Grey Letter Box



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Brief history

Bigso Oskar letter box in light grey color measures 13.7' x 10.2' x 3.3' and provides a neat path to keep important papers organized. Bigso Oskar letter box in light grey color features label holders that allow easy identification of contents. Letter box with understated style is suitable for home and office use.

Anthony Trollope, the novelist, introduced the pillar box to Britain in 1852 when he worked as a Post Office Surveyor in the Channel Islands. The first mainland box was erected a year later in 1853. At first local District Surveyors ordered boxes from local foundries. In 1859 a standard design was introduced. Wall boxes appeared in 1857, Ludlow boxes in 1885 and lamp boxes in 1896.

Each new reign brings boxes bearing the royal cipher of the monarch. Pillar boxes and wall boxes have been made in different sizes and with improvements to the design incorporated over time. A large number of different manufacturers have been employed and over the years there have been many experimental boxes put in service.

The Group

Founded in 1976, the LBSG has identified around 800 different types of postbox. There are more than 400 different varieties of pillar box; around 160 types of wall box, 66 Ludlow boxes and almost 80 versions of the lamp box. New boxes are still appearing while there are still many older boxes waiting to be discovered and rediscovered.
The Letter Box Study Group is the acknowledged authority on the history and development of the British roadside letter box.

Membership

We are an active group of individuals devoted to the study of postboxes. From modest beginnings four decades ago the Letter Box Study Group has grown to become the recognised authority on the subject – all through the voluntary efforts of its members.

BOXING CLEVER

New school term? Need new ideas for learning-related outdoor activities in primary schools? In literacy, numeracy, art, design, geography and history? Try the Letter Box Study Group Education Pack on for size. It consists of worksheets and activities for EYFS (Early Years Foundation Stage), KS1 and KS2. There are also notes for extension activities.

The sheets can be used individually or as a whole. They can be deployed for simple colouring, observation exercises, reading and writing, numbers and basic reasoning. For older age groups, the Pack may be used to introduce discussion of design, engineering, manufacture and elementary business studies. Teaching children about history is an integral part of understanding the world today. The Pack is, for example, well suited to teaching about Victorian times.

The Letter Box Study Group Education Pack will help children – and adults – look little more closely at post boxes, their place in our community landscape, and the importance of staying in touch with friends, family and neighbours all over the world.

| 31 Mar 2021

Grey Letterbox Wallpaper

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The fame and public profile of Alvis was still indelibly linked to private motor car production in the early ’50s.

And yet, among the stern-looking managers, directors and engineers who guided this revered firm through its tricky post-war years, there must have been many who knew its future lay firmly elsewhere.

Alvis Ltd was already well on the way to becoming a pure engineering firm (that merely built cars as a sideline) by the time its first truly new post-war model, the TA21 3-litre, appeared in 1950.

Formal, compact and unpretentious, the 3-litres were not the glamour machines that the Speed 25 and the 4.3 had been in their time.

Yet in conception and execution, these post-war cars were still very much what the pre-war customer would have expected of an Alvis: a refined car of balanced but sporty attributes that was fast, not excessively thirsty and handled well.

At a time when a prestige car had to be big to justify its existence, here was a traditional-looking saloon or drophead that was large enough to have presence and comfort, but not so big and heavy that it became an encumbrance in the city or an embarrassment on the A- and B-roads that linked our major conurbations; the first motorways were still a decade away.

Even in 1950 the 3-litre looked anachronistic with its separate wings and flat ’screen, but, with so many shoebox-like unitary construction cars emerging, most wealthy customers would have found the Alvis visually reassuring.

With its rear-hinged ‘suicide’ doors and upright grille, the Mulliners of Birmingham-bodied four-door looked exactly the sort of well-groomed machine that the Coventry firm might have introduced some time in the early ’40s had a world war not intervened: German bombs virtually destroyed the firm’s car-making facilities early in the conflict.

The basic shape of the 3-litre saloon can be traced directly to the 1937 12/70 saloon, the pre-war antecedent of the TA14.

If Tickford’s two-door TA21 drophead coupé (from 1951) was not quite as ravishing as the Vanden Plas Short Chassis 4.3-litre Alvis of 10 years earlier, it was still a very acceptable way of reintroducing open-topped motoring to Holyhead Road’s six-cylinder customers.

The similar-looking (but pre-war in origin) TB14 had kept the name alive in the second half of the 1940s, and the 3-litre was only ever seen as a mid-term solution while a more modern, higher-volume Alvis was developed for the second half of the ’50s and beyond.

But when that now near-mythical, Alec Issigonis-designed V8 saloon (C&SC, June 2008) was axed in 1955, the fate of Alvis as a car maker was sealed.

With the remunerative distractions of its government contracts for the Leonides radial engine and Stalwart six-wheeler, the firm had to put the innovation of the pre-war years behind it for car production to continue.

Would Alvis customers have accepted the dumpy, Morris Oxford-like TA-350? Perhaps the company was right to settle for a low-volume, low-key existence, developing the 3-litre technology to a logical conclusion.

Without the investment in body tooling for the abortive V8, the main problem Alvis had – along with most other low- and mid-volume specialist makes – was continuity of body supply.

It was tied to contracts with coachbuilders who, in the case of both Mulliners and Tickford, lost their independence and could no longer supply bodies to Alvis due to new allegiances.

This was the situation that led to the demise of the TC21/100 in 1955, and with it a lull in Alvis car making while a new way of sourcing bodywork was found. free. download full version hidden object games for mac.

Alvis could never get its volumes high enough to acquire the economies of scale that would put its cars on a competitive price footing (at least not without compromising its well-deserved reputation for careful, high-quality construction), or achieve the returns that would justify tooling up for a new model.

In many ways the TA21 and TC21 represent the last Alvis cars to sell in anything like significant quantities, with 2043 built between 1950 and ’55.

Grey

A handsome 1300 orders were taken at the 1950 Geneva show launch alone, such was the appetite for new product. But as the 1950s unfolded the demand tailed off.

First seen as the TA21 in 1950, these all-new post-war 3-litre cars fully lived up to the fine tradition for quality that Alvis had established between 1919 and 1940, reaffirming the name among the ranks of the nation’s better cars.

For his or her £1800, the buyer of a 3-litre Alvis got a well-engineered car that would serve for business and family purposes – and, if necessary, go a long time between major overhauls.

It was a practical thoroughbred that might not have been the absolute fastest in raw figures, but could cover the ground as quickly as any four-seater saloon then available.

This point was well made by the evocative advertising, conjuring images of carefree motoring under the wide vistas and traffic-free roads of Northumberland.

‘The pulsing power of your Alvis,’ stated the copy beneath a picture of a deserted and arrow-straight Roman road, ‘will speedily accept such an open invitation.’

From a firm that had pioneered front-wheel drive and synchromesh gears before WW2 and had been among the first British marques to adopt independent front suspension, the 3-litre was conservatively engineered as a long-life car with driver appeal.

Prioritising top-gear flexibility over top-end horsepower, its straight-six engine had nearly square dimensions, a rugged seven-main-bearing crankshaft and a rear-chain-driven camshaft for the overhead in-line valves.

Its twin-leading-shoe brakes were hydraulic, with a particularly generous friction area, and the centre of gravity was low down in a fully welded box-section chassis that, as well as being lighter than it looked, boasted coil-sprung independent front wheels with a solid rear axle located on long semi-elliptic leaf springs.

Supplanting the 86mph TA21 in 1953, the TC21 was an acknowledgement of the wider availability of high-octane fuels that left Alvis free to offer a higher-compression, twin-SU-carburetted version of the 3-litre engine.

The twin SUs had replaced the original single Solex quite early on, but it was only when the higher 3.77:1 axle ratio was used that the 3-litre became a true 100mph car.

Alvis viewed this as noteworthy enough to justify a change of name to TC21/100. It was also known as the ‘Grey Lady’, a title first used by the firm’s sales manager when he saw the ’53 Earls Court show car, which was painted grey with grey leather.

The historical waters are a little muddied here as to what constitutes a TC21/100 Grey Lady as opposed to a mere TC21.

What I can tell you is that only late TC21s had the chromed door frames and hidden hinges of the TC21/100s, which additionally – as a rule of thumb, but not a certainty – had the famous bonnet scoops plus wire wheels, spotlamps and side louvres.

Of the 727 TC21s and TC21/100s there were only 100 dropheads, all to the latter specification.

This royal blue Grey Lady saloon seems originally to have been ordered with the ‘plain’ bonnet and steel wheels, which illustrates the point nicely.

Subject of a five-year, body-off rebuild in the mid-’90s, it has led a quieter life than the Tickford drophead, which was sold new to Lady Courtauld and, in 1974, exported to America by its fourth owner as ‘personal baggage’ on the USS Enterprise.

It lived in San Francisco for 25 years (where Clint Eastwood graced its seats) and then followed its owner to Switzerland at the turn of the century.

After regular trips back to the UK for its annual MoT test, it was subjected to a £50,000 restoration by marque specialist Tim Walker in 2003.

Mark Elder of Bicester Heritage-based The Motor Shed was brought up on the Alvis marque by his father Malcolm, whose monthly adverts in C&SC almost always featured a ‘red triangle’-badged vehicle, the vintage 12/50s being a favourite. Mark maintains that tradition with a selection of five vintage and post-vintage thoroughbred four-cylinder cars in his current inventory alongside the two TC21/100s.

Styled in the handsome perpendicular school, the 3-litre twins have long, imposing snouts but sit quite low on a relatively wide front track.

The rubber grommets in the overriders are jacking points – handy on a car whose chassis features 19 grease points that need attention every 1000 miles.

Under the centre-hinged bonnets the engines look like generic ‘sixes’ but are also thoughtfully finished, with a cover for the spark plugs and detachable side panels to aid access.

To enter the cabin, you reverse onto the flat, shapeless front seats through the suicide-type doors that were just beginning to fall out of favour even on the more genteel English makes in the 1950s.

The atmosphere inside is that of an Edwardian headmaster’s study: comfortably finished in fine materials, but not lavish.

The drophead has a nicely contrived hood, with fully open or Coupe de Ville positions.

The saloon’s tiny back doors give access to decent rear legroom on an elevated bench that features triple armrests, the cosy feeling offered by the letterbox-type rear window further enhanced by a remotely operated sunblind.

Grey letterbox box

Heaters were included and, in the saloon, ventilation is augmented by a big steel sliding sunroof, also standard.

Nearly flush to the windscreen, the plain, unfussy walnut dashboard features cream switchgear and four minor gauges flanking a 100mph speedometer.

Starting is instant on the electric choke, which on the drophead has an override switch that allows you to dispense with it almost straight away.

Virtually silent at tickover, these engines are flexible enough to make first gear all but redundant on level ground and your choice of ratio is almost irrelevant to the initial acceleration. The lack of synchromesh on first feels a backward step but is no real hardship.

Download wma to mp3 converter for mac. The lower ratios hum tunefully in unison with the soft growl of a straight-six that on 100bhp pushes this not notably windcheating saloon to a guaranteed 100mph, putting the TC21/100 in an elite group of ton-up true four-seaters.

You need the leverage supplied by the large sprung steering wheel for manoeuvring at low speeds.

Its fixed centre boss depicts the famous red triangle in the claws of an eagle, and you can see how 3-litre owners must have enjoyed that ‘mastery of the road’ feeling, looking down the long bonnet as this distinguished but not ostentatious car put the miles behind it in the tired, monochrome Britain of the early ’50s.

Under way, the drophead feels slightly the sharper of the two, picking up speed eagerly in third and top, but the saloon is not far behind.

Both are superbly flexible and sweet in top gear and you rarely need to drop below third, which would, theoretically, extend to 85mph.

The pedals are sited close together and the throttle is a roller type, giving sensitive control over an engine that will wind out smoothly to its 4000rpm power peak. (The drophead has an aftermarket rev-counter fitted.)

The brakes have long travel in both and the clutch action is on the heavy side of moderate, but it is no chore to stir the short gearlever that pokes assertively out of the carpeted central tunnel.

Its hefty but precise action is a microcosm of the semi-vintage overall character of the Alvis, rewarding decisive, well-timed movements with mechanical feel.

While its mass-produced rivals were tending towards lower-effort controls – with the dialled-in safety valve of strongly understeer-prone handling to cater to a broader set of skill levels – the TC21/100 still assumed a level of interest in the task in hand.

Above walking pace the heft disappears from the steering and such understeer as there is can be easily countered by boosting the 3-litre through the corner.

So, instead of running wide on tortured rubber like the grocer’s Super Snipe or the bank manager’s Rover, the Alvis feels tidy and biddable, with accurate steering that doesn’t load up but castors smoothly back through the hands and doesn’t feel low-geared.

You expect – and get – some roll in tighter, slower corners, but the general agility is beyond reasonable expectations and not achieved at the expense of the ride: while it’s no magic carpet, it remains level and composed. Download vlc media player for mac os x 10.9.

Driving this pair, it’s easy to see why Alvis ownership has always bred a special kind of loyalty.

In the case of the 3-litre, this meant a diverse group of personalities that embraced everyone from double-amputee war hero Douglas Bader to singer Carmen Miranda (she of the fruit-bearing headgear) via Hitchcock’s favourite composer, Bernard Herrmann, who was a particularly keen Alvis man.

They appreciated the reassuringly expensive 3-litre for its reliability, its brisk turn of speed and the solid value its purchase represented in a fast-changing world of superficially plusher, flashier machines with less enduring appeal.

Smaller than a Standard Steel Bentley and much less frumpy than an Armstrong Siddeley or a Daimler, the Alvis TC21/100 was a car for the driver who drove himself and took a certain amount of pride in doing so.

It still is.

Grey Letterbox

Images: John Bradshaw

Grey Letterbox Tiles

Thanks to Mark Elder, The Motor Shed Ltd

Factfile

Alvis TC21/100

Box
  • Sold/number built 1953-’55/727 (all TC21s)
  • Construction steel chassis, ash frame, steel/aluminium body
  • Engine all-iron, ohv 2993cc straight-six, twin SU carburettors
  • Max power 100bhp @ 4000rpm
  • Max torque 152Ib ft @ 2500rpm
  • Transmission four-speed manual, RWD
  • Suspension: front independent, by wishbones, coil springs rear live axle, semi-elliptic leaf springs; telescopic dampers f/r
  • Steering Burman recirculating ball
  • Brakes hydraulic drums
  • Length 15ft 2in (4623mm)
  • Width 5ft 6in (1676mm)
  • Height 5ft 2½in (1588mm)
  • Wheelbase 9ft 3½in (2832mm)
  • Weight 3500Ib (1588kg)
  • Mpg 20
  • 0-60mph 15 secs
  • Top speed 100mph
  • Price new £1821
  • Price now £25-60,000*

*Prices correct at date of original publication

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