October 1989 Richard Forshaw had acquired it for his collection. This Martin Rudge is as perfect to catalogue specification as can be expected. Even the tyres appear to be original. Originality in any racing machine is very rare with all the stresses involved, repairs and replacements are inevitable. This machine has its originality endorsed by the extreme rarity of a remarkable provenance.Accompanied with the receipt, two original Victor Martin catalogues, photographs and much Rudge and Victor Martin material. The mechanical condition is not known and therefore we recommend re-commissioning and/or restoration to a greater or lesser extent.Key not requiredFootnotes:All lots are sold 'as is/where is' and Bidders must satisfy themselves as to the provenance, condition, age, completeness and originality prior to bidding.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
10241959 Wolseley 1500Reg. no. 332 UXCChassis no. W/WA133240Engine no. 15WC/U/L2049The Wolseley 1500 and its slightly more upmarket sibling, the Riley One-Point-Five, were BMC’s offerings in what would now be called the ‘compact executive car’ market. Launched in April 1957, the Wolseley had a single-carb version of the 1500cc B-Series engine, and the four-speed gearbox from the MG Magnette. The traditional Wolseley grille, with trademark illuminated badge, adorned the front of this handsome saloon, while on the inside, there was a generous level of luxury.This 1959 1500 comes with a current V5C and presents in good all-round condition. Thought to be an older restoration, a tow bar has also been fitted.Estimate: £1,500 – 2,000To be auctioned along with a fantastic selection of other vehicles on October 15th at our Showell Farm site, SN15 2NU. Viewing is welcome prior to sale and all cars are sold as seen, condition reports can be requested on each lot by contacting us direct. Lots are not available to buy prior to auction. Fully illustrated catalogue is available on the Richard Edmonds Auction website. Bids can be made online, by telephone or live on site. All lots are subject to commission.Vehicles that are un-registered or on foreign plates may require Import Duty and Vat to be paid upon purchase via HMRC prior to registering with the DVLA for a UK plate, if you are not sure please ask. For classic cars over 30 years this equates to 5% Duty on the final value.
1925 Raleigh 799cc Model 12Registration no. KM 189Frame no. 1654Engine no. V1644•Rare Raleigh twin-cylinder model•An older restoration offered for re-restoration•Comes with a spare Raleigh v-twin engineBritain's best-known and longest-lived bicycle maker, Raleigh also manufactured motorcycles from circa 1902 to 1905, and again from 1919 to 1933. More recently, the Nottingham company offered a range of mopeds plus a scooter in the late 1950s/1960s. Raleigh's first powered two-wheeler looked very much like the contemporary Werner, carrying its engine in front of the steering head with drive being transmitted via belt to a large diameter pulley clipped to the spokes of the front wheel. Already obsolete, that first Raleigh was soon superseded by a range of more conventional machines, the first of which appeared at the 1903 Motor Cycle Show. Sales must have been disappointing though, for only two years later Raleigh announced its complete withdrawal from the motorcycle market. The firm was back immediately after The Great War with a horizontally-opposed inline twin of advanced design, and during the 1920s the Raleigh range would expand to include machines of a wide variety of capacities and types, ranging from a 175cc unitary construction lightweight to a hefty 998cc v-twin. In 1924 the horizontal twin was replaced by a new 799cc v-twin, which was available as a solo (Model 12) or motorcycle combination (Models 13 and 14). Rated at 7hp for taxation purposes, the sidevalve engine was of Raleigh's own design and manufacture. The new v-twin featured all-chain drive via a Sturmey Archer three-speed gearbox, Brampton Biflex forks, dummy belt rim front brake and a 7' drum brake at the rear. A compact design meant that wheelbase ended up only 2' longer than that of the contemporary 350 single, making the twin a pleasant machine to ride in solo trim. This example of a rare British v-twin was purchased by the private vendor's father sometime before 1970, from a Kent-based dealer who had secured this and various other motorcycles from Chatham docks where they had been laid up by WW2 servicemen. We are advised the motorcycle has benefited from a replacement Alpha big-end bearing (at date unknown). An older restoration offered for re-restoration, the machine comes with a semi-dismantled Raleigh v-twin engine (numbered 'V1511') and a V5C Registration Certificate.Key not requiredFootnotes:All lots are sold 'as is/where is' and Bidders must satisfy themselves as to the provenance, condition, age, completeness and originality prior to bidding.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
Jawa 350cc Type 673 ReplicaFrame no. KT1.0105059Engine no. none•Accurate copy of this legendary Czech two-stroke racer•Engine professionally rebuilt•Requires further restorationIf ever there was a Grand Prix racing motorcycle famous for all the wrong reasons, it is the notorious Jawa V4, which claimed the life of former World Champion Bill Ivy at the Sachsenring in 1969. Ivy crashed in practice when the temperamental Czech two-stroke seized at high speed, the bike and its rider sliding into an unprotected concrete wall. The Type 673 350cc V4 was just one of a host of different designs drawn up by Jawa during the mid-to-late 1960s as its old four-stroke racers were pensioned off and a range of alternative two-strokes was developed. Designed by Zdenek Tichy, the Type 673 was effectively two twin-cylinder engines of 48x47.6mm bore/stroke mounted one above the other on a common crankcase at a narrow included angle, the two crankshafts driving a large primary gear and thence the seven-speed gearbox. Water-cooling was employed, with circulation by the 'thermosyphon' principal, there being no pump. MZ had shown that disc valves offered an effective route to increased power and this form of induction was adopted by Jawa, while ignition was controlled by four separate sets of contact breakers. The compact V4 engine was carried beneath a tubular steel frame, the lower pair of cylinders being horizontal. As if portending what was to come, the 350cc V4 made an inauspicious race debut in 1967 at the Dutch TT where, ridden by Gustav Havel, it repeatedly seized in practice and retired from the race for the same reason. The rest of the '67 season and most of 1968 were taken up with further experimentation to achieve a measure of reliability, one of the first developments being the fitting of a pump in the cooling system. These efforts began to pay off in the second half of 1968; works rider Franta Stastny achieving a number of top-six finishes in Grands Prix, the highlight being a 3rd place behind Giacomo Agostini's all-conquering MV Agusta at Brno. Following Yamaha's withdrawal from Grand Prix racing at the end of 1968, Jawa recruited Bill Ivy, 125cc World Champion for the Japanese factory in 1967, to head its rider line-up. After an inauspicious debut at a non-Championship meeting at Cesanatico, where the bike seized, Bill bounced back at the Hockenheim round of the World Championship, harrying Agostini's MV on his way to a fine 2nd place, with Stastny on another of the Jawas 3rd. By this time the V4 was running electronic ignition; maximum power had been raised to 70bhp, putting it on a par with the three-cylinder MV. At the next round contested, the Dutch TT at Assen, Bill had passed Agostini before the Jawa slowed, eventually finishing in 2nd place. Thus it was with a keen sense of anticipation that the Czech team arrived at the Sachsenring, only for their hopes to be cruelly dashed. Jawa's hopes of Grand Prix glory effectively ended with Bill Ivy's passing. Yet despite its fearsome reputation there was no shortage of riders willing to race the V4, which was the only credible rival to MV Agusta in the 350 class. The likes of Jack Findlay, Ginger Molloy and Silvio Grassetti all raced the Czech two-strokes with some success, Grassetti's 2nd place at the Italian Grand Prix in 1969 being the best result achieved. When the FIM banned multi-cylinder engines from the 350 class at the end of the '69 season, the Jawa V4's career was effectively over. According to information kindly supplied by Arnost Nezmeskal of the National Technical Museum in Prague, only three complete Type 673 racers were completed by the factory in period, plus two spare engines. All three bikes survive and are known. There was no factory bike sold into private hands except the sole example now in a private collection in Germany, currently on display at the Top Mountain Motorcycle Museum, Hochgurgl, Austria. It seems probable that the machine we offer is one of the early replicas made by Mr Fiala in south Bohemia. In the late 1970s or early 1980 his Tabor-based MAS company concluded an agreement with Jawa permitting them to make a copy of a Jawa Type 673 engine. That engine was mounted in their own frame, and they used castings of original Jawa hubs. Mr Fiala raced his MAS 350 in the early 1980s in Czechoslovakia. Fiala's Jawa replica was later sold to France and further improved to make it look more like the original. In 1991 it was sold by noted collector Michelangelo Pochettino, a Jawa-CZ importer in Italy, before being purchased by a UK collector in 2014. Fiala later made more such copies, although precisely how many is not known. The machine offered here has benefited from the expert attention of Jawa specialist Roger Henderson, who found that the engine was seized solid, the cause being a severely corroded water pump, which had locked the engine. Further inspection revealed a cracked clutch pressure plate, severe internal corrosion to the water passages, corrosion in the gearbox section of the crankcase (which had caused a hole), and various wrecked bearings. Judging by the corrosion in the water passages, which were full of plain water with no inhibitors, the bike had been standing for decades. It took a considerable time to dismantle the engine completely as so much damage was present. A regular report and update was made to the then owner, who asked Roger Henderson to rectify matters. Obviously, parts for the Type 673 are rare if not non-existent. A new water pump casting was made and machined to specification (original with the bike) and various new studs and fasteners made as the originals were of several non-standard sizes. The cylinders and pistons were scored so new liners were made and fitted. KTM con-rods and pistons were used. The engine was reassembled with much help and advice from BDK Engineering, which is about the only concern with knowledge of these machines.At this point matters came to a halt when Administrators were appointed to run the owner's company. Subsequently the engine was reinstalled in the frame, and the carburettors and exhausts refitted together with the tank, seat and fairing. Nothing has been done to the rolling chassis, suspension, brakes etc, so all this will need attention, as will the carburettor settings and cooling system plumbing (the original brief was to leave the cosmetics strictly alone.) Sold strictly as viewed, this well-made Jawa Type 673 replica will surely be welcome at any gathering of historic racing motorcycles.Key not requiredFootnotes:All lots are sold 'as is/where is' and Bidders must satisfy themselves as to the provenance, condition, age, completeness and originality prior to bidding.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
Miscellaneous jewellery including a Victorian locket and chain; three silver and semi-precious hardstone rings and a silver coral ring; stylistic heart-form brooch, malachite bangle, silver zodiac pendant on chain, copper micro-mosaic ring, marcasite earrings, silver filigree brooch, a vintage marcasite and enamel compact and a silver book mark stamped 925.
A collection of 10 x assorted compact binoculars. Models are: Bresser Piccola 8 x 22, Canon 8x23a 6.4, Pentax Jupiter 7 x 20, Nikon 8 x 21 6.3 CF, Greenkat 8 x 20, Pentax Jupiter 10 x 20 MCF, Pentax Jupiter Junior 6 x 15 Field 7.5, " Unbranded " stamped B93 Japan, Samsung B 725 II 7 x 25, Nikon 10 x 21. Optics are clear.
A Nikon L35AW 35mm All Weather Compact Camera, black & orange, body G, camera does not respond when batteries are insertedNote: Lot imported under Temporary Admission. 5% UK import VAT will be charged on the ‘hammer’ and 20% UK VAT will be charged on the ‘buyer’s premium’ and invoiced on an inclusive basis under UK Margin Scheme rules.
A Group of Compact Rollei Film Cameras comprising a black Rollei 35S 35mm camera, with a Rollei-HFT Sonnar f/2.8 40mm lens, shutter working, body VG, lens G-VG, a black Rollei 35 35mm camera, serial no. 6200275 with a Rollei Tessar f/3.5 40mm lens, shutter sluggish on slowest speeds, body G, lens F-G, fungus spot, both made by Rollei Singapore and with Rollei pouches, together with a Rollei A26 camera with C26 flash and a Rollei A110 camera, both untested

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38783 item(s)/page