non-Sadler Car Company cars One of Sadler's earliest cars was a 1939
American Bantam panel truck that had been Sadler's Auto Electric's delivery vehicle. Sadler completely rebuilt the truck and engine, added a column shift of his own design, and converted it into a convertible with a soft top that he sewed himself. Sadler did one track outing in the
MG TD that he and wife Anne were given as a wedding present by Sadler's father. The first car he campaigned seriously was a 1949
Hillman Minx. Sadler replaced the car's original four-cylinder engine with a
Ford V8-60 flathead V8. Sadler raced a
Singer Sports in 1954. He also made a few appearances in a
Triumph TR2 as driver for Southam Sales and Service in 1955 and 1956. Sadler bought
Jaguar D-Type XKD 545 after the car suffered a crash in 1960 at Watkins Glen. He rebuilt it and raced the car at least twice. He later sold it, at one point offering to sell it to
Brock Yates for $2000.00. It appears that it was eventually sold to
John Cannon.
Sadler Mk.1 Sadler built his first special, the Mk.1, over the winter of 1953–54. He made a multi-tubular chassis of mild steel for it. Much of the car's running gear and original powertrain came from a
Jowett Javelin sedan. The front suspension was independent, with longitudinal torsion bar springs. At the rear was the Jowett's
live axle, also suspended on torsion bars. Sadler changed the final drive ratio by using a set of 4.11:1 gears from a Studebaker. The steering system used a rack-and-pinion from a
Morris Minor installed upside down, with Morris tie rods and Jowett steering arms, and gave two turns lock-to-lock. Power came from the Jowett
overhead valve (OHV)
flat-four engine fitted with a reground camshaft, dual valve springs with competition Jowett outer springs and Austin Healey inner springs,
Jupiter R1 pistons, and a lightened flywheel. The Jowett's transmission was also used. The car debuted in 1954 at Watkins Glenn, fitted with simple aluminum torpedo bodywork and cycle fenders. In January 1955 work started on a new enveloping fiberglass body. During the winter of 1955–56 the Jowett engine and transmission were replaced with a
Standard wet liner inline-four engine from a Triumph TR2, and Triumph four-speed transmission. Sadler designed and built his own custom
fuel injection system for this engine. The Triumph engine threw a rod at the
Harewood Acres circuit on 4 August. Sadler replaced the damaged four-cylinder with a Canadian-built 1956
Chevrolet small-block V8 displacing and making with dual four-barrel carburetors. The TR2 flywheel, clutch,
bell housing, and transmission were carried over, and an adapter was made to mate the engine to the bellhousing. Sadler also built a new rear suspension that replaced the original
Panhard rod with a custom frame to reduce wheelspin. The final drive ratio was changed to 3.54:1
Sadler Mk.2 Wheelspin continued to be a problem with the Mk.1, and Sadler felt that an
independent rear suspension (IRS) was the solution. He was already planning to race the car overseas, so it would have to comply with new rules enacted by the
Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) dictating certain basic dimensions. He had also acquired a 1934 ENV
preselector gearbox. To add the IRS, accommodate the new transmission, and comply with FIA rules, he decided that a new chassis was needed, and this led to the Mk.2 being built. Using the ENV preselector allowed the car to dispense with clutch, pressure plate, and flywheel. The gearbox was mounted at the rear of the car. With this close-ratio 4-speed unit, the next gear could be selected at any time, and the shift triggered by cycling the clutch pedal. For the Mk.2, Sadler laid out a ladder chassis with main tubes of diameter
chromoly steel. It was sized so that the cockpit would be wide, as required by the FIA. The Jowett kingpins and upper wishbones were carried over from the Mk.1, as was the Morris Minor steering rack, although in the Mk.2 the rack was moved forward. The front torsion bar springs used in the Mk.1 were replaced by a lower transverse
leaf spring. Initially the drum brakes and
wire wheels were Austin-Healey pieces. The rear suspension was Sadler's original design. He took the rear axle from a 1940 Ford V8 and cut the axle tubes cut off, then machined the housing sides to accept roller bearings and adapter plates. Spicer 1310 U-joints from a 1950 Canadian Chrysler were adapted to fit modified GMC 3 ton truck propeller shaft sections with splines, that then mated with Spicer 1350 U-joints that in turn attached to the axle stubs. The rear wheels were located by two long A-arms, and the wheels suspended by a transverse leaf made to Sadler's specifications. The car underwent several updates. The original 265 CID V8 was later replaced with a Canadian-built version of the 1957 Corvette engine fitted with a Duntov cam, lightened valves, a Delco dual-point distributor, and a trio of two-barrel carburetors in place of the original dual four-barrels. The engine was bored out to . After returning from England, Sadler replaced the Healey front drum brakes with Triumph discs and installed a new body. Rear radius rods were also added later, as were front lower A-arms and Armstrong springs and shock absorbers. Sadler's 1958 win at Watkins Glen in the Mk.2 caught the attention of Earl G. Nisonger, president of the Nisonger Corporation, an auto parts supply company and British parts importer handling
Smiths products. Nisonger convinced Sadler to replace the used running gear on the Mk.2 with new parts, and hired
Bob Said to drive the car.
Sadler Mk.3 After the updates to the Mk.2 were completed, Nisonger commissioned Sadler to build a completely new car that he would also sponsor for the 1959 racing season. The Sadler Mk.3 that resulted was smaller, lower, and lighter than Sadler's earlier designs, with a more powerful engine. The first car was built over the course of seven weeks, for a cost of $10,000. The Mk.3 had a wheelbase of and tracks of in front and in back. The car weighed . Instead of a Mk.2 style ladder chassis of large-diameter tubes, the Mk.3 had a space frame of square-section seamless chromoly tubing. In front was an upper and lower A-arm suspension with coil springs over Koni shock absorbers. In back Sadler installed a low-pivot
swing axle with trailing arms. A Girling
disc brake with aluminum caliper was at each wheel. Steering was by rack-and-pinion, and the differential was a
Halibrand quick change unit. The car's engine was a 283 CID block bored and stroked out to , with a compression ratio of 11:1, a Racer Brown "Super-Torque #2" camshaft, and
Hilborn fuel injection. Power output was . The transmission was a
BorgWarner T-10 four-speed, and both engine and transmission were offset to the left. The car that Nisonger sponsored raced as the Nisonger KLG Special, named for the
KLG sparkplug line that the Smiths Group had bought from
Kenelm Lee Guinness. Drivers were Sadler, Paul O'Shea, and Bruce Kessler. A total of eight Mk.3s were built in 1959. Years later Sadler built a new Mk.3, largely out of spare parts, which he campaigned in vintage races.
Sadler-Meyer Special John van Meyer owned a cycle-fendered Special built for prewar road racing that he campaigned in early SCCA road races and hillclimbs. The car started with a Ford Flathead V8, which was first replaced by a Cadillac engine, and later with a Pontiac V8. In 1958 Meyer approached Sadler to have him update the car and return it to competitive form. Sadler carried over the Pontiac V8, Borrani wire wheels and
De Dion tube rear suspension from Meyer's old roadster, but fabricated a new ladder chassis and added an enveloping body. The car was completed in 1959. The Sadler-Meyer carried Meyer to his second New York State Hillclimb Championship in 1959, and set fastest time-of-day at the
Giants Despair Hillclimb in 1960, 1961 and 1962. Meyer eventually sold the Sadler-Meyer and moved on to other cars. The Sadler-Meyer has been restored twice; once in the 1980s by owner Robert Fernando, after which it appeared in historic racing events, and again in 2008, this time with input from Sadler. Over the years the car's body was revised, with changes that include enclosed side pipes, Plexiglas side curtains, a recontoured radiator opening and extended nose, and a clear cover over the engine intake that replaced the original prominent scoop. In its current state the car is powered by what started out as a small-block Chevrolet V8 stroked out to . The intake is an
Offenhauser manifold and six
Stromberg 97 carburetors. Engine output was measured to be at 6500 rpm. Other features include a BorgWarner T10 4-speed transmission, Halibrand quick change differential, solid rotor front disc brakes, inboard rear drums, and Halibrand
centerlock wheels. The car was raced in the 2009 Colorado Grand and then shown at the Greenwich Concours d’Elegance.
Sadler Mk.4 Just a single Mk.4 was built. It was a simplified version of the Mk.3, with a
live axle in place of the earlier car's IRS. The car was built for David Greenblatt. At some point the engine received a Latham
supercharger. Racing sponsorship was provided by Gorries Downtown Chevrolet Oldsmobile, a car dealership in Toronto that billed itself as "Canada's Corvette Headquarters". The Mk.4 was raced as the "Gorries Sadler Corvette". Greenblatt won the 1960 Quebec Drivers Championship in the car. Greenblatt later partnered with Luigi Cassiani to launch their own line of cars called the Dailu. The Sadler Mk.4 influenced their first car, the Dailu MK I. The degree of influence is described as ranging from providing the concept, to the frame design, up to the Dailu MK I being a rebody of the Sadler. The Dailu MK I adapted an IRS from a 1961
Jaguar XK-E.
Formula Junior Sadler built a series of twelve
Formula Junior race cars, six of which are said to survive. The car was a front-engine design with a steel tubular chassis. The aluminum skin was stressed. Many of the mechanical components used, including the engine, transmission, and axle, were
British Motor Corporation (BMC) parts from their
Austin-Healey Sprite model. List price was $2,995 complete.
Sadler Sportkart Sadler built a line of
go-karts called the Sadler Sportkart. The product served as a time-filler between work on the larger racing cars. Engine options ranged from a single engine kart up to a dual engine, with the 2.2 hp model priced at $185.50 and the 15 hp model costing $350. Drive for the single, offset engine model went to the nearest rear wheel, with power taken to the opposite side by a driveshaft. A total of 30 karts were built. Production of the Sportkart ended in 1961.
Sadler Formula 3 Sadler built a single
Formula Three open wheel racer for a client in Buffalo, New York. Braking was provided by two Al-fin drum brakes in front and just a single one in the rear. Powering the car was a parallel twin engine as used in the
Triumph Tiger. The car is said to still exist.
Sadler Formula Libre Sadler built two
Formula Libre cars, one with the engine in the front and one with the engine in back. His first attempt was essentially a front-engined Formula Junior car with a Chevrolet V8 shoehorned into it, which did not leave room for a clutch or a gearbox. Having the engine connected directly to the car's differential meant that when the engine was running the car was moving, and it would stall if its speed dropped too low. This car was never raced. Sadler's next Formula Libre used the brakes and front suspension from the earlier car in a new chassis with a Chevrolet V8 mounted behind the driver. This car had a clutch, but no gearbox, and so had only one forward speed. The engine was tuned to have a wide powerband.It was nicknamed the "Formula Ferocious". This was the first time that a Chevrolet small-block V8 was installed in a modern rear-engined racing car. Its pioneering use of a mid-mounted domestic V8 engine set the pattern for future F-5000 cars. The car debuted at the 1960 Formula Libre race at Watkins Glen, where it was driven by
Peter Ryan. It ran as high as fifth place until the engine failed. The Formula Ferocious was retired, then later restored for vintage racing.
Sadler Mk.5 Two Sadler Mk.5s were built in 1960 for the 1961 season. The cars were sponsored by the
Canadian Comstock Company, with the racing program under the auspices of Comstock Vice president Charles I. Rathgeb Junior. The cars were originally raced as Comstock-Sadlers. Sadler laid out a space frame chassis for the Mk.5, and used aluminum bodywork with flop-down doors. The front suspension used Healey parts, and a rack-and-pinion steering rack from a Morris Minor. Brakes were Girling discs, outboard from an Austin-Healey in front, and inboard from an MGA in back, with coil-over dampers also from Girling. The resulting cars had a wheelbase of , front and rear tracks of respectively, and a dry weight of . Power came from a Chevrolet small-block V8. The cars' first engine was a 283 CID V8 bored and stroked to . Later a small-block enlarged to was installed, with a compression ratio of 13:1 or 14:1. Cadillac connecting rods were installed, and large valves. Claimed horsepower for this larger engine was . In both cases the engine was mounted behind the driver, making the Sadler Mk.5 the first mid-engined sports-racing car powered by a small block Chevy V8 engine. The Mk.5 had two forward speeds. Sadler built a two-speed transaxle out of a Halibrand quick-change differential with a rear housing extended to accommodate another set of gears, and used Ford synchronizers. The shift pattern was low-neutral-high. One month after the Mk.5s debuted Sadler closed down his company and left auto racing. After a disappointing season, and facing difficulty sourcing a replacement transaxle, the Comstock team replaced the Sadler Mk.5 with a new front-engined sports racer with a chassis designed by Dick Syson, who was also Sadler's successor as Technical Editor of Canada Track & Traffic. The new car was the Comstock EXP. Veedol Motor Oil later sponsored a Mk.5, which was renamed either "Miss Veedol" or the "Veedol Special". A Mk.5 was purchased by
Peter Broeker and converted into the
Stebro Mark III by having its wheelbase stretched by and a conventional transaxle substituted for the two speed modified Halibrand differential. One Mk.5 was ultimately destroyed in a fire. The remains of the other car, originally driven by
Nat Adams, were later bought by Jack Boxstrom and restored. After many years Boxstrom sold the car to a new owner in England. It remains involved in vintage racing.
Formula Super Vee In 1972 Sadler built a
Formula Super Vee racer for his personal use. ==Aircraft==