Leach (automobile)

Leach-Biltwell Motor Company
Industry Automobile manufacturing
Founded Los Angeles, California, United States (1919 (1919))
Founder Martin Andrew Leach
Defunct 1924 (1924)
Headquarters Los Angeles, California, United States
Products Power-Plus Six

Leach-Biltwell Motor Company designed, engineered, manufactured, and distributed luxury automobiles in the early 1920s. They used a Continental 303.1 cubic inch inline six-cylinder engine. Some of the advanced features of the Power-Plus Six included a tilt and telescoping steering column, removable steering wheel (to be used as an anti-theft feature) and a directional signal/stop light box on the rear fender (with the control switch on the dashboard).

Perhaps the most distinctive feature of the Power-Plus Six was the pillarless "California top" that was a popular accessory for open touring cars in the 1920s. This top effectively made the car a "hardtop," thirty years before the hardtop-convertible became a popular body style in the United States. Body styles included both two and four door models.

Leach cars were high-priced for the day, and the company found itself in financial hot water by 1923. It closed its shutters in early 1924 after a grand total of about 250 cars (chassis with and without factory bodies) were produced.

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, October 04, 2012. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.