As one of the earliest and, it has to said, most committed advocates of badge engineering, Rootes always boasted a proliferation of marques and models. Commer and Karrier were the commercial vehicles, Hillman was reserved for the bread and butter variants, Singer added a smidge of class, Humber was the luxury brand, and the Sunbeam moniker, as befitting its competition pedigree, was applied to the sporting models.
In 1966, having bid a fond goodbye to its Audax range of light cars, Rootes revealed its new, much more contemporary, but, nevertheless, quite conventionally-engineered offerings. Collectively referred to as the Arrow range, buyers could choose from a bewildering selection of marques and models.
The saloons arrived first. Then, in 1967, came two estate variants (Hillman and Singer). Confusingly, models would come and…