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Cliff Byfield is a legend among car buffs in Western Australia. He commenced a coach-building apprenticeship before the war, joined the RAAF and went to the European theatre of WW2, then on his return, after some architecture study, resumed and completed his apprenticeship. He has run his own workshop, specialising in one-off truck cabs and employing up to fifteen men. Later taught manual arts he's equally talented in woodwork and in 'retirement' has continued, unabated, to make whole cars and panels. It's fair to say Cliff has a true vocation for metal-shaping as he's just as enthusiastic about his craft as he ever was and just as willing to share his skills with anyone with a desire to pursue this age-old craft. He also manages to find time to design and fashion beautiful pieces of furnitue and even a harp.IIRC the first complete car Cliff designed and built was a coupe made from the remains of a wrecked Citroen. A pic may be posted later.
He has had a long love affair with Jaguars and his next creation was the first of three 'Byfield Jaguars'. It was completed, to his own design, in the mid-fifties and when displayed at a major department store, caused a sensation in the backwater that was Perth.Uploaded withUploaded withPhotog unknownA Jag Mk V motor was used and the car had a removable hardtop. The panels are in steel and it was finished in a metallic mid-green.
After passing through several hands, Cliff's son now has the car back in the fold.More to follow.Edited by Repco22, 16 February 2012 - 07:35. This is the second Byfield Jaguar, built about twenty years ago.Uploaded withCliff started with a MkV Jag chassis and some body panels, then drew up a design for a sports car. The 'guards and bonnet were modified, the grille shortened and the rest he made to suit. Wooden patterns were made for parts to be cast in bronze, such as the windscreen pillars. Due to the difficulty in getting chrome-plating that will last on steel, Cliff makes parts like the bumpers and the headlight mesh stoneguards, from stainless steel. Not easy to work but it won't rust!
A measure of his metal-working skill can be gauged by those pieces of trim on the car's flanks. They are fashioned from brass sheet, are 'veed' in cross-section, taper to a point and of course, describe a beautiful curve. The interior istrimmed in leather of a soft green shade which contrasts with jarrah 'Swan River Mahogany' on the dashboard, door trims and self-made steering wheel. The standard of finish inside and out is comparable to a factory-made car. Motor, rear end and brakes are XJ6. The transmission was originally manual but Cliff recently converted it to auto for his wife's benefit.
The Byfields enjoy taking the car to shows where, on more than one occasion, they've overheard blokes explain to their girlfriends that 'this is a such-and-such model. Only X number were made' etc.Edited by Repco22, 19 February 2012 - 03:02.
This is the third Byfield Jaguar, completed about nine years ago. It's a mid-engined V12 and construction is based on a steel, box-section back-bone and is again entirely Cliff's design. He delights in nutting out the various catches, hinges, and assorted trickey bits that make up a car but are often taken for granted. A classic example is the design for a concealed door catch. All that is visible are two small panels that Cliff is operating in the first pic.
The top one is spring-loaded. You push it in with one finger and then pull down on the panel beneath it. Seats rise up to meet occupants and once inside there is, of course, air-conditioning. Naturally the finish is to the usual Byfield standard. The young guy who did the paint job specialises in fancy hot rods and asked if he could enter the car in Perth's big annual hot rod show. Not surprisingly, it won first prize. I don't have a usable pic of the finished car but perhaps Ken Devine can help out.Uploaded withUploaded with.
These shots were taken yesterday.Uploaded with Nice ones Ken. Cliff was fortunate to find a windscreen I forget from what that suited the lines for the rear window.This cartoon was from a card for Cliff's 80th birthday which coincided with his completion of the car.Uploaded withUploaded withBelow; Restoring the ex Gaze/Davison HWM-Jaguar sports and at bottom; Re-bodying Maybach III after Peter Briggs' horrifying prang at Philip Island. The tail was the only body panel to survive.Uploaded withBelow; The maestro working on my Healey.Uploaded with. That car is simply gorgeous!The man was more than a genius, he must have also been a human dynamo to do all this stuff.I hope I can get over there some time and see it in the flesh.Correction Ray. Cliff 'IS' more than a genius. Happily he is still with us and still building cars. In fact, in between working on his latest creation, a Riley-based sports car, he is restoring an MGTD for his wife and a couple of weeks ago changed the auto trans on the second two-tone green Byfield Jag to a different type.
Oh yes, and he's looking for a spare Renault Twenty gearbox to make adjustable linkage arms for the yellow car while it remains in the museum. The Byfield-Ayres Holden Sports.This was one of Cliff's best known and most admired creations. The basis of the car was a very successful open-wheeler, the BRM-Morgan, which had been designed and built by David Van Dal.
Its construction had been commissioned by the Australian Morgan distributor of the mid-fifties, Perth's Bill Richards. BRM stood for Bill Richards Motors and had nothing to do with another constructor of the same name! Richards' idea was, of course, to promote the Morgan brand, David's space frame accommodating parts from a wrecked car.
Front suspension, Vanguard motor, Moss box, that long bell-housing with the sliding barrel clutch-release bearing and rear axle but with coil springs were all from the Morgan. Steering was by Peugeot rack and pinion.Uploaded withUploaded withDavid Van Dal and BRM-Morgan.David was also a quick pedaller of the car and caused a sensation when he lowered the Caversham lap record by some six seconds. C1959 the shrewd Jack Ayres saw a niche for a good sports-racing car, that class being dominated by production cars like Healeys and TRs.
Recognising the potential of the space-framed, Morgan-based BRM, he bought it and with Cliff Byfield's expert help, set about rebuilding it. Cliff lengthened and modified the space frame and designed a body with hints of Ferrari and Lotus but a style of its own. Jack tossed out the Vanguard motor and fitted a modified 'Grey' Holden one. First time out he won the state sports car title and followed it up with a 6-Hour Le Mans win with Lionel Beattie co-driving.
Ray Barfield then purchased the ex David McKay DB3S and some close tussles followed, the best resulting in a dead-heat after the lead had changed three times in the last few hundred metres.The impression the car made on fans gave Jack the idea to produce, with Cliff as partner, a kit-car along similar lines. The pair produced one steel-bodied, road-registered example, see post 21 above and another was incomplete when the idea was dropped due to sales tax making the project unviable.Uploaded withJack Ayres' first trial of the sports car. Contrary to constant references, while Jack owned the car it was never Repco-powered. Lionel Beattie fitted a Repco head during his ownership.Pics from the David Van Dal collection.
The Geneve car at Albany hillclimb 1957 by Alf Empsal. There is an interesting story behind why the Ballot was rebodied maybe Rod will tell us.Uploaded with Ken, I guess you're referring to this; There was an occasion when Mick was doing some 'high-speed testing' on public roads near his home in Osborne Park, lost control and was thrown out.
The car ended up perched up on some grapevine trellises. But the Ballot wasn't just 'rebodied'. Cliff designed and built a new car with a new frame.
As mentioned, I think of the original Ballot, only the front wheels remained. Here's Mick in the number 6 Ballot with Sid Taylor in the TS Special, another car which Cliff has much more recently rebodied during a reconstruction.Uploaded withDavid Van Dal pic. The late Lionel Beattie, who had co-driven the winning Byfield-Ayres sports with Jack Ayres in the 1960 Caversham 6-Hour, bought the car from Jack and raced it very successfully for the next couple of years. Lionel fitted a cross-flow Repco head and also bigger brakes all around. I then bought it from Lionel, through Jack, and ran it in the '64 6-Hour with David 'Rockford'. The following year Lionel came out of retirement for one last drive and shared the car with me in the 6-Hour.
He is pictured here in the '65 event, trailing the eventual winner, Spencer Martin, in the Scuderia Veloce 250 LM. We were running in the top six but scored a DNF.Uploaded withPic by Alan Yates. After five years of intermittent racing I sold the above sports car to the late Bob Webb who ran it about three times, including a trip to Queensland with Bob Kingsbury for a Surfers Paradise 12-Hour event-c'69-70. It was then sold to an Italian guy who planned to fit an Alfa motor but ultimately abandoned the idea. The car deteriorated for some years until Neil McCrudden bought the remains for a few dollars and salvaged Cliff's panels.
He then commenced the task of rebuilding the rest of the car, starting with a new spaceframe.Below; the body as found, and bottom; original frame-designer, David Van Dal sits in the reconstructed sports car.Uploaded withBelow; Waller chauffeurs Van Dal in the reconstructed car at a Caversham reunion.Uploaded withBelow, ex-owner of the original, Rod Waller, with chassis designer, David Van Dal and bodybuilder, Cliff Byfield at Caversham.Uploaded withPics by Neil McCrudden. Some time after the 64 six-hour, the Repco Holden Sports appeared with the nose slightly modified to look like this. Rod can probably shed some light.Gordon, that pic was taken before the start of the '65 '6-Hour'. My co-driver and ex-owner of the car, the late Lionel Beattie is wearing the short raincoat. He'd driven in June '6-Hours' before! I had Peter Lyons narrow the nose intake a little as I didn't like the look of the full width one. After Neil McCrudden collided with a tyre barrier at Joondalup with the reconstructed car,Cliff repaired it and changed its look once again.
It now has a slight 'smile'.Here's another pic of Lionel and self before the start. Dick Morrow and John Bowles crewing.Uploaded withThe second pic shows Cliff working on the ex-Gaze/Davison HWM-Jag. His second Byfield-Jag takes shape in the foreground. That brown thing behind him is a 6 foot sheet metal brake which Cliff made from scrap metal from the Midland Railway workshops.The third pic is from c 1967 and shows me trailing John Glasson in his Rambler V8 special. We shared fastest lap in that race.
The field included the O'Sullivan Lola T70 but I have to admit it was not running on 8! There was still life in the old 'Repco' after eight years.Edited by Repco22, 15 March 2012 - 07:01. In 1963 the late Ron Miller a friend of mine and long serving official and committee member of the WASCC decided he wanted to goracing after inquiring about some interstate specials he couldn't find one in his financial range so he decided to build his own.He heard Bill Strickland had the ex John Walker Byfield body he did a deal with Bill to by an MGTC and exchange that body for theByfield body and with the assistance of a friend Bill Harrington they built the MG Special. The car performed quite well but unfortunatlyRon developed an illness the cut short his racing carreer. He even bribed the handicappers by giving them a drive of the car on atuning day it was an enjoyable drive and it is the only open wheel racing car i have ever driven.I think Jack Ayres son bought the car and converted it to road use.
The car now sits in a shed i think in Bicton and has not been usedfor years, it was for sale some time ago for a high price. That's right Ken. John Ayres Junior bought the car and, as you say, added lights and cycle guards for road registration. When Jack, concerned about my lack of experience, offered to give some tips at Caversham, I drove the Repco-Holden up-it too was road registered at the time- and John and his brother, Colin, followed in the MG Special for a look. Jack, who was a committee member of the WASCC, had a key to the lock and chain across the circuit entrance so in we went and had a memorable day.John raced the MG once and Colin laughed when he told how the commentator had given the champion's son a big wrap as he came onto the straight-'Big things were expected of him etc.'
Poor John then promptly blew the motor to bits and raced no more! It's interesting to note that here were two Byfield-bodied racing cars, both ex-state champions and both driven to the circuit. It couldn't happen today.
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