Filed under: Classics, Convertible, Auctions, Government/Legal, Rolls-Royce, India, Specialty, Luxury
You expect to find all sorts of optional equipment on a Rolls-Royce. It could be pearl-inlayed veneers or a special paint job. But this example is something else entirely.
Crafted for Sahib Bahadur – also known as Umed Singh II, Maharaja of Kotah – this 1925 Rolls-Royce New Phantom was coachbuilt by Barker & Company of London and includes some rather unusual accessories. Namely, a mounted shotgun, rifle stand, Lantaka cannon, a pair of search lights and a machine gun fitted to a matching trailer.
The car was custom built for the Maharaja for the purpose of tiger hunting, and though requested by the Indian Consulate for donation to a museum, is now going up for auction at the hands of Bonhams at the Quail Lodge mid-August, where it’s expected to fetch between 0,000 and milllion.
Though the armaments aren’t depicted, you can check the car out in the high-resolution gallery and the press release after the jump for a closer look.
Continue reading Maharaja’s tiger-hunting Rolls-Royce brings the firepower to Quail auction
Maharaja’s tiger-hunting Rolls-Royce brings the firepower to Quail auction originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 28 Jul 2011 09:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink | Email this | Comments
Autoblog
No related posts.