Renault AX ‘Conduite Intérieur’ - 1911 by Perico001 Chassis n° 31036
Les Grandes Marques du Monde au Grand Palais
Bonhams
Parijs - Paris
Frankrijk - France
February 2019
Estimated : € 35.000 - 45.000
Sold for € 31.625
By 1904 Renault was building its own engines: large-capacity fours at first, followed by the AX twin that later developed into the AG, famous for its WWI role as the 'Taxi de la Marne’. Powered by a 1,100cc twin-cylinder engine of 8hp and featuring the 'coal scuttle’ bonnet and bulkhead-mounted radiator that would characterise Renaults until the late 1920s, the AX arrived at a time when the motor car was beginning to gain a measure of respectability. The unreliability of early cars had provided good cause for public scepticism but the advent of the AX, destined to become Renault’s pre-WWI best seller, ushered in a new era. Here was an easy-to-drive car of simple design, whose mechanical workings even a technically illiterate layman might begin to understand. The water-cooled twin with its mechanically operated valves was simple and robust, endearing qualities to the novice motorist, and the three-speed gearbox was easy to master. For so small a car the AX possessed unparalleled flexibility between 8km/h and 56km/h in top gear, clinging to that gear on all but the steepest gradients.
This particular AX carries fully enclosed two-seater coachwork, contrasting with the open bodies more usually encountered. Described by the vendor as partially restored and in generally good condition, the car is offered with a UK V5C registration document (issued 2009) recording the date of first (UK) registration as 27th November 1989. https://flic.kr/p/2dJkLo4
from Tumblr https://66.media.tumblr.com/1a8504c1877e5d60111f2e1f5396297b/dd123cc8180ab9a6-04/s500x750/a9e98650bfccdd809db69e5663a4d04944835b06.jpg