triumphs
[Top] [All Lists]

LBC

To: triumphs@autox.team.net
Subject: LBC
From: GuyotLeonF@aol.com
Date: Sun, 9 Jul 2000 05:22:15 EDT
LBC: Large British Cars?

09/07 (06:17) ROLLS-ROYCE MAKERS RECREATE DISTINCTIVE SMELL 

By John von Radowitz, Science Correspondent, PA News 

Rolls-Royce owners who expect perfection from the world's most exclusive car 
have identified a problem with the latest models - they smell wrong. 

Modern production methods which use leather-clad plastics in place of wood 
are to blame, it is claimed. 

Now, after complaints from several valuable customers, a solution has been 
found. The subtle aroma that defines Rolls-Royce luxury and the sweet smell 
of success for anyone rich enough to own one of the cars has been captured in 
a bottle. 

Rolls-Royce's exclusive coachbuilders, SC Gordon Ltd in Luton, Bedfordshire, 
have started applying the secret-formula scent to the interiors of vehicles 
brought to them for repair. 

Managing director Hugh Hadland, whose customers include Buckingham Palace, 
foreign royalty, showbusiness celebrities and oil sheiks, said: ""Stepping 
into a Rolls-Royce is a sensuous experience, and smell is the most evocative 
of the senses. It's very important. 

"People say they don't understand what we've done, but that their car's come 
back different and better." 

He started investigating the problem about two years ago, after complaints 
from a number of customers. A personal friend, who works in the food 
flavouring industry, offered to help. 

Eventually they discovered what was wrong. Both old and new cars have 
hide-covered interiors which produce a leathery smell. But while the leather 
of the older cars covers a skeletal structure of wood, the substrates used in 
the new cars are moulded plastic. 

Older cars smelled deliciously woody, while in the new models an unpleasant 
plastic odour was creeping through. 

The next step was to produce a chemical solution which mimicked the smell of 
the older cars. After looking at a number of vehicles, a classic 1965 
Rolls-Royce Silver Cloud was used as the model to copy. 

Mr Hadland said: "People assume that the smell is leather, but what we found 
was that a major constituent of it is wood. So we put a lot of wood into the 
artificial scent. 

"On its own it smells quite peculiar, though not unpleasant, but in the car 
it mixes psychologically with sight and other senses to produce a wonderful 
effect." 

He said the smell problem was just one aspect of a quality issue which needed 
to be addressed by the new German owners of Rolls-Royce and Bentley. 

A chief annoyance was window and dashboard switches, and steering console 
arms, which felt lighter and less substantial in the new cars. 

"A switch is not just a switch, any more than a kiss is just a kiss," said Mr 
Hadland. 

He added that to save weight the cars were made of thinner metal than they 
used to be, which led to the whole vehicle "having a different feel". 

Two years ago Volkswagen bought Rolls-Royce and Bentley from Vickers. BMW has 
secured rights to the Rolls-Royce marque and in 2003 is due to start 
producing an all-new model in Goodwood, West Sussex. Bentley will stay with 
VW and continue to be made at Crewe. 

Mr Hadland said he was deeply worried about BMW's plans. He understood the 
company was going to modify the construction process drastically and produce 
a lighter car. 

"I'm sure it will be a very good product for what it is, but it won't be a 
Rolls-Royce as we've known it," he said. "My worst fear is that the marque 
could disappear. The Rolls-Royce as we know it could cease to exist, and that 
would be criminal and tragic." 

A spokeswoman for Rolls-Royce and Bentley at Crewe said: "Some changes may 
have been made necessary by legislation, but I would certainly say there's no 
compromise whatsoever in the way we build cars today. 

"The one thing we pride ourselves on is ensuring that anything we do is what 
the customer wants. VW is very, very aware of our unique identity within the 
group. I would say our standards in terms of motor manufacture are getting 
better and better." 

BMW's `Project Rolls-Royce' spokesman Fritz Fruth said Mr Hadland's fears 
were unfounded and the company was taking enormous trouble to ensure the new 
model would be an authentic Rolls-Royce. 

He said: "A BMW car disguised as a Rolls-Royce would never be accepted by 
Rolls-Royce customers. We know how delicate these questions are. It was 
perfectly clear to us right from the beginning that a Rolls-Royce has to be a 
Rolls-Royce, not a BMW derivative." 

He said the company had spoken to a wide range of dealers, customers, 
motoring clubs, and historians before coming up with the design concept. The 
exterior design had now been finalised but was still under wraps. 

Just thought some of you might be interested in this story

Léon

Triumph Sports Six Club 
International Liaison Secretary
1963 Triumph Vitesse 2-Litre Convertible (with wood and leather)
Wimbledon, London, England.

<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>
  • LBC, GuyotLeonF <=