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Lacre-Bedford SA Road Sweeper

Lacre-Bedford SA Road Sweeper

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Lacre-Bedford SA Road SweeperLacre-Bedford SA Road SweeperLacre-Bedford SA Road SweeperLacre-Bedford SA Road SweeperLacre-Bedford SA Road Sweeper
Lacre-Bedford SA Road Sweeper
Lot number 128
Hammer value £4,600
Description Lacre-Bedford SA Road Sweeper
Year c.1960
Colour Blue
Chassis No. SC055862
Engine No. CJN1BCOAT118626

Lacre Lorries Ltd was established in Kings Cross, London, in 1928 following the closure of the earlier Lacre Motor Car Company which could trace its roots back to 1902 in Long Acre, Covent Garden.

The original business was best-known for producing a range of municipal commercial vehicles, in particular road sweepers, by 1936 new works had been built at Welwyn Garden City. The re-launched company resumed building a range of commercial vehicles, once again specialising in road sweepers.

Lacre’s factory was taken over by the Ministry of Aircraft Production during the Second World War and vehicle manufacture was suspended but resumed in 1947 for the production of road sweepers. By 1952 they formed an association with Vauxhall for the JS Drewry-designed Lacre SA sweeping equipment to be mounted on a Bedford ‘J’ type chassis, the project being overseen by Bill Lust, a veteran of the sinking of the German battleship Bismarck in 1941.

By the 1960s the Bedford lorry was usually the J5 model fitted with either a 5-litre diesel engine or a 3.5-litre petrol engine driving through a four-speed synchromesh gearbox and hypoid bevel rear axle, always left-hand drive to give the driver a good view of the gutter. Power for the sweeping brushes, water-spraying pump and associated mechanisms was taken from the standard power-takeoff position on the Bedford gearbox, from which a short universally jointed shaft connected to the Lacre gearbox.

The main brush was 3ft wide in four sections and a smaller gutter brush was fitted. A full-width brush was not considered necessary, for the simple reason that it was found in practice that most road dirt was forced towards the gutter by passing traffic and that to have a full-width brush would have been unnecessary and uneconomical. Both brushes were fully floating and could therefore follow the road surface accurately, cleaning effectively over bumps or depressions. A 180 gallon water tank behind the cab sprayed water onto the brushes as required. Road sweepings were carried on a bucket conveyor into the body of the vehicle which could then be tipped to empty the contents. Lacre stopped building vehicles in the 1980s.

Thought to date from 1960, this Lacre-Bedford was donated to the Stondon Museum in 2003 at which point it was described as being “in good order although has not been started up for a few years”. Bidders are advised that there is no V5 with this vehicle which does not appear to have a registration number although the given chassis and engine numbers are stated above.

This lot will be available to view at Stondon Museum (SG16 6JN) on Friday 5th June. Although this vehicle will be offered for sale at Brightwells (HR6 0DE) it will need to be collected from Stondon.

Due to where the vehicle is currently stored, collection may not be possible for up to 4 weeks after the auction.

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