Buckland B3
Three-wheeler car designed and built by Dick Buckland from 1985 until 1999.
Three-wheeler car designed and built by Dick Buckland from 1985 until 1999.
The Locomotive Acts of 1861, 1865 and 1878 set the United Kingdom’s first speed limits for road-going vehicles; powered passenger vehicles were at the time known as light locomotives, as they were invariably powered by steam.
Three-wheeled steam carriage, probably completed in about 1890, capable of carrying four passengers plus its crew of two.
The Bond Bug is a small British two-seat, three-wheeled automobile, built from 1970 to 1974 by the Reliant Motor Company. Based on a modified version of the Reliant Robin chassis, with mechanical components from the Reliant Regal, its distinctive feature is its bright tangerine wedge-shaped body.
UK’s first kit car, 1900.
Land-speed record car built and driven by John Parry-Thomas to a world record in 1926.
High-performance V8 version of the British Rootes Group’s Sunbeam Alpine roadster, designed in part by the American car designer and racing driver Carroll Shelby and produced from 1964 until 1967.
Three-wheeled motor vehicle the prototype for which was produced in 1947. The body was a modified aircraft fuel tank, and the wheels also came from an aircraft.
Mini-based beach buggy-styled motor vehicle designed by Barry Stimson.
Three-wheeled motor vehicle designed by Barry Stimson, introduced into the UK in 2002, and continued in production until 2007.