A fascinating car, I have been reading more about its history, built from a Chrysler Imperial chassis in 1932/33 by Delaney and Sons with a fabric body by Vanden Plas and an 8.9 litre diesel AEC bus engine.
It was tested at Pendine and the first record attempt was at Brooklands in October 1933 with George Eyston setting a flying kilometer record of 103 mph. The next year at Monthery the car had been modified with the longer tail, wire wheels, and cycle wings, taking another record for the flying kilometer and mile at 115mph. In 1936 the car and Eyston returned to Monthery setting a 24 hour record of 94mph.
The car was road legal and practical with 4 doors and 4 seats, and due to the torque of the diesel engine could be easily driven around town and returned 22mpg.
It seems no-one knows what happened to the car after that, there were reports that it was still about post WW2, maybe it is still sitting in a barn somewhere, who knows?