The Delecroix was a Belgian automobile. First built in 1897, but commercialised in 1898, it was a light car with a rear-mounted engine and a suspension-less tubular frame.

In 1899, the company started building a model with places for carrying four people. It had a single-cylindre 3.5 hp engine.

A small car with a 2-cylinder De Dion engine was also built. This had the added advantage over many of its contemporaries of having the capability to drive backwards.

See also

  • De Wandre, manufactured around 1923, and known as "the elegant spider"

References

  • David Burgess Wise, The New Illustrated Encyclopedia of the Automobile


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