Rochdale Classic Car Show to be hosted at Falinge Park this summer

Date published: 17 February 2020


The annual Rochdale Classic Car Show will be returning this summer at a new venue, whilst celebrating the 60th anniversary of the famous Rochdale Olympic Sports Car.

Hosted by the Rotary Club of Rochdale, the annual car show will be held in Falinge Park on Sunday 26 July 2020, a fitting location as many of the publicity photographs for the Rochdale-manufactured cars were taken at the gates of the park.

The Classic Car Show features vintage, classic and collectable cars and motorcycles, stalls, music, entertainment and refreshments with all profits going to charity.

 

Rochdale Classic Car Show

 

There will be a shuttle bus for visitors from the town centre out to the park. 

The 'Vehicle of the Day' will be chosen by one of the sponsors and presented with a trophy on the day.

Back in 1948, the year of the London Olympic Games, a small company was started in Rochdale, Rochdale Motor Panels. The company produced a series of kit cars, and in 1960 the Rochdale Olympic was created. Named after the games that were held in Rome in 1960 by designer Richard Parker’s wife, Hilary, 2020 marks 60 years since the launch of the Rochdale Olympic.

Richard was later ‘poached’ by Colin Chapman, and went on to design several Lotus sports cars.

The car was developed and built by Rochdale Motor Panels in Hudson Street, following several successful years building ‘specials’: cars utilising the running gear from the Ford 8 and 10 range of cars.

The Olympic was brand new, based around an innovative, fully-stressed, glass fibre monocoque bodyshell - only the second ever to reach volume manufacture.

Calculations and durability testing had achieved a combination of light weight and strength which resulted in a car of around 12cwt in road going form, and the associated manufacturing process was patented by the Rochdale Motor Panels.

Similar attention was attached to the aerodynamics, with extensive airflow analysis enabling the styling to be optimised to achieve a drag coefficient – comparable even with those of cars being launched today.

This combination of low weight and drag contributed to a car with impressive rates of acceleration and top speed which was not bettered by other sports cars until later in the decade.

Cars could be purchased either complete or in component form - the latter to avoid the punitive levels of purchase tax that were still being applied to car sales in the post-war era, and in total, between 1960 and the mid-70s, approximately 450 were built, latterly moving into a new factory in Littledale Street.

Owing to the durability of the glass fibre construction, many of these cars have survived and their owners are supported by the Rochdale Owners Club who provide technical advice and manufacture spare parts for the marque.

A significant number of these fibreglass bodied cars are still in use today, and the Rochdale Owners Club were in pole position when the Olympic Torch visited Rochdale in the run up to the 2012 London Olympic games.

 

Wensheng Li and Amy Peckover at the Olympic Flame hand over in Rochdale Town Centre, with the 'Rochdale Olympic Cars' in the background

 

Despite the June showers, the town centre was crammed with excited Rochdalians, determined not to miss a once in a lifetime opportunity.

Many of these famous cars will be present at the Rotary Club of Rochdale’s third Classic Car & Bike Show which takes place on Sunday 26 July in Falinge Park, Rochdale.

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