AC Greyhound

The AC Greyhound (1959–1963) was a 2+2 version of the Ace and Aceca automobiles made by AC Cars of Thames Ditton, Surrey, England and announced for the opening of the Motor Show in October 1959. The Greyhound, of which 83 examples were built, had a two-door, four-seater aluminium body, and inherited most of the technical components of the Ace and Aceca but it had a wheelbase 10 inches or 250mm longer and coil springs in place of a transverse leaf spring at the front:


 * ladder-frame chassis
 * independent coil spring suspension front and rear. Unlike the Ace and Aceca the rear suspension used semi-trailing arms.
 * 4-speed manual gearbox, overdrive optional
 * rack and pinion steering;
 * 11.75 in disc brake front, 11 in drum brake rear

Various straight-six engines were fitted:
 * 1.991-litre AC Cars OHC (75 bhp @ 4500 rpm; 1000 kg)
 * 1.971-litre Bristol 100D2 OHV, (125 bhp @ 5750 rpm; 1015 kg)
 * 2.216-litre Bristol (105 bhp @ 4700 rpm; 1093 kg)
 * 2.553-litre Ford Zephyr engine (up to 170 bhp @ 5500; 1040 kg)



A 2-litre Bristol engined car with overdrive tested by The Motor magazine in 1961 had a top speed of 110 mph and could accelerate from 0-60 mph in 11.4 seconds. A fuel consumption of 21.8 mpgimp was recorded. The test car cost £3185 including taxes.