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    Austin Motor Company revived with retro electric roadster

    Austin is returning to UK roads with a modern interpretation of the Seven roadster – but with a distinctly 21st-century twist.

    Ben Zachariah

    Ben Zachariah

    Road Test Editor

    Ben Zachariah

    Ben Zachariah

    Road Test Editor

    One of Britain’s most prolific car manufacturers of the 20th century is set to make a return.

    Roughly three decades after the brand disappeared from UK roads, the Austin Motor Company is plotting its comeback – but rather than making modern, affordable vehicles for the masses, it’s taken inspiration from its history.

    The Austin Arrow 2 is a lightweight two-seater roadster – in the style of the Austin Seven of 1922 – but featuring an electric powertrain.

    The vehicle is powered by a 15kW electric motor, fed from a 20kWh lithium-ion battery, which the company says is good for 160km of driving range.

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    While performance appears lacklustre – with almost 80 per cent less power than an entry-level Hyundai Inster – the Austin Arrow weighs just 605kg with its battery, giving it a claimed 0-100km/h time of 7.8 seconds.

    The company says the Austin Arrow also has a top speed of 100km/h.

    The original Austin Seven was a popular choice for a budget race car, with the likes of Sir Colin Chapman – the founder of Lotus – successfully campaigning a modified Seven, as did Bruce McLaren.

    Australian motorsport legend Peter Brock also learned his trade on an Austin Seven – racing one around his parents’ farm, despite the car having no brakes or bodywork.

    Behind the revival of Austin is British engineer John Stubbs, who recruited Nigel Gordon-Stewart as CEO and Chairman of the company in recent months – a veteran of TVR, Lamborghini,Lotus, and McLaren (during the F1 road-car era).

    It’s understood Austin has set up manufacturing facilities in India, with each car being made to order – in both left- and right-hand-drive configurations.

    The Austin Arrow is reportedly priced from £31,000 – or just over A$63,200.

    The original founder of Austin, born in 1866, also had a connection with Australia, having moved to Melbourne at the age of 16 to work with his uncle at Langlands Foundry – the city’s first foundry and iron shipbuilder.

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    Ben Zachariah

    Ben Zachariah

    Road Test Editor

    Ben Zachariah

    Road Test Editor

    Ben Zachariah has 20-plus years in automotive media, writing for The AgeDrive, and Wheels, and is an expert in classic car investment.

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