It spins freely and effortlessly at your behest so that the Spider always feels lively and sounds expensively rich and smooth.
There’s that usefully long third in a light, accurate floor-shift ’box as you wind out to 5000rpm and snick neatly into top for 90mph-plus cruising.
The Spider stops strongly – those big brakes again, with 148sq ft of lining per ton of car – and rides softly. Best of all, it steers delectably.
It’s light enough that you never feel weary, plus accurate and sensitive enough to make the best of the car’s flat and lithe deportment, even on surfaces that would make almost anything similarly fast and ancient just feel scary and old.
You can spot the Lancia Aurelia B24 Convertible by its more upright windscreen and opening quarterlights
In 1956, Lancia replaced the B24 Spider with the Convertible. The intention was to make the soft-top B24 more habitable and watertight.
The Convertible has a conventionally proportioned ’screen that’s a better match for the hood and bigger, deeper doors with external handles, quarterlights and wind-down glass.
The body looks superficially similar to the Spider but they share no panels, plus it had full-sized bumpers to fend off marauding American sedans.
The B24 Convertibles were built through to the end of Aurelia production in ’58 – to the tune of 521 examples, all left-hand drive.
The Lancia Aurelia B24 Convertible’s cabin packs a touch more glamour; all were left-hand drive with seats more shaped than the Spider’s
These were in two separate runs; the first 150 were mechanically in line with the 5th Series Aurelia B20 GT (so slightly less power, but more torque), while the second batch of 371 cars made between 1957 and ’58 had the latest 6th Series tweaks that gave 112bhp and, on the final versions, the fuel tank in the boot floor rather than behind the seats.
Visually, these later cars had a higher rear-wing line and a different bootlid.
Gerald Batt’s Convertible is one of the later type, which he bought from its second owner, a French architect, in Paris seven years ago.
“This is the first time that I’ve run it with the hardtop off,” confesses the serial Lambda owner. For him this is almost a “modern” Lancia.
The Lancia Aurelia B24 Convertible’s horn button
Under way, it just feels like an ever so slightly more refined, slightly less powerful version of the Spider, which is to say that it is very nice indeed.
Only in the context of the earlier car could you begin to criticise its exquisite but subtly more conventional lines.
While its extra kilos of bulk and handful fewer brake horsepower must tell somewhere in its acceleration, you’d be hard-pressed to notice.
The Lancia Aurelia B24 Convertible is fitted with the same Carello lamps as the Spider
It gathers speed with the same eager composure, corners with much the same neutral and supple assurance, and stops possibly better; the Convertible’s front brakes are bigger.
If it is slightly more Gran Turismo than sports car – in the way that the 5th and 6th Series B20s were less aggressive than previous GTs – then the creator knew its customers well.
I love the idea of a semi-hot B50 Cabriolet as an alternative to a big Mercedes-Benz or Alvis drophead if I needed four seats.
The Lancia Aurelia B24 Convertible’s all-alloy V6 packs 112bhp
If I needed only two, though, I would probably be quite satisfied with the wonderful B24 Convertible.
But if I was not ‘price sensitive’, then the purity of the Spider would always win out.
The B24 Spider – maybe the most desirable Lancia of all – leaves you with an impression of precision mechanisms in near-perfect harmony, and it is hard to pick fault with it.
Images: Tony Baker
This was first in our February 2012 magazine; all information was correct at the date of original publication
Factfiles
Lancia Aurelia B50 Cabriolet
- Sold/number built 1950-’52/265
- Construction steel chassis and body
- Engine all-alloy 1754cc V6
- Max power 56bhp @ 4000rpm
- Max torque 78Ib ft @ 3000rpm
- Transmission four-speed manual, RWD
- Suspension: front sliding pillar rear semi-trailing arms, coils
- Steering worm and sector
- Brakes drums, inboard at rear
- 0-60mph 25 secs
- Top speed 80mph
- Mpg 27
- Price new n/a
Lancia Aurelia B24 Spider
- Sold/number built 1955/240
- Construction steel monocoque
- Engine all-alloy 2451cc V6
- Max power 118bhp @ 5000rpm
- Max torque 126Ib ft @ 3500rpm
- Transmission four-speed manual, RWD
- Suspension: front sliding pillar rear de Dion
- Steering worm and sector
- Brakes drums, inboard at rear
- 0-60mph 12 secs
- Top speed 112mph
- Mpg 22
- Price new £3500
Lancia Aurelia B24 Convertible
- Sold/number built 1956-’58/521
- Construction steel monocoque
- Engine all-alloy 2451cc V6
- Max power 112bhp @ 5000rpm
- Max torque 135Ib ft @ 3500rpm
- Transmission four-speed manual, RWD
- Suspension: front sliding pillar rear de Dion
- Steering worm and sector
- Brakes drums, inboard at rear
- 0-60mph 12 secs
- Top speed 110mph
- Mpg 22
- Price new £3500
Enjoy more of the world’s best classic car content every month when you subscribe to C&SC – get our latest deals here
READ MORE
Lancia Aurelia B12: seductive saloon
Bristol 405 vs Lancia Aurelia B10: focus on the finer things
Troubled succession: Lancia Aurelia and Lancia Flaminia
Martin Buckley
Senior Contributor, Classic & Sports Car