Home » ‘Flexitor’ Rubber Springs And ‘Cruciform’ Frames: The Austin Champ And Gipsy 4x4s Were Deeply Strange

‘Flexitor’ Rubber Springs And ‘Cruciform’ Frames: The Austin Champ And Gipsy 4x4s Were Deeply Strange

Austin 4x4s Ts2
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What surprises many people is that every single famous, high-volume off-road vehicle — the Land Rover Defender, the Toyota FJ, the Ford Bronco, the International Scout, etc. — was inspired by the World War II Jeep. I myself had a hard time believing that since off-road attributes seem so obvious you’d think everyone would converge to the same thing naturally and without influence, but nope. The World War II Jeep was the bright light in the sky that opened the eyes of all the rest, and that includes Austin.

It all started with the Austin Champ, which car culture website Silodrome writes about in its article “A Brief History of the Austin Champ – Everything You Need To Know“:

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Once the war was over however and the Nazis had been suitably dealt with, the British Army decided that they wanted a vehicle like the Jeep but better: a purpose built combat vehicle that could do rather more than a Jeep. And so in that aura of “the British are best at everything” sort of thinking they began the process of creating their very own “Rolls-Royce of Jeeps” complete with an actual Rolls-Royce engine.

[…]

The first thirty prototypes of the new vehicle were made by British car maker Wolseley and named the  “Wolseley Mudlark”, presumably because they were intended to be a vehicle well suited to larking about in the mud.

These Mudlarks were fitted with the Rolls-Royce B40 No. 1 Mk 2A petrol/gasoline engine. There is some debate as to whether there were only thirty Mudlarks made, one was listed as being a “saloon” which would mean an enclosed car and it may have been additional to the thirty.

The article goes on:

The Fighting Vehicles Research and Development Establishment left no stone unturned in their quest for the “Holy Grail” of a new combat vehicle that front line soldiers could trust their lives to. There were to be just three trucks given the “CT” Combat designation. The smallest of these was to be the “Truck, 1/4 Ton, 4×4, CT” which would be more commonly referred to as the “Austin Champ”.

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It’s an absolutely fantastic little machine — diminutive in size, and outfitted with an 80 HP 2.8-liter Rolls Royce engine or 75 HP 2.66-liter Austin inline-four engine. The motors sent power through a five-speed manual transmission to wheels suspended from a fully independent suspension mounted to a solid steel frame. But it wasn’t a ladder-frame, it was a “cruciform” frame, which should provide additional torsional stiffness, while in theory allowing for some interior packaging advantages as well:

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Image: eBay via eWillys

You can see in the image above the four longitudinal torsion-bars that each attach to a lower control arm to act as a spring. That’s the rear of the car up close and the front in the background; you’ll notice that rear diff looks a bit large. Here’s why (again, from Silodrome):

The need to place the transfer box at the rear and make it in unit with the differential came from the cruciform shape of the chassis which precluded attaching the transfer case to the gearbox in the more common way. This led to the Austin Champ gaining a rather unusual feature: the reversing gear was located in the transfer box meaning that the Champ had five forward gears, and five reverse gears. So, the Champ could do over 50 mph forwards or backwards, which could be rather handy if one needed to beat a hasty retreat.

That’s nuts!

Check out this awesome video showing the British military putting the Champ through its paces:

Anyway, this article isn’t even about the Champ, it’s about its successor, the Gipsy, whose name is an unacceptable slur and whose history Austingipsy.net explains here:

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The Austin Gipsy was first conceptualized in 1956, they wanted to build a civilian replacement for the military Austin Champ that could compete with other manufacturers like Land Rover and Jeep. The Gipsy was first announced in February 1958 and was intended as a rugged cross-country machine. It had a rounded box-section chassis and four wheel independent suspension.

The G1M10 (Series 1) was built at Longbridge East works and had a wheel base of 90” it rode on torsional rubber springs called Flexitors on which were mounted trailing arms, the Flexitor units gave a soft ride and had a self damping effect, combined with hydraulic dampers the Gipsy had the ability to travel more smoothly over rough terrain than leaf sprung vehicles. It had a load capacity of 10 cwt.

The differentials had a 5:12-1 ratio and were mounted up on the chassis, there were plans to mount the brakes inboard on the sides of the differentials as well but this couldn’t be done due to legal requirements.

What the? Seriously? Rubber springs?

Indeed, as pointed out in the video above by YouTube channel Austin Gipsy Site, the Austin Gipsy had hollow-cylinder-shaped rubber springs that, as I understand it, were vulcanized to a metal tube on the outside and then vulcanized to some kind of shaft on the inside — a shaft that was connected to trailing arms on which the wheel hubs bolted.

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Out back, you’ve got a similar metal tube with rubber Flexitor springs, but it’s been split in two to accommodate the driveshaft:

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Here’s a closer look at those trailing arms. They’re rigidly mounted to the shaft that goes inside the “Flexitor” spring. You can see that each halfshaft fits through a hole in each trailing arm to drive each wheel:

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Here you can see the bearing carrier bolted to the rear trailing arm:

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Here’s a wide-out of the rear suspension:

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Up front, you’ll see that not only does the halfshaft go through the trailing arm, but so does the steering tie rod!:

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You may notice that there are no conventional tube-shaped shocks; do the rubber springs act as the dampers?

The answer is: Yes. The rubber springs do provide some damping, but actually there is an additional damper. Check it out:

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There’s a link on the trailing arms that rotates a shaft in what appears to be a cast aluminum damper that contains little pistons. Here’s another look (this is the front right shock, the above is the front left):

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And here’s a wide shot from the rear (again, the front right).

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That weird suspension mounts to an oval-shaped frame made up of two welded U-shapes (one on top, one on bottom):

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The differentials are mounted to the frame via these interesting brackets that drop down from the frame:

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Here’s a Gipsy brochure showing some more hardware. Here’s the four-speed transmission:

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Here’s the frame and the two available engines, which include either a 2.2-liter gas engine or a 2.2-liter diesel. Austin Memories describes the engines in its article, writing:

[The Gipsy] was powered by the 2,199 cc four-cylinder petrol engine that was in the Austin A70 Hereford. It had proved to be reliable and although only producing 62 bhp @ 4,000 rpm power is not everything, torque is more important for this type of vehicle at 110 lbs/ft at just 1,500 rpm. Also available was a diesel engine of 2,178 cc which had its engine speed governed at 3,100 rpm and produced 55 bhp.

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Here you can see different body variations:

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And here are some Austin Gipsys working on the farm:

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I could go on and on about the Austin Gipsy, but I shouldn’t because this post’s original title was simply: “The Old Me Would Have Bought These Two Austin Gipsys,” in reference to these vehicles I found on Facebook Marketplace:

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$4400 for two?! Seems like a smokin’ deal.

Here’s the seller’s description:

I have 2 Autumn Gipsy’s that I was going to use to make 1 nice one. They are both projects, one has a pretty good body and ran when I put them away, the other has a hard top, and a lot of good parts and pieces the the other one needs. Both are independent suspension. This is just a project that I’m not going to get to. If the ad is up, they are still available. Let’s not waste each other’s time.

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I’d be concerned about parts availability, but otherwise, could you imagine crawling around Moab in an Austin Gipsy? I think the old me actually might have done it.

Screenshots: Austin Gipsy Site (YouTube). Images: Austin or Facebook Marketplace (Mike Patterson) unless otherwise stated.

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Torque
Torque
1 month ago

David you should buy these and then buy yourself some time (to find the parts you’ll need) to get them working by partnering with Beau on a old time “offroad themed scene” with both of these plus an original Ford Bronco” at the dealership to help sell more $$$ Broncos.
No one will have a clue what they are, but they look so fantastic no one will care!

Last edited 1 month ago by Torque
Sklooner
Sklooner
1 month ago

Flexitor sounds like some sort of comic book character

Col Hathi
Col Hathi
1 month ago
Reply to  Sklooner

When Skeletor still had tendons and ligaments

TheDrunkenWrench
TheDrunkenWrench
1 month ago

This is just Timbren torsion axles like any trailer that has “independent” suspension, and typical british dampers. Those dampers are a lot like the ones that were on my MGB.

I’m not sure how reliable their vulcanization process was, but it’s a pretty simple design overall.

4jim
4jim
1 month ago

So many fiddly parts to make. It would seem like that kept a lot of people employed but would be a pain now to keep one of these in good working order.

Slow Joe Crow
Slow Joe Crow
1 month ago

Both the Champ an the Gipsy have German levels of over-engineering. There’s a reason why the comparatively crude Land Rover became the dominant military and civilian 4×4, because it was simpler, cheaper, and easy to fix.
Rubber springs were novel at the time but became a niche item for a time. The original Mini is the best known and largest selling automotive example. They are also popular for heavy truck rear suspension (Foden comes to mind) and various trailers. A number of light motorcycles, scooters, and early mountain bikes used rubber springs

DONALD FOLEY
DONALD FOLEY
1 month ago
Reply to  Slow Joe Crow

Torsilastic suspension (originally BF Goodrich) was used on Eagle, DINA, and some MCI coach buses.

Speedway Sammy
Speedway Sammy
1 month ago

It’s an elegant but fairly complex design. I think the beauty of the Jeeps was the simplicity and ease of repair, pretty easy for any farm boy to keep them going.

Drg84
Drg84
1 month ago
Reply to  Speedway Sammy

My thoughts as well. Complex and delicate parts don’t work well in muddy rough areas.

Etancheite
Etancheite
1 month ago

Flexitors on the front of Alex Moulton New Series bicycles are very very good.

Nicklab
Nicklab
1 month ago
Reply to  Etancheite

Man those are some pricey bikes!

1978fiatspyderfan
1978fiatspyderfan
1 month ago

Hey DT great article. However I feel you really need to learn and publish an article on how the GP came to be. From the army request for such a vehicle. To Bantam auto works created design in short term and with cabled together parts. To the army choosing the design and giving it to Ford to produce. And giving Bantam a contract for jeep trailers as recompense. Bantam auto works from Butler Pa has a annual Jeep festival that has jeeps even you may have never seen. Have you been there? Heard of it?

pizzaman09
pizzaman09
1 month ago

Those rear dampers are simply lever arm shocks as would be typical on any British car at the time made by BMC. They look darn near identical to the rear lever arm shocks in my Austin Healey Sprite.

Hugh Crawford
Hugh Crawford
1 month ago
Reply to  pizzaman09

Yeah, they look like the Armstrongs on my TR3

Occam's Shaving Cream
Occam's Shaving Cream
1 month ago
Reply to  Hugh Crawford

They’re like the rear shocks on the ‘41 Buick I had back in 1979

Tom Herman
Tom Herman
1 month ago

I believe the Mini and maybe the Austin America had rubber springs as well.

TheDrunkenWrench
TheDrunkenWrench
1 month ago
Reply to  Tom Herman

Rubber “cones”, yes. Simple, cheap, and effective.

Pat Rich
Pat Rich
1 month ago

That suspension is still in use today, just not an anything driven.

https://mechanicalelements.com/wp-content/uploads/torsion-axle-works.gif
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rYDSekMVi6s

Very common actually. We have it on a boat trailer. reminds me of the early days of mountain biking with elastomer springs. Great at first, but miserable once they hardened and wore in.

Last edited 1 month ago by Pat Rich
Drg84
Drg84
1 month ago
Reply to  David Tracy

Hey DT, I still have those Jeep hubcaps you were interested in, but I’m guessing you lost your old email when you left the old site. Still interested?

Engine Adventures
Engine Adventures
1 month ago
Reply to  Pat Rich

Yup, very common on trailers. Can be on independent or solid axles, but since the solid beam part doesn’t move vertically it can be mounted high and tight, making for better ground clearance. Also the natural damping feature of the rubber helps (most trailers don’t use shocks) control the ride.

Last edited 1 month ago by Engine Adventures
Brynjaminjones
Brynjaminjones
1 month ago

I also have this setup on a boat trailer. From what I gather, it’s notable because when the rubber fails,the wheel can fall off. I e not had it happen though and I don’t know if the same applies to the Gipsy.

pizzaman09
pizzaman09
1 month ago
Reply to  Pat Rich

I’m designing a spring like that right now for work to use in a helicopter rotor. It’s a perfectly acceptable design for a torsion spring.

Morgan Thomas
Morgan Thomas
1 month ago

For an extreme example of what the Champ design was capable of, ‘Buttercup’ was a V8 powered Champ based buggy built by Grant Page, a stuntman best known for the Mad Max films.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kpAtQ0tbkMc&t=234s

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
1 month ago

That face looks like a good mashup of Land Rover and Mini Moke. These could be a lot of fun, but as previously noted, I’d hate to have to find parts, especially suspension pieces.

StillNotATony
StillNotATony
1 month ago

The old you is still in there, DT. Give in to those desires!! Buy them! BUY THEM!!! YOU KNOW YOU WANT TO!!!

You know you should.

VermonsterDad
VermonsterDad
1 month ago
Reply to  StillNotATony

Buy them. We will think of some change where you need to buy to gipsies later.

Chronometric
Chronometric
1 month ago

Those are fantastic. Now I want one.

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