Motor Car History
Technical History of the Motor Car
Toggle Navigation
  • Home
  • Makes and models
  • Motor car History
  • Motor Car Guide
    • Engines By Make
    • Engine Components
    • Electrical & electronic
    • Gearbox & Drivetrain
    • Induction & Exhaust
    • Suspension Types
    • Tyres wheels Brakes
    • Vehicle Body types
  • Trivia
  • links
    • Advertise your business
  • Register
  • Top rated

Manufacturer A-Z

  • ALL
  • A
  • B
  • C
  • D
  • E
  • F
  • G
  • H
  • I
  • J
  • K
  • L
  • M
  • N
  • O
  • P
  • Q
  • R
  • S
  • T
  • U
  • V
  • W
  • X
  • Y
  • Z
Britain
Manufacturers
1890s

Alldays & Onions History

Automotive manufacturer of Great Britain from 1898 to 1918.

 Alldays & Onions History

Alldays & Onions was an English automobile maker, it manufactured cars from 1898 to 1918. The cars were sold under the Alldays name. The company also built an early British built tractor, the Alldays General Purpose Tractor.

 History

The Alldays & Onions Pneumatic Engineering Co. of Birmingham, was a company founded in 1889 by the merger of the long established Onions (formed by John Onions in 1650) and William Allday & Co. (formed by William Allday in 1720) engineering companies. They became known for their engineering and blacksmithing equipment. Like many such companies at the time they turned to bicycle manufacture and sold a range under the Alldays name. They also started making motorcycles in 1903 under the Alldays-Matchless name; these had no connection with the London based Matchless company, and in 1915 presumably following representations from them, the name was changed to Allon. Manufacture of these continued until 1927. 

In 1898, the company produced its first car, the Traveller, a quadricycle made in private and commercial forms, steered by a wheel. It had an unsprung rear end, power generated by a 4 hp De Dion single-cylinder motor. However, series production did not start until 1903/4 with the 7 hp model. Larger commercial vehicles of up to 5 tons were also made in the years preceding the first World War and saw service during the conflict.

The company hit commercial success with the 1.6-litre, vertical-twin side-valve 10/12, which was made from 1905 to 1913. It was popular with commercial drivers and did well in period formula events and hill-climbs. A 16 hp 4-cylinder joined the lineup in 1906, and in 1908, the Enfield Autocar Co. was acquired. Shortly afterward, the range was rationalized, with most models being sold under both brand-names. The Alldays contribution to the equation was the well-established twin- and four-cylinders that put out 14 and 20 hp, always shaft-driven. A 30/35 hp six-cylinder was listed from 1911 to 1914, compressed-air starters being optional in 1911. In 1913, the 990 cc V-twin Midget cyclecar was introduced, featuring air cooling and shaft drive, selling at ₤138.10s. An 1100 cc 4-cylinder version with a bullnose radiator appeared in 1914, popular at the price of ₤175. Pair-cast side-valve four-cylinders rated at 12/14, 16/20, and 25/30 hp filled out the immediate pre-war offerings. arger trucks with capacities of up Entering service in 1911, each vehicle carried two series-wound Siemens motors located side by side beneath the floor. each driving a rear wheel via worm gearing countershaft and sprocket an chain. A combined output of 40hp was controlled by a tram-type controller with five running postions and reverse, and there were two braking systems. The 28-seat transverse-seat bodies were from Hurst Nelson & Co Ltd. Motherwell, Scotland, the Leeds vehicles having front-entrance bodies one-man operation and Bradford vehice slightly larger bodies with rear trance platforms. Commercial vehicle production came to a halt in 1918, following a merger with Enfield Autocar Co, thereby establishing Enfield-Allday Mo- tors Ltd being established, Motors Ltd.

Alldays & Onions merged with Enfield, a company they had owned since 1907, and produced cars called Enfield-Allday until 1925.

Enfield-Allday

Categories
Britain
Title
Alldays & Onions (1898-1918)

Description

Have you Say: Rate this
Overall Vote
80% - 1 vote
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
1. Performance & Specification
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Built to last?
2. Appearance Overall *Cool factor*
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
How good it looks ?
Related items
British Automotive 1910s | British Automotive 1900s | British Automotive 1890s | De Dion | Commercial vehicles | Birmingham | cyclecar

Technical

Technical
  • Main Car Models

    YearModelEngine 
    1898–1904Traveller4 hpDe Dion single 500 ccQuadricycle type. Two-seater - passenger in front of driver. Wheel steering. Rear "suspension" unsprung.
    1903–19087Flat twin 7 hpRear-engined. Four-seater. Although not put into production until 1903 this car had actually been shown at the 1900 National Show. Described as being of "novel construction" with a mixed shaft, gear and belt transmission, combined with great inefficiency.
    1903–19077 and 86.5 hp single (7 hp) and an eight hp single.Shaft drive
    1905–191310/121611 cc twinThree- (early) or four-speed gearbox. Shaft drive. Van version from 1906.
    1906163402 cc pair-cast four-cylinder 
    1906–191120/253261 cc four-cylinder 
    1908-1214/182500 cc four-cylinder 
    1911-Expressodel7/8 hpTri-van. Chain drive.
    1911-1430/354891 cc six-cylinderCompressed air starter from 1911.
    1912-1612/142174 cc four-cylinder 
    1912-1616/203012 cc four-cylinder 
    1912-1625/304082 cc four-cylinder 
    1913-14Midget990 cc V twinCyclecar. Van version in 1912.
    19148/101094 cc four-cylinderBullnosed radiator

     

Manuals

Download: Workshop manuals Tech Guides exclusive to registered users.

  • Worldwide
  • Argentina
  • Australia
  • Austria
  • Belgium
  • Brazil
  • British
  • Bulgaria
  • canada
  • Czech
  • Chile
  • Czechoslovakia
  • China
  • Denmark
  • Egypt
  • Finland
  • Greece
  • Guernsey
  • Germany
  • Hungary
  • India
  • Ireland
  • Indonesia
  • Korean
  • Mexico
  • Netherlands
  • New Zealand
  • Norway
  • Philippines
  • Poland
  • Portugal
  • South Africa
  • sweden
  • Romania
  • Turkey
  • Spain
  • Switzerland
  • Taiwan
  • Serbia
  • Uruguay
  • Ukraine
  • United States
  • Venezuela
  • Yugoslavia

log on

Log in to Motor car

  • Forgot your username?
  • Forgot your password?

Welcome To Motor Car

Please help to keep this site active.

  • London UK
  • cyclecar
  • kit-car
  • Yorkshire UK
  • 3 wheel car
  • Commercial vehicles
  • Fibreglass cars
  • Jap Engine
  • British Sports cars
  • Replica cars
  • VW Beetle based
  • British Automotive 1920s
  • British Automotive 1900s
  • British Automotive 1910s
  • British Automotive 1950s
  • British Automotive 1960s
  • British Automotive 1970s
  • British Automotive 1980s
  • British Automotive 1990s
  • British Automotive 2000s

Enjoy all of Motor Car Here


  • You are here:  
  • Motor Car
  • Motor car History
  • Britain
  • Alldays & Onions (1898-1918)

Back to Top

© 2025 Motor Car History