The Rover Scarab was a convertible four seater intended to sell at £85, and had a V twin engine of only 839 cc, which was rear mounted. Despite the engine position, the Scarab had a conventional (dummy) radiator grill at the front. The other 1930s rear engined cars all had a down-curved grill-less front. These included the Porsche Typ 12 prototype, the Mercedes-Benz 120 test car, and the subsequent 130 / 150 / 170 H, the Tatra V570 prototype, T77, 77A, T87 and T97 and of course the KdF-Wagen (later better known as the Volkswagen Beetle; see Volkswagen controversy). Only a few Scarabs were built, examples being shown at the London (Olympia) Motor Show and the Scottish Motor Show, both in 1931.
| This article about a classic pre-war automobile produced between 1930 and 1945 is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
The contents of this page are derived from <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rover_Scarab>
Text available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License;
additional terms may apply.
Return to the Model Information Index
Promote YOUR Business or Product on this Website!
→ Advertising Info
More sites to explore:
You can Login with the same Member ID on ANY website in:
The AutoShrine Network
© F4 Systems & Skye Nott unless noted | Terms & Conditions | ASN/CMS v5.6 for autoshrine.com | Website Problems? Email the webmaster
