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1954 Allard J2X Is Today’s Bring a Trailer Pick

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  • Though it existed for just over a decade, Allard produced some very competitive racing machines.
  • With Cadillac V-8 power, this car was fast in its day and still is.
  • It’s suitable for vintage sports car racing or just making a road drive feel like a lap of Le Mans.

Short-lived automotive startup companies might seem like a current phenomenon, but trying to found your own car company is a tale as old as time. Many have tried, come close, and then failed at the end, and perhaps become more desirable for their rarity. So it is with the cars built by Londoner Sydney Allard. He fitted lightweight English chassis with thundering American V-8s, long before the Carroll Shelby’s Cobra. Allard only lasted a decade, just long enough to make its mark everywhere from Monte Carlo to the 24 Hours of Le Mans.

This 1954 Allard J2X, up for sale on Bring A Trailer (which like Car and Driver is part of Hearst Autos), is one of the last such machines to wear Sydney’s name. The J2X was an extended and improved version of the Allard J2 racer, the latter campaigned by racers including Zora Arkus-Duntov (father of the Corvette) and Carroll Shelby.

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Shelby probably had multiple inspirations for his AC Cobra, but you have to think an Allard was prominent among them. In 1950, the year that Jaguar first rolled up to compete in the 24 Hours of Le Mans, a J2 co-driven by Sydney Allard achieve a podium finish.

He’d founded his eponymous company thanks to his family’s work during WWII, which largely involved managing Ford trucks for transporting troops and supplies. At the end of the war, he found himself with a surplus of Ford mechanical parts, and started building cars in various configurations. Even with post-war rationing, demand for cars in the UK was high, and business was brisk.

Courtesy: Bring a Trailer

But Sydney was a racer at heart, and rather than build enclosed cars with broad appeal, he almost immediately began producing competition-oriented machines. Happily, a growing sports car market in the U.S. was hungry for performance, and Allard’s success at Le Mans was the best kind of advertising. The J2 proved up to the task, the cars putting drivers on the podium in roughly a third of the races in which they were entered.

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The J2X was Allard’s counterattack against the likes of the Jaguar C-Type and D-Type, which in the early 1950s were the cars to beat at Le Mans. It was slightly longer than the J2, while riding on the same 100-inch wheelbase, with the engine shifted slightly forward and a reworked suspension setup.

This example was sold new in Canada and was featured in-period on the cover of Track & Traffic, Canada’s premier motorsports publication at the time (think Road & Track but possibly in metric and also wearing a toque).

Under that Art Deco meets Richard Scarry sheetmetal, however, is some pure Americana in the form of a 333-cubic-inch Cadillac V-8 breathing through a pair of four-barrel Holley carburetors. As a J2X tips the scales at something like 2100 pounds, this car was rocket-quick in its day and is still pretty fierce by modern standards. The transmission is a four-speed manual.

This example reportedly was originally beige but now wears a fetching blue livery with a red leather interior. While a J2X is very rare, that well-understood Cadillac powerplant means this car is just itching to bring a little 1950s Le Mans to the streets. Allard sadly ended operations in 1957, but there’s still a chance to get behind the wheel of one.

The auction ends on August 3.

Brendan McAleer is a freelance writer and photographer based in North Vancouver, B.C., Canada. He grew up splitting his knuckles on British automobiles, came of age in the golden era of Japanese sport-compact performance, and began writing about cars and people in 2008. His particular interest is the intersection between humanity and machinery, whether it is the racing career of Walter Cronkite or Japanese animator Hayao Miyazaki’s half-century obsession with the Citroën 2CV. He has taught both of his young daughters how to shift a manual transmission and is grateful for the excuse they provide to be perpetually buying Hot Wheels.


Source: Motor - aranddriver.com

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