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劳斯莱斯头条新闻汽车

劳斯莱斯车型——20 世纪 50 年代:劳斯莱斯银云

“品牌车型”系列的最新车型是劳斯莱斯银云。银云于 1955 年推出,将永远被人们铭记为最后一款既提供整车又提供滚动底盘的劳斯莱斯汽车。

 

  • 1955 年推出的劳斯莱斯银云简史
  • 传奇设计师约翰·布莱奇利 (John Blatchley) 出任首席造型设计总监后,首款劳斯莱斯汽车问世
  • 最后一辆劳斯莱斯提供单独的滚动底盘以及完整的汽车
  • 这是品牌历史上具有里程碑意义的车型系列的第六部
  • 为期一年的回顾展是为了纪念亨利·莱斯和查尔斯·斯图尔特·罗尔斯于 1904 年首次会面的 120 周年

“毫无疑问,银云是劳斯莱斯辉煌历史上最具变革性和标志性的汽车之一。在汽车行业迅速变化的时代,它的推出标志着劳斯莱斯汽车新时代的开始。讲述这款令人难以置信的车型和它杰出的车主圈子的故事让人百感交集;这是劳斯莱斯汽车最后一款以独立底盘和整车形式提供的车型,也是最后一款由 20 世纪伟大的车身制造商打造的车型我们历史上最重要的两位人物——伊凡·埃弗登和约翰·布莱奇利——是这款车设计的先锋,他们的创新和独创性的不朽遗产至今仍在劳斯莱斯汽车公司传承。” 劳斯莱斯
汽车企业关系和历史负责人安德鲁·鲍尔

1955 年,汽车世界正在迅速变化。 1949 年推出的银色黎明 (Silver Dawn) 获得了巨大成功,但它的设计原则是上世纪 30 年代末形成的,而劳斯莱斯的设计团队早在 1947 年就意识到了这个问题。这促使劳斯莱斯推出了品牌历史上最具变革性的车型之一:银云 (Silver Cloud)。

由伊凡·埃弗登 (Ivan Evernden) 领导的劳斯莱斯造型部门于 1940 年招募了经验丰富的设计师约翰·布莱奇利 (John Blatchley)。布莱奇利最初从著名的伦敦车身制造商格尼·纳丁 (Gurney Nutting) 加入劳斯莱斯;第二次世界大战时,他因心脏杂音无法参战,于是在诺丁汉郡哈克诺尔的航空设计总部工作,负责飓风和喷火战斗机上使用的梅林发动机的整流罩。

尽管劳斯莱斯在 1939 年至 1945 年间暂停了汽车生产,转而专注于制造航空发动机,但新车型的设计工作仍在幕后继续进行。新团队于 1949 年推出了大获成功的 Silver Dawn,但在幕后,新车型的研发工作已经开始,该车型将融合当时现代化的“新风貌”风格与传统英国保守设计的优雅。

在埃弗登的监督下,布莱奇利于 1951 年被任命为新设立的首席造型工程师,同年构思了一款四分之一大小的模型,代号为“Siam”。七个原型之后,更大、全尺寸的 Silver Cloud 诞生了。布莱奇利独创的全宽车身设计,加上底盘和机械部件的巧妙布局,使座舱尺寸显著增加。这反过来又促进了更宏伟、更豪华的座椅和装饰设计。

新车型不仅座舱变大,轴距也加长了 3 英寸(7.6 厘米),1957 年加长轴距版又加长了 4 英寸(10.2 厘米),直列 6 缸发动机的排量也扩大到了 4.9 升。不过,即便是这种扩大,也并未完全占据发动机舱,发动机舱特意设计得更大,以便将来能容纳 V8 发动机。

升级还不止于此。在 Evernden 和 Blatchley 的监督下,设计团队的工程师在底盘设计方面也取得了巨大进步,其焊接箱形截面使扭转刚度提高了 46%。自动变速箱首次成为标准配置,1956 年又增加了动力转向。银云将永远被人们铭记为最后一款同时提供整车和滚动底盘的劳斯莱斯汽车,挑剔的客户可以委托专业车身制造商为其定制车身。

银云非常成功,劳斯莱斯随后又生产了两款同名设计;1959 年推出的银云 II 充分利用了扩大的发动机舱,配备了强大的 6.2 升 V8 动力装置,使发动机功率提高了 20%。虽然这个版本的外观与上一代基本相同,但银云 III 进行了相当大的外观改造。1962 年推出后,重新设计的引擎盖向前倾斜,以便将散热器高度降低约 1.5 英寸(3.8 厘米)。双水平大灯取代了单个大灯,而侧灯从机翼顶部移到中部,采用了当时最伟大的安全创新之一 —— 闪烁转向指示灯。1965

年,银云走到了尽头,被银影取代。它的三次迭代都获得了巨大的成功,至今人们仍然对这个车型念念不忘;今年早些时候,在举世闻名的古德伍德复兴节上,劳斯莱斯汽车年度展品中,一辆漂亮的定制版银云 III 成为了焦点。

前首席造型工程师约翰·布莱奇利备受推崇,21 世纪初,当劳斯莱斯汽车计划在古德伍德的新劳斯莱斯总部重新推出幻影 VII 时,他被邀请就幻影 VII 征求意见。劳斯莱斯汽车的第一任首席设计师伊恩·卡梅隆向他展示了一系列新幻影的概念。布莱奇利只认可了一个:与幻影 VII 相同的设计。

MODELS OF THE MARQUE – THE 1950s: THE ROLLS-ROYCE SILVER CLOUD

The latest in the ‘Models of the Marque’ series showcases the Rolls-Royce Silver Cloud. Launched in 1955, the Silver Cloud will forever be remembered as the last Rolls-Royce motor car to be offered both as a complete car and as a rolling chassis.

 

  • A brief history of the Rolls-Royce Silver Cloud, launched in 1955
  • First Rolls-Royce motor car launched following the appointment of legendary designer John Blatchley to the role of Chief of Styling
  • Last Rolls-Royce offered as a separate rolling chassis, as well as a complete motor car
  • Sixth in a series celebrating landmark models from the marque’s history
  • Year-long retrospective marks the 120th anniversary of the first meeting between Henry Royce and The Hon. Charles Stewart Rolls in 1904

“The Silver Cloud is, without doubt, one of the most transformative and iconic motor cars in the marque’s illustrious history. Its launch signalled the beginning of a new era of Rolls-Royce motor cars, at a time when the automotive industry was changing rapidly. Recounting the story of this incredible model and its remarkable coterie of owners is somewhat bittersweet; it was the final Rolls-Royce to be offered as a separate rolling chassis as well as a complete motor car, the last to be worked upon by the great coachbuilders of the 20th century. Two of the most important figures in our history – Ivan Evernden and John Blatchley – were at the forefront of its design, and the enduring legacy of their innovation and ingenuity lives on at Rolls-Royce Motor Cars today.”
Andrew Ball, Head of Corporate Relations & Heritage, Rolls-Royce Motor Cars

By 1955, the automotive world was changing rapidly. The Silver Dawn, launched in 1949, was a roaring success, but it was built upon design principles conceived in the late 1930s, an issue that Rolls-Royce’s design team were aware of as early as 1947. Cue the introduction of one of the most transformative models in the history of the marque: the Silver Cloud.

The Rolls-Royce Styling Department, headed up by Ivan Evernden, recruited highly experienced designer John Blatchley in 1940. Blatchley originally joined Rolls-Royce from renowned London coachbuilder Gurney Nutting; unable to fight in the Second World War due to a heart murmur, he worked in the Aero Design headquarters at Hucknall, Nottinghamshire, where he was responsible for the cowling for Merlin engines used in Hurricane and Spitfire fighter aircraft.

Although Rolls-Royce suspended motor car production between 1939 and 1945 to focus on building aero engines, design work on a new model continued in the background. The new team launched the highly successful Silver Dawn in 1949, but in the background, work had already begun on a new model, one that would blend the modernised, ‘New Look’ style of the day with the elegance of traditional, British conservative design.

Under Evernden’s watchful eye, Blatchley, appointed to the newly created role of Chief Styling Engineer in 1951, conceived a quarter-scale model that same year, codenamed ‘Siam’. Seven prototypes later, the larger, full-scale Silver Cloud was born. Blatchley’s ingenious full-width body design, coupled with the inspired placement of chassis and mechanical components, allowed for a significant increase in cabin size. This in turn facilitated a grander, more luxurious seating and trim design.

It wasn’t just the cabin that grew in the new model; the wheelbase was lengthened by three inches (7.6 cm) – then by an additional four inches (10.2 cm) for the 1957 extended wheelbase version – while the straight 6-cylinder engine expanded to 4.9 litres of capacity. Even this enlargement didn’t occupy the engine bay entirely, though, which was purposely designed even larger to one day accommodate a V8 engine.

The upgrades didn’t stop there. The Design team’s engineers, overseen by Evernden and Blatchley, also made great strides with the chassis design, its welded box section yielding a torsional rigidity improvement of 46%. An automatic gearbox became a standard offering for the very first time, with power steering following in 1956. The Silver Cloud will forever be remembered as the last Rolls-Royce motor car to be offered both as a complete car and as a rolling chassis, upon which discerning clients could commission fully bespoke bodywork from specialist coachbuilders.

So successful was the Silver Cloud, Rolls-Royce produced two subsequent designs that bore the same name; Silver Cloud II, launched in 1959, would make full use of the enlarged engine bay with a formidable 6.2 litre V8 power unit, eliciting a 20% increase in engine power. While this version was largely unchanged to the previous on the outside, the Silver Cloud III received a considerable aesthetic facelift. Launched in 1962, the redesigned bonnet sloped forward to facilitate a reduced radiator height of around 1.5 inches (3.8 cm). Dual horizontal headlamps replaced the single units, while the sidelights were moved down from the top of the wing to the middle, incorporating one of the period’s great safety innovations – flashing turn indicators.

By 1965, Silver Cloud had run its course, replaced by the Silver Shadow. All three of its iterations were wildly successful in their own right, and the model is fondly remembered to this day; a beautiful example of a coachbuilt Silver Cloud III formed the centrepiece of Rolls-Royce Motor Cars’ annual presence at the world-famous Goodwood Revival earlier this year.

Such was the esteem with which former Chief Styling Engineer John Blatchley was held, he was consulted for his thoughts on Phantom VII in the early 2000s, when the marque was planning to relaunch at the new Home of Rolls-Royce in Goodwood. Rolls-Royce Motor Cars’ first Chief of Design, Ian Cameron, showed him a series of concepts for the new Phantom. Blatchley approved of just one: the same design that would go on to become Phantom VII.

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