Neracar (United States) The Ner-A-Car Corporation in Syracuse made three models of Neracar. The Type A had solo seating, the original 221 cc two-stroke engine, one headlight, and one taillight. The Type B had a larger engine, two seats, and two headlights. A commercial version, the Type CB, had a pair of headlights, a pair of drum brakes on the rear wheel, and a steel utility box rated to carry 150 pounds. In the US a 255 cc model was introduced in 1924. A five-speed Neracar was advertised as a "Christmas Special" for US$175 in November 1927. Production of the Neracar ended in 1927.
Ner-A-Car (United Kingdom) British licensee Sheffield-Simplex began production of Ner-A-Cars in 1921 with the original American design with the 221 cc two-stroke engine and the friction drive transmission In 1923 the engine was enlarged to 285 cc, with a 70 mm bore and a 74 mm stroke. Sheffield-Simplex developed a newer version with a Blackburne four-stroke side-valve engine, displacing 348 cc with a 71 mm bore and an 88 mm stroke, driving through a three-speed
Sturmey-Archer manual transmission. This version was introduced in 1925 as the Model C, with the earlier two-stroke friction-drive model continuing as the Model B. A Sports C, with an overhead-valve version of the Model C engine, was also offered. A de-luxe model was introduced in 1926 with swingarm rear suspension controlled by quarter-elliptic
leaf springs, a bucket seat with air cushions, and a fairing with an adjustable Triplex windshield and an instrument panel. A countershaft concentric with the swingarm pivot was driven by a chain from the transmission and drove the rear wheel. The addition of rear suspension increased the wheelbase of the de-luxe model to Production of the Ner-A-Car at Sheffield-Simplex ended in the autumn of 1926. ==Notes==