The first Swift car of the conventional type was the twin-cylinder 7-horsepower, later 10-horsepower, of 1904. This was shortly afterwards joined by the four-cylinder 12/14, which continued in a bewildering number of guises until the First World War. In 1904, the Swift Cycle Company Ltd. made a single-cylinder 700 cc car (possibly a voiturette) which had a cloverleaf emblem on its radiator, an emblem that was adopted by all the cars. In the years 1909–11 another single-cylinder 7-horsepower car was manufactured, this time with 1100 cc (105 mm bore and 127 mm stroke). This car was also sold by
Austin as the first
Austin 7. This model continued until 1925, when Ariel ceased making cars to concentrate on motorcycles. In 1925 the Swift 12 was replaced by the 12/35 with front wheel brakes, plate clutch plus an increase of in the
wheelbase. The last Swift car was the 1930 Cadet, which was an attempt to compete with the £100 cars. This had an 850 cc
Coventry Climax engine and a price of £149 for the tourer and £165 for the saloon. But Swift was too small to compete with the likes of Ford and Morris and closed in 1931 after its suppliers foreclosed on its debts. Coventry Climax was left with a number of engines for the Cadet model, which it used as the basis of its Second World War fire pump engine designated FSM, the SM standing for Swift Motors. ==Principal Swift cars==