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ISBN: 0143-7267

Год: 2024

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Ba d se on er ov 00 ,0 25 e vi re s w A classic car as treasured as yours deserves insurance from a specialist. Our customers have saved an average of 39% when taking out a classic policy with us*. Whether you drive your car daily, take trips in the summer, or you’re working on a classic car project, we can tailor insurance to suit your needs. Our bespoke classic car insurance can include: Agreed value cover Laid-up and build-up cover Cover for modifications Club member discounts Call us today on 0800 587 5472 adrianflux.co.uk Authorised & regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority. Trustpilot rating checked on 4th March 2024. *Based on customer premium data from 2023
July 2024 Issue 612 Keep that classic original, it’s a piece of history and the designers knew best? Or make it how you want, it’s your car after all and it’s there to serve your needs? hen I spotted the 8.8-litre McLaren M8E of Warren Briggs in the Goodwood Members’ Meeting paddock, I had to stop for a chat. I was bemused by his description of how user-friendly this 950bhp beast was. How many of us would try a standard 850bhp Can-Am car and say, ‘Hmmm, needs more power’? Minutes later I was hearing from Ivo Noteboom how he liked to experience his Arnolt-Bristol as it would have been in 1953. Whether road or track cars, owners have very individual views on whether modifying classics enhances the experience or corrupts history. With competition cars, modification on – or around – the limits of the rulebook is essential in pursuit of the competitive edge, but road cars? As soon as the nascent motor industry started series production, custom builds were available to anyone with means. Hence all the artfully coachbuilt concours sculptures. Changes to race or road cars executed in-period are clearly less controversial than those made later. From that, viewpoints become more nuanced. Are modifications using parts from another model in the range acceptable? Does it make a difference if the co-opted parts come from the same make, or period, or if the changes are reversible? I admire the craftsmanship and artistry that goes into a well-modified car, one that pursues a coherent vision with skill, ingenuity and determination for success. Like those gathered for this month’s big test, each a package of changes harmonised to create something meant to be and representing a distinct ethos. I also love coachbuilt concours contenders, hearing how owners scoured the planet to find original builders and even machinery to recreate the tiniest detail. Then, originality lecture mid-flow, they casually mention how they chose a different paint and trim combination because they didn’t like the original. That’s me bemused twice in one editor’s welcome. Enjoy the issue Phil Bell, Group Editor Cars in this issue 104 78 109 78 48 46 102 101 113 114 70 54 Porsche never stopped evolving the 911; neither have owners 110 94 52 50 06 58 44 88 Alfa Romeo 145 Cloverleaf Audi RS2 BMW 2002 Touring BMW M5 Touring DMC DeLorean by Electric Classic Cars Ford F100 by Gas Monkey Garage Ford XB Falcon GT Jaguar E-type 3.8 FHC Jaguar XKR Jaguar Racing edition Jensen-Healey Maserati 3500GTI Mercedes 190E 2.5-16 by Steve Howson Mercedes 220 SEb Coupé Mercedes CLS MGB GT LE60 by Frontline Peugeot 205GTI 1.9 by Tolman Pininfarina 124 Spider Plymouth Superbird 440 Porsche 911 by Ninemeister Skoda Rapid SAVE MONEY WHEN YOU SUBSCRIBE TO CLASSIC CARS Plus l Free UK delivery l Welcome gift with annual option Choose digital access to unlock rewards and past issues l Exclusive content l Never miss an issue! see page 34 l P A G E 3 4 O R O N L I N E Become a Classic Cars Member from just 99p to enjoy all these great benefits and more – details at greatmagazines.co.uk /classiccars Classic Cars ISSN 0143-7267, is published monthly by H Bauer Publishing Ltd. The US annual subscription price is $127.46 . Airfreight and mailing in the USA by agent. Named WN Shipping USA, 156-15, 146th Avenue, 2nd Floor, Jamaica, NY 11434, USA. Periodicals postage paid at Jamaica NY 11431. US Postmaster: Send address changes to Classic Cars, WN Shipping USA, 156-15, 146th Avenue, 2nd Floor, Jamaica, NY 11434, USA. Subscription records are maintained at Bauer Media, Subscriptions, CDS Global, Tower House, Sovereign Park, Lathkill Street, Market Harborough, Leicestershire LE16 9EF, United Kingdom. Air Business Ltd is acting as our mailing agent. 3
P42 ‘Perfected’ originals, re-engineered and customised – but improved? ‘Cars have been customised for more than a century now. But does tinkering with a classic ruin or revitalise it?’ Garden hoses and P70 Toyota gearbox – in a very bodged Maserati 4 Did this Fiat turn P6 out to be Italian sports-car perfection?
July 2024 Issue 612 P88 From Snetterton to storage for Skoda’s victorious 24-hour warrior The month in cars 22 Goodwood Members’ Meeting Shadows fall on Sussex as Goodwood celebrates Can-Am 26 Salon Privé London Supercar-heavy concours brings prototype Ferraris to light 28 Events Planner Racing cars in every direction as we spring into motor sport season ‘No history reduces value by 20 percent’ 28 Alan Minshaw, 1935-2024 Remembering the Demon Tweeks founder and VW BTCC champ 30 Barn Finds Long-unseen Bugattis surface as the Mullin reserve-collection selloff begins 34 Next Month Aspiring Ford Capri GT’s close encounter with the real thing from Maranello 37 Letters Solving the engine mystery of a racing Austin-Healey Sprite 39 Quentin Willson bunks off from a new-car launch to talk E-types with Richard Hammond Quentin Willson p15 41 Alex Riley remembers the Dralon (and Ford)-heavy world of Seventies footballers’ cars 146 50 Years Ago Today CAR unwittingly drove the future in the form of the Volkswagen Golf Owning 70 COVER Epic Restoration How a Maserati 3500GTI was rescued from truly hair-raising bodgery 88 COVER Life Cycle The only Skoda Rapid touring-car built, from race winner to heirloom 101 Our Cars Phil finally gets the right shims for his Jaguar E-type’s camshafts (p101), Stewart’s Ford Falcon gets ready for a wedding (p102), and Nathan’s Alfa 145 needs a gearbox (p104) Driving P58 Find out how Plymouth’s winged wonder actually drives 6 COVER 42 Mild to Wild Can you truly improve a classic through modification? With designer Peter Stevens and concours judge John Mayhead, we examine different takes on DeLorean, Ford, Mercedes, MG, Peugeot and Porsche to answer the most thorny classic question of all 58 COVER Spoiler Alert Driving NASCAR’s infamous homologation special: Plymouth’s Superbird 78 COVER Room With A Fast View Audi and BMW engage in a battle of 150mph load-luggers The List Reader and Italian car enthusiast Gordon Lang finally drives a Fiat 124 Spider COVER Buying 14 Quentin Willson explains how taking a punt on patchy history led to a Mini Cooper steal 16 Chasing Cars Russ spots a unique bargain Morgan and the latest fast Ford to rocket up 18 Temptations Rothesay Red shows just how elegant non-’Bond’ Aston Martin DB5s can be 20 Identity Crisis Meet the unique Fantuzzi Ferrari 250GT Lusso that thinks it’s a GTO 94 Buying Guide With prices lower than £3500, it’s time to buy the radical Mercedes-Benz CLS 99 Books & Models Stevens on working with Walkinshaw, and Lotus’s F1 swan-song in 1:18 109 Ads on Test BMW 2002 (p109), Merc 220SEb (p110), Jaguar XKR (p113), Jensen-Healey (p114) Contact us See page 37 P78 Two different ways to make furniture do 150mph SAVE MONEY WHEN YOU SUBSCRIBE TO CLASSIC CARS Plus Free UK delivery l Welcome gift with annual option l Choose digital access to unlock rewards and past issues l Exclusive content l Never miss an issue! l see page 35 5
[ The List] Your Dream Drive made real ‘My MG is going to feel a bit sluggish after driving this’ Retired dentist Gordon Lang has owned a vast array of Italian classics and roadsters, but he’d never driven a Fiat 124 Spider until today… Words JAMES PEENE Photography TOM CRITCHELL 6
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[ The List] Fiat 124 Spider n overcast and chilly morning is not exactly open-top driving weather, but when you’re offered the chance to drive one of your dream classics – and it’s an immaculately presented Pininfarina-badged Fiat 124 Spider – you’d no doubt do the same as Classic Cars reader Gordon Lang: grab your hat and scarf, pop the roof down and crank up the heater. But first, introductions. With a much-appreciated mug of coffee in hand, Gordon takes a while to drink in his beverage and David Slaney’s Spider. David has owned this 124 for just shy of 31 years and once removed from the sanctuary of his garage, where it sits with a couple of other classics, Gordon enthuses, ‘Well it’s beautiful isn’t it? What an immaculate 124 Spider. I’ve seen quite a few that are rather rough, like the one I spotted on the Isle of White the other month that I think was waiting to be restored. That was rather shabby, so I’m really quite taken aback by the condition of this one. David is a very lucky man to own it. I’m already quite envious of him, and I haven’t even driven it yet’. ‘Everything has a nicely weighted feel that encourages you to drive it spiritedly’ Gordon is understandably quite taken by the barchetta’s styling, despite the chunky, impact-absorbing late-model bumpers that were a necessity to comply with US crash legislation. ‘It’s quite beautiful with some lovely lines,’ he says. ‘These were made by Pininfarina. The last batch of them. Hence the badges all say Pininfarina rather than Fiat.’ Overhearing our chat, David asks, ‘Have you noticed the badge on the back? People often ask why it has a little a little yacht badge on it and what the “F” stands for on the nose – it’s for Farina and this is the Azurra model. Azure means sky blue, hence the colour is Azure Blue. Azzuras were produced to celebrate the Italian entry in the 1983 America’s Cup and were pretty much hand-built because they were introduced a year after Fiat stopped building the Spider’. David notes, ‘A lot of people take the later bumpers off, and they are quite heavy’. Gordon replies, ‘Yes, but they’re jolly good for parking aren’t they? I like them, and rubber-bumper MGs, too. I just think they look better’. It turns out David has inadvertently put them to the test, too. ‘We were on a trip in Holland with the Dutch 124 owners club and were in a procession when the car in front stopped suddenly, I ran into him and the car behind ran into me, but we all had the same bumpers and thankfully they just bounced back out. There was no damage at all’. Finding a dream car for Gordon to drive from his list wasn’t as straightforward as you might imagine. Like many who are yet to clamber behind the wheel of a left-hand-drive car, Gordon was initially apprehensive about driving a left-hander on UK roads for the first time but when fellow Bedfordshire dweller David offered the use of his 124, Gordon correctly assumed that sitting on the other side of the cockpit would just add to the experience. The 124’s diminutive proportions no doubt also helped. 8 Wonderful interior is the factory original
Modern head unit Gordon preparing is the only upgrade for his first drive in the cabin on the ‘wrong’ side 9
[ The List] Fiat 124 Spider Settling himself inside the Spider, any concerns he did harbour are dispatched quicker than our second round of coffee. Gordon’s not a large chap but once he’s familiarised himself with the controls and got going, he discovers his first quibbles with the 124. ‘The original steering wheel is lovely, but GORDON’S TOP TEN Ferrari 250SWB ‘I did test drive a Ferrari 250GT 2+2 when I lived in Woking and thought it was such a beautiful car.’ Alfa Romeo 2000GTV ‘I was going to test drive one at Thompson and Taylor in Cobham but it ran out of petrol. The owner, racing driver Roy Salvadori, came out with a petrol can. He was a great guy and we had a long chat but I never got to drive it!’ Fiat 124 Spider ‘I previously owned a 124 Coupé and always regretted selling it.’ Austin-Healey 3000 ‘A friend's uncle had a 100-6.’ 10 Fiat Dino Coupé ‘Beautiful Italian Elegance.’ Triumph Italia ‘Saw one once in Newcastle circa 1960 and was captivated.’ Mercedes Benz 300SL ‘Another beautiful roadster. I seem to gravitate towards them.’ Hillman Imp ‘I had a Singer Chamois and it was one of my favourite cars.’ Jaguar XK150 ‘I’ve always preferred it to its E-type successor.’ Ferrari Dino ‘The Dino ticks all the boxes. Small, compact, lively, chuckable cars are my forté. I don't go for large unwieldy cars like E-types.’ quite large so the bottom of it rubs against my legs. There’s also a bit of caster which takes a moment to get accustomed to. When you’re turning out of a corner the steering doesn’t recoil back into the straight-ahead position, so it feels like I have to actively pull it back into line. Maybe that’s just a matter of me getting used to it, as you’d have to with any type of car. ‘I actually think if I owned this car, I would fit a smaller wheel because I don’t think it would have much effect on the way it drives. It certainly feels lighter than my MG, which seems like a tank when you’re manoeuvring into small spaces’. Musing it over, Gordon adds. ‘I actually couldn’t say if this car has power steering or not. I’d have to check the spec [it doesn’t]. But it certainly has a pleasantly light feel and requires hardly any effort to point it exactly where I want it. ‘The brakes feel dependable as well, the clutch isn’t too heavy and it goes into gear easily, but reverse is a little tricky to find because the lever has to go right over and back, but that’s just another one of those things I’d acclimatise to. When you’ve owned a car for a little while you know where everything is, and you learn to live with all of its characteristics. ‘I’d say everything has a nicely weighted feel that encourages you to drive it spiritedly. And it’s certainly got a good turn of speed to it, which I imagine is helped by the fuel injection. It feels much smoother than all the Lancias I used to own – Beta
Still running factory fuel injection, with zero issues Nod to the America’s Cup ‘It requires hardly any effort to point it exactly where I want it’ No Fiat badges on this car 2.0 dohc fourcyl has a lot more pep than Gordon’s MG Coupés and the like – which were all fed by carburettors, so today really. I don’t feel the cold at all. With my MG you have a much lower windscreen, and you really feel buffeted by the none of them ever felt as refined as this. ‘To be honest, I’m surprised a car of this age still retains its wind. Actually, with the roof down on that, at 50mph the wind fuel-injection set-up. When you think about others that did comes round and starts lifting your eyelids up. ‘I don’t know how much David uses it in the winter, but I come with earlier generations of fuel injection, such as the Triumph TR6, they gave terrible trouble and most owners ended never put my cars on SORN because I don’t think it does them any good to be stuck away for a few months. Obviously, I try not up converting them over to carburettors when they played up. ‘While I was a little nervous of driving a left-hander on UK to drive them when there’s salt on the road, but they’re better roads – and certainly one as lovely as this, belonging to someone when they’re used. Although I do feel a bit guilty about getting else – it wouldn’t concern me now,’ Gordon says. ‘The Fiat’s his wheels dirty’. I can’t say I really blame him. Like the rest of forward vision is great. The view out of the front windscreen the car, the Speedlines are original and in fabulous condition. over the bonnet with those two large bulges in it – which I think They’re the car’s factory set, which David had refurbished about they only did on the Pininfarina models – is excellent. The five years ago and meticulously keeps on top of. ‘I’m very envious of David. My MG ergonomics are good, and it feels is going to feel a bit slow and sluggish surprisingly spacious inside. 1983 Fiat 124 Spider after driving this. Even on twisty ‘In fact, everything about the car is Engine 1995cc in-line four-cylinder, fuel-injection country roads I’m not familiar with, impressing me today. The controls Power and torque 102bhp @ 5500rpm; 110lb ft @ it’s much faster, a lot smoother and are all nicely weighted and it has an 3000rpm Transmission Five-speed manual, rearmore refined. This is a 2.0-litre and amazing heater too – that might seem wheel drive Steering Worm and roller Suspension Front: independent coil springs, wishbones, the MG is a 1.8-litre so there’s not a a minor detail, but as someone who’s telescopic dampers. Rear: coil springs, live axle, huge difference in cubic capacity, owned many convertibles you can’t Panhard rod Brakes Disc f/r Performance Top but this is obviously a much more understate its importance if you want speed: 106mph; 0-60mph: 11.2sec Weight 1082kg sophisticated engine with its twin to enjoy top-down driving at this time Fuel consumption 28mpg Cost new £11,000 overhead camshafts and EFI’. of year. I don’t think I need my hat on approx Classic Cars Price Guide £2500-£16,500 11
[ The List] Fiat 124 Spider GORDON LANG’S MOTORING CV 1948 LEA-FRANCIS I owned this from 1960-63 while in sixth form and then in my first year at Edinburgh Dental school. It was always very reliable and did a couple of long road trips with friends.’ 1966 FIAT 600D ‘This was my second little Fiat at university, a great little car which I preferred to a Mini.’ 1968 SUNBEAM ALPINE ‘Bought as a postgraduate. I kept it for seven years and have always regretted selling it.’ Thanks to the decent heater, Gordon never once asked to put the Spider’s roof up ‘It’s the whole package – beautiful to look at and lovely to drive, even in lhd form’ Digging deeper into Gordon’s extensive car history, the Fiat is right in his wheelhouse. He loves his Italian dropheads and sporty coupés. ‘Like anyone who’s been driving for as long as I have, I've lost count of how many cars I’ve owned, but the last time I tried to list them all I got to 56, including 19 Fiats, five Lancias, five MX-5s and four MGBs, so plenty of convertibles’. Gordon arrived for his dream drive in his 2018 Audi TT coupé. Gordon reflects, ‘Today has been great. I didn’t really have any preconceptions, only that I thought the Spider would be quicker than my MG. I remember when I first bought my 124 Coupé, I just noticed the power and it felt fast compared to previous cars. I’d been driving a Sunbeam Alpine before that, and the Fiat gave me an initial “wow”. You soon get over that feeling once you’re used to it, but I get that with this car. You put your foot down on the straights and it really seems to shift. ‘This late 2.0-litre car is a really beautiful example, with plenty of acceleration and a lovely smooth gearchange. It makes me wonder, why can’t they design beautiful cars anymore? The majority of modern cars are so ugly. On the downside, I don't find the driving position very comfortable because of the steering wheel. I would certainly consider owning a Fiat 124 Spider if I could locate one in this condition in right-hand-drive. ‘It’s a very desirable car and, as I said earlier, I’m very envious. It’s the whole package – beautiful to look at and lovely to drive, even in left-hand drive form. You’d always worry about rust on a car of this age, especially a Fiat, but I’ve never had any problems with any of those I’ve owned, except the 500 Giardiniera. Lots of bits fell off that, but that was an old car. ‘It’s been a great experience driving the Spider. I can’t thank David enough for letting me have a go in his truly fantastic and clearly much loved example. Sadly, I don’t think I could fit one in my garage. It might be a bit too long, so I’d need a new garage.’ Save money with a subscription to Classic Cars – see page 34. 12 1974 LANCIA FULVIA ‘This was a beautiful car, but I preferred the MGB I later traded it in for.’ 1980 LANCIA BETA COUPE ‘Another lovely car which I kept for five years.’ 1972 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE MKIV ‘A car which I greatly enjoyed driving. I owned it for seven years until I swapped it 1979 MGB ‘This was my second MGB which I kept for 12 years, the first one I had bought brand new in 1979 in exchange for the Lancia Fulvia.’ [Want a Drive?] Classic Cars will make a dream drive happen for one reader in every issue. Send us your list of the ten cars you’d most want to drive and why, along with a CV of the classic cars you’ve owned to thelist@ classiccarsmagazine. co.uk. Be prepared for the photoshoot glamour of an early start and a long drive to get there. ● Subscribe to Classic Cars from just 99p at greatmagazines. co.uk/classiccars NEXT MONTH MASERATI BITURBO 1989 HONDA CRX ‘This way my first Japanese car, and it was a little pocket rocket!’ 1992 NISSAN 200SX ‘I found this to be very fast but a little unwieldy with that long nose.’ 1999 MAZDA MX-5 ‘This was the first of five and I always would have liked more leg room.’ 2018 AUDI TT ‘A great car and the one I drive daily today.’ 1980 MGB ROADSTER ‘This is my fourth MGB and I’ve owned it for the last five years. It isn’t very quick but at 60mph it feels fast compared with modern, over-refined cars.’
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CHASING CARS Quentin Willson’s hot tips Keep your bargain radar tuned Austin Mini Cooper plus Monte Carlo Rally fairy dust creates magic ould you pay eleven grand for a Mini Cooper that had competed in the 1964 Monte Carlo Rally? Of course you would. And even though it hadn’t moved for several decades, had lost its original engine – but was just out of 59-year ownership – you’d still think it was cheap. At Manor Park Classics’ February sale, XOO 111 – a 1962 Cooper 997cc in Surf Blue with Old English White roof – made just £10,925. I know. I couldn’t believe it either. Maybe potential buyers didn’t see enough evidence to be convinced of its authenticity. Maybe the catalogue description put them off: ‘Believed to have competed in the 1964 Monte Carlo Rally.’ But it shouldn’t have. XOO 111 did compete and is logged in official rally records. I found period photos online with rally plates, lights and numbers on the doors pictured at the start from Glasgow, on the ferry to France and in the rally, along with a 1964 Pathé newsreel with glimpses of it in action. XOO 111 was a privateer entrant driven by Sonny Bannidge and Ron Clift, and isn’t listed as having finished the rally – but that really doesn’t matter, because so many didn’t. Just taking part in one of the greatest arenas of motor sport has considerable meaning. Owned since 1965, and still with the bodyshell showing repairs from when the rally roof light was removed in period, the provenance was strong. And yes, it needed a full restoration – although it looked remarkably solid and complete – but what would that cost? Maybe £25,000 if you were clever and did some of the work yourself. So, for £35k, you’d have a mint, Monte Carlo competition Mini Cooper with a long history – including a £375 receipt for its purchase in 1965 and buff logbook – for the same price as a very good, but unremarkable, stock example. Bargains don’t come much more exciting. Moral of story – always check the catalogue claims and put the registration into a search engine. You’ll be surprised what you uncover. And with the vendor still around you could back up the history even further by talking to them. Let’s hope XOO 111 is restored to its former glory and the inspired bidder does a deep dive into its history. ‘Moral of story – check the catalogue claims and put the registration into a search engine’ 14
ASK QUENTIN Time to live dangerously? Typically, as I’ve reached my mid forties and after doing nothing more exciting than the school runs and the occasional camping trip, I find myself really lusting after a rapid ‘family’ car. I’ve set my focus on an Audi RS6 Avant, but not just the normal beast – the V10 monster from the Noughties is the only one that will slake my thirst for raw power. Am I being wise in looking at these, or should I stay sensible and avoid expensive maintenance misery? Help, I’m so conflicted! Sven (name altered to hide embarrassment) T BMW’s E46-generation 3 Series is on the move he E46 BMW 3 Series looks good value. In Brightwells’ online sale in March, a lovely 2002 320i SE auto in Topaz Blue with grey cloth, one owner until 2023 and 26,000 miles, was knocked down for £4480. While the mileage wasn’t warranted, a quick search on the gov.uk MoT checker showed gently rising mileage on certificates going back to 2006. The condition backed this up with a perfect driver’s seat, and mint boot and bonnet areas. There was a partly stamped service history, full book pack and complete toolkit. Even Brightwells’ catalogue enthused that it ‘looks as good as it did when it rolled out of the factory’. Bigger-engined, convertible and two-door E46s have improved in value recently but most are high mileage without the low ownership and originality. The closest I could find for market context was a private-sale 2005 320i auto with 62k miles and part history for £7750. Don’t forget that the fourth-gen 3 Series – 1997-2006 – was a vast improvement on its forebears with 50/50 weight distribution, 70% more body rigidity and a near perfect steering that’s still revered today. The E46 was BMW’s top-selling model generation. Enthusiasts still hail the M3 version as the best of the breed with its ‘legendary, perfect platform’, which is why we should watch out for mint, low-mileage E46s – they won’t be cheap for long. The E46 may be numerous but the attrition rate is massive. Those that survive will be coveted. Look at what happened to the E21 and E30 values and interest over time. Dynamically, the E46 is far superior to both. MORE QUENTIN WILLSON P39 R Rover P5Bs live in a parallel universe over P5Bs values seem to defy gravity. Coupés are the most desirable with very good cars still in the mid-twenties, while nice saloons can make up to £13k. A surprise then to see a decent ’71 saloon going for just £5200 at Charterhouse’s March auction. This was an estate sale of a late local collector, and the cars were sold as found. Looking dusty but obviously cherished in Silver Birch with maroon leather, FHO 870K was straight and rust-free and had obviously had an older and expensive body restoration. For such a good P5B, I thought it well bought. The catalogue listed a ‘good history file with many previous MoTs and receipts’, and the seats only needed cleaning to spruce up the cabin. Compared to H&H’s 1969 car, sold in November last year for £13,200, this one had plenty of financial headroom for recommissioning. Where P5B prices will go from here remains to be seen. Compared to contemporary Jag XJs, the Rovers seem more resistant to the falling market. Better build quality will have helped, along with the halo of all those black ministerial cars seen in period papers and newsreels. Between 2020-23, values of very fine P5Bs exploded with Silverstone Auctions (now Iconic) setting a world record in May 2022 of £47,250 for a 14k-mile, ’73 Coupé in Bordeaux. There have been several other £40k examples and quite a few mid-£30k cars. Last May, H&H sold a perfect ’72 Zircon Coupé with 21,000 miles for £37,125. That values of the P5B have outperformed most other classics is clear. The question is – why? I used to look at warranty claims on RS6s and pale. They are incredibly expensive to repair – especially the Lamborghini-engined V10s. The real risk of being hit with a massive bill is why I’d say look for something else. Think about a BMW M5 or M3 Touring, or a Mercedes 63 AMG wagon. They won’t be cheap to repair either, but they’ll be nothing like as bad as the Audi. Sorry. Quentin Willson No service history, NOT SURE WHETHER NOW’S no deal? THE RIGHT TIME TO I’ve been seeking BUY, SELL OR HANG a 2007-2009 ON TO THAT CLASSIC? Jaguar XK for about a year Email classic.cars@ bauermedia.co.uk with now, only to be ‘Ask Quentin’ in the disappointed on subject line. viewings or by how expensive they are. Recently I test-drove a 2008 model that seemed to be a nice example with an HPI check and confirmed mileage of 51,500 miles through old MoTs. But the seller couldn’t source its service history – apparently the previous owner of 11 years had become seriously ill and may have died by now. The seller has had a few repairs carried out and has a video of an inspection being carried out, including underneath the car. It will come with a new MoT and 12 months’ warranty. What are your thoughts on proceeding with the purchase? Malcolm Blackmore Unless the price of this XK is significantly behind the market and at trade money, I’d walk away. Not having a maintenance history reduces the value by at least 20 per cent and will make the car very difficult to sell later. Some early history should be on the Jaguar service portal – and if it isn’t, that could mean very little work has been done with JLR dealers (if any). There are lots of these cars for sale right now at sensible money, so I would advise you find another with better provenance. Quentin Willson SAVE MONEY WHEN YOU SUBSCRIBE TO CLASSIC CARS Plus l Free UK delivery l Welcome gift with annual option l Choose digital access to unlock rewards and past issues l Exclusive content l Never miss an issue! See page 34 15
CHASING CARS Russ Smith’s market analysis SOLD WITHIN ESTIMATE Peeled away 30.6% DJ’s Plus 8 snapped up at Bonhams sale he first of Bonhams’ three Goodwood sales this year, at the Members’ Meeting on 14 April, offered a few treats. But with only 98 lots on offer, 21 of which were pre-war cars, it didn’t light a lot of torches. The auction achieved a decent sale rate, but that’s explained to the right. However, there were some bargains, such as the 1974 Morgan Plus 8 that was owned for most of its life by the much-loved late DJ John Peel and his wife Sheila. They had the car converted to a four-seater while it was back at the Morgan factory being restored. Recently recommissioned by the only owner since the Peels, it was offered at no reserve and looked a fantastic buy at just £21,275. That’s not a lot for any early Plus 8, never mind one with this history. SOLD ABOVE ESTIMATE 8.2% SOLD NO RESERVE 23.5% SOLD BELOW ESTIMATE 12.2% The overall 74.5% sale rate looked good but once again was greatly assisted by almost a quarter of the cars being offered with no reserve. It also looks like estimates for older cars are below where they were last year. NOT SOLD 25.5% John Peel’s Morgan bought for just £21,275 Market indicators Bargain buys of all kinds at this month’s sales 2004 Bentley Continental GT, £9640 Bonhams Online, UK, 12 April Yes, these can be a scary ownership proposition, but the temptation to roll the dice grows as their values tumble. This smart 105k-mile example doesn’t show its age and has been reliably used by the vendor for regular journeys between UK work and his home in Denmark for the past seven years. The history file shows plenty of care from Bentley specialists. The price paid was scruffy DB7 money. Makes you think. 16 1966 Sunbeam Tiger MkI, £28,560 Dore & Rees, Somerset, 13 April Talk about ticking boxes. This Tiger had been in the same family since 1969 and there was a photographic record of its restoration in the early Nineties. It has been garaged and not used a great deal since then, so needs a little cosmetic attention and to be properly recommissioned before regular use. Offered at no reserve, it presented an opportunity that someone grabbed with both hands. That looks cheap. 1961 BMW 700, £6900 Bonhams, Goodwood, 14 April This rarity was offered from the Alistair Caldwell collection and had been used by the vendor to win outright a historic Liège-Brescia-Liège rally – after much prep. It has been little used in the decade since, but still looks great. The body is original and unrestored, and there’s no sign of corrosion; only the interior cries out for some attention. Either as a distinctive car for shows or for taking rallying again, this was a bargain buy.
Focus RS – the modern classic to buy now PRICE GUIDE MOVERS here are very few cast-iron bets in the classic car market, but the Ford Focus RS MkI is about as close as you’re going to get at the moment. In the past year alone their values have risen by (another) 25 per cent and show no sign that they have reached any kind of peak. It’s a well-established pattern for performance Fords of all kinds, or course, especially those produced in limited numbers – just look at the Focus’s Escort predecessors. The Focus RS has that card to play. Only sold from 2002-03, and all in Imperial Blue Pearl, just 4501 were built – with 2147 coming to the UK market. With a well-sorted chassis and 212bhp from a 2.0 turbo four-pot, there’s a lot to like. CCA recently sold a 59,000-miler for £21,375, which is a fair representation of where they’re On the up A surprise uptick in values of some Sixties Brit saloons. Goodwood goers? T at right now. Though when Iconic offered a best-of-breed, 16k-mile one last August, it went all the way to £38,250. That’s almost double what it cost new. Don’t say we didn’t tell you. Bargain hunters should give Herald another look W hen the growth of interest in small British family saloons kicked off about five years ago, marked by rocketing values that gathered pace during lockdowns, Triumph’s Herald got rather left behind by its natural Morris Minor and Ford Anglia rivals. There appeared to be no particular reason. They’re just as practical to use, and probably better served by specialists than the Anglia. Less on-screen familiarity, maybe? Well, they’re catching up now. Values of early Heralds and the 1200s have increased by about 30 per cent in the past four years, with most of the increase more recently. The later and perhaps less pretty 13/60 hasn’t scored quite so well at 21 per cent, but that’s still a decent rise and they perhaps represent the best opportunity for future growth, if that’s a consideration for any buyer. Despite the increases, all Heralds still look like good buys. You can still bag a showworthy for under six grand. And they’re nice to drive too – I owned a couple. At the very least their underdog status should score a few points. 1984 Alfa Romeo Spider S3, £17,928 ACA, Norfolk, 7 April How do you get good money for a (usually unloved) S3 Spider? The restomod treatment, it seems. Among other things, this one has lost its black rubber spoilers and now has S2 headlamp covers and GTA alloys. The Graphite Metallic repaint is recent, as is most of the interior trim. A great looker, and obviously worth more than its £6000-£8000 estimate, but the price paid was still a big surprise. 1988 Vauxhall Nova GTE, £14,950 Manor Park Classics, Cheshire, 13 April These baby hot hatches are very rare these days – perhaps partly because the engine was more capable than the chassis. I had one briefly as a company car… This is probably one of the best survivors following a recent bareshell restoration to factory spec. What this one made was top Astra GTE money, but it’s a supply and demand thing – it’s actually not even an auction record for this model. Make and Model BMW 2002/Touring BMW 635CSi BMW 325i Sport (E30) Bugatti EB110 Fiat 1500S/1600S Osca sp Fiat 2300S Ford Fiesta XR2 MkII Ford Fiesta XR2 MkIII Ford Focus RS MkI Honda CRX 1.6i/V-TEC Lotus Elite, Eclat Mercedes-Benz 250/280SE cab Mercedes-Benz SLR McLaren MGB GT V8 chrome Peugeot 205GTi 1.6 Porsche 356 pre-A Porsche 928/S/S2 Rover P6 3500S Standard Vanguard Vignale Standard Luxury Six Standard Ten/Pennant Sunbeam Rapier/Alpine Sunbeam Rapier H120 Suzuki Cappuccino Toyota Celica GT 1.6/2.0 Triumph Herald/S sal Triumph Herald coupé Triumph Herald 1200 sal Triumph Herald 13/60 sal TVR T350 Vanden Plas Princess 1100/1300 Volvo T-5R/850R Year 68-75 78-89 89-91 92-95 59-66 61-68 84-89 89-94 02-03 86-91 74-82 65-69 03-10 73-74 84-90 51-55 77-87 71-76 58-61 61-63 54-59 67-76 68-76 92-96 74-77 59-64 59-64 61-70 67-71 02-06 63-74 95-97 Concours 19,000 26,000 26,000 1m 29,500 28,000 14,000 8000 21,000 8500 11,000 125,000 230,000 26,000 17,250 210,000 27,500 12,500 5250 5600 5750 7250 9250 6500 20,000 6250 7500 5850 5750 27,500 7500 12,500 Mint 14,500 17,500 20,000 800,000 24,000 20,000 9500 5750 17,500 6750 7750 90,000 180,000 17,000 11,500 150,000 20,000 8000 3750 4000 4000 5000 6500 4250 15,000 4400 5600 4250 3750 22,000 5000 9000 Good 6000 8500 12,000 600,000 16,000 16,000 4000 2750 12,000 2750 3000 44,000 150,000 8000 4500 110,000 10,000 3000 1850 1900 1900 2200 3000 1800 7250 1800 2750 1600 1500 16,500 2400 4250 Rough 2650 3500 6500 475,000 10,000 10,000 1800 1300 6750 1250 1250 24,000 n/a 4000 1600 85,000 4500 1400 900 1000 900 1000 1500 750 3500 900 1400 750 750 13,000 1100 2200 % up +6.3% +3.6% +15% +6.5% +9.1% +4.0% +7.7% +4.6% +6.9% +6.3% +2.7% +10% +4.5% +3.6% +4.5% +2.9% +10% +4.2% +5.9% +3.8% +4.5% +7.4% +8.6% +4.9% +2.9% +4.2% +2.7% +9.2% +2.8% +5.8% +4.2% +17% On the Slide Pre-war and Fifties classics continue to tumble as the market moves forward Make and Model Year Alfa Romeo GTV 2000 76-87 Alfa Romeo Spider 2.0 TS 96-02 Armstrong Siddeley Star Sapphire 58-60 Aston Martin Virage Volante 92-96 Bentley MkVI sal 46-52 Bentley R-type sal 52-55 Bentley R-type Continental 52-55 Bristol 412/Beaufighter 76-93 Facel Vega FV 54-59 Facel Vega HK500 59-61 Facel Vega Facel II 62-64 Ferrari 500 Superfast 64-67 Ferrari 308GT4 2+2 73-80 Ford Capri II/III 1.6/2.0 74-82 Healey Abbott con 50-54 Healey Tickford saloon 50-54 Lagonda 2.6/2.9 sal 48-57 Lagonda Rapide 61-64 Lancia Montecarlo 75-84 Range Rover 2dr 70-72 Range Rover 73-78 Lotus Elan S2 94-95 Maserati 3500GT coupé 58-64 Maserati 3500GT Spider 58-64 Maserati Bora 71-79 Mercedes-Benz 600 sal 64-81 MG SA saloon 36-39 MG VA saloon 37-39 MG TF1250/1500 53-55 MG MGA Roadster 55-62 MG Twin Cam Roadster 58-60 MG Twin Cam Coupé 58-60 Morgan Plus 8 73-86 Morgan Plus 8 injection 84-04 Nissan 300ZX 89-00 Rolls-Royce Phantom I/II 25-35 Rolls-Royce Phantom III 36-39 Rolls-Royce Silver Dawn sal 49-55 Sunbeam Tiger I 64-66 Sunbeam Tiger II 67-68 Vanden Plas 4-litre R 64-68 Concours 17,000 5400 20,000 67,500 38,500 44,000 775,000 38,500 160,000 162,500 230,000 1.65m 52,500 15,000 40,000 33,000 56,500 137,500 25,000 42,000 34,000 10,500 165,000 465,000 167,500 100,000 40,000 28,000 29,000 31,000 47,500 37,500 42,000 36,500 14,500 330,000 240,000 44,000 67,500 87,500 15,000 Mint 11,500 3500 15,000 50,000 27,500 31,000 625,000 28,000 120,000 125,000 175,000 1.45m 37,500 10,000 30,000 22,000 37,500 100,000 17,500 32,000 24,500 7750 135,000 415,000 130,000 75,000 32,500 22,000 20,000 21,000 34,000 27,500 28,500 27,000 9500 200,000 150,000 31,000 47,500 64,000 9500 Good 5250 1500 7000 32,000 14,000 16,500 500,000 16,500 82,500 99,000 135,000 1.25m 25,000 3000 20,000 12,500 20,000 60,000 8000 18,500 14,000 4750 102,500 350,000 92,500 43,000 23,500 14,000 13,000 12,500 23,500 17,500 17,500 17,000 4000 90,000 70,000 16,000 26,000 36,500 4000 Rough 2000 600 3500 22,000 6000 8000 400,000 10,000 42,500 45,000 75,000 1.1m 18,000 1300 12,000 7500 9500 37,500 3000 10,000 6000 2850 70,000 250,000 45,000 25,000 13,500 8000 7500 8000 15,000 12,000 12,000 11,000 2000 30,000 27,500 8000 16,500 25,000 1800 % dn -2.9% -3.8% -4.8% -10% -3.9% -2.5% -3.4% -3.8% -3.6% -2.3% -3.1% -4.4% -2.8% -2.9% -12% -8.3% -2.6% -8.3% -3.4% -6.7% -2.9% -2.5% -5.7% -4.1% -2.6% -4.8% -4.8% -3.4% -3.9% -3.7% -4.8% -6.0% -2.3% -2.7% -3.3% -5.7% -4.0% -2.9% -2.2% -2.8% -6.3% 17
CHASING CARS Russ Smith’s tempting buys Like a fine wine 1964 Aston Martin DB5 For sale at Iconic Auctioneers, London, 5 June, iconicauctioneers.com Why buy it? The DB5’s temptations need no introduction and this fine looking example was the subject of a full-on £200,000 Desmond Smail restoration ten years ago. Its collector owner has put just 3400 miles on the clock since then. Purists might jib at the car’s change from Sierra Blue to Rothesay Red, though possibly less so at the aircon and common 4.2-litre upgrade. Accurately estimated. Estimate £500,000-£600,000 1985 Ferrari 288GTO For sale at RM Sotheby’s, Toronto, 1 June, rmsothebys.com Why buy it? From the Dare to Dream collection of Miles Nadal, this is one of the finest 288GTOs. Just 26,617km (16,539 miles), three owners including golfer Ian Poulter and in immaculate condition. It has no reserve but don’t expect that to mean a bargain price. Estimate £3m-£3.2m 1974 Ford Escort MkI RS2000 For sale at Classic Car Auctions, Cheshire, 1 June, classiccarauctions.co.uk Why buy it? This RS2000 has covered 250 miles since restoration last year and authenticity has been confirmed by the AVO Owners Club’s registrar – there are a number of fakes about. The estimate looks quite light, so expect it to challenge that. Estimate £40,000-£45,000 18 1953 Austin A40 Devon Countryman For sale at Morris Leslie, Perth, 18 May, morrisleslie.com Why buy it? This super-rare Countryman version of the Devon is practical with folding rear seats. An older restoration that still presents fairly well, its cosmetic issues include small rust bubbles which the estimate reflects. Estimate £4250-£5000 UPCOMING SALES MAY Sat 25, Cheshire. Manor Park Classics’ sale, Runcorn. manorparkclassics.com Fri-Sat 31-June 1, Canada. RM Sotheby’s, ‘Dare to Dream Collection’, Toronto. rmsothebys.com JUNE Sat 1, Cheshire. Classic Car Auctions, Tatton Park, Knutsford. classiccarauctions.co.uk Wed 5, London. Iconic Auctioneers’ Concours Lifestyle Sale, Honourable Artillery Company. iconicauctioneers.com Sat 8, Hampshire. Barons Auctions, Unit 6, Harbour Close, Southampton. barons-auctions.com Sat 8, Newcastle Upon Tyne. WB & Sons, The Auction House, Killingworth. wbandsons.com Wed 12, Berkshire. RM Sotheby’s, Cliveden House, Taplow. rmsothebys.com Wed-Thu 12-13, North Yorkshire. Mathewsons, Thornton-Le-Dale. mathewsons.co.uk Wed 19, Herefordshire. Brightwells’ Classic & Vintage, Easters Court, Leominster. brightwells.com Wed 19, Cambs. H&H Classics, Imperial War Museum, Duxford. handh.co.uk Thu 20, Dorset Vintage & Classic Auctions, The Old Gas Works, Stalbridge, Dorset. dvca.co.uk Sat-Sun 22-23, Norfolk. Anglia Car Auctions’ classic sale, The Cattlemarket, King’s Lynn. angliacarauctions.co.uk Thu 27, Somerset. Charterhouse Auctions, Haynes Motor Museum, Sparkford. charterhouse-auction.com

CHASING CARS Russ Smith’s Market headliners Identity crisis Stunning unique period-modified Ferrari 250GT Lusso to be offered by RM hat price a customised Ferrrari? While that statement is likely to invoke intakes of breath sharp enough to shame a set of Weber carbs, there are mitigating circumstances here. This car’s welldocumented transformation mostly took place while in the hands of its first owner, in Italy. And the incorporation of elements of 250GTO, 330LMB and 275GTB into this 250GT Lusso has been remarkably cohesive. It also ticks the important box of having a superbly documented history, largely thanks to the owner who commissioned its 2011 restoration by DK Engineering. He found and met or spoke to most of its owners, including the first, to ensure the info was from the horse’s mouth, so to speak. That first owner was Luciano Perderzani who, with his brother Gianfranco, ran the Tecno Racing Team in Italy. They commissioned Medardo Fantuzzi, who was designing their 20 racecar bodies, to transform the 250GT. Fantuzzi was designed most of Ferrari's racing cars from 1959 to ’66, which perhaps makes the chopping up of a Lusso look a lot less like sacrilege. I speak as one who lists the 250GT Lusso as his favourite classic. Perhaps surprisingly, the Perderzani brothers sold the car a year later to a Venezuelan buyer. By 1968 it was in New York, and the car then spent several decades hopping between various owners in Texas, Hawaii and San Francisco. Much of that time in storage. In dire need of attention, it was from there that it went to DK Engineering with instruction to bring it up to concours standard but keep all the modifications that were such a part of its history and identity. DK described the work on the unique body as especially challenging, requiring moulds and drawings from a genuine 250GTO scaled to suit the Lusso body. After completion it was displayed at the 2013 Ferrari Owners Club GB’s annual rally and the quality of the work and the car’s
beguiling looks caught the eye of radio and TV presenter and Ferrari collector Chris Evans who owned it briefly. Since 2015 it has been with the vendor, who has displayed it at the Cartier Style et Luxe and Goodwood Revival. During his ownership it has been regularly maintained by GTO Engineering. Quite a story, and it brings us to the thorny issue of the car’s value. Does its uniqueness and the pedigree of those responsible for its coachbuilt transformation outweigh the fact that it’s not a Ferrari as the factory intended? It has been consigned to appear at RM Sotheby’s 12 June sale at Cliveden House in Berkshire, and RM’s opinion on that question appears to be yes. They have given the car a £1.1m-£1.5m estimate, the top end of which is actually above our guide’s value for a concours Lusso in standard form. Bullish? Perhaps, and it is a pretty hard call. But I’ll stick my neck out and predict either low estimate or a no sale. But would I want to own it? Yes, like a shot. Will this 250GT Lusso’s earlylife customisations add to its appeal or detract? Its auction on 12 June will give the answer 21
MONTH IN CARS Events Big bangers blitz Sussex A track-shaking demonstration of Cam-Am cars defined the 81st Members’ Meeting M arking 50 years since the last race of the rules-unlimited Canadian-American Challenge, Saturday and Sunday saw 25 of the biggest and baddest contenders from McLaren, Porsche, Shadow and more wake up the Sussex countryside. Shadow Can-Am collection Jim Bartel brought six Shadows from America for the Cam-Am demonstrations – the prototype MkI, Mks I though III, a DN4b and the DN4 that Jackie Oliver drove to 1974 Championship victory, ‘None of them have been seen on track together in the UK before and you have to see them all together to appreciate the variety created by that small team in a five-year period. There were no rules, all the answers weren’t known and they could do anything they tried.’ The cars live in Wisconsin, opposite Road America, ‘We get to drive them across the street.’ Bartel grew up 40 miles from the track and started visiting in 1965, watching every Can-Am race there from start to finish of the series. ‘It’s funny how one small experience can have a profound effect on your life. I was 20 years old, at this race a big Can Am car came rumbling by in the paddock, he hit the throttle and smoked the rear tyres. I thought, that’s brute force.’ Bartel ended up buying eight Shadows in a single deal in 2018. ‘Then I met another guy with two who told me I’d have to buy both together. I decided to focus on the Can-Am and F5000 cars and sell the others – you have to have limits!’ Two years later, restoration on all but one was completed, ‘The two MkIs were the hardest. The prototype has been dismantled and stored in boxes for 10 years; the other had been modified with different tyres sizes and so-on. I wanted it back to how it was at its 1970 Mosport debut.’ Ford Capri 3.0S Andrew Donaldson wanted a Group 1 car for years, ‘I didn’t want a tribute car. This 1981 Capri 3.0S came up at an auction in February. The 24h Capri’s Goodwood MM debut moment my bidding paddle number was taken I was on to Goodwood for a Members’ Meeting entry. It was only after I’d bought the car I discovered it had 80 plus race cards.’ Gerry Marshall and ‘Skid’ Scarborough drove it to second place in the 1981 Willhire 24 Hours, and Marshall won every BARC and BRSCC production saloon race he entered in 1981. ‘It was basically in good shape and runs like a dream but the brakes were awful so I fitted a Vic Wood Group 1 brake set with cooling and bigger calipers from a Granada estate. With around 245bhp it won’t be competitive but I want to keep it as original as possible.’ Donaldson shared the Gordon Spice Trophy race with Dan Welch. ‘Nice to work with a friend.’ McLaren M8E Warren Briggs bought his 1971 McLaren M8E in 2017, ‘I’m a New Zealander and used to work for McLaren and wanted a Can-Am car, so it had to be a McLaren. It was in good condition, beautifully prepared and they had really good engineering to start with, but you have to go through and crack test everything. This was its first time at the Goodwood circuit. ‘I went racing in the States straight away. I’ve also raced it in HSCC at Brands Hatch and Silverstone. It’s cool for an M8 to come back here for the Can-Am demonstration. We want to put on a show here, open it out.’ The monster 8.8-litre now makes 950bhp – up 100bhp on its original output – and needs a refresh every 800 miles, ‘It’s a lot milder than people might think. Yes, it has brutal power but the drivability is quite nice. It’s the torque that catches you out – you’ve got to be in a straight line before you welly it! Arnolt Bristol Ivo Noteboom bought an Arnolt-Bristol because he noticed that applications for the Mille Miglia historic seemed to have a good chance of being accepted. ‘But the year I applied, there were seven Arnolt Bristol entries! 22
Spectacular Shadow collection recalled Seventies Can-Am McLaren M8E now makes 950bhp ‘In 1953 Bob Youngdahl built it to compete in American west coast SCCA events, shortening the chassis to accommodate the Microplas body. He didn’t do a particularly good job – it was twisted. The body was OK cosmetically apart form an ugly extra air intake, so we lost that. ‘It had a C-type engine and a C-type style Panhard rod which I hadn’t seen on an XK before. It’s no C-type, but it’s better than an XK120 – it weighs 1020kg dry. It’s got potential but it will never be a race winner; then again, it’s not the price of a C-type. I don’t think it was particularly successful – I haven’t found it in the results.’ McLaren M1-B ‘We’d prepared it for a race last year so thought it was ready for Goodwood, but in a shakedown run at Zandvoort we found one of the wheels shaking because of a broken halfshaft. We couldn’t source a replacement in time for the Members’ Meeting, so welded it up, but after two practice laps today it’s broken again. He prefers his cars as they would have raced in period. ‘Its first race was in 1956 with Scott Baxter and it competed through 1957 in Southern California,’ he explains. Baxter took 15th in the 1956 Pebble Beach road race; its best result was Arnolt was ‘50s Pebble Beach racer first at Buchanan Field the same year. Eventually the car came to Europe and Noteboom found out about it in 2016, ‘I like how it drives, the engineering of that engine, and the community around them. Not a lot were made.’ Jaguar XK120 Mistral Gary Pearson bought his 1954 Jaguar XK120 Mistral in 2016, ‘It was complete but very scruffy. It had a not very good restoration in the Eighties. ‘Then, just three months ago, Goodwood suggested I enter the Peter Collins Trophy! Roger Wills co-owns the 1966 McLaren M1-B, the first built, with David Clark, ‘This is the first works car and the first time it’s raced since restoration. It’s the only one with Bruce McLaren and Chris Amon period history. It’s called the 13-inch wheel car but the drivers didn’t like the handling. ‘It was built with a 5.0-litre Olds V8 but that was switched to a 5.4-litre Chevrolet for more power and reliability. It did four events in period, the Group 7 season opener at Snetterton with McLaren, and three more with Amon, in the UK and then Canada, then it was pulled apart. Wills continued, ‘Constructor George Begg saw the remains of the car in a corner at the Mistral improved on the XK120 23
MONTH IN CARS Events M1B raced new by Bruce McLaren McLaren facility in 1968 rebuilding it and calling it the McBegg. I acquired the parts and chassis as a project around 15 years ago, I thought it would be a cool thing to have. I’m a Kiwi, I have a passion for McLaren and Bruce McLaren, Chris Amon and Denny Hulme are my heroes. ‘This chassis was unique, with square-section tubes onto which the Mallite wood-aluminium sandwich floor was attached. That’s no longer available so we replicated something similar.’ Wills sat in the seat for the first time on the Friday before Members’ Meeting, ‘I haven’t driven it yet but I’ve raced an M1B here lots. Compared with the later cars it will be giving up around 140bhp but it will be lighter. I plan to run it about and have a bit of fun.’ AC Cobra ‘This car was last seen in public at Silverstone back when its big classic event was still called the Coys Historic Festival,’ said Fred Shepherd of his father Bill’s AC Cobra. ‘That was 20 years ago, when it span backwards into a wall, which split its fuel tank and set it on fire. Ever since then, the wreckage sat in his workshop, until the covid lockdown, when he finally decided to rebuild it. ‘It was the start of his Ford V8-powered journey, really. He bought it as a hot road car with a race-specification engine in 1986.’ Previously, Bill Shepherd had contested Formula Ford alongside Nigel Mansell in the Seventies, but it was a self-funded project and he ran out of money. The Cobra represented both the start of his new business – Uniclip Automotive – and a second chance at a motor sport career. Bill contested the Intermarque series in 1988-9, beating contemporary GT cars in the process. In 1991, it won the Autocar 0-100-0mph challenge, beating Ray Mallock’s Ford GT40 with a 13.3-second run to Mallock’s 16.3. The field also included then-current works World Rally Championship cars and factory-prepared Lamborghinis. This car held the certified 0-100-0 world record until 2004. Chevron-Ford B15 Making a rare UK appearance after a lifetime racing abroad, this F3 car was originally raced by legendary test-driver Giorgio Pianta. ‘It was ordered by Italian privateer outfit the Jolly Club in 1969 via dealer Oliver Speight, part of a three-car F3 team,’ said owner Mike Lamplough. ‘Giuseppe Marriella, Luigi Petri, Franco Conti, Giorgio Pianta and Alessandro Angelini campaigned them in the 1969 and 1970 European F3 Championships. ‘This one also contested the Guards Trophy at Brands Hatch in 1969, with Pianta finishing eighth. The race was won by the works Chevron B15 of Rene Wisell, and between Wisell and Pianta were Emerson Fittipaldi, Jean-Pierre Jarier and Ronnie Peterson. Pianta beat James Hunt in that race too, although it was due to mechanical failure. ‘It stayed in Italy until 2009, when it was brought back to the UK and restored by Richard Eyre, before being raced in mainland Europe – including Monaco and Zandvoort – by Steve Smith. But it’s now been returned to its original livery for Goodwood, as Pianta would have known it.’ After his racing career, Pianta turned test driver and team manager, masterminding Lancia’s rally programme in the Eighties, then Alfa Romeo’s touring-car assault in the Nineties. Brabham BT42 A non-running part of a display honouring the career of Gordon Murray, this Brabham BT42 has finally been tracked down by its creator after years of searching. ‘He only bought it two weeks Pianta made his mark in this B15 24 Cobra once beat ’90s supercars Murray’s first F1 design: the BT42 ago, he doesn’t even have the history file yet,’ said Adam Hayes of Gordon Murray Automotive. ‘It was the very first F1 car that Murray designed in its entirety, and was created during a financial tight spot for Brabham. The team had just been bought by Bernie Ecclestone and was being run without sponsorship, essentially out of Ecclestone’s pocket, so the cars had no livery. The Martini deal didn’t arrive until 1975 after its agreement with Tecno fell through. Murray designed this car as the BT42 in 1973, but it was upgraded to BT44 specification for 1974. ‘It was driven by Carlos Reutemann, who won the South African Grand Prix with it. But as the first car Murray had complete creative control over, it’s the first example of his triangular chassis which would later underpin the controversial BT46 “fan car”. It was also designed as intended around the Cosworth DFV – along with Martini sponsorship came wide-block Alfa Romeo flat12 engines which didn’t work so well with the chassis – so it was exactly the car Murray wanted. ‘After its F1 career it went to the US, where Phil Riley ran it in SCCA club competition. Murray bought it directly from him. It’s not running as he hasn’t had time to assess its condition, but aside from some repainting, it looks pretty original.’
SATURDAY SUNDAY EAST ANGLIA’S WATCH LIVE BIGGEST YOUTUBE CLASSIC CAR & ONLINE SEE WEBSITE ION AUCT JUNE FOR TIMINGS 22&23 CALL US ON 01553 771881 OR VISIT angliacarauctions.co.uk SELLER’S FEE 6%, BU YER’S FEE 8% l FREE STORAGE l NATIONWIDE TRANSPORT 90% ENTER S R A C E H T OF ED IN OU ERE S W E L A S L I R R AP OLD SALES FROM OUR APRIL CLASSIC ALL PRICES INCLUSIVE OF BUYER’S PREMIUM 1976 TOYOTA CELICA 2000 GT (RA28) 2004 2004 MG TF 160 1,200 MILES 1980 FORD ESCORT RS 2000 CUSTOM RESULT: £15,552 RESULT: £10,800 RESULT: £28,080 ENTRIES NOW INVITED FOR OUR JUNE AUCTION
MONTH IN CARS Events Super Salon Supercars past and present define this year’s Salon Privé London F rom 50 years of Porsche’s defining supercar, to previouslyunseen Ferrari prototypes and a near-unique Thirties Bentley, Salon Privé London 2024 was characterised by supercars. Although everything on the Concours de Vente dealer displays was for sale, more lawn space was given to special displays – not least a huge number of special 911 Turbos. Bentley Speed Six This special Bentley, on show for the first time since a restoration reunited its long-separated body and chassis, was part of a collection being sold as a single lot. ‘It’s a £17m six-car collection, which also includes the 1927 Le Mans winner and the Woolf Barnato Special,’ said William Medcalf of Vintage Bentley. Rare Walter body finally reunited with its Speed Six chassis Koenig 512BB restoration needed custom suspension 26 However, this coupé formed the centrepiece of the group. ‘It’s one of just two Bentley Speed Sixes to be bodied by Martin Walter of Folkestone,’ Medcalf explained. ‘One was built for the 1930 British Motor Show at Olympia, Viscount Mandeville saw it and wanted it, but found out it had been sold, so he commissioned Walter to make another one for him there and then. Walter isn’t as wellknown as Gurney Nutting, but he was more expensive and produced very high-quality work – this was one of the most exclusive British coachbuilders of the inter-war era. As part of the design, he made the Speed Six’s bonnet longer, and there are beautiful design touches like the BSA-branded toolkit integrated into the bootlid. ‘It ended up in the US, before returning to the UK in 1980, when it was rebodied as a Vanden Plasstyle tourer. I bought it 25 years ago but it just sat in the corner of the workshop. It always had its original engine fitted to the chassis, but the body had been transferred to another car. Once I was able to get hold of the bodywork, reuniting the two and restoring it became a project during the Covid pandemic. ‘Once upon a time, rebodying vintage Bentleys as Le Mans replicas was a real moneyspinner, but nowadays it has just served to make surviving coachbuilt saloons and coupés more sought-after. There are only seven 4.5-litre saloons left nowadays, and owners are seeking out the coachwork their cars were originally supplied with when getting them restored. This one was featured in The Autocar when it was new, so its photographs and description really helped as a guide during our restoration.’ Porsche 930 Turbo Shown for the first time, this 1976 3-litre example was part of a cavalcade of cars celebrating 50 years of the Porsche 911 Turbo. ‘It’s the earliest Turbo in the UK,’ said owner Paul Munford. ‘When new, it was the highest-specification Turbo you could buy, and was bought new in the United States by David de Rothschild, who took it around the world with him when he moved for work. It lived in Germany too, before coming to the United Kingdom four years ago. Tuthill restored it – a two-year process. Early Porsche 930 headed up 911 Turbo anniversary display
Ferrari prototypes MP09 (left) and MP10 made show debut ‘It wasn’t tuned, but it was full luxury specification, bought in California,’ said Munford. ‘Air conditioning, a limited-slip differential, electric windows, electric sunroof, and a factory graphics package. Like all very early 930s, it also has a separate oilcooler grille on the rear spoiler, and chrome headlight surrounds. ‘I’ve only had it a year, but one thing I want to change is the interior. It originally had tan leather, the perfect colour combination, so I want to put it back.’ Koenig Ferrari 512BB Special This wildly modified Ferrari has just emerged from an 18-month restoration. ‘We needed Gaz to custom-make the suspension,’ said Chris Wainwright from London dealership DD Classics. ‘It has actuators that raise the nose at lower speeds, when driving around town and negotiating speed humps, then lower the car to reduce drag at high speeds.’ It’s not the only way Koenig deviated from Ferrari’s norm. ‘The car was two years old when it went to Willy Koenig,’ said Wainwright. ‘In terms of the body styling, the twin spoilers don’t actually do anything, but the carburettor scoops actively ram air into the engine, Formula One-style. There are twin air ducts in the nose to cool the brakes, and the engine features forged pistons and race cams. There’s also a curious twin-clutch setup, almost like a modern DSG gearbox. It’s still operated with a clutch pedal and an H-gate, but it’s been re-engineered for faster changes and will do 100mph in first gear.’ Ferrari LaFerrari prototypes This pair of prototypes was on show in public for the first time. Carrs Ferrari acquired them from Maranello for one of its clients in 2016. Neither are road legal, nor can they be used on track, but they contain several firsts for Ferrari. MP09, which resembles a 458 Italia, houses the first example of a LaFerrari engine and hybrid unit to be built, and as a result is the firstever hybrid-engined Ferrari, as well as the first to have an ESP braking system. It was primarily built to test the F1-derived KERS (Kinetic Energy Recovery System) at Ferrari’s Fiorano test track. MP10, parked to the right, was Ferrari’s first carbon-fibre tub LaFerrari prototype, and features styling edging closer towards how the production model would end up. The car’s doors, engine compartment, mirrors and seating position were finalised with this prototype, allowing stylist Flavio Manzoni to complete his design. MP10 was also used to further develop the KERS, and for testing out suspension settings. Jaguar E-type ‘It was restored in 2019, but it’s been tucked away ever since, having been stored for nine years before that,’ said Jonathan Franklin of his early outside-bonnet-lock Jaguar E-type. ‘It’s chassis number 50, rare enough as an outside-lock car in right-hand drive, and was delivered new to Hatfield’s of Sheffield as its demonstrator. It would have been the first E-type that a lot of people saw in the metal. ‘Its colour is unusual too. That Opalescent Gunmetal Grey Metallic is actually original, it wasn’t commonly seen on E-types until a lot later in production. I’m usually a Porsche man, but saw it hidden away in a collection and knew I had to have it. Pearson Engineering restored it, and before then it was owned by Gary Pearson’s father.’ Early E-type has been avoiding the public gaze, until now 27
EVENTS PLANNER Prescott Historique brings out the weird and wonderful May-June event highlights Historic racing turns up the heat all over the country May 17-19 Spa Classic, Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, Belgium peterauto.fr 18 Pre-’66 Classic Sports and GT Raceday, Oulton Park, Cheshire oultonpark.co.uk 25-26 Masters Historic Festival, Brands Hatch, Kent brandshatch.co.uk 25-26 Prescott Historique, Prescott Hillclimb, Gloucestershire prescotthillclimb.co.uk 4-6 London Concours, Honourable Artillery Company, London londonconcours.co.uk 8-9 HSCC Donington, Donington Park, Leicestershire donington-park.co.uk 26 Simply VW, National Motor Museum, Beaulieu, Hampshire beaulieu.co.uk 9 Retro Show, Santa Pod, Podington, Northamptonshire santapod.co.uk June 9 National Mini Day, National Motor Museum, Beaulieu, Hampshire minicooper.org 18-19 Beaulieu Spring Autojumble, National Motor Museum, Beaulieu, Hampshire beaulieu.co.uk 1-2 Coventry MotoFest, Coventry, Warwickshire coventrymotofest.com 18-19 Wolds Trophy, Cadwell Park, Louth, Lincolnshire cadwellpark.co.uk 2 BVAC Classic, Thirlestane Castle, Lauder, Borders, Scotland bvac.org.uk 15 Vintage Motorsport Festival, Cadwell Park, Louth, Lincolnshire cadwellpark.co.uk 24-26 Concorso d’Eleganza Villa d’Este, Como, Italy concorsodeleganzavilladeste. com 2 Simply Porsche, National Motor Museum, Beaulieu, Hampshire beaulieu.co.uk 18 CSCC Thruxton, Andover, Hampshire thruxtonracing.co.uk 18-June 23 Peking-Paris Rally, China to France heroevents.eu 1-2 Masters of Motoring, Castle Combe circuit/Bowood House, Wilt mastersofmotoring.com 15 HERO Challenge Two, Bicester Heritage, Oxfordshire hero-era.com 16 Custom & American Show, National Motor Museum, Beaulieu, Hampshire beaulieu.co.uk Alan Minshaw, 1935-2024 Alan Minshaw, the racing driver and tuning guru who founded Demon Tweeks, has died aged 88. Starting out in club motor sport in his Morris Minor in his native Liverpool in 1958, Minshaw soon spotted a market for clubman racers looking to upgrade their cars. Initially selling Fram air filters out of his roadgoing Downton racing Mini, he branched out into sports cars and Formula Ford in the Sixties, before establishing Demon Tweeks in 1971. Originally based near Oulton Park, Minshaw used saloon-car racing as a showcase for his products. He competed in top-flight BTCC for a decade, his biggest successes coming with VW Golf GTIs, winning his class and coming second overall in 1983, although his most iconic car was the distinctive red BMW M3 he hotly contested the top class with in 1988-9. After retiring from the front line, Alan Minshaw focused on historic racing with his sons, applying his tuning knowledge especially to XK-engined Jaguars. SAVE MONEY WHEN YOU SUBSCRIBE TO CLASSIC CARS Plus l Free UK delivery l Welcome gift with annual option l Choose digital access to unlock rewards and past issues l Exclusive content l Never miss an issue! see page 34 28

MONTH IN CARS Barn finds 1936 T57 Ventoux’s tapewrapped wheel ’36 Ventoux fetched more than smarter ’34 Mullin Museum’s amazing show-style display in Oxnard, CA Unrestored ’34 T57 Ventoux: original body and engine Lightweight seats are a Ventoux feature Peter Mullin’s B-team Bugattis Fleet of unrestored rarities from Mulhouse museum’s spillover collection is sold off fter Californian businessman, museum founder and collector extraordinaire Peter Mullin died in September last year aged 82, more than 100 of his cars were offered for sale by Gooding & Co on 26 April. Among those were cars that had previously been part of the even more famous collection once owned by the Schlumpf brothers, reclusive Swiss textile magnates who created a huge hoard in Mulhouse, eastern France, bankrupting their company in the process. The bulk of the collection was eventually seized by the French authorities in 1977 and formed the basis 30 for the Musée National de l’Automobile. museum in Oxnard, California. All of However, many of the hundreds of them have therefore been off the road Bugattis acquired by the Schlumpfs since 1977 at least, and in some cases far longer. They include relatively small were in unrestored condition, and and modest models like the pair of those already in barn-find form SEND US 1927 Type 40s; these are 1.5-litre were sent to await restoration YOUR BARN FINDS four-cylinder lightweights, one at various sites, and eventually – BEST ONE a faux cabriolet with a torn roof stored 20km outside Mulhouse. WINS £100 and some missing engine parts, These cars remained separate one a canvas-topped ‘Break de from those seized by the State Chasse’. There are larger and more and were finally sold in 2008 by Fritz Schlumpf’s widow, Arlette, to Dutch car valuable cars such as the four Type 57s, dealers Jack Braam Ruben and Bruno including a pair of Ventoux coupés from Vendiesse. They in turn sold the majority 1934 and ’36. These appear intact and of them to Peter Mullin, who displayed complete, and at least one of them has them in unrestored condition at his the potential to be returned to the road
Crusty Ferrari was too much for country lanes Galibier interior roomier than Ventoux coupé The owner of this 1974 Ferrari 365 GT4 2+2 bought the car in the Eighties and used it as his daily driver for several years before moving to rural Herefordshire in the early Nineties. Matthew Parkin of Brightwells Auctioneers in Leominster explains what happened next. ‘There’s rural Herefordshire, and there’s very rural Herefordshire. It turns out a large, frontengined V12 Ferrari isn’t much use for trundling down a narrow muddy lane to pick up the milk, so the owner put it away in 1992, since when it’s been sitting in the same barn. ‘And I do mean a barn – mud floor, a few missing slates, holes in the walls…which probably helped keep the air moving.’ The owner is a very private individual, so no photos were taken of the car on his property, but Matthew did manage to snap one as it was unloaded in the car park at Brightwells before cleaning, in advance of a sale on May 8. ‘One wheel was seized, which we’ve now freed off, and we’ve fixed a flat tyre. The engine turns but hasn’t run in 30 years and the clutch is frozen. There’s corrosion and blistering in the wheelarches, but the chassis sections underneath look rusty rather than rotten. I actually think the body’s mostly okay, and the interior has got away with only a slight nibble from furry residents here and there. The number plate – 365 COW – will need to be reclaimed from the DVLA, and the vendor has lost the paperwork.’ It’s a big project for someone, but it’s also a front-engined, V12, right-hand-drive Ferrari with a manual gearbox – uncommon at an estimate of £10,000 to £15,000. T57 Galibier saloon – 135bhp once shifted it It’s all there, but it’s been getting crusty T57’s 3257cc twin-ohc straight eight in as-found cosmetic condition, after extensive mechanical recommissioning. Herein lies the problem for buyers, though – it’s unlikely anyone who does not already have their own museum would consider buying these cars to keep them ‘in their juice’ and display them unrestored, but restoration would remove decades of patination. The T57 Ventoux coupés made $511k (1936) and $472,500 (1934), while both T57 Galibier saloons made $179,200. Perhaps the most curious results were those for the Type 40s – these 1496cc four-pot runabouts had no competition history nor potential, and were in need of plenty of work. The Break de Chasse made $445k, the faux cabrio $246,400. Burgundy hide trim may be saveable It turns, but that’s all. Who’s brave? Car was originally dark blue – a better choice? in association with 31
MONTH IN CARS Barn Finds MGBs make Volvo 240 up the bulk and Porsche of yard 944 at rest XK120 and S-type Jags: too far gone? Roadsters and GTs feature in equal numbers Handsome logo remains in window Midget, TR6, Mk2 Jag all looking rough Roll-hoop in Frogeye – race history? Alfetta GTV & Volvo P1800 worth saving? American MG specialist lies dormant Our long-time American barn-find tipster Tom Letourneau has been inspiring his friends to keep an eye out for unusual discoveries, hence this message from fellow fan of European sports cars, John DeWaele. ‘Tom Letourneau suggested I send these pictures to you for your publication. We were exploring this part of North Carolina after the National Alfa Romeo convention in Charlotte in 2023, and were passing through the town of Star Keep your project covered with when we came upon this amazing sight. I found the little website for this dealer, BJ & Sons, and I also their Facebook page, which doesn’t seem to have been updated since 2015. So not much sign of activity on the classic car side.’ Star is a settlement of just 876 people, around 50 miles east of Charlotte. In its centre, on the corner of East Street and South Main, is the BJ & Sons Motor Company, with sundry British and European cars – and a few American classics – Protection for your barn find - the holy grail of the classic car scene Matt Allen, Product & Insurance Underwriting Development 32 spread around the side and back of the lot, plus parking for a Frogeye Sprite, a Morris Minor, and MGB and something hidden by cover under a car port at the front. As well as more than a dozen MGs, John spotted Jaguar Mk2, S-type and XJ6 saloons (sorry, sedans), a Triumph TR6, Porsche 944, sundry Volvos and an Alfa Romeo Alfetta GTV. The weeds are growing ever higher – will any of them be rescued? Manager at Adrian Flux, outlines the cover needed to protect your beautiful barn find. Build-up cover: This ensures your barn find is protected while it’s off the road being restored. There are two levels, fire and theft or fire, theft and accidental damage. Parts and tools can be included. Classic car cover: Once the car’s back on the road, from £56 a year, we tailor your cover to meet your individual needs. Adrian Flux: www.adrianflux.co.uk/classics
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Next Month The August issue of Classic Cars will be out of this world O N SA L E 12 JUNE 202 4 OVERLAPPING Exploring late Sixties grand touring from the extreme perspectives of a Ferrari Daytona and Ford Capri 1600GT PLUS Ex-Le Mans AC Cobra tested • Maserati Biturbo reader bucket list drive • Life story of a 1969 Morgan 4/4 • 1986 Rally d’Antibes Mini 1275GT team cars driven • Epic Alfa 1300GTA restoration • 5.7-litre Overfinch Range Rover tested • Fiat Coupé buying insights and more Contents may change but will still be great 34
‘ENJOY THE UNIQUE WORLD OF ALL YEAR’ GET 3 ISSUES FOR £5 OFFER ENDS MAY 26! * Choose your subscription offer here FR digita EE l with a access P + Di rint subsc gital riptio n SCAN HERE 01858 438 884 greatmagazines.co.uk/classiccars BENEFITS OF SUBSCRIBING Save 16% on shop prices and get FREE UK delivery** Receive bonus articles and an exclusive monthly e-newsletter from Classic Cars group editor Phil Bell Enjoy compelling, original series you won’t find anywhere else, including Life Cycle of a classic, Epic Restoration, Quentin Willson’s Hot Tips, reader’s bucket list dream drives and our quarterly Price Guide (monthly for digital subscribers) Plus exciting big tests, the hottest market analysis and buying advice, the sharpest event coverage, the most thoughtprovoking columnists in the business and much more FREE Digital access through our dedicated Classic Cars app where you’ll find rewards and past issues Receive a FREE Keycare SmartFob Bluetooth key tracking device worth £36*** FREE GIFT! *3 issues for £5 is the trial price available on Classic Cars. Trials auto-renew to £30 every six months thereafter. UK only. Offer closes 26th May 2024. **Saving refers to annual recurring subscriptions including the print magazine. ***The welcome gift is for new UK subscribers only purchasing on an annual payment method on Print, Digital or Print + Digital. Your Keycare SmartFob, and further details on how to set it up, will be sent to you in the post within 28 working days, after the first payment has been received and the cooling-off period has passed. The welcome gift offer is limited to 300 units. For 01 numbers, calls from landlines are typically charged up to 16p per minute (approximately). Call costs from mobiles vary according to the calling plan chosen. If you call an 01/02 number outside of any inclusive minutes, they can cost between 3p and 65p per minute (approximately). Please refer to ofcom.org.uk for updated pricing. Operating hours are 8am-9:30pm Mon-Fri and 8am-4pm Sat.
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LETTERS Flaming haemorrhoids LETTER OF THE MONTH My immaculate 2008 Porsche Cayenne was supplied new by Mayfair Porsche with every available extra; it wants for nothing. While refuelling it recently, a fellow patron asked me how it went. ‘Like a testosteronefuelled adolescent buffalo, suffering from inflamed haemorrhoids!’ was my reply. From the outside it has the form of an immensely obese 911 on stilts, and is about as fast. Its wide track and 21in x 295mm tyres give it the frontal stance of a sumo wrestler. At its heart is a twin-turbo 4.8-litre petrol engine with 500bhp and 500lb ft; enough to propel it to 60mph in 4.7 seconds and on to a claimed 171mph. The brilliant cabin is swathed in quality stitched leather and festooned with instruments and controls. Considering its bulk, it handles superbly, due mostly to intelligent air suspension and variable ride height. Some argue all this is overkill for a daily driver – my defence is there’s no pressure to use all its abilities but it’s comforting to know they’re there. If you’re on the cusp of buying an SUV, the Cayenne is worth serious consideration but they’re not cheap to own – main dealers charge £270 per hour; indies £80-£100. The cost of OEM parts can be steep but quality alternatives are available. If you use the performance, be prepared for 10-20mpg, and to go through a set of Pirelli P Zeros very quickly. Expect to pay £15-£18k for a nice example with traceable service records. A professional inspection is money well spent. Ray Ganderton Past repairs add to the history I agree with Quentin Willson (The Insiders, May 2024) that the presence left on a vehicle by past owners and repairers adds to its own ‘album’, and can give the new owner much to wonder about. Perhaps the leap between great condition and pristine is as collectable art is – admiration still, but in a different environment. It could also be down to said owners being super-fastidious or having a romantic type of OCD. Dave Murphy Getting the supercar bug On taking my first glance at the cover of your June 2024 issue, I actually thought you were featuring the Bond Bug as the ‘definitive poster car’. Imagine the damage to the esteem of any Countach owner to find that their pride and joy could be mistaken for a Bug. John Rogers A Firenza that was F1 fast As a South African addict of your publication, the feature on Frikkie Esterhuizen’s collection (The Collector, June 2024) caught my eye. A Vauxhall Firenza as a fire-breathing V8 racing car was something special. I have an idea that in the saloon car race after the South African Grand Prix at Kyalami in 1973, Basil van Rooyen was lapping at the same speed as F1 cars of only a few years before. In the same issue, Alex Riley’s column reminded me of seeing BMC Farina pick- ups styled along Riley lines dotted around the countryside in various parts of South America. They had been created by BMC Argentina, I think. Ian Dove These second-series Di Tella Argentas were built by Siam from 1963 to 1966. – Phil Bell Bodge engineering Alex Riley is absolutely spot-on about badge engineering (The Insiders, May 2024). Ford cheapened the Ghia badge but Standard beat the Blue Oval to it when it came to Vignale, having nailed the badge to the rump of the Vanguard before that model was euthanised by the glorious Triumph 2000. I pointed this out to a Ford dealer PR client as Vignale was unveiled. ‘Best not mention it,’ was his response. Maurice Hardy Engine mystery The Landar-marked rocker cover (Barn Finds, June 2024) on the Austin-Healey Sprite racecar is easily explained. Landar built rear-engined sports racing cars with Mini engines/gearboxes, a common sight at hill climbs. They also made Landar parts, including alloy rocker covers. I’ve only ever seen one other, displayed by a company selling Austin-Healey Sprite parts. Maybe Landar built an engine for that Sprite? Landar also made a larger car with a rear-mounted Ford engine and Hewland gearbox. David Morys JULY 2024 ISSUE ON SALE 15 MAY-11 JUNE EDITORIAL ENQUIRIES Classic Cars, Media House, Lynch Wood, Peterborough PE2 6EA Tel: 01733 468000 Fax: 01733 468379 Email: classic.cars@bauermedia.co.uk GROUP EDITOR Phil Bell PRODUCTION EDITOR Joe Breeze CONTENT EDITOR Sam Dawson ART DIRECTOR Karen Nunn DESIGNERS Chelsea Nelms, Grace Bloye HEAD OF PRODUCTION Rob McCabe ASSISTANT EDITOR Russ Smith EDITORIAL ASSISTANT Leise Enright Contributors this month Nigel Boothman, Nathan Chadwick, Stuart Collins, Tom Critchell, James Peene, Stuart Perry, Chris Randall, Alex Riley, Ian Shaw, Adam Shorrock, Ian Skelton, JJ Vollans, Quentin Willson Cover photography Stuart Collins Advertising enquiries Classic Cars, Media House, Lynch Wood, Peterborough PE2 6EA. 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QUENTIN WILLSON THE INSIDERS Quentin Willson had a 10-year stint presenting the BBC’s Top Gear, has bought and sold countless cars and has cemented a reputation as everyone’s favourite motoring pundit. Somehow a trip to preview a new electric SUV saw me locked in conversation with Richard Hammond and car designer Toby Ecuyer about the E-type ent to the preview of INEOS’s new electric SUV – the Fusilier. I’m a fan of its combustion Grenadier, not least because of all its clever retro touches. Designer Toby Ecuyer – a hardcore classic buff – has cleverly brought a beguiling blend of ancient and modern to the Grenadier’s DNA. But while all the other journos were poring over the new Fusilier EV, Toby, Richard Hammond and I were ignoring the media hoopla and got locked in conversation about E-types. Richard owns a 4.2 – as does Toby – who ventured that as a car designer, he believes that the E-type’s everlasting appeal comes from the fact that it forces you to look at it. Repeatedly. ‘Unlike so many other car designs, one look at the E is never enough. It visually demands that you come back again and again for more.’ At this point I ventured, thinking this might be a slightly rash admission, that back when I owned my 1961 flat-floor 3.8, at night I’d go down to the garage in my dressing gown just to drink in those exquisite proportions. Expecting the remark to raise a ribald eyebrow, they both nodded in sympathetic understanding. And they also admitted to opening the E’s bonnet for the same reasons. There aren’t many cars – apart from some Alfas – that force you do that. Just look at the engine because it’s a thing of beautiful complication. The domed, chrome cylinder head nuts, the polished twin alloy cam covers and alloy water manifold, the fat, shiny SU carbs with their brass tops. Unlike an XK, the E’s engine is mounted on a square tube frame like an art exhibit that demands you run your eyes over the entirety of its details. Richard said the same thing happens if he opens the bonnet in public. ‘People just stare, for ages. It’s a look of love.’ We were disturbed from our reverie and asked to join the crowd in the famous Grenadier pub – its name changed for the day to Fusilier – to listen to a presentation by INEOS boss Sir Jim Ratcliffe on his new motor. Quite unprompted, and without any prior knowledge of our conversation, Sir Jim cited the Series 1 E-type as an example of one of the world’s most emotionally powerful car designs that was ruined by constant meddling. ‘It started as a perfect design and then progressively, because of corporate interference, lost all its allure and because of that, its customers.’ He’s a billionaire who knows his cars, industry, and what sells. The E-type was never just an industrial product, it was an artistic triumph. A moment in time when a handful of very brilliant Coventry men in brown coats fused mechanical complication with the delicacy of the human form. Haunches like thighs, headlights like fingernails and thin rear tyres like ankles. The roofline of the coupé is like the arched back of an athlete poised to run. The front wings like powerful forearms and that bonnet bulge like a tensed bicep. This sculptured, flowing muscularity is what makes us stare at the E-type. With the possible exception of the Ferrari Dino, I can think of no other car design that has such a sinewy physicality. It radiates plenty of other messages too, but the most powerful one is its rendition of the soft curves of the human body. ‘It had haunches like thighs, headlights like fingernails and thin rear tyres like ankles’ Many say it was Malcolm Sayer’s obsession with aerodynamics that ultimately dictated that distinctive silhouette, but I’m sure he’d be enormously proud to know that 63 years on we’re rapt in wonder, constantly caressing those curves with our eyes. 39
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THE INSIDERS ALEX RILEY Unlike today, most 1970s footballers drove humdrum cars. But, even then, the most flamboyant players liked to tool around in some tasty, and flashy motors Alex landed his first television job in 1998, working behind the scenes on Top Gear. He’s made several classic car TV series since, and currently writes and presents The Car Years on ITV4. n a world where even quite average footballers can afford a blackedout Range Rover or a gold-wrapped Lamborghini, it’s easy to forget just how modest most footballers’ lifestyles were back in the Seventies. Back then I’d read my brother’s Shoot mags, purely to find out what cars the players were driving. It seemed a lot of them drove Capris, though only Terry McDermott specified the exact model he owned (a black and gold John Player Special edition). They also drove Escorts, Cortinas, the odd Vauxhall and a surprising number of Datsuns. Ossie Ardiles and Ray Clemence drove Princesses. More flamboyant players often had more interesting cars. George Best and Rodney Marsh had Lotus Europa S2s and Frank Worthington an Elan +2S. Worthington then bought a Ford Mustang Mach 1 in 1972, which no doubt attracted a lot of attention on the streets of Huddersfield where he lived at the time. How galling it must have been for him a few years later to be forced to appear in an ad for the Euroway Car Centre in Bolton, sitting at the wheel of his ‘nippy and economical’ Lada. QPR’s Stan Bowles had a Lamborghini Espada, but by the time he played for Orient he didn’t have a car and Alan Ball had a Plymouth Barracuda. John Gidman of Aston Villa was pictured sitting on the boot of his new Triumph TR7 parked next to his Dolomite Sprint, a step up from a couple of years before when he’d had a Cortina 1600. Gidman lived, like every other player featured ‘relaxing’ at home, in a new-build detached house. These photo stories followed a strict formula: a shot of the footballer mowing the lawn and/or washing the car with the kids; another of him sitting with his wife by the music centre, slipping an LP out of its sleeve, followed by a shot of them awkwardly leafing through a magazine on a Dralon settee. Or on a sunlounger if the weather was nice. Superstar Kevin Keegan owned a fancy petrol-powered ride-on lawnmower and a more expansive period farmhouse in North Wales. He waxed lyrical about his new Datsun 240Z, saying he’d much rather go for a drive than watch TV. After that he got a 260Z and then a 2+2 so he could take his parents ‘for a spin’. Malcolm MacDonald was pictured at his fashion boutique in Newcastle called ‘Malcolm MacDonald – For the Exclusive Man’ and described himself as a keen driver. His stylishness extended to cars too, because he owned an Alfa Romeo that he got ‘a real kick’ out of driving. While we don’t know which Alfa he was talking about, he claimed it was ‘practically jet-propelled’. Even faster was the pre-HE XJ-S that Trevor Francis drove up to the City Ground in 1979, when he signed for Nottingham Forest to become Britain’s first million-pound player. The top European stars seemed to be a step ahead of most British players, both on and off the pitch. Franz Beckenbauer had a BMW 2800CS. Johann Cruyff, who drove a blue Citroën SM, lived on a ranch-style estate outside Barcelona where he’d relax by going horse riding. I imagine he had someone to mow the lawn for him. Fellow Dutchman Johnny Rep drove a green Fiat 124 Coupé with driving lamps. But when it came to having great taste in cars, even George Best would struggle PHOTO: JOHN LAKEY ‘When it came to taste in cars, George Best would struggle to compete with Gunther Netzer’ to compete with brilliant West German international Gunther Netzer. He went through not one, but several E-types – one of which he sold to Beckenbauer – as well as a Porsche 911, a Ferrari Dino, a 365GTB/4 and a 512BB. So spare a thought for Terry Butcher, who had a Datsun 1200 Estate. 41
Messing around with classic designs can enhance the whole ownership experience, or corrupt the very virtues that make them more appealing than modern cars. Here, six exemplars of different modification schools make their case Words JJ VOLLANS Photography STUART COLLINS 42
[ Modified Classics] 43
[ Modified Classics] ar fans have been customising their machinery for well over a century now. Back in the Twenties, Ford Model T owners were bolting Frontenac crossflow cylinder heads to the engines of their ‘Tin Lizzies’. A century later, the selection of machines gathered here represents a thin but tasty slice of the vast custom classic scene. Representatives include Ninemeister’s Porsche 911 backdate, Frontline’s ‘LE60’ MGB riff, Tolman’s modernised 205GTI, a Ford F100 that starred on TV show Fast N’ Loud, an electrified DeLorean DMC-12 and a home-built ‘OEM+’ modern classic, the Mercedes-Benz 190E 2.5-16. With car designer Peter Stevens and Hagerty concours judge John Mayhead both offering their professional insights on this notoriously thorny topic, we set out to explore whether tinkering with your classic car ruins or revitalises it. It’s impossible to explore custom car culture without including Porsche. With an easily accessible engine out back and a chassis layout that remained fundamentally unchanged for decades, there’s been plenty of Porsche parts-swapping down the eras. It’s why the trend of ‘back-dating’ 911s can exist at all. This customising style was given a huge boost by Brit Rob Dickinson when he created Singer Vehicle Design back in 2008. British firm Ninemeister predates the famous Californian outfit, having been formed in the late Nineties by design 44 engineer Colin Belton. Warrington-based Ninemeister was entrusted by Andy Paul Stafford when he sought to create his take on Porsche perfection, based on a 1987 911 Carrera 3.2. The owner – Andy Paul Stafford ‘I’ve had 911s for 40 years, on and off… this is my sixth,’ reveals Andy. ‘Having had a lot of cars that were the way Ferdinand wanted them, I decided to do one the way I wanted.’ The idea Andy cooked up was to create something of a halfway house between a touring 911 and one that could keep pace on track. These concepts might seem diametrically opposed, which is why some fettling was needed to get the car just as Andy wanted. ‘You specify it as you think you want it, but there are always a few tweaks. The first exhaust was too loud so I asked Ninemeister to add baffles, and soften the suspension too.’ Any build of this nature involves a methodical approach to parts selection. ‘It’s got a 993 engine, G50 gearbox, Turbo suspension, wheels and master cylinder, plus Boxster brakes on the front and a Wavetrac LSD. It’s making around 310bhp.’ Andy took years to thoroughly plan his build with the team at Ninemeister, and that attention to detail has paid off. ‘It gets used, that’s the whole point. I’m extremely happy with it and the guys did a fantastic job.’ The car designer – Peter Stevens Peter Stevens needs little introduction, as the man responsible for the look of the McLaren F1 and restyled Lotus Esprit – along
Andy Stafford owned several factory 911s before speccing his own SPECIFICATIONS (based on factory 911 Carrera 3.2) ‘So cohesive in style, stance, and appearance as to set a very high benchmark for any enthusiast’ Engine 3164cc horizontally opposed six-cylinder, sohc per bank, Bosch Motronic ignition with LE-Jetronic fuel injection Power and torque 231bhp @ 5900rpm; 209lb ft @ 4800rpm Transmission Getrag G50 five-speed manual, rear-wheel drive Steering Unassisted rack & pinion Suspension Front: independent, twin longitudinal torsion-bar springs, Boge dampers, anti-roll bar. Rear: independent, semi-trailing arms with torsion-bar springs, Boge dampers, anti-roll bar Brakes Servo-assisted discs front and rear Performance Top speed: 152mph; 0-60mph: 6.1sec Weight 1210kg Fuel consumption 29mpg Cost new £41,504 Classic Cars Price Guide £21k-£54k with numerous other stand-out designs – he’s ideally placed to reveal what can make or break a car’s aesthetic appeal. ‘A Porsche 911 has always been a thing of beauty. What a great starting point for a very personal interpretation. The delicious colour of Andy’s 911 is a rare but original Porsche colour [Oslo Blue] – available on 356s in 1962 and 1963 – a colour that works brilliantly with the orange spoked Fuchs wheels and subtle orange ‘Porsche’ lettering on the lower surface of the doors and, even more impressively, the cooling fan above the engine. ‘Considering that the car had been a beaten-up Londonbased daily driver, the body is now flawless. The same can be said for the interior, Andy having found a company in Scotland who produced the Napier tartan trim that complements the extreior colour to produce a car so cohesive in style, stance, and appearance as to set a very high benchmark for any enthusiast.’ The concours judge – John Mayhead John Mayhead is a global concours judge and the UK editor of the Hagerty Price Guide. As such, he’s here not only to gauge how ‘right’ a classic is, but how any deviation from factory spec may affect its value. First and foremost, however, he’s a classic enthusiast and clearly understands the lure of personalising. ‘Reducing any of these cars to a bare value seems grubby and frankly unfair,’ Mayhead admits. ‘Every vehicle in this assemblage is totally different, but the owners and builders who have brought them along today have one thing in common: extraordinary passion for what they’ve created. JJ claims colourmatching his shoes was a conincidence 993 engine gives the Ninemeister 911 plenty of punch ‘Andy Stafford’s project is the culmination of years of preparation. The result is extraordinary, with a car that has been both mechanically and physically improved beyond recognition. His attention to detail is phenomenal, with paint, interior and detailing all finished to the highest possible standards.’ Andy’s 911 dream build began with buying a donor 1987 lhd Carrera 3.2 for £50k. It required an immediate £10k investment for restoration work, followed by £170k for the full build. That amounts to a £235k-ish total. John says the value as it stands is around £170k, based on another extensively modified Ninemeister 3.2 recently offered by dealer Tom Hartley. The road tester – JJ Vollans A great road car comes from the right balance of considered compromises. Less insulation and it’ll be lighter, but louder. Suspension too firm and it’ll ride poorly, but handle sharper. Changing one element makes it easy to upset the balance. The mechanical mix of this machine, however, seems to lie in the goldilocks zone between road and racer. Yes, it’s still loud, but its edgy motor sport growl is just on the right side of raucous. Powered by an engine two generations newer, performance is conspicuously keen. Its styling, inside and out, triggers classicera expectations – a Porsche that’s likely only exciting in its extremis. However, this 911 is both fearsome and forgiving. Straight-line pace is scorching, but its pendulum-like handling poise feels tamed. It’s surefooted and confidence inspiring. In short, an expertly honed 911 that’s a credit to its creators. 45
Wayne Lamport was smitten by the F100’s star quality No lateral support to cope with the improved handling EFI engine is a quarter century younger than chassis SPECIFICATIONS (based on factory 1968 Ford F100 390) Engine 6391cc V8, pushrod-activated overhead valves, Holley quad-choke carburettor Power and torque 255bhp @ 4400rpm; 376lb ft @ 2600rpm Transmission Threespeed column shift manual, rear-wheel drive Steering Cone worm with recirculating balls Suspension Front: independent twin i-beam with coil springs, radius rods and telescopic dampers Rear: Flex-O-Matic leaf spring solid live axle with telescopic dampers Brakes Servo-assisted drums front and rear Performance Top speed: 90mph; 0-60mph: 15sec (est.) Weight 1481kg Fuel consumption 20mpg (est.) Cost new $2198 Estimate value £25,000 ustom car culture flourished in America. The hot-rod craze of dropping big V8s into small cars during the post-war period threw ‘gas’ on the fire for a whole generation with a passion for going fast. That led to the brash, hedonistic muscle car era of the Sixties and early Seventies, when manufacturers took inspiration from hot rodders. The expectation of modifying your machine for drag racing, or simply customising it to personal taste, is almost a given in America. The aftermarket parts industry is correspondingly huge. And as muscle cars and hot-rods – once the preserve of the blue-collar worker – have appreciated out of reach, greater diversification in the type of machines being customised leads us neatly to this Ford F100… The owner – Wayne Lamport The pickup truck is about as American as a vehicle gets. It’s the motoring equivalent of a bald eagle flying over a baseball field, trailing the Stars and Stripes from its talons. Perhaps that’s why this once utilitarian vehicle has been co-opted by Stateside custom car culture, with one of its most visible outpourings being the Discovery Channel television show Fast N’ Loud. The exploits of Richard Rawlings and his crew at Gas Monkey Garage in Dallas, Texas has captivated millions of car fans worldwide, with pickup trucks featuring right from the start in 2012. Wayne Lamport’s 1967 Ford F100 was one. 46 ‘I don’t have to worry about it getting scratched. It’s not there to look pretty, it’s designed to work’ ‘It was owned by the father of Aaron Kaufman, the former main mechanic at Gas Monkey Garage,’ says Wayne. ‘It appeared in about 15 episodes. Later, it popped up on eBay, right in the middle of Gas Monkey mania. I’d always wanted an F100 with the full Ford Crown Vic’ front end and a more modern engine – something that handled, went and was reliable.’ Wayne’s F100 has the subframe and most of the mechanical components up front from a Nineties Crown Victoria, with its electronically fuel injected 5.0-litre V8 engine from a similarvintage Mustang. Though that sounds like a potent mix, which in relative terms it certainly is, Wayne’s realistic about his F100’s performance. ‘It’s heavy, but you can pull away from lights quickly. It handles, and that’s what really shocked me.’ Wayne’s not alone in adoring his TV-star truck either. ‘People love to get selfies with it, and I love the patina and that I don’t have to worry about it getting the odd scratch. It’s not there to look pretty, it’s designed to work.’ The car designer – Peter Stevens ‘As a long-time hot rodder, I always love almost any old-school American car or truck. There is something about the confident way they sit on the road, almost as if they own it. American magstyle wheels, not out-of-proportion 18in wheels but proper 16s with wider tyres – particular at the rear – give the suggestion of serious horsepower under the “hood”. ‘When older American cars start to rust it's not that awful orange English stuff that you just know is eating away at your
[ Modified Classics] pride and joy at night, the steel just seems to turn into some kind of black oxide that doesn’t appear to get worse over time. ‘This has that patinated used look that tells you that it has earned its keep. A tidy interior without too many modern additions also just looks right. A tow hook on the back and it would be my perfect trailer tow car for a beach-racing hot-rod.’ The concours judge – John Mayhead ‘Wayne’s truck adds another element to the valuation debate, that of celebrity ownership. Hagerty publishes the Power List every year, an analysis of what difference a famous connection can make to a car’s value. A few years ago, Richard Rawlings sold a group of his own, mostly unmodified cars on Bring-A-Trailer. They averaged around 15-20% mark up over a standard car. ‘This one has been modified and starred in the first series of Fast N’ Loud, so that all adds to its value. People want this because it’s cool and are prepared to pay for it.’ The truck was sourced and rebuilt by Richard Rawlings and Aaron Kaufman for $75,000 (£60,000). Although it’s hard to be precise, of course, John estimates that the value now stands at around £45,000. From our own observations we note that a hot rod pick-up truck is certainly a niche within a niche, at least here in the UK. Interest in classic American cars in Britain, while significant, remains relatively modest compared to that of home-grown or European machines, which could mean it’ll take longer to find a buyer, come sale time. It also means that, beyond importing a truck yourself, stock on our shores is somewhat limited. Fortunately, parts availability is excellent thanks to the aftermarket industry in the US, with firms over here specialising in sourcing and delivering parts to UK owners. The road tester – JJ Vollans The builds during early seasons of Fast N’ Loud – as Richard and Aaron were forging their reputation – bear little resemblance to the big-budget affairs seen later. This F100 was designed to be the first GMG shop truck, usually consigned to the back of shot, or sent on parts runs. So it’s comparatively modest. Its relaxed if relatively bare cabin sports a big comfy bench seat, offering nothing in the way of lateral support. The Crown Victoria underpinnings give this F100 far more composure in the bends than it has any right to. Wayne’s right, it does handle, well enough for a truck from the Sixties at least. The ride is also comfortable with the body kept remarkably level. Plenty of mid-range shove from that 5.0-litre V8 comes with a delicious and addictive soundtrack – it’s almost impossible to resist giving the throttle a blip at a traffic light, just to feel the torque rock the cab. The transmission’s slightly agricultural column shift, off to the right-hand side of the enormous steering wheel does, however, somewhat pop any sporting illusions. Surprisingly, this near five-metre-long and two-metre-wide truck doesn’t feel that huge on UK roads. It’s drivetrain also makes it surprisingly economical, with Wayne reporting over 20mpg is easily achievable. The disc brakes, although better than the original drums, are still this truck’s weakest link. 47
[ Modified Classics] ‘Now it not only looks futuristic but has the feel of the future to it from behind the wheel, plus a sciencefiction soundtrack’ hatever your view of converting classic cars to electric drivetrains, few would argue there are more deserving candidates than John DeLorean’s white elephant. The DMC-12 was compromised from new because of its lacklustre PRV engine. This granted the DMC-12 just 130bhp in the US, and performance that was certainly less than a supercar’s – on par with an original Golf GTI. While there was, and remains, plenty to like about this former vision of motoring future, few other than DeLorean die-hards speak favourably of its powerplant. Owner Leighton Chumbley certainly isn’t one of those, having decided a few years ago – after a few beers with a friend – to call up Electric Classic Cars (ECC) with a proposition… The owner – Leighton Chumbley ‘I rang Richard at ECC and asked if he would be interested in converting a DeLorean,’ Leighton remembers. ‘“Oh yeah” Richard said, “but you need to get a good one.”’ Not an easy task, as it turned out. ‘Richard was interested in one with good bodywork, of course… We eventually found this example at auction. I must admit, I didn’t truly understand the appeal of the DeLorean until I brought it back from the auction 48 on the trailer and went to get a coffee. By the time I came back outside, there was a crowd of people surrounding it. I thought to myself, “what have I bought!”’ Leighton supposed it was best to sample his factory-standard DeLorean, to give him a benchmark before the conversion. ‘I trundled about in it a couple of times… it was rubbish! When we took the engine, gearbox, and petrol tank out, we found one of the fuel lines was loose, so petrol was evaporating, it was even less efficient than it should have been. I donated the drivetrain to the DeLorean Owners’ Club which came and collected it. ‘The car was in ECC’s garage for about nine months, because this was in the middle of covid.’ Here Jon Peck of Electric Classic Cars details the conversion work. ‘We used a Tesla small motor – 220kW (295bhp) and 243lb ft torque – mounted in the rear directly driving the rear wheels. It has a 70kW/h battery pack with a 7kW AC type 2 intelligent charge system. We upgraded the suspension with sports springs and dampers and installed new gas struts with remote opening on the doors.’ IVA approval is on a points-based system, and because this DMC-12 retained its original chassis monocoque, axles and steering, it could keep its original registration number despite the fuel change. With the car back with Leighton, he could finally experience the result of his alcohol-fuelled impulse decision. ‘I love it, it’s a toy really. I’ve been to a few rallies and events with supercars and owners seem to get a little miffed when everyone’s drawn to the DeLorean. I think the only things I’d be tempted to add are power steering and, since it’s a Seventies car, modern heating.’
Leighton’s drunken idea makes perhaps the most sense of them all SPECIFICATIONS (based on factory US DMC-12) Engine 2849cc V6, sohc per bank, Bosch electronic fuel injection Power and torque 130bhp @ 5500rpm; 153lb ft @ 2750rpm Transmission Five-speed manual, rear-wheel drive Steering Rack & pinion Suspension Front: independent coil springs, telescopic dampers and anti-roll bar Rear: coil springs, transaxle with telescopic dampers Brakes Servo-assisted discs front and rear Performance Top speed: 130mph; 0-60mph: 10.5sec (US spec) Weight 1290kg (2844lb) Fuel consumption 24mpg (UK) Cost new $24,000 Classic Cars Price Guide £24k-£50k Interior left largely untouched, for better or for worse... Not much to look at perhaps, but surely more on-brand for Doc The car designer – Peter Stevens ‘Way back in time I was asked by an Italian design house if I would be interested in working on the design of a sports car with a glassfibre chassis and a stainless-steel body. This sounded the wrong way round to me, and the people sounded a bit flaky too, so I said no! As it turned out, when Lotus took on the job of productionising the DeLorean DMC-12, it added a steel backbone chassis under the GRP. ‘At the time the DeLorean was built, American law required all cars to have crude, officially homologated headlights. To my eye the front end of the car has always suffered from these inappropriate lights, otherwise the centre section has aged quite well. The panel fits were never that good and the stainless body shows dirt and finger marks too easily.’ The concours judge – John Mayhead ‘Leighton’s DeLorean is a great example. The DMC-12 with its wedge styling, alloy panels and movie star credentials was the perfect choice. Leighton thinks the conversion is great, and a big improvement on the original engine, and his lack of any ecomotivation makes that element of the build beyond discussion. ‘The car itself is structurally good, but – how can I put this – has very authentic panel and interior build quality. If he sold the car tomorrow, he would be very lucky to recoup the money invested, but I don’t think he cares. That’s not the point.’ Leighton sourced his DMC-12 for £50k with the conversion costs described as ‘A lot more than that’. The total is best summed up as £100k-plus but currently, with no other machines offered for sale with this conversion to compare it to, there’s no way to gauge its current value. ‘Would someone offer me £70k? Maybe…’ suggests Leighton. The road tester – JJ Vollans The promise of John DeLorean’s supercar is hard to overestimate. Here was a man who had been head honcho at General Motors at the height of his powers, decided to leave it all behind to make his own brushed stainless-steel, gullwinged dream machine. The weight of the DMC-12 famously mushroomed, with a big snarly V8 power option denied, and even the planned turbocharged version of the V6 never happened. Though this DMC-12 is no longer hindered by such a combustion compromise. Now it not only looks futuristic but has the feel of the future to it from behind the wheel. Performance isn’t necksnapping but is considerably more urgent. Press the pedal hard and the Tesla motor at the back whirs you up to speed smartly – with a science-fiction soundtrack – putting its 295bhp to the road in a remarkably linear fashion. The ride is comfortable, despite the upgraded dampers, with the chassis’ GT nature offering plenty of compliance, albeit still with some soggy body control. You’re also acutely aware of this car’s width on the road, occasionally wincing down a narrow lane. The brakes are just about adequate, reinforcing that this DeLorean is at its best when it’s not rushed. 49
Chris Tolman wanted to pay tribute to the model that fired his passion SPECIFICATIONS (based on factory 205GTI 1.9) Just like you remember it – only far better built Ported cylinder head part of Tolman’s array of engine tweaks Engine 1905cc transverse four-cylinder, sohc, Bosch LE2-Jetronic fuel injection Power and torque 128bhp @ 6000rpm; 118lb ft @ 4750rpm Transmission Five-speed manual, front-wheel drive Steering Rack & pinion, optional power assistance Suspension Front: independent, MacPherson struts with lower wishbones and anti-roll bar. Rear: independent, cross tube with trailing arms and torsion bars, inclined telescopic dampers and anti-roll bar Brakes Discs front and rear, servo assisted Performance Top speed: 123mph; 0-60mph: 7.8sec Weight 875kg (1929lb) Fuel consumption 36mpg Cost new £9295 Classic Cars Price Guide £5250-£20k he Peugeot 205 is a prince among GTIs. Alongside the Golf MkI and go-faster front-wheel drive Escort – and better to drive than both – it was one of the first hot hatches to gain serious collector attention. It’s no accident then that Tolman Engineering in Warwickshire chose to put its name on one. If you’re going to reimagine one of the most revered performance cars of all time, you’d better be confident you can do it justice. Tolman certainly has the necessary experience, because its staff has worked on numerous laurel-winning motor sport projects with founder Chris Tolman assembling BTCC and WRC competition engines prior to creating the firm that bears his name in 2007. Like countless others, Chris’ first 205 was his gateway into performance motoring. Tinkering with it also led him into his chosen career. Decades later, the Tolman 205 is Chris’ love letter to a machine that, for him, started it all. However, this is no mere nostalgia trip, it’s a car loaded with very carefully chosen modern additions, designed to maintain the feel of the original, yet bring the engineering and technology of a 40-year-old hot hatch into line with modern driver expectation. The builder ‘The overriding impression, from those driving our development car, was the emotions it evoked,’ explains Chris. ‘Drivers were stepping out of the car, just grinning, having rekindled that 50 feeling so hard to find driving today’s sports cars. For me, and I’m sure many others, 205s were a first taste of a performance car; something rewarding, responsive and engaging. ‘We wanted to recreate that feeling of being at one with the road – you can just jump in and simply enjoy driving hard. Current hot hatches surpass these cars in many areas but despite them having loads of power and incredible dynamics, they fail to rekindle that special emotional involvement.’ The car designer – Peter Stevens ‘The 205 was a competitor to the Golf GTI when it was new but, at that time, it was not the hot hatch enthusiast’s first choice; even though, in comparison, the Golf was fairly ordinary looking. The 205 was more stylish, although it always seemed to sit a little too high compared with the GTI versions of the VW. ‘Tolman has gone to extraordinary lengths to produce a “perfectly perfect” example of this model – subtly upgraded without losing the basic honesty of the car – and red really is the only colour for the 205GTI, and of course, the paintwork on this car is “perfect”.’ The concours judge – John Mayhead ‘The Tolman Edition Peugeot 205 GTI isn’t a one-off, but a restored/reimagined limited-edition run. These cars have been reinvented to a level that is way beyond the original. ‘These companies sell cars to people who are used to driving modern high-performance models and require the same build
[ Modified Classics] ‘It provides the drive you remember from the Eighties, rather than the reality’ quality than they expect from a top-end manufacturer but with a bespoke element that makes each car special.’ The Tolman process starts with a donor Peugeot 205GTi, which is available from £5000. The conversion process for a 1.6 Tolman 205 starts at £65k plus local taxes and donor. This Evo Edition is one of a limited run of just 20, with its considerable performance comes a £125k conversion premium. Incidentally, a browse online turned up prices for modified 205GTIs ranging from £5k to £15k. Those with the popular Mi16conversion – the engine from the 405 Mi16 and Citroën BX 16 Valve – generally seem to achieve asking prices closer to £10k. The road tester – JJ Vollans The Tolman process involves more than 700 hours of precise engineering and attention to every detail, resulting in what are very likely some of the best 205s on the planet. Power delivery in this Tolman Edition is in keeping with the original, but there’s considerably more under your right foot. That’s thanks to a modified XU engine with a ported 16-valve cylinder head, new camshafts and modern engine management. Power hovers around the 200bhp mark with a Quaife automatic-torquebiasing differential ensuring that the extra grunt gets to the road in a controllable manner. The ethos behind the Tolman Edition 205, according to Chris, is that it provides the drive you remember, rather than the reality. Personally, I never found an original 205GTI’s performance lacking – especially when it could carry so much pace through a bend – but what’s interesting about the Tolman version is that its extra performance hasn’t come at the cost of the base car’s inherent rightness. It’s blisteringly quick, of course – 0-60mph in 6.5 seconds – but that’s how a 1.9-litre 205GTI felt in the late-Eighties; expectations have since moved on. The chassis certainly seems up to the increased power too as Tolman rather wisely chose not to overly alter the already superb base. It merely added its own in-house tuned Bilstein dampers, custom rear anti-roll bar and adjustable bottom arms. The results are the same fluid and at times frenetic road manners as the original, but with incremental improvements. It turns in more succinctly now and feels more controllable – or perhaps that should be forgiving – during mid-corner manoeuvres. Thankfully – because I really wanted to love this car – it proves to be easily the best 205 I’ve driven. I had access to a 1.9-litre 205 magazine project car in the 2000s and loved driving that on many a track day or impromptu ring-road blast. Unlike that modified machine however, this Tolman 205 feels far better nailed down. Peugeots from the Eighties are famous for many things but cabin quality isn’t one of them – however, there’s ne’er a hint of a rattle here. Modern additions, like gorgeous digital clocks emulating the original analogue needles but offering more readouts and functions, have been integrated discreetly. The level of care here perfectly encapsulates how to modernise a classic properly, just one of the many reasons why the Tolman Edition 205 is every bit as good as you’ve heard. 51
[ Modified Classics] ast year, when the LE60 was announced marked a century since Cecil Kimber set up Morris Garages, and six decades since the first MGBs rolled out of Abingdon. The hot-selling Roadster (and later ’B GT) that arguably came to define the British sporting approach offered entertaining – if not thrilling – introductions to performance motoring. Nostalgia plays a massive part in any MG’s appeal. Despite this, even those with the rosiest of tinted specs would struggle to deny there was room for improvement, especially by the close of MGB production in 1980. A lack of funds to either replace or develop the ’B left it looking and driving like a relic, but it’s this missed potential that led owners and aftermarket firms to carry out the development work that MG couldn’t. Chief among modern MG improvers is Frontline Developments. The builder In 1991, when Frontline was founded by Tim Fenna, it was on the… frontline of the burgeoning Restomod scene. Based in the former Benetton Formula One facility – across the road from the old MG plant at Abingdon-on-Thames – Frontline’s work resurrecting and reimagining old MGs is special. Its latest creation, the LE60, is seen as the culmination of its three-decades of experience, as Tim points out. ‘The LE60 is not just a car for us, but a heartfelt celebration of Frontline’s history and our intertwining connection with not only MG but 52 more specifically the MGB.’ Just 30 LE60s – ten for each decade Frontline has been in business – will be made, with the technical specification and cabin appointments in stark contrast to those found in the original MG product. Top of the LE60’s headline list of upgrades is its 4.8-litre Rover V8. Developing an extremely healthy 375bhp, the LE60’s dash to sixty has been almost halved – to around four seconds – compared with a factory ’B V8. Yet big-lunged performance hasn’t come at the cost of convenience, with the cabin of this converted coupé offering levels of opulence and refinement only period Aston Martin customers would have experienced. The car designer – Peter Stevens ‘What caught my eye first in this group was the MGB. It’s painted in one of those fascinating colours that changes according to how the light falls on it, or what’s reflected in the perfect body surfaces. I love colours that defy description but delight the eye. ‘Removing the bumpers, without leaving a trace of how they were fitted, leaves the body looking so clean and simple. Just a small lower front lip spoiler hints at enhanced performance, as do the gloss black Dunlop wheels with knock-off wheel hubs. ‘The interior is totally re-trimmed and detailed in a way that dispels that fusty “tired old car” look without having that feeling of being inappropriately modernised. It is so easy to do a huge amount of work to a car and then get the stance all wrong. I have seen Lamborghini Miuras set up in a way that makes the rear boot look as if it’s full of potatoes. This MGB sits just right.’
Jamie Butcher is part of the team who gave MGBs a modern twist MG SPECIFICATION (based on factory ‘B GT) ‘Like the motoring equivalent of a Guy Richie character, it’s a hooligan in a tweed jacket’ Engine 1798cc inline four-cylinder, overhead valve, twin SU HIF4 carburettors Power and torque 84bhp @ 5500rpm; 105lb ft @ 5500rpm Transmission Four-speed manual, rear-wheel drive Steering Rack & pinion Suspension Front: independent, coil and wishbone, telescopic dampers, anti-roll bar. Rear: semi-eliptic leaf springs, live axle with lever arm dampers. Brakes Discs front and rear, servo-assisted Performance Top speed: 99mph; 0-60mph: 14sec Weight 1108kg (2443lb) Fuel consumption 25mpg Cost new £998 8s 9d in 1965 Classic Cars Price Guide £3250-£16k Hidden tech meets retro modern trim This is the first Factory Edition V8 The concours judge – John Mayhead The road tester – JJ Vollans ‘Comments online about the MGB GT Frontline LE60 and cars like it are punctuated with keyboard warriors explaining that they “could do that” for much less cost. They couldn’t. Dave, in his garage, would not have CNC-machined new cylinder heads for the Rover V8, or developed this engine to a level that he was comfortable offering a two-year unlimited mileage warranty. That’s if the car keeps up its on-schedule servicing, isn’t further modified or used on a circuit or for hill climbs, sprints etc. – which are perfectly fair terms. ‘Frontline can control the quality of second-owner cars, and those that it doesn’t accept, and reach the market through auctions and online platforms, tend to have significant stories that makes their values much lower than they’d otherwise be.’ John is referring to Frontline’s ‘Cherished Programme’, which we asked Frontline’s Conner Matthews to explain in more detail. ‘A car we originally restored can be sold secondhand by us with a six-month warranty. We return sellers the maximum amount and offer a buyer the opportunity to beat our twoyear-plus waiting list. A car with a few Frontline components is not a Frontline car and would not be eligible for the Frontline Cherished Programme.’ The donor car in this instance cost £12k, which was just the beginning of an in-depth process that created the LE60 Factory Edition; with its ideal design and pretty much all extras, the cost comes in at £176k+VAT. Bespoke Frontline builds start from £120k plus VAT – the average costing about £160k. It’s easy to get carried away by the engine in the LE60, it certainly makes its presence felt right from the off. The roar that emits from the twin pipes, even at idle, is more TVR than MG – not that I’m complaining. The gurgling goliath that powers the LE60 is the first eight-cylinder Frontline has slotted into one of its models; I hope it isn’t its last. Peak torque comes in at 297lb ft, marshalled through a bespoke six-link coil-over suspended rear end, with upgraded axles and a limited-slip differential. The cabin has a hint of bespoke Italian maritime motor launch about it. Its quality surges out of every seam. This initially distracts you from the delicious open-gated, clunkclick Tremec five-speed transmission lever, its deeply satisfying changes proving to be largely avoidable, because of that torque on offer and the engine’s 6500rpm redline. Peak 375bhp is found at 6300rpm, giving plenty of incentive, even beyond the symphonious soundtrack, to keep that V8 spinning. The ride feels deliberately compliant, with softer springing than an out-and-out racer but well-judged and certainly not sloppy. A greater sense of compliance and weight transfer are matched by fantastic rear-end grip and front-end traction. You need to work hard to provoke the LE60 to misbehave, though it’ll do the tail out thing if suitably encouraged. When you do want to calm things down, six-piston front and four-piston rear callipers have you covered; the LE60’s 1122kg proving easy to reign in. This car feels like the motoring equivalent of a Guy Richie character, it’s a hooligan in a tweed jacket, and I love it. 53
Steve’s engineering choices prove to be top-tier MERCEDES SPECIFICATION (based on a factory 190E 2.5-16) Recaro bucket for driver – the rest of the seats are stock M-B 2.5 16v rebuilt for less peakiness, and more usable power Engine 2498cc inline four-cylinder, dohc, Bosch KE-Jetronic fuel injection Power and torque 204bhp @ 6750rpm; 177lb ft @ 5500rpm Transmission Five-speed dogleg manual, rwd, lsd Steering Recirculating ball, power assisted Suspension Front: independent, coil springs, torsion bar stabiliser. Rear: independent multi-link, coil springs, hydropneumatic spring struts, torsion bar stabiliser, anti-roll bar Brakes Vented discs front, solid discs rear, servo-assisted with ABS Performance Top speed: 147mph; 0-60mph: 7.5sec Weight 1300kg Fuel cons. 29mpg Cost new £29,900 (1987) CC Price Guide £10k-£27.5k odified Mercedes-Benz models seem far less frequently encountered, in the real world, than equivalent products from Munich. Perhaps it’s down to the relative age group appeal between the BMW and Mercedes-Benz badges. Whatever it is, in the UK at least, we count ten modified BMs to every one custom Merc. One owner in the minority group is Steve Howson. He’s a serial 190E collector with a specific interest in the 16-valve cars, and he has a serious penchant for tinkering. Steve’s 190E represents all the home-built modern classics in garages and lock ups up and down the nation that are the lifeblood of current custom car culture. The owner – Steve Howson ‘I’ve had a lot of 190s over the years,’ explains Steve. ‘I had my first one back in 2001. I bought it when they were going for junk money – I only paid £2000. That car was featured on an early series of Wheeler Dealers.’ After an unfortunate incident at the Nürburgring, Steve decided to cash out of 190s, but couldn’t entirely break from the model’s orbit. ‘I missed 190s, and because a few friends and I had set up the 190 Owners’ Club, I missed the events. So, I went up to Santa Pod in an E55 I’d bought and put a ‘for sale or swap for a 16V’ note in the window. I drove home in this 2.5-16.’ 54 ‘We did a few European trips, but then the engine went pop. I decided I needed a stronger engine, built by a professional. I gave Ian Howell at Area Six Developments – who is well known in drag racing circles – free reign to build a streetcar engine that didn’t need to rev to the moon. He put in forged conrods and pistons, new cams and I found AT Power throttle bodies for it, which are expensive bespoke billet aluminium items.’ Steve’s decision to have an engine built with a more accessible power band was deliberate. ‘It’s running 242bhp and only revs to 6500rpm. I noticed when I used to gun the old motor through the gears, it would fall out of the power band, which it doesn’t now. I do sometimes miss that extra 1000rpm, but for driving on the road – which it’s predominantly for – it’s now ideal.’ The car designer – Peter Stevens ‘I spent a large part of my early design career designing body kits for everything from WRC-winning Subaru Imprezas to Mazda 323s for Tom Walkinshaw, as well as parts for the MG versions of Rovers. Although I always insisted on developing the parts in the wind tunnel, I also thought that it would have been much better if the standard car was better designed. ‘But if you are going to go down the body kit look then this particular evolution of the 190 is as complete a job as you can get. The fit of the parts is immaculate, the paint is flawless, and the car really does sit just right on the road. For this look to work there needs to be a consistency in fit and finish of every part, and that is what this car has.’
[ Modified Classics] ‘It retains the essence and character of the original, and looks coherent enough to be an ‘Evo III’ that never was’ The concours judge – John Mayhead ‘Steve’s 2.5-16 has been a labour of love, modified with an Evo kit and his own rolled wheelarches that don’t leave the gaps seen on some “kitted” standard cars. Under the bonnet, he’s gone for the minimalist look and improved engine power and ancillaries, brakes and more. The car has opened the door to a community that he’s thrived in and introduced the love of cars to his son.’ The true amount of money and effort Steve’s put into his 190E means he’s not likely to make much of a profit, were he to sell, but that’s not why he did it. By his own admission this one’s a keeper so the £30k he’s put into it so far is probably his breakeven point. He has it insured for ‘mid-30s’, with John putting the current market value at approximately £35k. ‘Compared with a factory Evo, the outlay is a small price, with Evo I values at over £100k and low-mileage Evo II values nearly double that.’ For a long time, go-faster 190Es trailed similar machines from BMW, which is how Steve managed to bag his fantastic 2.5-16 for just £4k. As prices in the past decade have firmed significantly, that same above-average example would now set him back around £12k. The road tester – JJ Vollans It’s a brave soul who decides they can engineer better than M-B managed in the Eighties. There’s a reason why three-pointedstar gazers look back to those halcyon days with misty eyes. Steve’s attempt at improvement would have seemed futile in period yet, with the passage of four decades of technological advancement, there’s now plenty to upgrade. Almost every facet of this 190E has been altered, yet in such a way that it perfectly fulfils what’s called the OEM+ approach; this 2.5-16 still retains the essence and character of the original, and looks coherent enough to be an ‘Evo III’ that never was. The main difference is that decision to lower the engine’s powerband, making its enhanced performance more attainable. The flip side of that is a reduction in the drama and effort needed to wring out the revs. However, there’s now a wonderful DTM note to the induction roar with the exhaust also lingering around troublemaker level. A tight Recaro bucket seat, for the driver, improves exponentially on the support-lacking original. The aftermarket gearshift also feels more precise than stock, dealing with another common 190E complaint in the process. The ride’s firm but not ruinously so, the suspension and chassis make up for less compliance with much keener turn-in and grip and, when that’s matched to the engine’s attainable power band, it makes for a seriously entertaining and swift B-road companion. Having said that, steering lock has been reduced a little to stop the aftermarket wheels rubbing on those extended arches. Braking is dominated by eight-piston calipers and two-piece 335mm front discs – together with larger E36 AMG vented rear discs – the centre pedal feeling a lot more confidence-inspiring than stock. This 190E grants the driver fantastic grip levels with a compliance of chassis character that’s in total agreement with the original. The thought that’s gone into modifying this M-B certainly hasn’t ‘ruined’ it, quite the opposite. 55
[ Modified Classics] Six very different takes on the bespoke classic – which would you want to drive home? John Mayhead takes in the Ninemeister 911’s honed stance aving spent my early career in the modified car scene, I’ve driven countless customised cars, but I’ve never been presented with a more thought-provoking selection. All these machines have impressed me under close inspection and from behind the wheel. It’s hard not to fall for Wayne’s Ford F100. Aside from its tour on TV, the patina suggesting it’s just been pulled from a barn is at odds with underpinnings that provide a much more accomplished drive. The utility and practicality of this truck, together with how easy it is to drive and how good it looks, make it the perfect work companion, which is precisely what Wayne uses it for. As a Lotus Esprit fan, the DeLorean DMC-12 has always seemed like a pale imitation to me. It’s now gained appreciation as a classic car, and movie prop, but I find there’s little appeal for enthusiastic drivers. This DMC-12, however, goes a long way to fulfilling John DeLorean’s original promise, its running gear actually matching the retro futuristic looks. I have had several 190Es, so I can say from experience that these are pretty much the definition of a useable modern classic. Steve embodies that with his; the tweaks he’s carried out have been carefully considered and the result is a far more focused Mercedes-Benz that rewards you for driving it like a touring car but doesn’t punish you for a trip to the shops. The 911 world seems awash with back dates and restomods, making it hard sometimes for any one to stand out. This 911 manages to not because it’s revolutionary or attention grabbing, but because Andy has got the details right. Cosmetically captivating, it’s even better to drive, with a considered approach to customising that’s resulted in component and driving harmony that almost feels factory. 56 Peter Stevens isn’t one to hold back on due criticism... ...but all of today’s reinterpretations pass with a sage nod Frontline’s LE60 is possibly the most far removed from its progenitor. The quality of fit and finish goes so far beyond what Abingdon would have managed and its performance and mechanical quality shines through on a test drive. Yet, despite now having the pace to match a supercar, it still feels classically elegant and unashamedly British. I am one of the generation of drivers introduced to performance motoring via a GTI. Those famous three letters might have been sitting on a VW, in my case, but I understand all too well the appeal of an Eighties hot hatch. The 205 was always one of my favourites and I’m delighted to report that the Tolman incarnation is not only better in every meaningful way, but Chris and his team has achieved it without overriding the lightning-in-a-bottle sensation that made the original so special. All these classics are the culmination of hundreds of hours of care and careful contemplation, resulting in some remarkable and unique cars. If that’s not for you, fine, but I applaud their owners and builders for achieving just the right balance.
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rbird tolt e p u S e u built thovals. The resing h t u o Plym NASCAR’s est roadgo n te t ca wild dominaas one of the ials ever – buroads? w n spec ight on UK CHELL o i t M CRIT a g o fl l HY TO P o A e R k G hom re bird ta HADWICK PHOTO this raWORDS NATHAN C 58
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Nathan recalibrates himself to manage the car’s 10sq metre roadprint Not all elements are designed for use at 200mph Headlights relocated ‘Beep beep’ horn part into the deep high- of a licensing deal with downforce nosecone Warner Brothers s far as two words in the automotive lexicon go, few get the senses heightened quicker than ‘homologation special’. It usually means that a manufacturer has pulled out all the stops to win on track, building a road car with all sorts of fancy – and expensive – bits on it that, even if unused, unplugged or left in the boot of the road car, will provide the killer edge against its racing opponents. Most of the time, these showroom cars barely look different to their base cars; maybe a flared wheelarch here, a deeper chin spoiler there. Not with the Plymouth Superbird. Based on the Road Runner model, it’s 5.6m of pure motor sport theatre, developed by former NASA engineers with the express aim of tempting NASCAR’s hottest driver, Richard Petty, back to Chrysler’s ranks. It succeeded, but NASCAR sanctions rendered its aerodynamic aids obsolete after just a few years. As a racer it had done its job, luring back Petty and taking him to 18 victories in 1970 – but what of the road car? Does it live up 60 to the Talladega dream, or, like many roadgoing homologation specials, provide only a fleeting impression of unrestrained competition? Beep beep, time to find out… Perhaps surprisingly, it’s not the enormous rear wing that grabs my attention first – it’s the vast front overhang. The nosecone adds 90kg of downforce at high speed, contributes to a slippery drag coefficient of 0.31cD, and extends the front end by around half a metre over the car it’s based on. Note to self: take care if I have to park nose-in at any point. Then again, the rear overhang could swallow a Fiat 126 too, so backing in can’t be dispatched with casual abandon either. From the inside, however, it doesn’t feel intimidating – unless you’re spooked by the face of the cartoon Road Runner peering out from the centre of the thin-rimmed three-spoke steering wheel; a prod of it will elicit the character’s trademark ‘beep beep’ in place of a common horn. The last time I checked, I wasn’t Wile E Coyote, so I slip the thin key into the ignition barrel and the Super Commando V8 thrums into burbly life.
[ Plymouth Superbird] I lean back against the slim but comfortable seats, angle the automatic shifter into D, and breeze away. This example has the mid-range 440 Super Commando Six Barrel V8 engine, one of 716 built, though a four-barrel – that’s quad-choke to us Brits – carburettor version of the same engine, plus a 7.0-litre 426 Hemi V8, were available. It was the 426 that was used in racing, and produced 425bhp in road trim; it was an expensive engine to build and just 135 cars were so-equipped. The 390bhp Super Commando V8 isn’t a high-revving unit – it’s all over by 5000rpm, but you have a chunky 490lb ft of torque to play with at 3200rpm, though it doesn’t feel that thumpy behind the wheel. The Superbird may have been slippery through the air, but touching down it tips the scales at a hefty 1742kg, around 100kg more than a normal Road Runner. So it doesn’t quite feel as bowel-churningly quick as the on-paper figures suggest. Indeed, a standard Road Runner was quicker where it mattered on the street – between the lights and over the quarter mile – and the Superbird’s aerodynamic advantage ‘On high-speed ovals the rear wing added 350kg of downforce’ only kicked in beyond 60mph. On high-speed ovals the rear wing usefully added 300-350kg of downforce; on the leafy lanes of Suffolk I’m more concerned about catching it on low-hanging trees. Disappointing? Not in the slightest – looking at my fellow drivers’ reactions as I rumble past, the Superbird has accelerated deeply into my affections, and it’s all to do with the rear wing. The reason for its height has been the matter of some debate over the years; Chrysler itself kept the precise mathematical formulae behind the design secret for decades. The subject was muddled in the Nineties when a retired engineer erroneously 61
[ Plymouth Superbird] 1970 Plymouth Superbird Engine 7212cc V8, ohv, three twin-choke Holley 2300-series carburettors Power and torque 390bhp @ 4600rpm; 480lb ft @ 3200rpm Transmission Three-speed automatic, rear-wheel drive Steering Power-assisted recirculating ball Suspension Front: double wishbones, torsion bars, telescopic dampers. Rear: live axle, semi-elliptic leaf springs, telescopic damper Brakes Ventilated discs front, drums rear Performance Top speed: 149mph; 0-60mph: 6.1sec Weight 1742kg Fuel consumption 15mpg Cost new $4776 Classic Cars Price Guide £120,000-£150,000 62
7.2-litre Super Commando was the biggest Superbird engine available, but not the most powerful 63
[ Plymouth Superbird] Wing bulges to satisfy homologation, rather than vent anything Structural bracing for spoiler merely nibbles into vast boot area Beep Beep! Petty and co coming in hot... OWNING A SUPERBIRD A love of American motoring came naturally to Paul Beamish, the owner of this Superbird and the man behind the Krazy Horse motorbike and specialist car dealership network (krazyhorse. co.uk). ‘I grew up near the Mildenhall air base, so I always saw Corvettes and Challengers around,’ he says. ‘When the Americans went back home they tended to leave their cars here, so when we were young my mates and I used to roll around in Chevelles and the like.’ Paul acquired this Superbird in 2019 from another UK enthusiast, 64 who’d imported it in 2015. ‘The first step was to get it running well, but other than getting it setup and a little TLC in a few places, it’s pretty much as I bought it.’ He was drawn to the car through its racing history, and the story behind it – oh, and the fact that Superbirds were used to help land U2 stealth planes, whose unorthodox design necessitated a high-speed chase car acting a spotter for the spacesuit-clad pilot. Paul says the ease of ownership with American muscle is a key part of the appeal. ‘There’s such a huge muscle car movement in America so it’s easy to get parts, and relatively cheaply. Rock Auto can get bits sent out the next day, and for not much money.’ said that it was that height so that it could clear the opened bootlid. The reality was that it needed to be that tall so it could take advantage of clean air, far above the disrupted flow generated by other racers in the pack. Behind the wheel, you simply don’t feel its presence. Before I stepped in, I’d imagined some bodily distortion, creaks or some such concession, but unlike some Eighties European rally homologation specials, the Superbird was constructed with a high degree of care. Peer into the cavernous boot and the structural engineering goes right to the bottom of the car, with the wing supported by thick bracing down to the subframe, cutting through where you’d normally put your Mac ’n’ Cheese mix. It’s said that it’s possible to sit on the top of the wing and not break it but, all the same, I’ll refrain. Some parts of the car are clear homologation ‘fudges’. The scoops on the front wings look as if they should be vents, but lead nowhere. On the racers, they were opened out to reduce undercar pressure, allowing air to escape – though rumours
‘It’s said that it’s possible to sit on the top of the wing and not break it’ persist that the cutouts allowed more room for the tyre under the compressive forces of the superspeedways. Talking of pressure… Some sniffy Europeans see such oval racing, and NASCAR in general, as merely turning left occasionally for many hours. It’s more like playing chess at 200mph; instead of plunging, instinctive overtakes on road courses, position changes play out over four to five laps, maybe more. While we’re certainly not approaching anywhere near those speeds near Bury St Edmunds, driving the Superbird requires a lot of thought. Left-hand drive plays a big part in the experience – at 1.9m metres it’s about the same width as a Range Rover Velar, and there’s a good deal of recalibration involved. Unlike other lhdonly homologation specials, certainly of the rallying variety, traversing a road grate or piece of corrugated asphalt doesn’t rearrange a spinal cord. In fact, the ride is pillowy soft. The steering is fingertip light with a lot of dead zone around the straight ahead; on these bouncy Suffolk roads the wheel fidgets like a bored toddler at a church recital. The best approach is to hold the wheel a little bit looser, let it do its dance and enjoy the spectacle – much like NASCAR itself. Start to apply more lock and the response from the front is surprisingly direct, but like a Mercedes-Benz of the era it’s reticent about what’s going on at tread block level, so it’s certainly no racer for the road. While the Superbird wears 11x7in vented discs up front, the rear setup uses 10inx25in drums, which means that braking while fairly sharp and effective for the first few heavy presses, it starts to become less effective the more often I wind the car down for tighter bends. Pushing the Superbird a little harder through them, it’s clear that corners aren’t its forte; the detached steering and tendency to head straight on under load don’t inspire confidence. But to criticise the Superbird for its lack of prowess is to bemoan McDonalds for its lack of a Michelin Star; it really isn’t the point. This is very much a slow in, slow during – allowing enough time to tip a Petty-style ten-gallon hat at a grid girl – blast out kind of car. Sophisticated it isn’t, but much like comedy, not every 65
‘Petty returned and work began on the Superbird, with the help of a former NASA rocket scientist’ belly laugh has to come from PG Wodehouse. The Superbird is more X-rated Woodhouse – somewhat rickety and low-tech for the most part, but still eliciting enthusiastic brute Anglo Saxon for the sheer fun of it. The car’s huge kerb weight and syrupy automatic gearbox means that you’d really have to be punching the accelerator through the bulkhead to spool up the rear tyres, so for the most part the Superbird feels benign; it certainly has the potential to get away if you’re uncaring with it. Perhaps that lack of dangerous edge – down to the weight and corresponding absence of Friday night street racing appeal – contributed to its poor sales performance in period. NASCAR mandated Plymouth to have one Superbird road car for every two Chrysler dealerships, so Plymouth produced 1923 examples – though some claim around 800 more may have been built. Such an extreme-looking car would have been a difficult sell anyway, but the wider political environment was starting to turn against muscle cars and motor sport in general with the fallout including punitive insurance costs. 66 While the driving experience itself is remarkably free of drama, that’s not something that could apply to this car’s gestation. Plymouth found itself in trouble for 1970. Richard Petty had won 27 NASCAR races with the Plymouth Belvedere in 1967, and had mostly raced for the marque full time since 1958. Ford, now largely free from its GT40 commitments, had cash to spend and developed the Torino Cobra, which in turn prompted Plymouth’s Chrysler stablemate, Dodge, to produce the Charger 500 – the first American car to use computer analysis and a wind tunnel for its aerodynamic design. Though the Charger put up a good fight, Dodge knew it needed to up its game and created the Charger Daytona, the first of the ‘wing cars’, for 1969. Petty wanted to switch to Dodge for 1969 to take advantage on the superspeedways, but the Chrysler suits insisted he stay at Plymouth, which hadn’t developed an aero car to compete. Petty chose to jump ship to Ford for 1969, driving the new smoothed-out Torino Talladega. Though Petty finished second, the Blue Oval won the manufacturer’s championship that year.
[ Plymouth Superbird] Plymouth was desperate to have Petty back; the man himself committed to a return on the basis of an aero car. Thus work began on the Superbird, with the help of former NASA rocket scientist Gary Romberg, who had worked on the space programme throughout the Sixties and played a key role in developing the Saturn B-1 booster. In early 1969, just months before his contributions took man to the surface of the moon for the first time, he moved to Chrysler’s motor sport arm. However, though the Dodge Charger Daytona looks similar, and Plymouth was part of the same overall company, the Superbird was an entirely different creation. For starters, it originally wasn’t a Road Runner at all; the project began with the Plymouth Belvedere. But after two months grappling with a scaled-down model at Wichita University’s wind tunnel, the Road Runner body was deemed more receptive; Plymouth also used the front wings and a modified bonnet from a 1970 Dodge Coronet, which lent themselves better to the nose design. It was named Superbird in tribute to the Road Runner character. Ford may have bagged NASCAR glory in ’69, as well as the services of Richard Petty, but at the end of the year the Blue Oval removed official support from racing activities in the face of congressional hearings questioning the tangible links between the research and development costs of motor racing, and improvements in fuel economy and safety. Insurance costs for muscle cars were spiralling ever higher, and with the Superbird holding little real-world performance advantage over the standard Road Runner, Plymouth struggled to sell the cars over the next few years. There are reports of Superbirds lying around the back of Plymouth dealers well into the Seventies, its eyeball assault too much for suburban life. Matters became so challenging that many Superbirds were shorn of their aero accoutrements and sold as standard Road Runners. Not that Plymouth’s competition arm was too worried – Petty bagged a slew of victories in 1970, while teammate Pete Hamilton won three times that year, including the Daytona 500. Dodge ultimately won the manufacturer’s title with its wing cars, 67
[ Plymouth Superbird] ‘Unlike younger homologation specials, it actually works as a car you’d want to spend time in’ with its driver Bobby Isaac taking the driver’s title. At the end of the year it was all over – NASCAR mandated that wing cars would have to carry weight penalties and use a less powerful engine; though they raced in 1971, they were well off the pace – the rule changes had effectively killed their advantage. NASCAR had safety concerns – tyre technology hadn’t quite kept up with the 200mph abilities of the cars – but some believe the ‘win on Sunday, sell on Monday’ appeal inherent to NASCAR was undermined by how wild the aero cars looked. Given Plymouth’s struggle to shift the road cars, there’s perhaps some truth to that. Determining the worth of a homologation special is a challenge. With one or two exceptions, you’re unlikely to get near the unmitigated fury of the racing versions. Many Group B cars feel unfinished, agricultural and argumentative, without the upside of searing pace because they’ve been detuned. Alternatively, the cars become too polished, all show and not a great deal of go. That doesn’t stop either selling for six-figure sums at auction with the retrospective appeal of classic status. 68 Perhaps unsurprisingly, a racing car designed to fly around ovals at 200mph cannot translate to a roadgoing car that’s more likely to traverse the Santa Monica Highway. However, unlike younger homologation specials, it actually works as a car you’d want to spend time in, rather than endure in the name of homologation-ness. It’s a comfortable cruiser, with a throaty roar and a good, if not scintillating, turn of pace. Add in the history, the rarity – it’s believed just 1000 Superbirds of all kinds are left – and the aero cars have surged in demand. A Plymouth example like this one will cost you around £150,000, but in the States a Hemi might command $750k to $850k (£600k-£680k). In the end, the excitement about driving the winged wonder comes from two entirely different words from homologation special – it’s more fundamental than that. It comes in reaction to every wide-opened stare and the car’s reflection in passing windows, and two key words: Plymouth Superbird. Save money with a subscription to Classic Cars – see page 34.
CONSIGN Sold for £99,562* in March 2024 *including buyers premium Consign your Classic or Performance Motorcar with the experts at H&H Classics. Consign your vehicle to our next auction at The Imperial War Museum, Duxford on Wednesday 19th June. Contact our classic vehicle specialists now 01925 210035 | Sales@handh.co.uk For thousands of cars for sale visit classiccarsforsale.co.uk Rated excellent for customer service 69
[ Epic Restoration] ‘The gearbox was out of a Toyota Celica; the fuel lines were garden hose’ Despite being outwardly shiny, this rare Maserati 3500GTI harboured household wiring, cereal boxes and bathroom sealant in its unhinged catalogue of bodgery. Could Project Heaven bring it back from the brink? Words JJ VOLLANS Photography IAN SKELTON 70
Maserati 3500GTI [ Epic Restoration] 71
[ Epic Restoration] In association with Machine Mart urned out that the work done to having it completely rebuilt. However, the deeper the team at was exceptionally poor and the Project Heaven dug, the worse things got. ‘It was definitely a death trap,’ continues Peter. ‘The fuel line only way to rectify it was to go back to square one,’ explains from the tank was red garden hose! The rear axle was a 4HA type Will Tomkins, owner of this – the same as you got in a Scimitar or a Jaguar. Someone had sort now glorious but once grievous of “rebuilt” it; I mean, all the bits were there but they’d managed Maserati 3500GTI. It’s a rare to install the taper roller bearings the wrong way round. The only model to begin with – Maserati thing holding in the halfshafts were the oil seals. Everything was only made 441 of the twin- shimmed incorrectly; it was just awful.’ Clearly, this wasn’t going to be the quick refresh that Will had overhead camshaft, straight-six, mechanically fuel-injected 2+2s hoped for. But considering how far it had already strayed from between 1961 and 1964 – and factory specification, and with its ever-growing list of things that the opportunity to buy a good needed to be put right, a plan was beginning to develop. ‘Once we’d decided to do the full works on the car everything became restorable example doesn’t come up too often. Not that the scarcity of the ‘right’ car has ever bothered Will easier, because no compromises were needed,’ admits Will. too much – he prefers his classics built from the ground up to his own specification. Take his purist-provoking replica Ferrari Body not so beautiful 250 GTO ‘Speciale’, for example. It boasts a custom fabricated With Peter given the green light to enlist the help of the whole aluminium body – sat atop a shortened and stiffened chassis Project Heaven team to get this 3500GTI fighting fit once again, from a 400i – with 365GT4 suspension and the V12 engine from master fabricator Ed Fitch got stuck in. ‘It was one of the first a 575 Maranello. That certainly sounds pretty ‘Speciale’ to us. jobs I did when I joined,’ recalls Ed. ‘I’d come from an industrial Suffice it to say, Will and the team at Project Heaven have no background, so I learned on the job.’ Looking at his work, you’d never have guessed Ed honed his craft qualms about tweaking rare old cars, on this Maserati’s metalwork. ‘I did a lot though both are just as happy doing the of small fabrication bits, replacing parts concours original thing too – elements Low point that we couldn’t source. I had to refer to of both philosophies went into restoring ‘We had to paint the a lot of images, remaking things like the this captivating but once catastrophically car twice. There was stainless-steel jacking point covers and cobbled together Maserati. a problem with the interior trim underneath the dashboard.’ ‘We bare-metalled the body and I Catalogue of errors chemistry of the paint found cracks in the aluminium panels Will owns Turrino Wire Wheels, a that meant we had to and obvious signs of pitting,’ says Ed. firm that specialises – as the name take it back to bare metal ‘I fixed the corrosion in the doors, suggests – in hand-fabricating wire and start all over again.’ where water had sat in the bottoms, by wheels. ‘On a visit to see a customer in repairing the alloy and steel with new Buckinghamshire to take measurements Peter Bulbick fabricated panels. I repaired quite a from a 450S Replica to ensure correct lot of the front end too – the sweeping wheel fitment, I noticed he had two other Maseratis, one of which was this 3500GTI. I was under no reverse curve between the headlights and the grille was a illusion that I was taking on anything other than a long-term, patchwork of previous repairs.’ Because of the 3500’s Superleggera construction, its structure on-off project, but nevertheless committed to buy.’ That decision would soon come to haunt Peter Bulbick, co- consists of a tubular steel chassis hung with aluminium body owner of Will’s other business, classic car restoration outfit panels; so, serious corrosion tends to be limited to the steel. Project Heaven. Soon after the car was delivered, it became clear Perhaps surprisingly, considering the rest of the car’s condition, rust wasn’t the issue. ‘The chassis was dinked and dented,’ that this outwardly shiny Maserati concealed numerous nasties. ‘It had been painted but when we took the paint off there was recalls Peter, ‘But that wasn’t the worst aspect of the build. That quite a lot of filler. The body lines weren’t right,’ Peter explains. was undoing all the bodges and tracking down the correct parts.’ Ed’s fabrication skills extended to the exterior brightwork ‘The doors also had loads of filler in their bottoms. It looked like there had been poorly repaired accident damage on the offside too which, although not hiding quite as many horrors as the front too. The upholstery was disgusting; stapled together and mechanical elements, was still very far from factory-fresh. glued with random pieces of foam stuffed into the seats.’ Having already discovered enough maladies with this Mechanical maladies Maserati to put off many a less committed owner – and with the Leaving the fabrication in Ed’s hands, Peter took a brave pill chances of returning this 3500 to the road without spending a before diving into the engine and running gear. Sure enough, huge amount of money looking highly unlikely – Will committed the powerplant proved just as cobbled together as the rest of the car. ‘We obviously tried to get it to run when it arrived, but the engine was knocking, banging and smoking. Outwardly, it looked like it had been done – if you squinted – but taking the Epic Restoration of the Year engine apart and removing the cylinder head revealed that This Maserati is one of 12 Epic Restorations you’ll be able to vote for in 2025, with the chance to win fabulous prizes of premium whoever had done the previous work had made copper rings for workshop gear from Machine Mart, including the wet liners to seal, but the rest of the gaskets were just stacks this *Clarke CP185 Sander Polisher of cereal boxes held together with bathroom sealant.’ complete with synthetic lambswool Peter discovered that, to the surprise of no one, this mix of bonnet. classiccarsmagazine.co.uk/ EpicRestoOfTheYear. T&C apply cardboard and silicone hadn’t kept the engine watertight. ‘The liners themselves were completely trashed, because water had been getting down into the cylinders and had also damaged the pistons. The oil pump was off some random thing – I’ve no idea *Prizes subject to change. They will be confirmed by the May 2025 issue what. It had some adapter plate bodged on to a remote filter, so 72
As it arrived. Not as smart as it looked… Front end originally had damage. Not that you’d know it now Lots of trim was missing and had to be made in-house Block needed total teardown and refurbishment Peter Bulbick (right) talks writer JJ through the process New pistons and liners were fitted Retains the mechanical injection look but is now computer-controlled 73
Shiny new valves seating correctly Breaker’s yardfind gearbox needed rebuild Bosch electronic injectors neatly concealed Household aircon unit was living under the dash Wire wheels were a must – owner Will’s firm makes them 74 Wiring renewed because much of it was made up of household cabling Gearbox all torn down to inspect for damage
In association with Machine Mart [ Epic Restoration] was very clearly not original. ‘The gearbox was out of a Toyota Celica, and not a good one! It was a big heavy cast-iron one someone had made an alloy adapter plate for, but it was all offcentre and wasn’t lining up properly.’ These cars were originally shipped with a ZF four-speed, later upgraded to the same firm’s S5-17 five-speed. It was the latter transmission that should have marshalled the motor’s 217bhp from this 1962 example. ‘We found the correct gearbox at a classic car breaker. It had to be rebuilt: I replaced the bearings and a selector shaft, and lapped-in the new synchros, I used lapping-in paste, like you’d use on inlet valves, put it on the synchro rings and ground it on to the gear so that it got the synchro rings to the right height and Mantra of modification Sensible yet largely invisible quality-of-life upgrades became bedded them in so the gears could shift smoothly.’ Engine and correct transmission mated for likely the first the route map to this car’s renaissance. It was hoped that this 3500 would pass muster at all but the most stringent of marque- time in decades, Peter’s mechanical mission was still far from finished. ‘We rebuilt all the suspension specific shows, yet provide far more and steering because bits were missing, reliable and efficient performance in all and all the bushes had been homemade weathers. As Peter explains, ‘The original High point out of chopped-up nylon bar. The Lucas fuel-injection system is pretty ‘Probably when we brake calipers hadn’t been rebuilt, just primitive. I’ve rebuilt a few and you can started up the rebuilt painted, so we did that properly and get them to run OK-ish, but things like engine and got all the EFI added stainless-steel pistons.’ the choke mechanism are crude; it just With the end in sight, there was one buckets in fuel. Although it still has the working correctly, then more particularly noticeable nasty Peter Lucas pump in there, its function is now took it for its first test had been desperate to put right. ‘The more like a fuel-distribution manifold. drive.’ Peter Bulbick exhaust was a terrible thing. I think it It gets high pressure fuel from the had a Mitsubishi back box with some tank, via a Bosch pump, and then little shocking 45º mitre-saw-cut pipes. We chrome-plated fuel lines – replicas of the made a custom stainless-steel one.’ originals – bring it to Bosch electronic Although the car arrived with its original Borrani bi-metallic fuel injectors.’ Best of all, none of the work could be considered anything other than entirely reversible. “You can actually disc wheels, there was no chance Will would leave them. ‘We convert it back to the original Lucas system, though I don’t know added a Turrino alloy rim wire-wheel conversion. It uses why you would,” admits Peter with a smirk. adaptors that can be removed to refit the original wheels.’ Not content with skilfully disguising modern fuelling, Peter also custom-built the electronic control units. ‘The ECUs Cabin fever are under the dashboard. You can get them as kits from DIY Despite knowing that the cabin had been considerably Autotune, which is great, and you can build in all the features cannibalised, Peter was still shaken by the level of carnage when you want within the hardware. Its idle control is operated via it came time for the retrim. ‘I couldn’t believe what I saw under a valve, with spark coming from twin-sparkthe dash; there was a slimline air-conditioning per-cylinder ignition. That means it runs six unit from a house! The domestic dials had been MY FAVOURITE TOOL twin-spark coils and, with the new hardware removed and switches added at the top. It was containing distributor and crank sensors, it almost ingenious but, of course, it didn’t work. fires both ignition and injection sequentially. The whole car got a brand-new wiring loom The more common (but less efficient) route because we found a lot of household cabling.’ would be to batch-fire the injection and use a The task of bringing this once opulent GT’s wasted spark. The sequential way is very clever interior back to its best fell to a Project Heaven and makes more power, starts up better and regular collaborator, trimmer/upholsterer runs really well, even in freezing cold weather.’ Mark Milner. ‘It came with all sorts of bits and Naturally, clever fuel and spark management pieces, and nothing really correlated,’ he said. are of little use in an engine where fluids are ‘Everything had to be made from scratch. The kept apart by bathroom sealant, so Peter whole car is offset, with the transmission tunnel Rolling road simultaneously put right the many wrongs. off to one side. I had to sort of pick a middle – The clever management of this ‘There are new pistons [from JE] and we even if it wasn’t in the centre – and continue Maserati’s engine relies on a very thorough set-up, which is machined the cylinder block to suit new liners that through the whole car. Doing it all offset why Peter Bulbick chose the because the liner protrusion from the block would have looked rubbish.’ rolling road at Project Heaven face wasn’t correct. The crankshaft only had to As with the brightwork and running gear, as his preferred tool. ‘I had to have a 10-thou grind, but the head had a crack much of the cabin had gone walkies over the completely map the engine’s in it. We welded and skimmed it here. Other years, making Mark’s job even harder. ‘It was ignition and fuelling from scratch. We had to do multiple than that, we made an aluminium radiator a bare shell, with only the seat mechanisms power runs to ensure it was because these engines are prone to overheat, and the dashboard. That was one of the first running at exactly 0.8-0.85 on and we upgraded the charging system with a jobs I did, adding a leather covering and handwideband lambda. Then, at modern alternator that looks like a dynamo.’ sewing a grab handle. Talking to Will, because idle, we wanted it to be at 1. It’s measuring how much oxygen is he knows how it should look, the interior took left in the exhaust. Once you’ve a year of work. For example, the carpet has all Transmission impossible got your fuel mix right, across Engine back together and positively purring, been patterned from scratch. The seat foam had all loads and conditions, you Peter worked his way back along the car’s disintegrated, so I made that new, referencing a then have to programme in your driveline, discovering that its transmission lot of images to make it all look correct.’ enrichment for cold start.’ we had to find the correct oil filter housing and oil pump. As it arrived, the engine was a complete write-off.’ By this point, it would have been totally understandable if Will had decided to cut his losses, but instead he went in the opposite direction: the project would centre on incorporating cutting-edge technology, while keeping the exterior looking largely stock. ‘The departures from standard that we decided on were to refit the original Lucas mechanical fuel injection but run a hidden electronic fuel injection (EFI) system. An ECUcontrolled 12-coil pack ignition was also integrated,’ says Will. 75
[ Epic Restoration] In association with Machine Mart Mirroring the rest of the build, Mark’s traditional touches were added with hand-crafted flair. ‘The fluting is traditional and all the springs – especially in the back seat bases – are pocket springs, which is how it should have been. Probably the hardest job was all the diamond stitching in the boot – that gave me so many bruises. I did it by leaning into the car, with the floor digging into my stomach. It took a lot of time! I know you can buy diamond stitching pre-made now, but I did it properly.’ Paint and final assembly Finally, with the seemingly never-ending horror show of bodges behind them, the paint had to be perfected, which has been the responsibility of body shop manager Harry Turner. ‘The colour on this Maserati is an interesting one. It’s a pretty common shade that has been poorly re-interpreted over the years, so there are plenty of variations. The challenge was establishing what’s truly original so, to help us do that, we looked at other examples so we could decide if that’s how it would have been or if it’s faded. ‘We took the panels to bare metal and then, within 24 hours, epoxy-coated the whole thing, sealing off the metalwork and preventing corrosion. Then we spray-filled with a high-build primer that allowed us to do our final shaping, before another high-build primer was applied, tinted with body colour to make it easier to touch up.’ Maserati on high at Project Heaven For Harry, painting any classic car can’t begin with bashing a code into a website. As he explains, there’s a science to painting old cars so that they end up looking as they should. ‘The colour Blue Sera must be made in-house from scratch because there are modern versions of it that never look quite right. There are two kinds of metallic flakes, and some mixes use the modern type that looks totally wrong on a classic. ‘The bonnet is always tricky on these cars because they have that flat panel on the front. The way it bolts in means it can flex and move around. You must make sure that the metalwork is strong enough, so the gaps don’t change. A lot of people solve that by making the gaps too big, but we double-plated the metal to ensure that it was strong enough. ‘My big thing is to make people look at a car and doubt whether it’s original or not. On any hand-built car, lines may be slightly different from one side to the other, so we keep that. We laser them in and measure, marking it in the metal. The swages may be a little off, for example – wider on one side than the other – but you can’t look at both sides at once, so that’s a nice originality talking point. But if they’re off on the nose, that’s going to look obvious so we correct some things and not others.’ Worth it in the end? The route this car took from forlornly festering to festooned with fancy gizmos makes for quite the tale of transformation. The dedication of its owner and restorers, who could easily have been excused for wringing their hands in despair, makes the result even more commendable. This rare Maserati now not only looks as elegant as it did new – arguably even better – but it can be used and enjoyed far more frequently and easily than Modena ever managed. Peter admits it was a challenge getting this one right, although the team had some customer help. ‘We looked at other customers’ cars to get everything correct,’ he recalls. ‘Even the steering wheel wasn’t right – nothing was. It was nuts.’ All the reference work and fabrication has now paid off, with owner Will clearly delighted with how it has turned out. ‘I'm really impressed with the finished result, both dynamically and visually.’ He’ll no doubt be hoping that the next build the team takes on proves to be a little less arduous. Bodge-free and beautiful: a 3500GTI transformed NE X T ISSU E ALFA R O M EO G IUL IA GTA 76
We strip and protect the areas that other processes cannot reach PRIMED AND E-COAT PROTECTED: Re-cleaned, Zinc Phosphated, Immersed in Electrophoretic paint and oven cured BEFORE: Mini before treatment STRIPPED: Chemically stripped and ready for repair The SPL Chemical Immersion Process strips the paint, grease, sealants and filler from both inside and outside and dissolves rust on contact. The E-Coat Protection is the most advanced multi stage immersion paint process available. The resulting oven cured crosslinked Epoxy coating is used by every automotive manufacturer in the world. Over 95% of the worlds new motor vehicles are coated in this way. It is fully compatible with all automotive approved refinishing paint systems. “Trusted time and again by the UK’s leading manufacturers and restoration specialists. More than 4,000 shells have successfully received the SPL Treatment. Call us now for friendly and honest advice.” 4000 SHELLS TREATED 1994-2018 Tel: 01384 242010 www.surfaceprocessing.co.uk sales@surfaceprocessing.co.uk MARKET LEADING COMPONENT RECOVERY AND CORROSION CONTROL TECHNOLOGY SINCE 1994
[ Audi RS2 Avant vs E34 BMW M5 Touring] 78
WITH A FAST VIEW As the fast estate enters its final combustionengined chapter, we revisit two pioneers of a genre arguably mastered by German brands – the E34 BMW M5 Touring and the Audi RS2 Avant Words NATHAN CHADWICK Photography ADAM SHORROCK 79
Revvy motor, despite its lack of VANOS variable valve timing Wide grille once The six speed unique to most manual is a rare powerful E34s delight in an E34 First of three M5 Touring generations 80
[ Audi RS2 Avant vs E34 BMW M5 Touring] OWNING AN AUDI RS2 Dean Grossmith says, ‘I was drawn by the performance and understated looks in an estate with enough room for a dog or two – even though we don’t have any. We took the car to the Alps and it was no problem keeping up with modern Ferraris and Porsches, despite being loaded with luggage and equipment. I budget about £2.5k per year and mine had an extensive rebuild of all subframes and suspension components in 2017, which came to £11k.’ OWNING A BMW M5 TOURING Claire-Louise Barron says, ‘Back in 2005, we had to replace our E46 325i Sport saloon with something sensible, so after much searching we found this E34 M5 Touring – practical and fast. A deal was done after a few visits to the garage selling it, because it was far from perfect. I love how understated it is – it’s nothing flash, but it is rare as one of the 209 six-speed examples. If I won the lottery, I’d still choose this over a Ferrari! ’ German-market trip computer easier to decifer in age of translator apps he estate has been in a slow decline for years. These once-noble family holdalls are no longer popular, swept away in a clamour for more SUVs and crossovers. The fast estate is entering its final stage of fossil-fueled evolution – and that’s a shame. After all, from the Volvo 850 T-5R to the unhinged V10 madness of the 2008-2010 Audi RS6 and 2007-2010 BMW M5, this breed brought performance motoring to those who also had to shift dogs, children and other byproducts of family life. Those latter ten-cylinder chargers might represent the evolutionary peak of the fast estate, but they wouldn’t exist if it wasn’t for these two trailblazers – the 80-based Audi RS2 and the E34-generation BMW M5 Touring. True, individual tuners and the likes of Alpina and AMG had built quick specials since the Seventies, but these two were the first factory-sanctioned fast estates from Germany. These weren’t just potent engines in another body – they were precision instruments built by the best in the business. The M5 wagon is a proper M-division product, its running gear assembled by hand at Garching. Audi went even further with the RS2, enlisting Porsche to build it on the same production line that had just finished building the 500E W124 for MercedesBenz, and at one time had churned out 959s. That kind of heritage is a lot to live up to for either car, so to celebrate 30 years since the RS2’s launch we’ve brought together two survivors to see which one marries the differing concepts of estate and performance car together most cohesively. There are few cars that get the four-door saloon quite as right as the E34 5 Series – and with the combined talents of Ercole Spada and Claus Luthe to hand it’s hardly surprising. If anything the Touring version is even better – the lines are tense, unfussy, and imposing without being vulgar. You’d be hard pushed to tell this was something special – aficionados might spot the subtle spoilers and bodykit, and those with a keen eye for the parts catalogue will notice the 18in M-Parallel alloy wheels offered as part of the Nürburgring package. Thanks to this example’s Fjord Grey paintwork, it’s really subtle. You won’t find quad exhausts here, or a rippling exhaust note on start up. There’s the familiar BMW big-six chinking sound as it turns over and kicks into life, but it’s a refined unit. It’s not without power though; as the gen-two powerplant, the S38B38 ‘The big six is a refined unit; it’s not without power though’ pumps out 335bhp from 3.8 litres. Compared to the earlier 3.6 M5, there’s a larger intake, lighter pistons, shorter conrods, increased compression ratio, reprofiled manifolds on entry and exit, revised ECU and a dual-mass flywheel. That’s marshalled via a six-speed manual gearbox, making this a rare version of an already rare car – this is one of just 209 M5 Tourings built with six Getrag ratios rather than five. It’s a nice shift: positive, a little long – as befits a car designed for the autobahn – and with a nice feel. The same could be said for the rest of the interior – you feel like the most important part of the package, with all the dials and diodes pointing towards you. With the lovely hand-stitched leather it’s certainly a more interesting place to be than the Audi. The RS2 struggles to shake off its B4-generation 80 Avant origins inside and out. Yes, this version is much more purposeful, squatly sitting on its 964 Carrera-sourced alloy 81
[ Audi RS2 Avant vs E34 BMW M5 Touring] BUYING TIPS There are five coil packs, one for each cylinder – but replacing one in isolation isn’t an easy undertaking, because you have to solder it on to the loom. A more modern coil pack set-up is available and costs around £400. Listen out for a whirring noise above 4000rpm in first gear, because it’s an indicator that the gearbox is on the way out – and to fix it you’ll need to budget £2750. Make sure you’ve got a real RS2; lesser 80s dressed up are out there. The VIN plate should read ARGE Audi/Porsche RS2 and the VIN should start with WAC. Cambelts last for 75,000 miles and replacement involves removal of the front bumper, but it’s relatively inexpensive job to have done by a professional. Spark plugs can rattle loose – they need replacing every 20,000 miles. Check the auxiliary water pump comes on after shutdown because this cools the turbo. When seven Porsche coaxed gauges aren’t the five-cyl to enough... 143bhp per litre wheels like a primed sighthound waiting for an unlucky squirrel to stray into its path, but it’s a little too bulbous to have the same understated menace as the Beemer. It’s usually unmistakable in its signature Nogaro Blue livery, but plenty more discreet in this example’s Polar silver. You’d really have to know your fast German metal to notice the massive air intakes in the injection-moulded bumpers and the small red badge on the grille to take it all in before it blasts past in a ferocious blur. Inside it’s far more functional, the dash lying flat. There are body-coloured trim accents that lift the gloom, along with some white instrument dials, but it doesn’t quite have the exoticism of the Beemer, even if everything feels a little more solid. There’s similar solidity under the skin – Porsche comprehensively fettled the 2.2-litre Audi Quattro-sourced 20v five-cylinder to produce 315bhp. That headline figure is an 85bhp boost over the S2, thanks to a larger KKK turbo and intercooler, a more robust camshaft, bigger injectors and a revised ECU and exhaust set-up. The Quattro four-wheel drive system uses a Torsen centre differential, and there are six ratios to play with. It had stiffer dampers and anti-roll bars too, though the spring rate was unchanged. Given the unforgiving reputation of Audi suspension, that’s a bit of a relief. It certainly sounds more up for it at idle – a bassy hum permeates, sounding like an angry wasps’ nest. Despite this, the ‘It sounds great fully lit, shrieking into life as you head to 7000rpm’ 82
BUYING TIPS The S38 straight-six isn’t an engine that copes with shoestring budgets well. Check for regular oil changes and that the valve clearances have been checked every 15,000 miles. Check the radiator for signs of damage or leaks. If the temperature rises in traffic it could be an iffy viscous fan – a £90 part. Rear dampers and the hydraulic lines that supply them can leak. Finding replacements is hard, so refurbishment is the best option. The Electronic Damper Control system should be noticeable in operation – if it isn’t you’re looking at refurbishment because replacements are no longer available. Worn bushes and ball joints are frustratingly common, scuppering the handling. The steering box may also need adjusting, which isn’t an easy task. No right-hand-drive model was built – so it might be worth importing a left-hander if you’re set on one. Steering’s power BMW’s S38 boasts assistance is six individual speed-sensitive throttle bodies M5 appeals to me more. With that glorious naturally-aspirated big six and rear-wheel drive, the ingredients are there – so I take the Touring’s key first. Tales of rampant M-power pace and screaming S38s ring in my ears… Only it doesn’t translate that way, at least not at first. As we peel out of Hertfordshire-based modern German classic specialist Seymour Pope’s premises, the M5 doesn’t feel any different from a lesser-engined E34. It’s maybe a little noisier, the enormous rear load bed amplifying the rear suspension’s doings with the clarity and depth of a concert hall. The seemingly infinitely adjustable factory Recaro sports seats make everything very comfortable, and the gearshift, though a little loose – probably the bushings, a common old Beemer complaint – feels sufficiently weighty. The Servotronic steering is much lighter and more vague than expected too – but then this is a steering box-fed wheel, rather than rack and pinion. If you’re used to more modern M-Department racks this might come as a disappointing surprise. The first thought isn’t BMW, it’s Mercedes-Benz. The steering wheel is not quite as secretive about its work as the Three-Pointed Star’s finest, though, which gives you a little more confidence to push the M5 harder. I step on it a bit. Happily, it all starts to come together. Peak torque arrives at just under 5000rpm, but around threequarters of it can be had from just under 2000, lending the M5 a more relaxed feeling than you might expect. It doesn’t rev with the enthusiasm you might expect either, but it there’s plenty of in-gear punch when dropping down to blast past dawdlers, the engine seemingly scrabbling in the bay in its bid to charge forwards. It doesn’t feel particularly swift by today’s standards, testament to its relative refinement back in the day. It doesn't sound particularly exotic when milling about, but it sounds great fully lit, shrieking into life as you head to 7000rpm. But such moments are fleeting; this doesn’t seem like a car that 83
Audi RS2 Avant Engine 2226cc in-line five-cylinder, dohc, Bosch Motronic M2.3 fuel injection, KKK K24 turbocharger Power 315bhp @ 6500rpm Torque 302lb ft @ 3000rpm Transmission Six-speed manual, four-wheel drive Brakes Porsche servoassisted discs front and rear with antilock system Suspension Front: independent, MacPherson struts, track rods, coil springs, electronically-adjustable dampers. Rear: independent, double wishbones, track rods, electronically-adjustable dampers, coil springs, anti-roll bar Steering power-assisted rack-and-pinion Weight 1595kg (3517lb) Performance Top speed: 163mph; 0-60mph: 5.4sec Fuel consumption 31mpg Cost new £45,705 Classic Cars Price Guide £14,000-£30,000 BMW M5 Touring Engine 3795cc inline six-cylinder, dohc, Bosch Motronic 3.3 fuel injection Power and torque 335bhp @ 6900rpm; 295lb ft @ 4750rpm Transmission Six-speed manual, rear-wheel drive, limited-slip differential Steering Powerassisted recirculating ball Suspension Front: independent, MacPherson struts, coil springs, gas dampers, anti-roll bar. Rear: independent, semi-trailing arms, coil springs, selflevelling dampers, anti-roll bar Brakes Servo-assisted discs all round, floating at front Performance Top speed: 155mph; 0-60mph: 6.3sec Weight 1786kg Fuel consumption 23mpg Cost new £52,480 (UK price for M5 3.8 saloon) Classic Cars Price Guide £9500-£27,500 Interior flourishes limited to white dials Shift is weakest link of Audi’s formidable package Audi’s Bolstered Recaros are vital Rear diff lockable up to 25km/h 84
[ Audi RS2 Avant vs E34 BMW M5 Touring] appreciates full-bore throttle workouts, and the long gearing makes it feel more lethargic than it actually is. To that end the damping is smooth; not quite at MercedesBenz level, but I’d happily trade that for the cornering gusto. A late-model car, this one has Electronic Damping Control, well known for failing and leaving grown men in tears when they see the repair bill – there are no replacements available from BMW (see buying advice panel). With the Nürburging package, you can choose from two damper settings: ordinarily it will automatically sense the right rate for the road, monitoring steering angles, body movement, vehicle speed and acceleration and deceleration, and controls each wheel individually when set to ‘N’ for ‘Normal’. Put it in ‘P’ and it will maintain a track-honed level of suspension stiffness while doing so. I can’t help but select the firmest setting and… well, there’s not a great deal of difference. Maybe there would be if I headed out on track – but I’m near Watford, so the largest asphalt expanse is ‘The RS plays its hand, slapping its cards on the table with a huge snap’ The first time the M division squared up against the RS brand Audi references its family ties discreetly but proudly the M25 and it’s currently at a crawl. We head into the twisting lanes in the sliver of green before you get to London itself. The M5 acquits itself well – there’s no getting away from the steering box’s limited feel, but put your faith into the M5 and it delivers, with excellent stability as you exercise the brakes. There’s a touch of understeer as you lean into the apex, but nudge the accelerator and the rear pushes with predictability, bringing the nose into line. Press harder and you can unleash your inner Steve Soper quite easily, though that seems an odd thing to do in any estate car, even one wearing an M badge. Drive it neatly, quickly, and you’ll find vast reserves of grip – this feels like the natural driving style to adopt and it rewards with excellent feedback and needle-point adjustability. Just remember to keep it on the boil past 4000rpm and you’ll be fine. Some might find that disappointing; and if you’re seeking the fast-revving, screaming hooliganism you get from M3s and later M5s, then this isn’t really the car for you. BMW tasked the M department to come up with a lightning-quick executive car, not a sports car – the steering is too ponderous for that – and the results are excellent in terms of achieving that aim. But can the Audi manage to go one better? So far it’s provided entertaining five-pot bass notes to the BMW’s high-octave delivery, but can it keep the concert going from behind the wheel? The answer wasn’t immediately obvious back in the day. The original Ur-quattro has its enthusiasts, but personally I’m not a fan. It looks and sounds great, but isn’t especially thrilling. I’ve not driven its replacement, the S2, but seeing as that was panned back in the day, hopes aren’t high. Much like the BMW, it takes a while to show its hand. But rather than the M5’s slow reveal, when the Audi does, it slaps its cards on the table with a huge snap – somewhere around 3000rpm, chucking you into the Recaros with a force that still seems immense despite its modern equivalent, the RS4, chucking out twice the output. Past 3000rpm it’s fairly linear, but when the shove comes you’d better be pointing straight. Not that it’s unwieldy – far from it. As you might expect there’s epic grip and traction, but mere words just don’t convey the RS2’s ability to take ever more lateral punishment in its stride. The best experience is on initially tight corners that gradually open out. Approach at speed and dab the brakes, and the lack 85
[ Audi RS2 Avant vs E34 BMW M5 Touring] ‘You have to push the M5 hard to release its tasty jus; the RS2 feels more honed’ of understeer is a revelation. Hit the throttle and there’s absolute precision as you accelerate, the engine firing away like a roaring crowd – no drift, no wander, just ever increasing velocity. The only thing stopping you is the feeling your brain might be sucked out of your ear, such are the lateral G-forces. If the lack of understeer was surprising, then there was the steering. It was panned for lacking feel, and failing to excite when it was launched; and yes, there isn’t the granular detail the M5 is happy to provide when you start to lean on it. But 25 years on and in sharp contrast to most performance cars these days, there’s a clarity of information about the road surface that’s at least satisfyingly detectable, if not piped into your fingertips. You really do get a sense there’s a connection going on – that’s helped by an interior that although solid, is nowhere near as refined as more modern Audis. You feel part of this experience, rather than simply watching it. The jiggly ride has a role to play in that, too, and the lack of body roll – it’s an engaging experience. The steering is direct and accurate; heavier than the BMW’s but it doesn’t increase its communication in extremis either. It’s still much better than most Audis of the era. And since. The brakes feel much sharper than the BMW’s; the Porschebranded Brembos are eyeball-warpingly quick to operate. The gearshift isn’t, though – occasionally it feels clumsy across the gate, though the clutch feel is much nicer than the Beemer’s. The best course of action is to take an unhurried approach to gearshifts, going for accuracy rather than hardcore, sharpshifting immediacy. But then it’s not really that type of car. It’s all about the accelerative thrust – the RS2 is famous for beating the McLaren F1 from rest to 30mph (1.5sec vs 1.7sec), but the more useful figures lie in-gear. Stomping from 40mph to 60mph takes less than three seconds; get more adventurous and from there to 80mph takes little more than three and a half seconds. If you’re truly wedded to the traffic light grand prix 86 then it’ll crack the sprint to 60mph in a lightning 4.8 seconds. That’s still quick even by today’s standards. You can imagine the brief for this model, an excruciatingly exacting one – it was ordered by the boss himself, Ferdinand Piech, after all – and it feels like it has nailed that. But is it enough to defeat the Munich machine? This fight is a battle between two ideologies – finesse versus thump. It’s the first time the M division squared up to Audi with directly comparable products, but it certainly wasn’t the last. If this were an M5 saloon versus an RS2 saloon – which exists only in tiny numbers as bespoke commissions from Audi – then the M5 would take the rosette. When fully lit the M5 is a true Jekyll and Hyde machine; there’s real talent at the extremes, a thoroughly pliable M car with a shrieking six-cylinder war cry. On a B-road the M5 saloon would be the car to have; for all its talents the RS2 saloon drive simply wouldn’t be quite as much fun, especially if you like unleashing your inner Dieter Quester. But then these are estate cars, and it seems rather silly getting one sideways. Especially when they’re likely to spend most of their time with dogs/kids’ bikes/things for the tip/random stuff in the back of them. Worse still, that big glass house over the rear wheels just doesn’t sit well with the M5’s nature. You have to push the M5 hard to release its tasty jus, and that enormous amphitheatre behind you doesn’t fill you with confidence. The RS2 feels far more honed. True, it doesn’t handle as crisply as the M5, but you feel more confident accessing its power more often. The grip and thrust recipe is perfect for the estate car job – just remember to strap the dog in, lest the poor hound finds itself pinned to the rear window. The Audi’s talents are more closely aligned to what a fast estate should be about – crushing in-gear thrust and high-speed cornering stability. Save money with a Classic Cars subscription – details on page 34.
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1980 Tony at Silverstone in works S110R 1983 New Rapid (red, in background) intended as parts donor [ Life Cycle] THE LIFE STORY OF A 1983 Skoda Rapid Skoda’s first foray into British saloon-car racing with this Rapid was successful, but short-lived. This is its story, through race victory, show stardom, long-term storage and sympathetic restoration Words SAM DAWSON Photography TOM CRITCHELL 1983 – Dickinson’s builds Skoda’s first British racing saloon car ‘The Rapid coupé was due for UK launch in 1984, so Skoda sent us this pre-production car, to prepare for racing in March 1983,’ says Simon Dickinson, current proprietor of independent car dealer and garage Dickinson’s, on the outskirts of Boston, Lincolnshire. ‘Rallying was always Skoda’s forte, but in 1977 Tony Dickinson, my father, bought Alec Poole’s Skoda-Hart Special Saloon,’ says Simon. ‘He was very successful, and this got Skoda’s attention.’ ‘Successful’ seems to be an understatement. Simon digs out Tony’s race records from the late Seventies and early Eighties. With Tony behind the wheel, the Hart-powered 2.0-litre silhouette racer chalked up no fewer than 63 outright wins – usually from pole position – in the Wendy Wools Special Saloons series, plus the occasional sports-prototype race too, between 1979 and 1982. This led to an invitation by Skoda to drive the works S110R Group 2 car in 1980. Together with Antonín Charouz and Oldrich Vanícek, Tony contested the Brno and Silverstone rounds of the European Touring Car Championship in the tuned production-class coupé, succumbing to engine failure on both occasions, but cementing a working 88 partnership between the Czech manufacturer and the Lincolnshire garagiste. ‘We built two more Skoda-Hart Special Saloons on the premises, and also sold a few cars for them,’ says Simon. ‘It created a bit of a problem in the early Eighties, because Skoda brought its cars into the UK at King’s Lynn, fairly nearby, and its nearest main dealer was in Boston, just down the road from us. Dickinson’s was originally a Wolseley and Singer dealership, but by the Eighties we were a Hyundai dealer – they made a £3000 truck and, being in farmer territory, we sold loads of them. However, the Boston dealer had trouble selling all its cars, so Skoda used to give us a few new ones to sell too.’ By 1982, Tony was juggling Skoda Special Saloon drives with a British Saloon Car Championship campaign in a Ford Escort RS2000, admittedly without the kind of success the Skoda-Hart brought. But for 1983, Skoda hatched a bigger plan for Tony and Dickinson’s: It was about to launch the new Rapid, and wanted to enter it in the Willhire 24 Hours at Snetterton, Britain’s only 24-hour endurance race. ‘We struggled to get it homologated in time – build numbers only just made it in time for the race,’ says Simon. ‘In those days we had seven or eight people onsite, and we fabricated, welded and painted
1983 Skoda celebrates win at Motorfair Rapid back on the road after hiding for 36 years 89
[ Life Cycle] Skoda Rapid saloon-car racer the car, but with the Willhire 24 Hours being a production touring-car race, there was very little you could do, although we did shim the rear suspension to increase the camber.’ Chief mechanic Mick Presgrave carried out much of the build. ‘We stripped it all down and added more camber to the rear,’ he says. ‘Skodas weren’t exactly noted for their great road manners before the Rapid came along; and we enlarged the front luggage compartment to fit a long-distance fuel tank, maximising laps in between fill-ups. There was a bit of legalised cheating too. You had to keep the original fuel pump, but we fitted another pipe and an isolation valve, so that if the standard one ran into trouble or couldn’t deliver fuel fast enough, you could pull into the pits, open the bonnet, turn the tap and activate a Bendix racing fuel pump! Although a lot of the time, we just used the standard pump. ‘Mike Pilbeam, best known for his sports-prototype and hill climb cars, gave us a lot of advice on the suspension set-up, but it still needed test-driving to arrive at the best shim settings. Tony would put the Skoda on the dealership’s trade plates and take it out on the road after hours, drive it through a series of bends nearby, then come in to adjust the shims before going back out again. ‘After a while, this attracted the attention of local traffic cops, who’d pull him over and ask, “Why don’t you go to Cadwell Park to do this?”, to which Tony replied “because the A52’s bends are more like Snetterton’s, where we’ll be racing this!” ‘The roll cage and fuel tank all arrived at the last minute, and with no weight in the nose, it would understeer on test. I used to take it home at lunchtime – I lived very nearby – and found that it handled better if I left my toolbox in the front luggage compartment. Tony’s final test-drives were made in the dead of night, not long before the race.’ The 1983 Willhire 24 Hours came around on the weekend of the 4-5 June. ‘There was quite a field,’ says Presgrave. ‘Even though we were a worksbacked team, we saw ourselves as privateers, such was the size of our operation. And there were some proper works teams contesting the event. ‘The bigger and better-financed the team, the more scope there was for legalised cheating. Back when we did the BSCC, I once spent an eye-opening two hours at Silverstone with a works Ford mechanic who told me all the things they did to their RS2000s, such as Australian-market outback-spec suspension arms that not many people knew about but which qualified as standard Escort parts, attached to custom brackets with Chevron-derived anti-roll bars so you could take bends flat-out; or getting a mechanic to slip a lead weight under the driver’s seat while the scrutineers were looking under the bonnet before the car went onto the weighbridge. Out-andout cheating wasn’t quite as rife at the Willhire, but you knew looking at some of the bigger teams that they’d be capable of doing things like that.’ And the top teams didn’t get much bigger than ultimate outright victors Porsche, who’d entered a works 928 that was driven by Tony Dron, Andy Rouse and Win Percy. The Dickinson’s Skoda team instead relied on solid driving, the car’s reliability, and not getting entangled in battles with cars in classes above its own 1300cc group. ‘Tony was an excellent driver, both in rallying and racing – in fact, it’s a pity he isn’t more widely recognised in retrospect,’ says Presgrave. ‘He would take two laps to get to know a circuit, then after that he could hit the same lap time for lap after lap 1983 With rally regardless of traffic for the rest of the race. in ‘After qualifying for the 1983 Willhire, champions Skoda’s adverts another driver asked him what gear he was in for Russell [a tricky left-hander by the pitlane at Snetterton between 1965 and 1989], to which he replied, “Top, flat. Why, what were you in?” You could do that in a 1300cc car.’ In the race, the team of Tony Dickinson, Tim Read, Bill Hunt and Andy Woolley set the 1300cc class record, and took the class win. ‘It did it all on the same set of brakes and tyres, and only used one pint of oil,’ says Simon. ‘For the race, Skoda delivered a new pre-production Rapid road car to our pit garage on the back of a truck in case we needed to take any bits off it should anything fail during the race. We didn’t need to touch that car. It went back to Skoda, who presumably sold it to someone who assumed they were getting a completely new, unused car, rather than something that could have been a parts donor for a racing car!’ With the race won, Skoda commandeered the car for promotional duties. ‘It featured in a lot of literature at the time, alongside its rally cars, which scored repeat class wins on the RAC Rally, and featured on its stand at the Earl’s Court Motorfair in October 1983 as part of the Rapid’s launch. Although Skodas were respected in the rally world, they often got a lukewarm reception in the motoring press, but the Rapid changed that. Autocar & Motor famously said it drove like a Porsche 911. Whether Skoda examined the suspension set-up of our racing car in order to get it to do so, I don’t know.’ Promotional duties over, it was time to ready the car for a second Willhire 24 Hours eight months later. ‘There was a lot more competition this time, and we didn’t do so well, having a minor off and damaging the fuel lines,’ says Simon. We still finished, though – a creditable 17th overall. But given the difference in success between the racing and rallying operations, it marked the end of Skoda’s involvement – to the extent that in 1985, the Rapid did absolutely nothing. It was just stored in the garage. ‘Tony considered racing it in 1986 as a privateer, but Joe Ward, who owned some Thundersaloons, wanted a co-driver and asked Tony. This led to drives in his 5.7-litre Opel Monza V8 and Ford Escort Turbo, resulting in a couple of class podiums. But in October 1986, there was a four-hour race at Donington Park to promote the forthcoming British Motor Show at the NEC, and Ward returned Tony’s ‘It handled better if I left my toolbox in the front boot’ 90
1984 Back to Snetterton for a second Willhire Cockpit largely left alone during recent restoration Rear camber arrived at via illicit road tests 1984 ‘Top, flat’ through Russell at Snetterton 1984 Stiffer competition for Willhire 24h 91
1984 Fuel line damage nixed second win favour by partnering him in the Skoda Rapid, pulled out of hibernation for the race. ‘It was actually the only car in its class for that race, and the media took the piss. In his post-race interview, Tony said, “Yes, we finished low down, but it was ready to keep going for another four hours”.’ However, on the racetrack, the party was over for the Dickinsons’ pioneering Skoda Rapid. ‘Group N rules came in, which – despite being for standard road cars – actually allowed a very high level of modification,’ says Simon. ‘When you look at touring-car racing from the early Eighties, you can see huge suspension lean, and you’d only need a few sets of tyres for a whole season. Dad wanted to do the Uniroyal Production Saloon Championship, and in 1987 he bought a Suzuki Swift GTi from the main dealer in Cambridge. With a twin-cam fuelinjected engine, it was the fastest 1300cc-class car of its day, and completely eclipsed the Skoda.’ As if to underline the Swift’s superiority, Tony’s team took the 1300cc class win once again in the 1987 Willhire 24 Hours with his Uniroyal Championship car. Despite being built in 1983 and infamously driven on trade plates, the Rapid was finally road-registered by Tony in 1987 on a then-new E-prefix registration. ‘We used it on the road for a while, but didn’t really know what to do with it,’ says Simon. ‘Also, Dad could see the way Skoda was going. In 1987 the new, modern front-wheel-drive Favorit came out, making an impact in rallying, totally changing people’s impression of Skoda, and paving the way for the Volkswagen partnership. Skoda wanted to distance itself from the old rear-engined cars, and didn’t want anything to do with the Rapid any more. ‘We repainted it around this time. The lacquer had started to peel. However, we barely used it after that, and Dad mothballed it in the garage in 1988.’ It wouldn’t see daylight again for 34 years. ‘I’d been meaning to restore it for a long time when I finally unearthed it in 2022,’ says Simon. ‘I’d left the family business in 1998 and worked for Aston Martin for 20 years. But then Dad died in 2018, and I had to take over the business. I had so much to do, Numberboard illuminated through night and despite Dickinson’s being my family business, I was essentially coming at it as an outsider. I had to cut costs and streamline the operation while maintaining its reputation, so 2022 was the earliest I could start work on the Rapid. ‘It was also approaching the 40th anniversary of the 1983 Willhire 24 Hours, so a 2023 completion felt appropriate. We’d lost two members of Dad’s old crew in those past few years, and I wanted to keep their story going too. ‘Everything rubber and plastic in the engine bay had perished and needed replacing, which wasn’t an easy sourcing job. I took off all the suspension and powdercoated it to protect it, because replacements are no longer available. ‘It has an engine from a later Rapid 136 in it now, with an aluminium cylinder head. Originally it had a competition-spec S110R engine with a Weber 30BDIC carburettor and a custom racing exhaust. The spec sheet has it at 145bhp, up from the standard 130. ‘We got the original engine running again during the restoration, but while it does run, I just don’t want to risk damaging it. It was blueprinted by Skoda and is all-original with no spare parts available, so I didn’t want it to end up as a Trigger’s Broom engine. I can always return it to totally original specification, but I also want to use it.’ The car made its public debut as a classic at the 2023 NEC Classic Motor Show, Dickinson’s again attracting the attention of Skoda. ‘Skoda wants to put it in its Czech museum,’ says Simon. ‘John Haughland, former Skoda works rally driver, is now the firm’s motor sport consultant, and knows where the car is, but it’s part of my family. I don’t want to lose it. ‘I’ll continue to take it to shows, and I’d love to see it go up the hill at Goodwood as part of Skoda’s competition heritage display, especially because most of its cars will be on the rally stage at the top, so it’ll take people by surprise. Some Skoda-Hart special saloons would broaden that track heritage further, of course. However, if it goes out just once or twice a year, that’s enough for it. I want it to live! Plus, it’s now the only one of the old Dickinson’s competition cars we’ve got left.’ ‘It completed the race on the same set of brakes and tyres’ 92 1986 Out of retirement at Donington Park
Skoda Rapid saloon-car racer [ Life Cycle] 1985 At home on the drive as future pondered Engine swap will preserve rarespec original Know your classic’s previous owners? Let us know at classic. cars@bauermedia.co.uk and it might make for one of our features Simon Dickinson is preserving his father’s – and Skoda’s - legacy 1985 Dickinson’s sells Estelles; race van at back 2023 At NEC after careful restoration 93
Seven steps to buying a MercedesBenz CLS C219 This sublime combination of luxury, performance and show-car looks is probably the most affordable it’ll ever be. Here’s how to dodge the bad ones Words CHRIS RANDALL Photography MERCEDES-BENZ oncept cars rarely make it from show stand to production unchanged. However, that is precisely what happened to the MercedesBenz Vision CLS concept after its unveiling at the 2003 Frankfurt Motor Show. Mercedes’ radical reimagining of what a luxury saloon or coupé could be like made it into production a year later. And they’ve never been cheaper, with serviceable examples available from as little as £2500, or less. Mercedes has never been able to follow up its sheer visual impact, so they bode well as a modern classic to buy now, cherish and maintain. Mercedes has since replaced the first-generation car twice over, and the earliest examples are two decades old. Solid build quality means C219s have survived in impressive numbers, but it’s been a long time since the oldest were covered by a factory warranty. The perfect time to go bargain hunting. But these are complex cars. Optional air suspension and an array of sophisticated electronics can complicate the buying and ownership experience. Low values have also seen some of these 94 [ What to pay ] Basic high-mileage V6 models can be had for as little as £2000, but beware of electrical glitches, neglected engines and collapsed air suspension. Decent six-cylinder runners start at £3500, rising to £6000 for a lowmileage example with full history. Rare non-AMG V8 500 and 550 models start at £7000, with £15k buying the best. There isn’t much price difference between CLS55 and CLS63 AMG models. £16k will buy an average example, with the very best commanding £20k. cars run on shoestring budgets, with major problems ignored and non-specialist garages attempting to complete work on them. To help guide you through the potential minefield towards a modern-classic luxury bargain, we asked specialists Cheshire Classic Benz, D:Class and Niemoller for their advice. Time to enjoy the pioneering car which, 30 years after the demise of the Rover P5B, brought the idea of a four-door luxury coupé back for good. Which is which? Based on a stretched W211 E-class platform, the CLS was offered with three engines at its 2004 launch. Base model was the CLS350 with its 3.5-litre V6, which gained direct injection and a CGI badge in 2006. The CLS500 had a 5.0-litre V8. First range-topper from 2004 was the AMG-tuned CLS55, with a supercharged 476bhp 5.4-litre V8 offering 0-60mph in 4.2 seconds. Diesel arrived in 2005. Although the turbodiesel V6 was a 3.0-litre, it was badged CLS320 CDI, and renamed CLS350 CDI in 2007.
Mercedes-Benz CLS (C219) [ Buying Guide] CLS55 was replaced by the normally-aspirated 6.2-litre CLS63 AMG in 2006. 5.5-litre CLS550 replaced the CLS500 in 2007. An entry-level 3.0-litre V6 petrol version joined the range in 2008. Initially called the CLS280, it gained the more meaningful CLS300 moniker for the last two years of CLS production. C219 CLS production came to an end in 2009, with the commemorative CLS350 CDI Grand Edition. Only 560 made it to the UK, with a £2450 premium over an ordinary CLS350 CDI and an additional 48bhp, along with every optional extra as standard. Bodywork There shouldn’t be any concerns about rust unless there’s been some poorly repaired accident damage. It’s a good idea to carry out a history check to see if there are clues to anything worrying in the car’s past. Next assess the general condition of panels, paint and bumpers; cost-effective ‘smart’ repairs can usually rectify minor issues. A reasonable number have been broken for spares so finding used exterior parts isn’t too difficult; headlights cost upwards of £100 although Xenon units command around four times that so check for damage and non-operation. Engine Diesels were popular but the smooth petrol engines are worth seeking out if economy isn’t a priority. Avoid examples with a patchy service history because regular maintenance, especially on the AMG engines, is key to trouble-free ownership. Regular oil and filter changes will avoid timing chain wear – budget £200-300 at a specialist depending on the service required. Early M272 V6 units suffered from balance shaft gear issues so check the paperwork to Changed little from the concept car, the CLS was the forefather of the modern fourdoor coupé ‘It’s time to enjoy the pioneer that brought the idea of a four-door luxury coupé back for good’ 95
[ Buying Guide] Mercedes-Benz CLS (C219) Base sixes are powerful enough; V8s are supercar-quick see if any rectification work was carried out under main-dealer recall. Also watch for signs of oil leaks from the cam cover and oil cooler seals. Diesels can soak up very high mileages with proper care but failure of the oil cooler can result in a £1000 bill because of the labour involved in replacing it, and leaking turbo intake seals can also lead to seized turbochargers, with a telltale of a fine spray-mist of oil on the underside of the bonnet adjacent to the turbo assembly. The seals that sit in the pipework between the air filters and turbo are cheap enough to replace at every service but if they fail they allow oil to drip onto the inlet port shut-off motors that control the inlet manifold swirl flaps. The motor itself is around £175 but some owners elect to disable the flap system completely. Gearbox Apart from the 55 AMG model, which had a fivespeed automatic transmission, all other versions got the Mercedes 7G-Tronic unit. It should be smooth and slick-shifting so anything else requires investigation; renewing the oil and filter might improve things, and although opinions differ on the interval – 40k or 80k miles – it’s only a couple of hundred pounds at a specialist so err on the side of caution. A ’box that’s jerky or seems to stick in gear or illuminates dashboard warning lights points to issues with the control unit – reading off the fault codes 96 should confirm the problem; specialists can rebuild the ECU for around £280. Suspension and brakes The CLS is no lightweight so listen for knocks caused by worn suspension ball joints. Rear coil springs can break, too, and pay particular attention to cars equipped with the AIRMATIC air suspension system; leaking spring units or corroded pipework are the most common bothers and aftermarket replacement air springs are around £600 apiece. Check for damaged alloys, especially large rims fitted to AMGs. The hefty kerb weight takes its toll on the brakes, so check that the brakes work pull up effectively and evenly – the uprated calipers are items on AMGs cost £150 each for the part alone. Check brake pipes for corrosion, too. The brake-by-wire Sensotronic Brake Control system fitted until around 2006 can be troublesome; Mercedes wisely ditched it in the end but replacing a control unit could run into four figures and an official recall was issued in 2005 to attend to a wiring harness issue. Trim and electrics Build and material quality were top-notch so expect little more than light wear on seat bolsters, even on high-mile cars. It’s important to check the operation of all the gadgetry – prod every switch and button. Climate control and infotainment systems
‘Low values have seen some of these cars run on shoestring budgets’ 2008 facelift brought new wheel design and infotainment AMG engines were hand-built... ... and 6.2 makes 507bhp at 6800rpm Seven-speed auto’ with manual mode for all but CLS55 are obvious items to check and electric window regulators can fail but many cars were loaded with options so establish what’s been fitted so you don’t miss anything. Lastly, water ingress can cause electrical glitches so be wary of random faults. Beware modifications Mercedes spent millions developing the CLS, so beware of aftermarket upgrades, or AMG suspension and brake parts fitted to lesser models. If any work like this has been done, ask the owner for evidence of who carried it out. The CLS isn’t a DIY-friendly classic, so unless prior work has been done by a professional mechanic, you could end up having to unpick bodged suspension work, or run the risk of an engine failing an MoT emissions test. But that radical styling was irresistible to tuners and customisers. Respected names like Brabus being involved shouldn’t harm the value. But if it’s wearing a gaudy bodykit from a firm you’ve never heard of, it might prove a difficult thing to sell on. CL63 replaced the CL55 as thunderous AMG offering SAVE MONEY WHEN YOU SUBSCRIBE TO CLASSIC CARS Plus l Free UK delivery l Welcome gift with annual option l Choose digital access to unlock rewards and past issues l Exclusive content l Never miss an issue! see page 34 97
Edinburgh’s leading classic car specialists, offering general servicing, specialist repairs and full restoration. CLASSIC LANCIA SPECIALISTS Call us for a quote on 0131 5107131 or visit AURELIA • FLAMINIA • FLAVIA • FULVIA • STRATOS www.investorclassics.com If ou own or are thinking of owning a classic car local to us, we can look after all aspects of classic car maintenance for ou at our large facilit in Midlothian. We are keeping old fashioned engineering skills alive so we can handle an job that others can’t. Speak to the dedicated classic experts toda ! Gene al se vicing and epai Welding, bodywo k and paint Full esto ation ★ Rapid international mail order parts service. We ship to 70+ countries worldwide ★ Full or partial restorations undertaken to concours conditions. ★ Fully equipped bodyshop and mechanical workshops. ★ Race & rally prep undertaken including event support We also look after an increasing number of British cars for East Anglian based customers. Chris Loynes is our British car expert and he brings an encyclopaedic knowledge of Triumphs and MGs in particular. TRIUMPH, MG, MORRIS & MORE... Unit 11, Rosemains Steading, Pathhead, EH37 5UQ Omicron Engineering Ltd., Norwich Tel: (01508) 570351 • www.omicron.uk.com Investo classics Love your Mercedes-Benz? Join the Official Club of UK & Ireland. Warmly welcoming owners of all models of Mercedes-Benz to the UK and Ireland’s only officially-recognised club, since 1952. Join the family today! mercedes-benz-club.co.uk/signup/MKT 98 6 78 482 office@mercedes-benz-club.co.uk For thousands of cars for sale visit classiccarsforsale.co.uk
BOOKS & MODELS MODELS 1:18-scale Lotus 107 Tecnomodel, £279.99 Team Lotus’s last burst of competitiveness is joyously captured in 1:18-scale resin here. Fabric seatbelts, fully modelled gearbox and tiny air meters and aerials lift it above most Nineties F1 models. But, as ever with Tecnomodel, is it really worth that price tag? By Peter Stevens, £149, porterpress.co.uk, ISBN 978 1 913089 66 5 Supercar development stories aren’t exactly uncommon. However, work on the Jaguar XJR-15 is thin on the ground, and what makes this book even more remarkable is that it’s written – wonderfully well – by the car’s designer. You get the feeling that Stevens is also taking the opportunity to set various records straight. It functions partially as an autobiography, which pauses longest on the relationship between the designer and the late Tom Walkinshaw. Stevens knew Walkinshaw better than most, and pays tribute to a man usually mired in controversy by journalists who never met him. Out of this vibrant partnership came the XJR-15. As Stevens explains, it moved supercars out of the wedge era and paved the way for his McLaren F1. The torturous racing story is all here too, told with remarkable candour by the inside man. Engrossing and revelatory. MG Century By David Knowles, £45, quarto.com, ISBN 978 0 7603 8315 5 Given MG’s 100th anniversary this year, and its featured-marque status at no end of major events, there will be no shortage of MG histories emerging. Few will be as comprehensive as this one. Avoiding the purist temptation to focus wholly on the early cars, Knowles draws upon a vast range of sources to tell the story of a journeyman marque that has embraced sports and saloon cars alike, broken serious scientific ground with speed-record attempts, avoided death at the hands of several industry machinations and somehow emerged strongly, still improving the breed through racing, as a Chineseowned electric-car pioneer bringing sportiness to the supermini sector. Knowles digs out rarely seen photos of concept and development cars as well as period adverts, showing what might have been at every turn. It feels like a day spent at Gaydon in the company of someone who knows its archives inside-out. Absolutely fascinating. Ferrari Uovo By James Page, £35, porterpress.co.uk, ISBN 978 1 913089 62 7 Another incredible deep-dive into a single car’s story. This time, however, the Ferrari 166 ‘Uovo’ (‘egg’) feels like a fascinating glimpse at a different direction Ferrari might have taken, and the story of the industrious Marzotto family. Page’s sources come largely from outside the usual Ferrari universe. The story of the Marzottos – their ambition to create their own racing cars, early patronage of a nascent Ferrari, and a high-tech experimental racer the conservative-minded Enzo wouldn’t have dared take a punt on – is incredible, untold until now. Illustration, by way of original photos including some from its twilight years as a secondhand racer, culminating in bespoke photography, is stunning . A beautiful book. MORE TO ENJOY Oiling The Cogs By Jim and Guy Loveridge, £30, DLP, chaters.co.uk The completed and posthumously published story of Reg Bishop, Lord Nuffield’s right-hand man who oversaw the launch of the Mini. Like finding a secret document in a museum vault. Excellent. Formula One – The Legends By Tony Dodgins, £35, quarto.com A large-format, photo-heavy tribute to the greats of F1. Naturally all the champions are here, right up to Max Verstappen; but it’s the others making the cut that actually make for the most interesting reading, the likes of McLaren, Gurney and Villeneuve. It doesn’t dig particularly deep, though. Alfa Romeo – Cars For Passion By Daniele Buzzonetti, £75, artioli.it This is a revised and updated edition of Buzzonetti’s Alfa marque history. Walter De Silva’s extended preface is both frank and fascinating, the book leaving us wondering what Alfa stands for nowadays. Thoughtprovoking and poignant. All these books are available from Chater’s, many with discounts. To find out more, go to chaters.co.uk. 1:43-scale Lamborghini Countach TrueScale Miniatures, £109.99 This is a nicely executed, if pricey, model of F1’s coolest-ever safety car. Interior detail is where it wins out – just as well, given that Scalextric does a 1:32 model of this car for less than £50. You’ll have to be a hardcore collector to justify spending this kind of money on it, but it’s crisp-lined and accurate. 1:18-scale BMW 2002 Turbo MCG, £76.99 This feels a bit basic – there’s no headlining, for example – but it’s satisfyingly chunky and captures the car’s demeanour perfectly. Painted-on body detail is crude, but the interior, with its red instrument surround and legible boost gauge, more than makes up for it. Bargain. 99 All models are available from diecastlegends.com JaguarSport XJR-15 1:18-scale Peugeot 207 S2000 Sun Star, £124.99 Detail levels are dizzying on Sun Star’s latest rally model, capturing the great but short-lived IRC’s top challenger. Kriss Meeke and Craig Breen versions are available, and Sun Star has even managed to get brake discs to spin with the wheels within stationary calipers. Remarkable and refreshing.
100 For thousands of cars for sale visit classiccarsforsale.co.uk
OUR CARS Feeling blue, Phil? Keep smiling and carry on Leftover shims the start of Phil’s crypto currency rival Kind of Blue 1962 Jaguar E-type S1 FHC Owned by Phil Bell (phil.bell@bauermedia.co.uk) Time owned 14 years Latest/total miles 0/110,637 Latest/total costs £51/£16,546 Previously Solved a clunky carb problem moment of dismay saw me standing in my garage and pondering whether Miles Davis was inspired by an E-type in the same shade as mine when he wrote Kind of Blue. He certainly had a taste for fast cars, treating himself to a procession of European exotics including a Jaguar XK120, Ferrari 275GTB/4, Lamborghini Miura and so on. But the chronology is wrong, his seminal 1959 album hitting the record stores two years before Jaguar’s definitive sports car arrived in showrooms. At least the earworm of Blue in Green helped soothe my mood as I wondered how several of the valve clearances could be wrong after I’d reset them according to the original workshop manual. I’d followed the time-consuming but straightforward process (Our Cars, April 2024), measuring the clearances, removing the camshafts and inverted steel buckets to reveal the adjusting pads that sit on the valve stems. After measuring their thicknesses with calipers, I calculated the shims needed to achieve the correct valve clearances only to discover that several sizes were on back order. When weeks became months, I searched again, finding that specialist Ken Jenkins had a stock of used shims. Inverting them eliminated the wear dimples caused by the valve stem and I was ready to play. So far, so good. But taking nothing for granted, I measured the replacements before refitting the timing gear and measuring the new valve clearances. Most were now correct, but not all. I’d been advised by a specialist that this may happen, and a rummage around on the E-type Club forum backed this up. In fact, the consensus among E-type fettlers far more experienced than me suggested that three rounds of measurement and adjustment were typical. Oh, joy! Rather than get cross, I opted to keep calm and carry on and, you know what, my faith in statistics if not Jaguar engineering was restored when the third round gave a correct clearance for the final, recalcitrant valve. But why was so much repetition necessary? One forum dweller suggested that the need to bend regular feeler gauges in order to access the gap between cam and bucket would cause measurement inaccuracies, and that angled gauges were needed. Feasible, but I was always careful to use a finger to create the bend away from the bucket/cam, so the blade was flat where it passed through the gap. Regardless, I’m just happy to have finally set the clearances and can move on. Apart from reassembly, a couple of remaining jobs keep the E-type from experiencing the first warm rays of spring sunshine, whenever that comes. In the meantime I can count up my accumulated coin collection of removed shims, in denominations from 0.092 to 0.102in. Perhaps a safer investment than crypto currency. 101
OUR CARS Stewart's XB GT (r) in good company – the groom’s 1973 Toyota (l), and another mate’s 500bhp 1978 Holden Torana Welded for the wedding 1974 Ford XB Falcon GT Owned by Stewart Perry (c/o classic.cars@bauermedia.co.uk) Time owned 18 Years, 9 months Latest/total miles 389/243,901 Latest/total costs £160/£34,876 Previously Belated introduction to my XB ould we use the XB GT as the bridal car at our wedding?’ came the question from my good friend Dougal. ‘Of course!’ was my answer, but also it was the prompt I needed to get on to fixing the couple of issues that had seen the GT languishing in my garage for the previous nine months. Specifically, the GT had petrol leaking into the boot from the filler neck, and the towbar and rear bumper had become worryingly flexible. The first step was to get the petrol tank out of the car. After draining 50 litres of stale 98-octane fuel from the tank using a jiggle siphon, I was able to lift it free with my father’s help. Conveniently the XB GT petrol tank forms the boot floor, giving great access to all the bumper bar and towbar bolts and brackets, which made doing the two jobs at the same time much easier. 102 Next, I removed the bumper and towbar assembly to make a horrifying discovery – the two main brackets that support both the towbar and bumper were two-thirds broken through on both sides. I counted my lucky stars that they hadn’t failed completely on our last family holiday towing the caravan – it must have been a near thing, and we were oblivious. Upon closer inspection the design was fatally flawed from the factory. The XB GT has two full-size chassis rails that run to the back of the car, and connected to these rails are the offending brackets that the bumper attaches to. The towbar is drilled into the side of the two brackets and attached with only two bolts each side. However, the real problem is that the brackets are made from steel just 1.6mm thick. Worse still, it was pressed to form its hat section shape, and the pressing created stress concentrations, almost like a perforation for the metal to tear along. I’m surprised it never ended up in a Ford-Pinto-style lawsuit! I enlisted help from my uncle, who’s a mechanical engineer; together we designed a set of brackets, which we The newly fabricated heavy-duty internal brackets fabricated from 6mm plate steel and fitted inside a new set of factory bumper brackets, connecting the towbar and all its forces directly back to the chassis rails. We also put a plate on the top and bottom of the rails, with a vertical bolt and crush tube to make sure that all the torque reactions were transferred safely into the car. With all the new brackets made and the rear bumper and towbar reinstalled to the car, I was delighted to discover that the fuel leak had only been a perished rubber seal on the fuel filler neck – an easy fix. Just over two weeks later I was sitting in the foothills of beautiful Beechworth in Victoria with the bride and her party onboard, watching my friend’s purple 1978 Holden Torana squirm its way into the distance to deliver the groom in their retro-themed wedding. Moments later, we followed and successfully presented the bride in style.
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OUR CARS Treasure hunt 1999 Alfa Romeo 145 Cloverleaf Owned by Nathan Chadwick (c/o classic.cars@bauermedia.co.uk) Time owned Four months Latest/total miles 150/157,300 Latest/total costs £800/£2750 Previously Rust and electrics play to the worst he 145 Cloverleaf was never the first choice of hot hatches – that fell between the Peugeot 306 GTi-6 and VW Golf GTI MkIV. Add in 24 years of thrashing, neglect and general wastage, and howmanyleft.co.uk lists just 50 of these Alfas as being still on the road, with 201 SORN’d. Finding parts has been a perennial problem for my newer Alfas, but what of the 145? Well, it’s a mixed bag. The Cloverleaf wasn’t a huge seller, but there’s good parts commonality with other cars on the often unfairly maligned Tipo platform. For example, new tailgate struts cost just £6.12 each from Autodoc. The gearbox was more challenging. Under acceleration it kept popping out of gear, which gave me some moments – such as planting the throttle out of a roundabout, only to hear the revs rise, the car coast and a closely following BMW M2 almost take a pew in the back of the car. Replacement gearbox collected on south Buying a replacement wasn’t coast parts mission easy; my 145 is a 1999 car, which is when the gearbox mechanism changed. Ant from needed doing when I bought the car, but Autosportivo prodded around and the urgency was drilled home one damp reckoned it was a pre-facelift gearbox evening, when the road turned left and the tyres debated the idea for rather too factory-fitted into a facelift car. These gearboxes aren’t plentiful but long for comfort. I took the hint. Most modern performance cars have Autolusso Bournemouth had one in stock. While in the area, I picked up some tyres upwards of 19in these days, and secondhand Eibach springs and Bilstein performance compounds are hard to find for smaller sizes. The 145 sits on 16in 155 dampers from a chap in Portsmouth. There are some new performance parts wheels, and I’d hoped to fit Michelin Pilot although, with the 145 now so rare, many Sport 4s because they’d impressed on stockists don’t keep them. For example, my 147 GTA, but they weren’t available. the thicker rear anti-roll bar I ordered I spoke to Ben Field at Vintage Tyres and from Malaysia was, at the time, the last he suggested Dunlop Sportmaxx. I’ve now sent the car to Workshop one available in the world. The most important change, along with Seventy7 to have it all assembled. I’m the gearbox, will be the tyres. I knew they already beginning to miss its presence. Rare, and raring to go – but Nathan will have to be patient Watch & Learn How to maintain, improve and restore your classic car from experts you can trust Over 100 online videos to watch 104 Learn how to restore, maintain and improve your classic car at www.skillshack.co.uk
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65 SIZES UPTO 260 AMPS IN STOCK MIG WELDERS Quality machines rom Britain’s eading supplier See online for ncluded 135TE accessories £ TURBO AIR COMPRESSORS SUPERSTORES NATIONWIDE Superb range ideal for DIY, hobby & semi-professional use FROM ONLY .00 EXC.VAT 249 £298.80 inc.VAT * Gas/No Gas model MIG103NG* RO90 35TE Turbo 51TE Turbo Min-Max Amps 35-90 24-90 30-130 30-150 exc.VAT £134.99 £249.00 £289.98 £345.00 inc.VAT £161.99 £298.80 £347.98 £414.00 HIGH VELOCITY FANS Britain’s Tools & Machinery Specialist CHROME HIGH VELOCITY 18" FANS DEHUMIDIFIERS & 3-IN-1 AIR CONDITIONERS deal for creating a powerful air flow, suitable or both domestic & commercial locations 3 Speeds Tilts to adjust direction of air flow Mobile Units provide quick & effective cooling & drying 18" 18" PRICE CUT NOW FROM ONLY £ .98 39exc.VAT £47.98 inc.VAT exc.VAT 79.98 £ £95.98 inc.VAT CHV18WF 3-in-1 ✔ ✔ ✔ Air Con Dehumidifier 3 Speed Fan Lightweight, portable, durable and suitable for home indoor use. Strong and sturdy 360° tilting stand Max air flow up to 2338cfm 14" £ exc.VAT 79.98 £95.98 inc.VAT 18" £238.80 inc.VAT CFF18B100 WAS £56.38 inc.VAT # WAS £52.79 inc.VAT Size Model 20" BF20# 18" FF18B100* 18" PF18B100 AC7050 CPF18B100 exc.VAT inc.VAT £47.98 £39.98 £45.99 £55.19 £71.98 £59.98 Model AC5000B AC7050 AC10050 AC13050 MMA/TIG INVERTER WELDERS exc.VAT £199.00 £239.00 £279.00 £319.00 inc.VAT £238.80 £286.80 £334.80 £382.80 FROM ONLY DOUBLE.99 EXC.VAT 104 £125.99 inc.VAT £ MMA/TIG 120 MMA/TIG 160 £ 96exc.VAT exc.VAT £96.99 £119.98 £239.00 £599.00 inc.VAT £116.39 £143.98 £286.80 £718.80 1 TONNE PORTABLE GANTRY CRANE Super light & compact Min/Max Electrode Output Dia. Model Current (mm) MMA140A 20A-140A 1.6-3.2 MMA200A 20A-200A 1.6-4.0 AT165 10A-160A 2.5/3.2/4.0 GWH7 Top quality belt driven air compressors for industrial & commercial users inc; garages, factories, workshops and farms. 10 bar/150psi max working pressure FROM ONLY .00 EXC.VAT 589 £706.80 inc.VAT # WAS £1438.80 inc.VAT ‡ WAS £1678.80 inc.VAT ◆ WAS £1774.80 inc.VAT AIR. DISP MOTOR MODEL CFM (HP) 3 XEV16/150(400V)† 14 XE18/200 (OL)†* 18 4 30 7.5HP XE36C200†# 28 2X3HP XE29/270†* ‡ XE37/270 (OL)†* ◆ 36 2x 4 36EXC.VAT ARC ACTIVATED HEADSHIELDS Activates instantly when Arc is struck Protects to EN379 Suitable for arc, MIG, TIG & gas welding £622.80 inc.VAT SEE FULL RANGE IN-STORE/ONLINE STRUT SPRING COMPRESSOR £ FROM ONLY .98 XEV16/100 AIR RCVR 150ltr 200ltr 200Ltr 270Ltr 270ltr EXC.VAT INC.VAT £699.00 £838.80 £759.00 £910.80 £1179.00 £1414.80 £1349.00 £1618.80 £1459.00 £1750.80 Ideal for home MIN/MAX usage, including AMPS automotive and 40/100 general repairs Plug in, switch on, get welding IMIG100NG 230V CXR5R Model CXR5R CXR15R CXR20R CXR100R cfm Hp RCVR 17.1 5.5 200ltr 53 15 270ltr 65.3 20 500ltr 37.1 10 270ltr exc.VAT £2565.00 £3895.00 £4395.00 £3355.00 DIAGNOSTICS FROM ONLY exc.VAT 149.98 £ NO GAS Professional Engine Diagnostic & EOBD/ OBD ll Fault Code Reader also available: COBDIIR-2 £27.99 exc.VAT £33.59 inc.VAT £179.98 inc.VAT inc.VAT £3078.00 £4674.00 £5274.00 £4026.00 exc.VAT 79.98 £ £95.98 inc.VAT £ exc.VAT 189.00 BATTERY CHARGERS /ENGINE STARTERS Ammeter Multiposition charge regulator Overload protection on charging cycle CIG81212 FROM ONLY £ .98 89 exc.VAT BRIGHT WHITE INTERIOR size (LxWxH) 3.6x3.6x2.5m 4.5x3x2.4m 4.9x3.7x2.5m 6.1x3x2.4m 6.1x3.7x2.5m 7.3x3.7x2.5m 9.7x4.3x3.65m 12x4.9x4.3m exc.VAT inc.VAT £249.00 £298.80 £279.00 £334.80 £329.00 £394.80 £349.00 £418.80 £399.00 £478.80 £499.00 £598.80 £1099.00 £1318.80 £2599.00 £3118.80 CFC100 £51.59 inc.VAT .98 219exc.VAT £ CTJ2250LP LOW ENTRY ONLY 85MM CTJ1250AC JACKS ALSO IN STOCK UP TO 5 TONNE FROM ONLY .98 DOUBLE EXC.VAT 109 £131.98 inc.VAT Lifting Cap. exc.VAT £109.98 1.5T £139.98 1.25T £169.98 2.5T inc.VAT £131.98 £167.98 £203.98 ‡ WAS £53.99 inc.VAT # WAS £63.59 inc.VAT Model Type Tonne exc.VAT inc.VAT Long 2 £42.99 £51.59 CTJ2L ‡ CTJ2250LP*# Low Profile 2.25 £49.95 £59.94 CTJ3000GB Pro Garage 3 £109.98 £131.98 CTJ3000QLB Quick Lift 3 £122.99 £147.59 CTJ2QLP Low Quick Lift 2 £159.98 £191.98 * CTJ2250LP has a 2.25 tonne capacity, has a Max. exc. WAS Volts Charge VAT inc.VAT inc.VAT £47.98 12/24V 7A £39.98 12V 15A £49.98 £59.98 12/24V 20A £62.99 £80.39 £75.59 12/24V 25A £79.98 £101.99 £95.98 12/24V 40A £99.98 £125.99 £119.98 1 TONNE FOLDING WORKSHOP CRANE exc.VAT 99.98 £ 450NM BRUSHLESS 2 2AH X BEST SELLER exc.VAT £89.98 £104.99 £149.98 £159.98 £184.99 £219.00 £259.00 inc.VAT £107.98 £125.99 £179.98 £191.98 £221.99 £262.80 £310.80 Heavy duty steel construction sandblasters for the quick removal of surface rust, paint, dirt/grease etc. £119.98 inc.VAT Folding and fixed frames available Robust, rugged construction Overload safety valve Model BC125 BC190 BC210C WBC180 WBC240 WBC400 BC520P BC190 Max Amps Charge/Boost 20/120 38/180 25/200 35/180 45/240 60/350 50/510 SANDBLASTERS 18V ½" IMPACT WRENCH 3 forward and reverse gears £263.98 inc.VAT Fully tested to proof load Model IBC7 IBC15 IBC20 IBC25 IBC40 CMTC1 £226.80 inc.VAT IBC40 42EXC.VAT Quick lift Non-marking nylon wheels Rubber contact pad - helps protect vehicle undersides Model TJ1500QL TJ1250AC TJ2500QLGB MANUAL TYRE CHANGER CEOBDPRO 39exc.VAT 2 & 3 TONNE ONLY TROLLEY JACKS £FROM .99 DOUBLE £ # WAS £334.80 inc.VAT ‡ WAS £598.80 inc.VAT ◆ WAS £922.80 inc.VA Pressure Engine Model Bar/PSI HP exc.VAT inc.VA Tiger1800B# 110/1595 3 £269.00 £322.8 Tiger2600B 180/2610 4 £379.00 £454.8 Tiger3000B 200/2900 6.5 £399.00 £478.8 PLS195B ‡ 182/2640 5.5 £479.00 £574.8 230/3335 9 £679.00 £814.8 PLS220 PLS265B ◆ 225/3263 13 £749.00 £898.8 248/3600 13 £998.00 £1197.6 PLS360 £107.98 inc.VAT ZIP CLOSE DOOR FROM ONLY Suitable for wheels from 4" to 21" Dims. 600 x 610 x 860mm Weight – 27kg £47.98 inc.VAT Model CIG81212 CIG81015 CIG81216 CIG81020 CIG81220 CIG81224 CIG1432 CIG1640 HEAVY DUTY PETROL POWER WASHERS DOUBLE.00 EXC.VAT 269 FROM ONLY £ .98 KEEPS THE WEATHER OUT! inc.VA £322.8 £574.8 £766.8 Honda & Diesel engine models in stock CAN DRAW OWN WATER FROM ONLY .00 2565exc.VAT £ FROM ONLY £ .00 ALUMINIUM RACING JACKS in VA £131. £131. £179. £203. £286. £358. £322.80 inc.VAT Ideal for use as a garage/ workshop Extra tough triple layer cover Heavy duty powder coated steel tubing Ratchet tight tensioning 249exc.VAT TIGER 3000B INDUSTRIAL SCREW 5.5HP + 17.1cfm COMPRESSORS INTELLIGENT CHARGER/ MAINTAINERS £298.80 inc.VAT Model Tonnes exc.VAT CTJ2GLS 2 £269.00 CTJ5GLS 5 £479.00 CTJ10GLS 10 £639.00 £ GARAGES/ WORKSHOPS 189EXC.VAT Foot operated hydraulic powered £227.98 inc.VAT Adjustable for springs up o 400mm dia. & 520mm in ength Adjustable spring retainers Inc. spring retaining guard WAS inc.VAT £143.98 £191.98 £215.98 £298.80 £370.80 FROM ONLY £3078.00 inc.VAT INVERTER MIG WELDER FROM ONLY .00 SSC1000G exc. CFM Tank VAT 7 24ltr £109.98 7.8 24ltr £109.98 7 50ltr £149.98 9.3 50ltr £169.98 14.5 50ltr £239.00 14.5 100ltr£299.00 .00 EXC.VAT 269 £322.80 inc.VAT CFF18C100 INDUSTRIAL AIR COMPRESSORS £ DOUBLE .99 519exc.VAT £ exc.VAT inc.VAT £104.99 £125.99 £139.98 £167.98 £219.98 £263.98 £44.39 inc.VAT CWGC1000 Motor HP 2 2 2 2.5 3 3 CTJ2GLS CAM14HV †V-Twin *230V NEW Min/Max Model Output Current 10A - 120A MMA/TIG 120 10A - 160A MMA/TIG 160 MIG150 MULT 30A - 140A MIG200 S-MULTI 20A - 200A exc.VAT 46.98 £56.38 inc.VAT £ FROM ONLY £ .99 Model Tiger 8/260 Tiger 7/260 Tiger 8/550 Tiger 11/550 Tiger 16/550 Tiger 16/1050 £ Cooling Capacity 5000 BTU/h 7000 BTU/h 9000 BTU/h 12000 BTU/h MMA & ARC/TIG INVERTER WELDERS £116.39 inc.VAT TIGER 16/550 £131.98 inc.VAT HEAVY DUTY LONG REACH JACKS FROM ONLY .00 199exc.VAT £ WAS £52.79 inc.VAT FROM ONLY .98 109exc.VAT £ HIGH VELOCITY DRUM FAN Model Desc Batteries exc.VAT CCIW160 Cordless 2X 2AH £99.98 LI-ION CIR184LIP Cordless 2X 4AH £144.99 FROM ONLY exc.VAT 169.00 £ £202.80 inc.VAT INCLUDES SANDBLASTING GUN, DELIVERY HOSE, 4 CERAMIC NOZZLES AND SAFETY HOOD inc.VAT Tank Flow Rate £119.98 Model Volume Req. exc.VAT inc.VA CPSB100B 32 litre 6-25 cfm £169.00 £202.8 £173.99 CPSB200B 63 litre 6-25 cfm £209.00 £250.8
PAY Monthly Spread the cost over 12, 24, 36, 48 or 60 months Any mix of products over £300 5 MIN 19.9% APR APPLICATION! EASY TO USE WEBSITE 21,000 NOW OVER section on: 10 FROM ONLY .99 DOUBLE EXC.VAT MICRO £36 JUMP £44.39 inc.VAT STARTS PRICE CUT FROM ONLY £ .00 deal for creating the perfect fitted garage or workshop – the ultimate PACKAGES IN storage solution. 1149exc.VAT THE RANGE COMBGSM01 • IN-STORE • ONLINE • PHONE 0844 880 1265 machinemart.co.uk MODULAR STORAGE £1378.80 inc.VAT Start Peak exc. Model Boost Boost VAT JSM180 180A 360A £36.99 JSM100 1000A 400A £49.98 JSM1200 600A 1200A £69.98 JSM350* 350A 500A £79.98 JSM600 300A 600A £49.98 ELECTRIC PRESSURE WASHERS PARTS WASHERS FROM ONLY FROM ONLY £ .98 CW1D 59 exc.VAT NEW £71.98 inc.VAT JET8500 Motor Max. exc. Model W Press. VAT JS1850 1400 1523psi £59.98 JS1950 1600 2030psi £94.99 Jet7500 1600 2030psi £149.98 Jet8500 2100 2610psi £189.98 JET9500B 2400 2900psi £229.98 exc.VAT 69.98 £ £83.98 inc.VAT FROM ONLY EXTRA LONG 1m LEADS ✔ ALL UNITS ALSO AVAILABLE SINGLY FOR CUSTOM BUILD TOOL CHESTS & CABINETS 150mm PAD DIA. PRO TOOL CHESTS & CABINETS REAR LOCKING SECURITY BARS JUMP STARTS Provides essential home, garage £ STARTS VEHICLES UP TO 6L PRICE CUT £ .98 69exc.VAT PRICE CUT £ .99 £83.98 inc.VAT 64exc.VAT WAS £89.99 inc.VAT £77.99 inc.VAT Inc. hook & loop backing pad and wool polishing bonnet WAS £83.98 inc.VAT CP150 Dual action combines rotary & orbital motions to produce an excellent polished finish exc.VAT 154.99 £185.99 inc.VAT CP185 CAR CREEPERS 2 FROM ONLY £ .00 279exc.VAT LARGE CAPACITY LOWER STORAGE WITH LOCKABLE DOORS £334.80 inc.VAT AVAILABLE IN 4 COLOURS FROM ONLY 35EXC.VAT 99EXC.VAT Model Description CBB203C 3 Dr step up 1 CBB209C 9 Dr Chest 2 CBB217C 7 Dr Cabinet exc.VAT £86.99 £154.99 £279.00 inc.VAT £104.39 £185.99 £334.80 Motor (W) Speeds exc.VAT 350 / 5 £99.95 350 / 5 £99.95 350 / 5 £115.95 450 / 12 £209.00 550 / 16 £329.00 01226 732297 0121 358 7977 0121 7713433 01204 365799 01274 390962 01273 915999 0117 935 1060 01283 564 708 01223 322675 029 2046 5424 01228 591666 01242 514 402 01244 311258 01206 762831 024 7622 4227 020 8763 0640 01325 380 841 01304 373 434 01332 290 931 01302 245 999 01382 225 140 0131 659 5919 EXETER 16 Trusham Rd. EX2 8QG GATESHEAD 50 Lobley Hill Rd. NE8 4YJ GLASGOW 280 Gt Western Rd. G4 9EJ GLOUCESTER 221A Barton St. GL1 4HY GRIMSBY ELLIS WAY, DN32 9BD HULL 8-10 Holderness Rd. HU9 1EG ILFORD 746-748 Eastern Ave. IG2 7HU IPSWICH Unit 1 Ipswich Trade Centre, Commercial Road LEEDS 227-229 Kirkstall Rd. LS4 2AS LEICESTER 69 Melton Rd. LE4 6PN LINCOLN Unit 5. The Pelham Centre. LN5 8HG LIVERPOOL 80-88 London Rd. L3 5NF LONDON CATFORD 289/291 Southend Lane SE6 3RS LONDON 6 Kendal Parade, Edmonton N18 LONDON 503-507 Lea Bridge Rd. Leyton, E10 LUTON Unit 1, 326 Dunstable Rd, Luton LU4 8JS MAIDSTONE 57 Upper Stone St. ME15 6HE MANCHESTER ALTRINCHAM 71 Manchester Rd. Altrincham MANCHESTER CENTRAL 209 Bury New Road M8 8DU MANCHESTER OPENSHAW Unit 5, Tower Mill, Ashton Old Rd MANSFIELD 169 Chesterfield Rd. South MIDDLESBROUGH Mandale Triangle, Thornaby FAST SNAP CONNECTOR For a brilliant shine Model Dia. exc.VAT CBB150 150mm £74.99 CBB200 200mm £94.99 CHDB500 150mm £122.99 CBB250 250mm £169.95 inc.VAT £89.99 £113.99 £147.59 £203.94 * WAS £95.98 inc.VAT # WAS £152.3 inc.VAT PADDED SEAT CMUS3 AWD .99 63exc.VAT £ £76.79 inc.VAT PER PAIR FROM ONLY 17EXC.VAT £21.59 inc.VAT Max Min/Max Model Tons Height exc.VAT CAX2TFB 2 235-360mm £17.99 CAX3TPB 3 325-490mm £31.99 CAX-3TBC 3 300-430mm £29.98 CAX-6TBC 6 400-615mm £48.99 CAX3TAB* 3 295-395mm £59.98 NORWICH 282a Heigham St. NR2 4LZ NORTHAMPTON Beckett Retail Park, St James’ Mill Rd NOTTINGHAM 211 Lower Parliament St. PETERBOROUGH 417 Lincoln Rd. Millfield PLYMOUTH 58-64 Embankment Rd. PL4 9HY POOLE 137-139 Bournemouth Rd. Parkstone PORTSMOUTH 277-283 Copnor Rd. Copnor PRESTON 53 Blackpool Rd. PR2 6BU SHEFFIELD 453 London Rd. Heeley. S2 4HJ SIDCUP 13 Blackfen Parade, Blackfen Rd SOUTHAMPTON 516-518 Portswood Rd. SOUTHEND 1139-1141 London Rd. Leigh on Sea STOKE-ON-TRENT 382-396 Waterloo Rd. Hanley SUNDERLAND 13-15 Ryhope Rd. Grangetown SWANSEA 7 Samlet Rd. Llansamlet. SA7 9AG SWINDON 21 Victoria Rd. SN1 3AW TWICKENHAM 83-85 Heath Rd.TW1 4AW WARRINGTON Unit 3, Hawley’s Trade Pk. WIGAN 2 Harrison Street, WN5 9AU WOLVERHAMPTON Parkfield Rd. Bilston WORCESTER 48a Upper Tything. WR1 1JZ SWIVEL CASTORS WHEEL DOLLY (PAIR) £ DOUBLE .99 01392 256 744 0191 493 2520 0141 332 9231 01452 417 948 01472 354435 01482 223161 0208 518 4286 01473 221253 0113 231 0400 0116 261 0688 01522 543 036 0151 709 4484 0208 695 5684 020 8803 0861 020 8558 8284 01582 728 063 01622 769 572 0161 9412 666 0161 241 1851 0161 223 8376 01623 622160 01642 677881 74 exc.VAT £89.99 inc.VAT MECHANICS UTILITY SEAT exc.VAT 79.98 *Aluminium inc.VAT £119.94 £119.94 * WAS £139.14 £250.80 £406.80 £394.80 inc.VAT FROM ONLY £ .99 BENCH BUFFERS/ POLISHERS £ VISIT YOUR LOCAL SUPERSTORE Open Mon-Fri 8.30-6.00, Sat 8.30-5.30, Sun 10.00-4.00 BARNSLEY Pontefract Rd, Barnsley, S71 1HA B’HAM GREAT BARR 4 Birmingham Rd. B’HAM HAY MILLS 1152 Coventry Rd, Hay Mills BOLTON 1 Thynne St. BL3 6BD BRADFORD 105-107 Manningham Lane. BD1 3BN BRIGHTON 123 Lewes Rd, BN2 3QB BRISTOL 1-3 Church Rd, Lawrence Hill. BS5 9JJ BURTON UPON TRENT 12a Lichfield St. DE14 3QZ CAMBRIDGE 181-183 Histon Road, Cambridge. CB4 3HL CARDIFF 44-46 City Rd. CF24 3DN CARLISLE 85 London Rd. CA1 2LG CHELTENHAM 84 Fairview Road. GL52 2EH CHESTER 43-45 St. James Street. CH1 3EY COLCHESTER 4 North Station Rd. CO1 1RE COVENTRY Bishop St. CV1 1HT CROYDON 423-427 Brighton Rd, Sth Croydon DARLINGTON 214 Northgate. DL1 1RB DEAL (KENT) 182-186 High St. CT14 6BQ DERBY Derwent St. DE1 2ED DONCASTER Wheatley Hall Road DUNDEE 24-26 Trades Lane. DD1 3ET EDINBURGH 163-171 Piersfield Terrace CS10BRK £95.98 inc.VAT Ratchet action for quick height adjustment Sold in pairs B = Bench mounted F = Floor standing model CDP5EB CDP5RB CDP102B CDP152B CDP352F 10 TONNE BODY REPAIR KIT exc.VAT 169.98 BALL BEARING DRAWERS CDP102B £119.94 inc.VAT WAS inc.VAT inc.VA £71.9 £179.98 £173.9 £226.80 £214.8 £275.98 £262.8 exc.VAT £59.98 £144.99 £179.00 £219.00 £203.98 inc.VAT AXLE STANDS DRILL PRESSES FROM ONLY £ DOUBLE .95 inc.VAT £101.99 £107.98 £215.98 £227.98 £43.19 inc.VAT * WAS £45.59 inc.VAT # WAS £65.99 inc.VAT exc.VAT inc.VAT Description Model CMC36 Car creeper £35.99 £43.19 CMC45 With adjustable headrest £49.98 £59.98 CMC60 Car creeper reclining £49.98 £59.98 seat & mechanics seat Range of precision bench & floor presses for enthusiast, engineering & industrial applications EXTRA WIDE 56" CHESTS/CABINETS IN STOCK 180mm PAD DIA. £ DOUBLE .99 • Oil resistant vinyl covered padded backs & headrests • Swivel castors for easy manoeuvrability exc.VAT £84.99 £89.98 £179.98 £189.98 £ Type Bench Floor Floor Floor compressor Long life battery Starting Peak Model Boost Amps exc.VAT inc.VAT 910 400 900 £96.99 £116.39 JS1100C 500 1100 £96.99 £116.39 700 1500 £164.99 £197.99 BEST 4000 1000 2000 £179.98 £215.98 SELLER JS12/24 PRO SANDER/POLISHERS 1 CTC1300C * WAS £107.98 inc.VAT Description Model 6 Dr Chest TC600C TC900C 9 Dr Chest 7 Dr Cabinet TC700C TC1300C 13 Dr Combination Chest/Cabinet CW2D Tank Model Cap. CW2D 10Ltrs CW1D 45Ltrs CWM20 22.5Ltrs CW40 75Ltrs 96EXC.VAT and roadside assistance Integral £116.39 inc.VAT work light 910 includes air CORNER UNITS IN STOCK CTC1300C WAS inc.VAT inc.VAT £71.98 £116.39 £113.99 £185.99 £179.98 £231.59 £227.98 £275.98 £ DOUBLE .99 CHOOSE STAINLESS STEEL OR WOODEN WORKTOPS .98 EXC.VAT 189 £227.98 inc.VAT £71.98 inc.VAT 2610 psi WAS £1437.60 inc.VAT CTIDG2 £ 59EXC.VAT £ DOUBLE .98 Makes easy work for washing vehicles, patios, stonework, etc. JET7500, JET8500 & JET9500B include hose reel 180 Bar inc.VAT £44.39 £59.98 £83.98 * WAS £95.98 £105.59 £59.98 inc.VAT DIGITAL TYRE INFLATOR MECHANICS’ TOOL CHEST & CABINETS PAGE CATALOGUE OUT NOW! PRODUCTS ONLINE! For 15,000 hard to find items vist the 484 NEW inc.VAT £21.59 £38.39 £35.98 £58.79 £71.98 01603 766402 01604 267840 0115 956 1811 01733 311770 01752 254050 01202 717913 023 9265 4777 01772 703263 0114 258 0831 0208 3042069 023 8055 7788 01702 483 742 01782 287321 0191 510 8773 01792 792969 01793 491717 020 8892 9117 01925 630 937 01942 323 785 01902 494186 01905 723451 LOAD RATING: 500KG PER DOLLY 603x370x150mm SWIVEL, NON MARKING CASTORS HEIGHT ADJUSTABLE MECHANICS SEAT BEST CMS2 SELLER exc.VAT 37.99 £ £45.59 inc.VAT 5 EASY WAYS TO BUY... SUPERSTORES SUPERSTORES NATIONWIDE ONLINE www.machinemart.co.uk TELESALES 0115 956 5555 CLICK & COLLECT OVER 10,500 LOCATIONS CALL & COLLECT AT STORES TODAY Calls to the catalogue request number above (0844 880 1265) cost 7p per minute plus your telephone company’s network access charge. For security reasons, calls may be monitored. All prices correct
OVER 60 ROLLS-ROYCE & BENTLEY IN STOCK 1975 HANWELLS OF LONDON 2024 BROADWAY, 86-91 UXBRIDGE ROAD, HANWELL LONDON W7 3ST TEL: (020) 8567 6557 / (020) 8567 9729 After Hours: 01932 224872 Web: www.hanwells.com Email: sales@hanwells.com 2014/14 Bentley Continental GTC Speed. Finished in Damson with a Black hood and 21 inch Speed alloys in Dart Tint. The interior is in Beluga with contrast stitching in Damson and Black carpets with Piano Black veneers. Totally unmarked with full history, immaculate condition throughout .............................................................£54,950 2013 Model/62 Bentley Continental GT 4.0 V8. Finished in Hallmark Silver with V8S 21 inch six spoke Black / polished alloys. Beluga interior with cross stitching in Portland and Piano Black veneers. Adaptive cruise, powered boot and rear camera. Only 50,700 miles with full history. Immaculate condition ............................................£38,950 2012/62 Bentley Continental GT. Finished in Extreme Silver with 21 inch 7 spoke polished alloys and Beluga interior, with Linen stitching, Walnut veneers and Linen stitched Flying B’s. Only one owner and just 7,700 miles from new. Smells, looks and drives like new. Very fairly priced at just .........................................................£53,750 2015 / 2016 Model Bentley Mulsanne Speed in Silver Storm with 21 inch Speed wheels and electric sunroof. Linen main hide and Beluga secondary hide, with Comfort Specification, Speed Premier Specification, Piano Black veneers and waist rails with carbon fibre inserts. Only 29,500 miles with full Bentley history ....................£73,950 2010/10 Bentley Continental GTC Speed. Finished in Granite with Black roof and 20 inch Speed alloys. Beluga interior with Linen stitching, Piano Black veneers and Black carpets, rear park camera and Convenience specification. Only 49,000 miles with full history. Immaculate and outstanding value at only .......................................£37,950 2009 Model / 58 Bentley Arnage R. Finished in Anthracite with 18 inch alloys and an electric sunroof. Fitted with sports suspension and rear park camera. The interior is in Oatmeal with Beluga carpets and Burr Walnut veneers. Only 36,000 miles with FSH. This car is in outstanding condition and has to be seen ................................................£39,999 2009/09 Bentley Arnage T Sports Combination Level 2. Finished in Beluga with 19 inch 5-spoke alloys, Flying B mascot and electric sunroof. The interior is trimmed in Beluga with Portland stitching, Piano Black veneers and Black carpets. Known to us for 12 years. Only 41,000 miles, immaculate throughout ..........................................£47,950 2008/08 Bentley Continental GTC Mulliner. Finished in Silver Tempest with 20 inch Mulliner alloys and a Black mohair hood. The interior is Portland with Bentley embossed in the seats and contrast stitching. Fitted with Walnut veneers and Black carpets. Low mileage with FSH. Immaculate throughout ..........................................£32,750 2008/57 Bentley Arnage T Mulliner Level 2 in Black Sapphire with latest style Arnage T diamond cut alloys and electric sunroof. Cotswold interior with picnic tables, rear park camera and electric rear seats with heating and lumbar. Only 55,000 miles with FSH. Known to us for 6 years. Immaculate throughout................................£44,950 2008 Model/57 Bentley GTC Mulliner. Finished in Beluga with a Black hood and polished and painted split rim alloys, with Beluga interior, embossed Flying B’s in Linen and Piano Black veneers. Fitted with park camera. Known to ourselves for last 6 years. 65,000 miles with FSH. Immaculate throughout .............................................................£33,950 2008 Model / 57 Bentley Continental GTC. Finished in Diamond Black Metallic with a new Mohair Black hood and fitted with Speed 20 inch alloys. Beluga interior with Piano Black veneers and just 51,000 miles with a full history file. Immaculate condition throughout, priced at only ..............................................................................£31,950 2007/07 Bentley Arnage T Level 2. Finished in Tungsten with 19 inch polished blade alloys, electric sunroof and retracting Flying B mascot. Stratos Silver leather interior with Slate secondary hide. Wood and leather steering wheel and Bentley badges to waist rails. Only 61,000 miles with FSH. Only ...............................................................£38,950 2007/56 Bentley Continental GTC. Finished in Beluga with a Black Mohair hood and 2014 style 21 inch alloys. Beluga interior with St James stitching and Walnut veneers. 69,000 miles with Full Service History. Known to ourselves for 5 years and in immaculate condition throughout .............................................................£28,450 2006/06 Bentley Arnage T Mulliner Level II. Finished in unmarked Moonbeam Silver with quad exhausts, Le Mans wing vents and 19 inch split rims. Beluga interior with Piano Black veneers, machined alloy dash and door capping inserts. A fantastic spec. with only 67,000 miles and full history. Only...........................................................£29,999 2004/54 Bentley Continental GT. Finished in Diamond Black with 19 inch alloys. The interior is in Saffron leather with Beluga secondary hide. Full Service History, only 5,000 miles per year. Immaculate condition, value at only .......................................................................£16,999 2004/04 Bentley Continental GT. Finished in Sapphire Blue with Black Badge styling, with 19 inch split rim alloys. Saffron interior with Nautic Blue secondary hide and Walnut veneers. Immaculate throughout with Full Service History. Real value at only ..................................................£16,999 1999 S Rolls Royce Silver Seraph. Finished in Midnight Blue with a Cream coachline, white wall tyres and chrome wheels. Magnolia leather piped in French Navy with French Navy carpets piped in Magnolia, Walnut veneers and picnic tables in the rear. Only 66,000 miles with outstanding service history .......................................................£35,950 2002/02 Bentley Arnage R. Finished in Silver Storm with 18 inch alloys and the interior is in Barley with French Navy carpets and Burr Walnut veneers. Only 63,000 miles with history. A truly beautiful car, unmarked throughout ..............................................................................£24,950 1981 W Rolls Royce Silver Spirit, ULEZ compliant. Finished iin stunning Regency Gold with a Beige Everflex roof and whitewall tyres. The interior is in Cream leather and in exceptional condition. Beige carpets with Walnut veneers just refurbished. This car is in immaculate condition, ideal for daily use ...........................................................£15,999 1999 V Bentley Continental T. One of only 95 RHD cars built. Finished in Sherwood Green with pristine bodywork and looks like a new car. Cotswold interior leather with secondary hide in Ascot and all veneers in Walnut. Only 29,000 miles and maintained to highest standard with comprehensive history file .....................................£98,950 1997 R Bentley Turbo RT. Finished in Black Emerald with Cream coachlines and 17 inch 5-spoke RT alloys. The interior is like new with nice fresh Sandstone leather and Spruce carpets, with Walnut veneers. This car is really immaculate throughout with Full Service History. An investment in a real classic car ..............................£24,950 1987 D Rolls Royce Silver Spirit EFI ABS. Finished in Royal Blue with Cream coachlines. The interior is Cream piped in French Navy with Cream carpets piped in Cream and Walnut veneers. This is a stunning car which we have known, serviced and maintained regardless of cost for 15 years. Value at only ................................................£17,250 1980 V Rolls Royce Silver Shadow Series II. Finished in 1980’s classic Walnut with Gold fine lines and London Tan interior. Lockable centre cocktail cabinet, Walnut veneers and Fawn carpets bound in London Tan. Only 30,000 miles with lots of history. A stunning car, realistically priced at only ..............................................................................£36,950 1963 Rolls Royce Silver Cloud III. Finished in original Burgundy, with London Tan leather. Special order folding rear seats by Rolls Royce appointed agents Radford. Extremely well maintained with just 4 owners and a large history file dating back to 1971. Just 78,000 miles and offered at only .......................................................£65,950 All vehicles have a full 20,000 mile service plus a 100 point check and 1 year MoT with a 24 month 5 star warranty (parts and labour) Open 7 days a week for appointments
ADS ON TEST Solex replaced with Weber in the engine bay Flawless finish is possibly better than new Interior displays light patina 1970 BMW 2002 Touring £33,990 This BMW 2002 Touring has been fastidiously restored, but as Chris Hope wonders, is it too good to use? ome restored across three decades and with fewer than 500 miles recorded since, there’s little to fault about this unique BMW. Both the finish of the striking Inka Orange paint and the panel fit throughout are of a very high quality. Circling around this BMW several times reveals not a dent or a stonechip. The front features a pair of dipping Cibie driving lights and there’s a sliding sunroof – an extra specified when new. Underneath it’s been properly undersealed, while the stainless steel exhaust is brand new. Likewise, the Cromodora alloy wheels are pristine and unkerbed. The BMW badges front and rear are among the few items showing any kind of patina. Some of the strips of chrome are likewise scuffed and scratched, notably the rain gutters on both sides, but these do not detract from the overall impression. There’s little to quibble over inside either. XTP 880L was treated to a new headlining as part of its restoration, as well as a new carpet set. The seats have seemingly been left alone; understandable when the only issue is slight rippling to the vinyl seat bases, which remain comfortable. The dashboard is free from damage while all the gauges operate correctly. The engine bay is faultless. The original Solex carburettor has been substituted for a Weber 32-36 DGW, while restoration work included the cylinder head being rebuilt and fitted with hardened valve seats compatible with unleaded fuel by marque specialist Jaymic. The radiator has also been recored and fitted with a Revotec electric fan. Almost every aspect of this car’s 154k-plus mileage has been tabulated by its fastidious owner. It was collected new from BMW Munich on 24 January 1972 where it was driven some 8000 miles before being imported into the UK the following year. It was then used daily for its first 100k miles until 1983 when it was subject to a documented engine overhaul. It racked up further 40k miles until 1990 when it had a full restoration. This, because of other projects – including the restoration of a pair of 3.0CSLs – wasn’t completed until last year. It starts on half choke and finds an even idle shortly afterwards once the engine has warmed up. A five-speed gearbox from an E21 320i was fitted as part of its restoration and changes are slick, coupled to a high-biting clutch. Power builds smoothly and the brakes nicely progressive. Weighty steering is offers good feedback and tracks true, though if we’re being picky there is a small degree of play at the dead-ahead. With overhauled subframes and fresh bushes throughout, the handling is typically small Sixties sporting saloon sharp. The 2002 Touring is an uncommon sight in the UK with club estimates suggesting no more than 40 survive. The asking price of this one is undoubtedly several orders above what others that have sold recently, but its history and the work carried out is impressive. CHOOSE YOUR BMW ’02 Introduced in 1966, BMW’s 02-series was based on a shortened Neue Klasse platform. Initially a two-door saloon with a 1.6-litre engine it was named 1600-2, although this was revised to 1602 in 1971. Baur-built Cabriolet and twin-carburettor 1600TI versions introduced in 1967. The 2.0-litre 2002 supplemented the 1602 model from 1968. Hatchback variant called Touring was introduced in 1971, alongside the mid-range engine-option 1802. The 2002 Turbo, Europe’s first turbocharged production car, topped the range from 1973. 1602, 1802 and 2002 were phased out in 1975, replaced by the new E21 3 Series but the 1.5-litre 1502 was created as a new base model, remaining in production until 1977. 1970 BMW 2002 Touring Price £33,990 Contact Jordan Fox Cars, Stamford, Lincolnshire (07473 911911, jordanfoxcars.co.uk) Engine 1991cc four-cylinder, ohc, carburettor Power 113bhp @ 5800rpm Torque 116lb ft @ 3000rpm Top speed 104mph 0-60mph 10sec Fuel consumption 25-31mpg Length 4230mm Width 1620mm 109
ADS ON TEST Straight-six is smooth at idle Body has been extensively rustproofed Older restoration just starting to patinate 1965 Mercedes 220SEb £74,995 Maintaining this meticulously-restored manual Mercedes in its present condition will be a responsibility, says Ian Shaw ercedes’ W111 pillarless coupés have always commanded a strong price – when new the 220SEb was triple the cost of a Jaguar E-type – and this one has been restored and maintained regardless of cost. It drives well, while none of its inherent character has been lost through restoration. Now it requires an owner with the same approach to preservation and expenditure to secure its next half-century. The bodywork appears to be incredibly solid. An extensive mechanical and interior restoration was carried out but the body panels are original, with excellent paint condition and extensive rustproofing seen in the wheelarches and behind the bumpers. These and all the rest of the chrome, glass and lights are in great condition. The wheels are excellent too, athough they sport four budgetbrand tyres – albeit with lots of tread life. In 2005 the car underwent a major mechanical and interior restoration, even down to rebuilding the original Becker radio. The interior is still in fantastic condition today, it having seen little use 1965 Mercedes-Benz 220SEb since. Other than a little cracking of the leather on the driver's seat bolster, the interior is in as-original condition. Most classics have a mere history file, but this one’s fills a cubic metre. Paperwork, from the 1965 sales invoice to receipts detailing restoration by the M-B Owners' Club chairman confirms the effort and money that has been invested. The straight-six turns over a little before firing cleanly and settles to a slow but turbine-smooth idle. The progressive accelerator action and firm-but-linear clutch contrast the fingertip-light gear shift action with its long throw and delicate movement. Solidity of build is obvious in the first few hundred yards and despite the great opportunities for rattles of trim or glazing that the pillarless coupé provides, there are none here. The engine pulls cleanly, gear selection and synchromesh seem in fine fettle and the suspension is soft yet controlled with no untoward noises over broken surfaces and no damper issues. The car pulls up straight and the braking feel and ability is first class. The fuel gauge flickers but coolant temperature and oil pressure readings sit solidly in the midrange once the engine is warmed up. Price £74,995 Contact Sherwood Restorations, Notts (01636 358814, sherwoodrestorations.co.uk Engine 2195cc 6cyl, ohc, mechanical fuel injection Power 120bhp@5000rpm Torque 140lb ft@2800rpm Top speed 105mph 0-60mph 16.5sec Fuel consumption 20-25mpg Length 4875mm Width 1795mm 110 This 220SEb covered most of its mileage in the first ten years of its life, and was owned by its second keeper for 36 years before undergoing the major mechanical restoration. At 176,000 miles the engine was completely stripped and rebuilt with genuine Mercedes parts including new oil pump, pistons, main bearings, big and little end bearings, valves, guides and springs for example. A new clutch was fitted and the rear axle completely rebuilt. It has covered just 12,000 miles since then and it shows under the bonnet. All the pipes, hoses – bearing M-B markings – and wiring look excellent, there are no leaks, and only a touch of rust on the radiator and air-cleaner housing are apparent. It’s a terrific prospect, but not one to run on a shoestring. CHOOSE YOUR MERCEDES-BENZ W111 COUPÉ Launched in 1960, the Paul Bracq-designed coupé version of the W111 ‘Heckflosse’ (‘fintail’) saloon did away with the tailfins. Named 220SE, it featured a fuel injected 2.2-litre straight six engine. Mechanically identical convertible version joined the range in 1961. A 3.0-litre fuel-injected 300SE arrived in 1962. Mercedes gave it the W112 model code, creating a new spinoff range of super-luxury versions culminating in the V8 280SE 3.5. Fuel-injected version of the 220, internally named SEb, arrived in 1965 just ahead of its replacement by the new 2.5-litre 250SE. The 2.8-litre 280SE succeeded 250SE in 1967. Discontinued 1971.
CHARLES RAMSEY THE CLASSIC CONNECTION www.classicconnection.co.uk 1961 MERCEDES 190 SL Papyrus white with sable black leather interior, 69,000 miles. This car is an older restoration that remains in great condition throughout. It has just come out of a private collection and benefits from a recent five thousand pound mechanical overhaul. £79,995 1970 Mercedes 280SL Pagoda Automatic E Type Jaguar 1961 Outside Bonnet Lock This matching numbers car was supplied new to the USA . Number 339 of 385 cars built in left hand drive, this Jaguar was rescued in 2008/9 after being stored in a barn, believed to be in West Virginia, for over thirty years. £149,995 1969 Porsche 911T Targa Silver with black leather and wood interior, this Pagoda is in an excellent condition throughout. 96,727 miles from new with service history dating back to 1984. The car presented here drives faultlessly and goes through the gears perfectly. White with black interior. 82,000 miles. This Porsche has been subject to much recent expenditure totalling over fifty thousand pounds. Work included the following: Targa top re-trim, new dashboard top and front, full carpet set, new door cards to original specification, and much more. Mini Cooper S Mk3 Showing 43,000 miles 1988 Mercedes-Benz 300SL (R107) Only 35,000 Miles From New £149,995 £114,995 Comprehensive history file which includes vast amounts of paperwork pretty much going back to when the car was a year old, nearly all mot’s going back to 1976, tax discs including one from 1972, genuine owners handbook. Having only completed 35,690 miles from new, this car has just come out of a 33 year ownership with receipted work of roughly £13,500 since 2019 with less than 60-miles travelled since. It’s finished in Signal Red and the paintwork is all original. TRIUMPH TR5 1983 Maserati Merak SS only 51,000 miles from new £44,995 UK original car, red with black interior. Very rare Surrey top with matching red removable hard top. Comprehensively restored in 2015 using a new old stock body shell. The interior has all been replaced and is in superb condition throughout, including the woodwork. £49,995 £49,995 This superb example is presented in Celeste Chiaro with blue leather interior. It was specially ordered from new with metallic paint, black carpets, black leather centre console, electric windows, air conditioning, Campagnolo wheels and Dynatrol rust treatment. £74,995 1968 Jaguar E-Type S2 Roadster Ravens Gloss black with dark red leather interior with black mohair soft top and matching tonneau cover. This car is a one off build that we created for a customer of ours around five years ago which has had little use since. £114,995 Ariel Atom 3.5R 2018 550 Miles! Full Ariel service history. Fully loaded and extremely rare factory 3.5R with side pods and front and rear factory carbon spoilers. 350bhp. Currently fitted with a new stainless sports exhaust which makes it sound insane (original exhaust comes with it) £69,995 1963 Volkswagen Type 2 23 window Cream over dark red with matching beautifully re-trimmed interior. This very rare bus is a genuine German built 23 windows, which was supplied new to the German Embassy in Mexico City as their Minibus, they sold it in 1969. £59,995 Mercedes 300SL Automatic Signal red with matching hardtop, black leather interior and black mohair soft top. Only 68,000 miles from new supported by a comprehensive history file. Last owner since 1997 who has looked after this car fastidiously. £39,995 CLASSIC CONNECTION, SALES, SERVICE & RESTORATION Pound Lane, Burley, Hampshire, BH24 4EB Telephone: 01425 489575 Mobile: 07970 024634 Email: sales@classicconnection.co.uk
JAGUAR F-TYPE 5.0 S V8 SUPERCHARGED 2013 8 SPEED CONVERTIBLE. ONLY 12000 MILES FROM NEW. This is one of a small number of 5.0 V8 Supercharged S Models produced in Rear Wheel Drive. Finished in Metallic Midnight Black with Full Pale Grey Leather Electric Heated Seats. Factory Options include: 7” Colour Touch Screen Sat/Nav, Bluetooth Phone, Meridian Sound System 770w Music with Audio Interface, Rear Parking, Front/Rear Park Distance, 20” Black Blade Alloys, Switchable Sports Exhaust, DAB Radio, Heated Seats. Multi Function Steering wheel with Paddle Change, Push Button Start Stop, Cruise Control, Power Fold Mirrors, Full Jaguar Main Dealer Service History with Service Invoices and Full MOT History. For More Detailed Information Please Call or email.... £36,995 MERCEDES BENZ CLK 350 3.5 V6 PETROL SPORT CONVERTIBLE 2007 ONLY 31000 MILES FROM NEW. Finished in Metallic Designo Grey with Full Designo Cream Leather Electric Memory Seats. MB Factory Options Included: Colour Sat/Nav, Front and Rear Park Distance Control, Electric Memory Seats, Heated Seats,Harmon Kardon Premium Sound, Xenon Headlights,18” AMG Alloys, Piano Black Interior Pack, Cruise Control, Black Power Hood, Multi Function Steering Wheel, Bluetooth Phone, Full Service History with Full MOT History, 2 Keys and Full Book pack. One of the Finest colour Combinations. For More Information Please call or email ................................................................................ £14,995 JAGUAR XK 5.0 V8 PORTFOLIO CONVERTIBLE 2014 Only 9000 Miles From New. Finished in Beautiful Metallic Rhodium Silver with Full Royal Blue Leather Electric Seats with Cashmere Stitching, Jaguar factory options Included: Colour Touch Screen Sat/ Nav, Bluetooth Phone with Audio Interface Music, Heated Sport Steering Wheel, Electric Heated Seats, Air Conditioned Seats, Walnut Interior Pack, Front/Rear Park Distance, Reversing Camera, Bowers/Wilkins Premium HiFi, Adaptive Steering Xenon Headlights, Full Jaguar Service History and Full MOT History. Surely the Very Finest of the last of the XK Models ..................................................................................................................................... £35,995 BMW 325I M SPORT 3.0 CONVERTIBLE 2008 with Folding Hard Top. ONLY 28,600 MILES FROM NEW.This Beautiful E90 is Finished in Metallic Estoril Blue with Full Dakota Sand Beige Leather Electric Heated Memory Seats. This Example was registered new on the 13-10-2008 by Cooper BMW Ipswich. Factory Options Included: Colour Sat/Nav with Aux Music, Bluetooth Phone, 18” M Sport Alloys, Electric Folding Mirrors, Rear Park Distance, Xenon Headlights, MTec Sports Multi Function Steering Wheel. Full Service History with Service Invoices and Full MOT History . For More Detailed Information Please Call or email .......................................£13,995 MERCEDES BENZ SL350 AMG SPORT V6 3.5 2013 CONVERTIBLE. ONLY 29000 MILES FROM NEW. Finished in Metallic Obsidian Black. Full Anthracite Leather Electric Seats with Silver Stitching, MB Factory Options Inc: Colour Sat/Nav, Airscarf, E/Folding Mirrors,Traffic Sign Recognition, Premium Sound with Bluetooth Audio, Bluetooth Phone, AMG Sports Pack, 19” AMG Alloys, Sports Steering Wheel, Active Park Assist, Front/Rear Park Distance. Full MB Service History with Service Invoices and Full MOT History ............................................................................................................................................ £21,995 MERCEDES BENZ A45 AMG 4MATIC AUTO 7-SPEED DCT. ONLY 17000 MILES FROM NEW. Finished in Metallic Grey with Full Black Leather AMG Performance Seats.One Owner Since who we Purchased it From.Options Included: AMG Performance Steering Wheel in Suede and Black Leather, Designo Seat Belts in Red, AMG Performance Body Styling with Rear Boot Spoiler,Tyre Pressure Monitor, Sports Suspension,MB Audio 20 with Audio Media, Bluetooth Phone, 19” Black AMG Multi Spoke alloys ,Rear Privacy Glass, Xenon Headlights, Cruise Control, Front/Rear Park Distance, illuminated AMG Door Sills in Ali, ECO Start/Stop Function. Full Main Dealer/MB Specialist Service History and Full MOT History ....................................................£21,995 AUDI TTS 2.0 TFSI QUATTRO 6 SPEED MANUAL PETROL CONVERTIBLE 2012. ONLY 45200 MILES FROM NEW. Finished in Special Order Exclusive Cambridge Green Pearl with Full Exclusive Black Leather with Silver Stitching. Factory Options Included: Electric Fronts Seats, Symphony Radio with Bluetooth Interface, Audi Exclusive Paint, 18” Audi Cross Alloys, Electric Wind Deflector, Heated Seats, Cruise Control, Multi Function Flat Bottom Steering Wheel, Front /Rear Park Distance Control, Xenon Headlights, Factory Quad Exhausts. Original Sales Invoice. Full Audi/Specialist Service History with Service Invoices and Full MOT History. For more Detailed Information Please Call or email ................£13,995 JAGUAR XKR 5.0 V8 SUPERCHARGED CONVERTIBLE 2013 (Face Lift Model) ONLY 24000 MILES FROM NEW Finished Beautiful and Very Rare Metallic Italian Racing Red With Full Charcoal Leather with Red Stitching Electric Heated Memory Seats. Factory Options Included: Colour Touch Screen Sat/Nav, Speed Pack Body Kit, DAB Radio, Bowers & Wilkins Premium HiFi with ipod /USB Connection, Black Pack, Reversing Camera, 6 CD Player, Bluetooth Phone, Heated Steering Wheel, Ali Interior Pack,Wind Deflector, Red Brake Calipers, 20” Jaguar Alloys, Front/Rear Park Distance, Active xenon Headlights, Keyless Entry, Full Jaguar Main Dealer/Specialists Service History with all Service Invoices and Full MOT History. 2 Keys and all Booklets. These Final Edition LED XKR Models Have become very Collectable. A Truly Stunning Low Mileage Example In the Ultimate Colour Combination.....................£34,995 URGENTLY WANTED SIMILAR LOW MILEAGE CARS
ADS ON TEST V8 feels sportier in this rare special edition Interior faded but solid, electrics need checking Outer panels in fine condition 2001 Jaguar XKR Convertible £15,995 A recent life in Spanish sunshine seems to have preserved this sporty Jaguar well, as Sam Dawson finds on a test drive or a product of one of Jaguar’s more gentle eras, this XKR is sportier than usual. Not just in the TVR-style growl of its sports exhaust system, but also as a rare Jaguar Racing special edition. Echoing the livery of Jaguar’s Formula One cars of the era, it wears weird-looking British Racing Green-stained wood on its dashboard, as well as a Racing-logoed chrome gearknob. It’s an unusual set of options, all of which look slightly faded – probably a result of living under Spanish sunlight for a good portion of its life. There are some small scratches in the paint on the driver’s-side rear wing near the hood, and on the bootlid by the spoiler, but the overall condition of the bodywork is good, with no outward signs of rust. The interior is generally very good too, apart from that fading, although once on the move it appears the convertible’s scuttle-shake has rattled some of the air vent surrounds loose on the dashboard at the base of the windscreen, resulting in a persistent twittering noise at speed. The complex electric hood retraction is completed with the touch of a single button. However, during the process the driver’s side window doesn’t drop – it’s meant to – while the one on the passenger side does drop, but needs winding back up again on the window button. It doesn’t affect hood operation though, and there’s no sluggishness to the windows when moved in isolation. Everything else is promising. That fiery V8 starts immediately, the steering wheel offers itself to you electrically as it starts up, and once warmed-through the oil and water temperature gauges sit in the middle of their unmarked dials. Gear changes are instantaneous in manual mode on the J-gate transmission, making it possible to drive the XKR like a proper sports car. The brakes, which can underwhelm on X100s, especially lesser XK8s, feel reassuringly powerful on this XKR. Handling is sharp, and the suspension creak-free. MoT certificates are not continuous, although the service history file also includes the Spanish Inspección Técnica papers for 2019-2022, completing a service history going back to 2010, when the car was nine years old. And it seems to have parts from all the right places. Receipts confirm various sundries from SNG Barratt, and in 2015 E&E Services of Milton Keynes carried out a comprehensive overhaul and upgrade, including fitting Osram Nightbreaker lightbulbs, a full Polybush kit, improved brake pads and a new anti-roll bar link, running up a £1768 bill in the process. Under the bonnet it’s clean, although there is some surface rust on little ancillary fixings, and when the passenger door is open, rust can be seen on the mounting brackets for the front wing, but it’s nothing terminal. This is a fundamentally well-looked-after car in need of a bit of minor tidying up, offering a near-supercar drive for a fairly average price so far as XKR drop-tops go. CHOOSE YOUR JAGUAR XK (X100) Anticipated as the Jaguar F-type, the XK8 was launched in 1996 to replace the 20-yearold XJS. Immediately available as both a coupé and convertible, it used a 4.0-litre V8 and an innovative ‘J-Gate’ transmission allowing the car to be driven either as a conventional automatic or a clutchless manual. Coupé models had the option of Computer Active Suspension Technology, made available on the convertibles from 1997. Supercharged XKR variant available from 1998, capable of 0-60mph in 5.4sec. New and more robust 4.2-litre engines in normally-aspirated and supercharged forms were introduced in 2002, coupled to new sixspeed automatic gearboxes. XKR-S, with stiffened suspension and 174mph potential, was released as a 200-car run ahead of production ending in 2005. Eventually replaced by F-type in 2013. 2001 Jaguar XKR Convertible Price £15,995 Contact Fender-Broad, Holt, Wiltshire (fenderbroad.com, 07794 477785) Engine 3996cc V8, DOHC, electronic fuel injection, supercharger Power 370bhp @ 6150rpm Torque 387lb ft @ 3600rpm 0-60mph 5.6sec Top speed 156mph Fuel Cons 22mpg Length 4760mm Width 1830mm 113
ADS ON TEST Highly-strung Lotus engine is wellbehaved here Bodily scruffy but mechanically sound – perfect for usability Interior wellused but solid and complete Jensen-Healey MkI £12,500 Scruffy but sound and priced accordingly, this is a Jensen you really won’t worry about driving, says Sam Dawson et’s get one thing clear – this Jensen is not a concours contender. Its overall demeanour is one of solid, well-used scruffiness. However, given how tetchy their Lotussourced twin-cam engines can get, a car that has been so regularly enjoyed bodes well if you want a Jensen-Healey you can rely on. The chrome trim on the dashboard is split in places and the gear lever gaiter is perished, but crucially everything is present and works well. It’s a similar story externally – panels fit flush, the hood is slightly faded but supple and intact, and there’s a healthy slickness to the way in which everything operates, from the smooth steering and gearchange to the window winders and roof-folding mechanism. Some of the beige bodywork could perhaps do with a bit of attention in future. There are tiny dents on the bonnet and front wings, consistent with minor carpark dings, and some rust bubbles on the sills and door bottoms. The most serious corrosion is on the bottom of the driver’s-side sill, though the metal isn’t crumbling yet, and there’s splitting in the paint around the beading on the 1973 Jensen-Healey rear deck. There’s also a large rust bubble next to the fuel filler cap. A slightly darker shade of beige has been used to touch in some of the stonechips too. However, raise the bonnet and the view is reassuring. There are no signs of inner-body or chassis-leg corrosion here, and the engine seems unpretentiously healthy, with plenty of clear-coloured oil on its dipstick. The engine fires up eagerly, with no choke needed once warm. Crucially for a Lotus 900-series, it sounds slightly clattery when cold but smooth when warmed-up. If it’s the other way round they bode trouble. Oil pressure sits just above 50psi under load, and the car corners with verve. There’s no slack in the steering, the engine pulls well through the four gear ratios and there are no untoward noises from the suspension. If there is a weak link, it’s the brakes. The pedal has a lot of free travel before they seem to bite, and they need a lot of force to properly stop the car. Service history is patchy. The original owners’ manual is in the glovebox, and the original service book, although unstamped, gives the first owner as TR Clark, who bought the car at FO Green Autos of Hertford on 1 August 1973. The Price £12,500 Contact The Motor Shed, Bicester Heritage, Oxon (vintageandclassiccars.co.uk, 07718 764463) Engine 1973cc four-cyl, dohc, two carburettors Power 144bhp @ 6500rpm Torque 134lb ft @ 5000rpm Top speed 119mph 0-60mph 7.8sec Fuel cons 26mpg Length 4115mm Width 1600mm 114 V5C suggests it’s had four owners in total. According to vendor Mark Elder, it’s been retrofitted with a MkII engine at some point – the MkI unit is more fragile so this is a good thing – though this makes determining its mileage impossible, especially because there are no MoT certificates in the file. It's had money spent getting it sound though. It was welded and undersealed by Yarnell Mead Motors in 2010, and L Arrowsmith & Son overhauled the engine with a new fuel pump, plus further chassis welding last year. It would take a lot of work to make it show standard, but as an unusual classic you can just jump in and enjoy, it’s a compelling prospect. CHOOSE YOUR JENSEN-HEALEY Designed by William Towns as a replacement for the Austin-Healey 3000 MkIII, the Jensen-Healey was launched in 1972. It was also the first production car to feature the new Lotus 900-series slant-four twin-cam engine, mated to a four-speed Chrysler gearbox. MkII version arrived in August 1973. The engine now sported an oil cooler grille, chrome-trimmed bumpers had given way to plastic legislation-friendly impact bumpers, and the gearbox was now a five-speed Getrag 235/5. Jensen GT, a two-plus-two hatchbackcoupé version, succeeded the MkII roadster in 1975. It featured a luxury-trimmed interior with a completely redesigned dashboard. Production ended in 1976.
HURST PARK Classic Cars A family business founded in 1938 MERCEDES-BENZ 300 SL (W107) 1990: Midnight Blue with matching hard top and Grey hide interior. ‘Flat-Face’ alloy wheels. Three owners. 13,500 miles only from new. Original handbook pack, service book and comprehensive history... £59,995 BMW 325CI M-Sport CONVERTIBLE 2004: Orient Blue with Beige hide interior. Navy Blue soft-top. 18” M-Sport alloy wheels. Two owners. 21,000 miles only from new. Automatic. ‘Myrtle’ wood trim. Electric heated memory seats. 6-CD player. Electric folding exterior mirrors ................................£13,495 MGB V8 1974: British Racing Green with Fawn hide interior. ‘Minilite’ alloy wheels. Manual gearbox with overdrive. Walnut dashboard. This car started life as a factory V8 GT but was rebuilt in the mid 1990’s using a new Heritage V8 bodyshell to roadster specification. 18,500 miles since construction. A very rare opportunity to buy a V8 engined roadster ........................................£29,995 JAGUAR XJR 4.0Ltr SUPERCHARGED (X308) 2001: Carnival Red with Ivory hide interior. 18” alloy wheels. Three owners. 37,000 miles only from new. Air conditioning, wood & leather steering wheel and other usual refinements .....................................................................................Arriving shortly MERCEDES-BENZ SL 320 (R129) 1995: Dark Blue with Sand hide interior. Dark blue hard-top and soft-top. 8-hole alloy wheels. Rear seats. Two owners. 73,000 miles only from new. Air conditioning, electric heated seats, and other usual refinements ........................................................................£13,995 AUDI A4 SPORTLINE QUATTRO 3.2 Ltr CONVERTIBLE 2006: Silver with Charcoal hide interior. Black soft-top. 18” alloy wheels. 27,000 miles only from new .....................................................................................Available shortly MERCEDES-BENZ 380 SL (W107) 1985: Black with Beige hide interior. Black hard & soft-tops. ‘Mexican Hat’ alloy wheels. One owner. 68,000 miles only from new. Full service history. Air conditioning, cruise control, rear seats, fog lights, heated front seats and other usual refinements ................... £39,995 JAGUAR SOVEREIGN 4.2Ltr 1985: Rhodium Silver with Black hide interior. ‘Pepperpot’ alloy wheels. One owner. 40,000 miles only from new. Full service history. Air conditioning, electric sunshine roof and other usual refinements ................................................................................... Arriving shortly WANTED: WE ARE ALWAYS IN SEARCH OF LOW MILEAGE ORIGINAL OR FULLY RESTORED EXAMPLES OF CARS OF THE TYPE THAT WE SELL. PLEASE ADVISE OF ANY SUITABLE CARS YOU MAY HAVE, OR KNOW OF, WHICH MAY BE FOR SALE. VIEWINGS STRICTLY BY APPOINTMENT ONLY ALL OUR CARS ARE ORIGINAL UK SUPPLIED UNLESS OTHERWISE STATED. Hurst Park Automobiles Ltd www.hurstpark.co.uk Tel: +44 (0)1372 468487 sales@hurstpark.co.uk For thousands of cars for sale visit classiccarsforsale.co.uk 115


CARS FOR SALE KIM CAIRNS - Established 1972 Quality is remembered long after price is forgotten EX ULE EM Z PT 1952 DAIMLER SPECIAL SPORTS CONVERTIBLE. Coach built by Barker and one of only 500 built. 3 were fixed head the rest drop heads mainly by Barker, there were a few Hooper bodied. Finished in Sage Green over Smoke Green with Beige Hide. The car has an extensive History File including the original log book detailing ownership. Also comes with MOTs dating from 1968 to 2018, handbooks, Jack and Tools, Spare keys etc. Beautiful example...............................£32,995 2003 BENTLEY ARNAGE R 6.7. Originally supplied by Bentley Motors of Crewe to Her Royal Highness Princess Anne in September of 2003. Retained by the Princess until 2006 and covered 10,000 miles during her ownership. Finished in immaculate Royal Blue and trimmed in unmarked extra supple sandstone hide, which was specified. Only 46,000 miles complete with Rolls Royce Service History, 7 stamps. Plus a further 8 by Royce engineering the last one at 44,000 miles. A history file containing old MOTs, invoices for servicing and 2 sets of keys. A truly magnificent Bentley with Royal Province, low mileage and in immaculate condition ... £29,995 1990 ROLLS ROYCE SILVER SPIRIT II *2 OWNERS 15,000 MILES FROM NEW*. Supplied to a London PLC 1st Jan 1990 then passed to a doctor for 29 years and used sparingly now covered 15,900 miles. Finished in Royal Blue with Magnolia Hide, Dark Blue Piping and Dark Blue dash top Dark Blue carpets. Spare wheel and unused complete tool kit. The underside is in remarkable condition, looks more like a one year old car not a 33 year old one. One of the very best you will find........................................................£26,995 EX ULE EM Z PT 1983 MERCEDES 200 123 SERIES *ONLY 25,800 MILES FROM NEW*. Supplied by M Thomas Continental of Plymouth to a gentleman from Newquay who had the car until his passing in 2022. The car has 10 service stamps by M Thomas Continental up until September 1998 at 25,118 miles. Finished in its original and immaculate Signal Red with unmarked Tan Trim, the car is in time warp condition and totally original, not having had any restoration or repairs. Comes with all its original Hand Books, Service Book, New Car Brochure and price list. When only the best is good enough......................................£23,995 EX ULE EM Z PT 1985 JAGUAR XJ-SC 3.6 CABRIOLET. Sold new to Mr Michael Allen by Ruttee Braye Ltd of St Martins Guernsey on the 8th July 1985, who kept the car until May 2000 having only covered 10,000 miles. Sold to its 2nd and only other owner and has now covered only 27,000 miles. Finished in immaculate Claret Metallic with unmarked Doe Skin Hide, manual 5 speed gearbox and air conditioner. Rare opportunity to acquire a totally original unmolested XJ-SC in time warp condition and very low mileage. Sound investment at ........................£23,995 1981 MGB GT LE. Only 19,000 miles and only 2 owners from new. Only 580 GT LE’s were built, all finished in Platinum Metallic and 421 roadsters all finished in Metallic bronze. This particular car is a very original unrestored example. Comes with all original book packs including service book, full set of MOT’s, large history file, unused spare wheel and a tool kit. Excellent original example .......................................... £13,995 CO UL MP EZ LIA NT EX ULE EM Z PT 2000 VOLKSWAGEN GOLF V5 AUTO. Top of the range luxury Golf featuring the super smooth VW V5 engine together with the DSG Automatic gearbox. ONLY one owner and 57,000 miles. Immaculate Diamond Black with contrasting Magnolia Leather. Only one very careful owner, meticulously serviced and maintained, confirmed by the documented history and service records with 18 stamps in the service book. With all the original handbooks and service book. Exceptional condition..£12,995 1979 VOLVO 264. Only one owner from new and only 54,000 miles. Last on the road in 1993, in storage until recently recommissioned and ready for the road again. Totally original, body work and interior original and in excellent condition. Just needed a major service brake overhaul, new fuel tank and fuel pump. A new set of tyres and hoses were also fitted. Time warp car .............................................£12,995 2001 JAGUAR XKR COUPE 4.0 SUPERCHARGED AUTO *ULEZ COMPLIANT*. Supplied new by Drabbe and Allen of Rusholme with 12 service stamps in the service book both main dealer and specialists. Finished in immaculate Black with Ivory Hide and 18inch impeller alloys. Specifications include cruise control, climate control, electric seats, valet key etc. Comes with all original books, a selection of MOTs and invoice and 2 sets of keys. Supercharged ultra quick and comfortable XKR .....£10,995 CO UL MP EZ LIA NT 1996 MERCEDES E220 CABRIOLET SPORT. Finished in the popular colour combination of immaculate Brilliant Silver with Black Leather. With the optional extras of heated seats, front armrest and 8 hole alloy wheels. Only 3 owners from new, the last owner has owned the car since 2005. Comes with service history, Old MOT’s, Mercedes Book Pack, Service Book etc. Very well looked after low ownership, locally owned car from new. Now becoming very sought after ..........£10,995 1986 AUSTIN METRO CITY 1.0 ONLY 3,200 MILES. Finished in original white Diamond white with Brown/Beige trim. Totally original apart from a new exhaust system. Serviced at 999 miles and 2,505 miles. MOTs from 1989, 1990, 1991 and 1992. With a recent MOT carried out by ourselves on the 1st Nov 22. With all original books, unused spare wheel and tools. An incredible opportunity must be the best in existence. Would credit any collection or museum....... £9,995 2002 BMW 520I ES SE AUTO. Finished in immaculate Titanium Silver with Full Black Leather. Very rare being the ES model and only 64,000 miles from new with 7 Hexagon Service Stamps and one main dealer stamp. Full Leather, Electric Sunroof, Climate Control, Split Rim Alloys and BMW Business Entertainment System. With all the original Books and Service Book in the leather BMW wallet and 2 sets of keys. 3 former keepers a very well looked after original example ........ £6,995 To view all of our cars please visit www.kimcairnsclassics.co.uk FREE DELIVERY ENGLAND, WALES OR ANY UK PORT KC 2000 Ltd T/A Kim Cairns, Common Road, Snettisham, Norfolk PE31 7PF 01485 541526 kimcairnsltd@gmail.com 118 For thousands of cars for sale visit classiccarsforsale.co.uk
CARS FOR SALE ULTRA LOW MILEAGE MODERN CLASSICS T EZ N UL PLIA M CO T EZ N UL PLIA M CO T EZ N UL PLIA M CO 2018 MERCEDES AMG SLC 43 AUTO CONVERTIBLE. Finished in immaculate Metallic Black with Black Nappa leather stitched red and red seat belts. This high performance example has a 3.0 litre V6 engine capable of 0 to 60 in 4.6 seconds. Panoramic folding roof, air scarf, climate control, Mercedes Comand System, Linguatronic control system, heated seats, performance steering wheel, AMG body styling, 18 inch alloy wheels, 9 speed auto transmission with tiptronic paddles. Only 41,800 miles with all original handbooks. Full Service History and 2 sets of keys. Excellent opportunity to acquire a high performance luxury Mercedes ...£31,495 2017 MERCEDES C220 AMG LINE D AUTO CONVERTIBLE. Finished in Mercedes Brilliant Blue with Macchiato Hide interior, Black hood and Grey AMG alloy wheels. Only 27,000 miles with full documented service history. Very high spec car including climate control, heated air scarf, Tiptronic gearbox 9 speed auto, wide screen sat nav, Ambient lightning, electric steering column, electric heated seats, park assist etc. Comes with all original books. Immaculate example. .......£23,995 2016 MERCEDES C200 COUPE AMG AUTO. Finished in flawless Hyacinth Red Metallic with unmarked Black Leather Interior. Specifications include heated and electric front seats, two zone climate control, cruise control, multi function colour control screen, DAB radio, Sat Nav, Rear camera, Bluetooth, ambient lighting, paddle shift, speed limiter, panoramic sunroof, 18inch alloy wheels etc. The car has only covered 25,000 miles. Very high spec luxury low mileage C200 Coupe.. ...................... £19,995 EZ NT UL PLIA M CO EZ NT UL PLIA M CO EZ NT UL PLIA M CO 2004 JAGUAR X-TYPE 2.5 V6 SE (AWD) MANUAL *ONLY 12,000 MILES*. Finished in immaculate Pacific Blue with Ivory Leather and bronze Sapele veneers. Only 12,000 miles and only two owners, the first owner had the car from 2004 to 2023. This immaculate example comes with its book pack, fully documented main dealer service history, original sales invoice, selection of service bills and 2 sets of keys. Specifications include heated front seats, climate control, cruise control, radio/CD player, adjustable steering column, trip computer etc. Exceptional low ownership and low mileage Jaguar X TYPE known for elegance and excellence..............£10,995 2010 SAAB CONVERTIBLE 9.3 1.8 VECTOR SPORT TURBO. ONLY one owner and ONLY 28,000 from new. Finished in immaculate Midnight Black with electric folding light grey hood and unmarked parchment Hide. This stunning example is a 5 speed manual and is ULEZ compliant. Perfect for the spring/summer months. Comes with all original books, fully stamped service book and two sets of keys, With low mileage and ownership this Saab is a truly immaculate original example........ £8,995 2004 VW BEETLE 2.0 AUTO. Only 18,000 miles from new only 2 owners, 1st from 2004 to 2023. Finished in Silver with Grey Trim this virtually unmarked car has been very well looked after with 15 service stamps in the service book. Specs include Radio/CD player, alloy wheels, air con and metallic paint. With original new car invoice, fully stamped service book, unused spare wheel and tool kit and 2 keys. Immaculate low mileage Beetle for only ............ £7,995 SPORTS CARS EZ T UL EMP EX 2013 MORGAN 3000. Only 10,400 from new and finished in unmarked British Racing Green Metallic with Tan Hide piped green and a green hood. Fitted with the Ford 3.7 litre V6 engine mated to a 6 speed gearbox. With power steering and SSL front suspension upgrade. This stunning Morgan comes with a full Morgan Service History Tonneau cover and side screen bag. Virtually as new Morgan 3000 for a very large saving from new at .......................................................£48,995 1986 ALFA ROMEO SPIDER 2.0. Only covered 56,000 km, 37,000 miles with full documented service history by Lombarda and Veloces, well known Alfa main dealers. Alfa Red with Black Leather piped in Red and Black Hood. Always been garaged and totally original, not used since 2013 due to ill health. With original books and a large documented history file. Very low mileage original unrestored immaculate example, you will not find a better one ............. £23,995 EZ T UL EMP EX T EZ N UL PLIA M CO 2009 PORSCHE BOXSTER 987 GEN 2, 2.9 SIX SPEED MANUAL. Only two lady owners from new. Immaculate Meteor Grey with Black Leather and Black Hood. £5,927 worth of options including climate control, Bose sound system and Porsche Communication Management including extended navigation. 75,000 miles with main dealer and specialist service history, all original books, Cobra tracker with transfer paperwork, old MOTs and original invoice and order form. A Gen 2 car without the engine problem inherent with earlier Boxster’s. Ready for the summer at a winter price ..........£16,995 1975 TRIUMPH TR6 2.5 PI P6. This immaculate fully restored UK spec CR chassis number fuel injection with overdrive example has been subject to a full restoration to its original UK spec and original colour, Magenta with black trim. Upgraded with far more comfortable seats and a wooden steering wheel. With an extensive history file with MOTs to confirm mileage of only 71,000 from new, the original hand book, service book, heritage certificate plus a hard top supplied from new ................£23,995 1980 MGB ROADSTER. This stunning MGB is finished in immaculate Factory Black with Black Leather, Wire Wheels, Overdrive, Mohair Hood and Pioneer KE2900 Radio. 64,000 miles, comes with MOT certificates dating back to its first one at 3 years old and a large file of invoices for service and maintenance detailing the care and attention this exceptional MG has had to keep it in the condition it is today. One of the best on the Market, don’t miss this one!...................... £14,995 1988 TVR 350I SERIES 2. Stunning Monza Red with Biscuit hide and Black Mohair Hood. With cross spoke alloy wheels. Only covered 73,000 miles since 1988 and comes with 2 files full of service history with MOT certificates dating back to 1991. With original book pack including hand book, service book, 2 sets of keys and the TVR V8 Sound Track. Low mileage well looked after example. ...............£11,995 To view all of our cars please visit www.kimcairnsclassics.co.uk For thousands of cars for sale visit classiccarsforsale.co.uk 119
Supplying Classic Cars Worldwide for Over 30 Years OPEN: MONDAY - FRIDAY 9AM - 5.30PM SUNDAY 10AM - 4PM 1957 Chevrolet Bel Air – The quality is first class throughout and having had an incredible £90000 of expenditure. Only 300 miles have been covered since restoration. 268.9 HP at 4300 RPM and 327.9 lb/ft of torque the specification includes Powerglide Auto transmission, power steering and power windows. ..................£49,995 1968 Rolls Royce Mulliner Park Ward Convertible - Having had the recent level of re-commissioning, the Rolls Royce feels excellent on the road and is in strong mechanical condition. BWA 438G looks impressive and imposing with a straight bodyshell and lovely, well presented paintwork ................................................................. £69,995 1986 Jaguar XJ-S C V12 HE TWR – The XJS presents in first class order with excellent paintwork and bodywork, and a lovely Grey leather upholstery. The Speedline alloys and Black Cabriolet targa top hood are also in very good order. This really is a true collectors piece and with low mileage XJS cars really pushing on in value ...................£29,995 1977 Daimler Sovereign Coupe – The bodywork, shut lines and panels are pristine, the paintwork beautiful, chrome work first class and the upholstery truly outstanding. The underside is quite simply exquisite, and on the road equally impressive with impressive power, performance, comfort and luxury ........ £47,995 1970 Rover P5B Saloon – One of those unrepeatable finds. A sensational P5B 3.5 litre saloon with an amazing history, low miles, low ownership and a top class restoration to show standard. It’s a delight on the road, having been superbly maintained. It is comfortable, with excellent road holding ....................................... £29,995 1989 Jaguar XJS V12 Convertible - This XJS has had a staggering £110,000 spent on restoration work since 2014. Ten years on since restoration the XJS is exceptional to drive, with its rebuilt engine, gearbox and upgrades it is very special on the road .................£27,995 1958 MG ZB Magnette – The MG is ready to use and enjoy. Having gone to huge expenditure, the last owner has sold the car and it therefore now offers an excellent opportunity. Prior to the work, this was a strong, honest, original car and its now been taken to a lovely standard, ideal for regular use, shows and rallies .....................................£19,995 1968 Jaguar S-Type 3.4 Manual with Overdrive – 99 RXW is a striking example, its ideal for regular use, shows events and the history, paperwork and provenance is quite simply exquisite. It won’t be easy to find an S’Type quite like this, its unrepeatable in so many respects .....................................£39,995 1971 Mini Cooper S MKIII – A beautifully prepared car with an outstanding, gleaming Acqua paint finish. The engine is strong, feels quick and the gearbox offers lovely smooth changes. A huge level of work has gone into this car, its now ready to use and enjoy and is so much fun. ........................................ £49,995 1967 Morris Minor Traveller – PPK 264E is an upgraded, perfectly usable Morris Minor Traveller that has proven faultless on the road and is ready to go. Whilst not finished to a concours standard, this is an incredibly sharp, high quality, smart and presentable example ............................................... £16,995 1978 Aston Martin V8 Volante – 45000 miles, accompanied by an exceptional history file including original bill of sale. A stunning, highly original top class motor car that we are very proud to offer onto the market . £187,995 1972 Triumph TR6 PI - a UK 150BHP CP chassis number Triumph TR6 with overdrive, finished in its correct original colour of Pimento Red, with correct original engine. Its appearance is impressive with lovely older paintwork, good strong, straight body panels, excellent new bumpers, and a very smart interior.....£25,995 1959 Austin Healey 3000 MKI – We can confirm on the road this Healey is sensational, it is quite simply outstanding to drive. The engine is incredibly fit offering excellent performance and correct oil pressure, the gearbox as expected after a thorough rebuild is first class and the car is dream in terms of handling ................. £45,995 1971 Jaguar E-Type Series III V12 Roadster – Coombs Demonstrator – Registered new with the Coombs of Guildford and wore the world famous registration number ‘BUY 1’. This matching numbers car has only covered 38500 miles from new and whilst it has had cosmetic refurbishment, it is an incredibly original car. An unrepeatable opportunity ............... £149,995 1939 Bentley 4.25 Litre Vanden Plas DHC – Geneva Show Car. One of only two examples built by Vanden Plas to this design on the overdrive chassis. The ultimate pre-war touring car. An ultra-rare example which would suit the most discerning collector........ ............................................................ £179,995 1964 Jaguar MKII 2.4 Manual O/D – Can incredibly special, and largely original matching numbers car that comes with a magnificent history from new. Presents incredibly well with a delightful paint finish, excellent original chrome work and the interior is quite simply unrepeatable. ................ £29,995 1971 Morgan 4/4 Four Seat Tourer – One long term owner since the 1980’s and in 2011 treated the car to over £13,000 of work to the engine, braking system, steering and suspension. Since carrying out this work, the Morgan has covered over 7,000 miles and has been thoroughly enjoyed on club events. This is a fantastic car, superbly aged. ........................... £29,995 1997 Mazda MX5 MKI Harvard – Our car has covered just 16,000 miles from new and is a one lady owner car with all its original manuals, original bill of sale, service book and hard top. We can confirm the Mazda is superbly presented with an exceptional bodyshell and structurally first class underside ............ £17,995 2006 Ford GT – This completely original, immaculate First Generation Ford GT has had just one owner from new and has covered 5300 miles. This legendary super car was ordered new in 2006 by one of our long term clients and for the past 17 years the Ford has been part of an impressive car collection and used sparingly ............£449,995 1971 Bristol 411 – A very honest, original and well cared for look. The upholstery is impressive with Black leather seats, high quality new carpets and delightful dashboard, dials and headlining. The Bristol has a true feeling of quality and finding genuine, very original examples of the 411 is becoming increasingly difficult .................£64,995 01944 758000 sales@classicandsportscar.ltd.uk
1968 Triumph TR5 PI – TYF 97F has an impressive history and whilst its very much an older restoration, it presents incredibly well and looks like a car that was subject of a body off rebuild 15/20 years ago. The bodywork is impressive including panel gaps, and the chassis is excellent ....................................................................£49,995 1960 AC Aceca – The paint finish gleams and is of an exceptional high standard, bright work and wire wheels are in excellent order and the interior is beautifully re-trimmed. The engine bay presents superbly, and having been in the hands of a meticulous collector, the car is in excellent condition throughout. This is a true collector’s piece ............£117,995 1968 Jensen FF MKI – This FF is in outstanding condition and is presented in showroom condition. The bodywork is exceptional with stunning, clean panels and the paint finish and chromework are first class. The Red leather upholstery is outstanding .....£129,995 1959 Jaguar XK150S 3.4 FHC – UK Home Market - Matching Numbers. Perfect combination of history, provenance, usability, and quality in terms of condition and restoration. This is a car we’ve known for almost 15 years and we cannot highlight enough how spectacular this car is .... £99,995 1967 Jaguar E-Type Series I.5 4.2 FHC – This matching numbers E-Type was manufactured in 1967 and left the factory in Opalescent Maroon with Black trim and whilst officially a Series 1 4.2 FHC, it is within the Series 1.5 chassis number series explaining its open headlight bonnet. The car started life in the USA before arriving in the UK in 1989 ................................................ £87,995 1987 Ferrari 328 GTS – This UK RHD Home Market Ferrari 328 GTS has covered just 46000 miles from new and comes with a comprehensive service history. The Ferrari comes with original service books and manuals, original tool kit and is a sharp, excellent driving example with fantastic history and a superb low mileage ......£79,995 2008 Ferrari 612 Scaglietti HGTS F1 – 1 owner. Covered just 50,250 miles from new. Superbly maintained with full history. It has been an enjoyed, cherished car and that’s clearly evident in every respect of this car ....£72,995 1939 MG VA Four Seat Tourer – A truly stunning motor car, and this example will not disappoint and has the added provenance of a superbly well documented history over the last 80 plus years. The paint finish, brightwork and upholstery are all wonderful, inspecting the underside reveals a stunning painted chassis ............................ £39,995 1963 Chevrolet C10 Luxury Custom Base Truck – An awesome truck on the road with real presence, we have a complete list of the work carried out and parts used totalling over £17,600 spent during the custom restoration of this exciting machine. Power comes from a 283 cubic inch (4.6 Litre) small block V8 with 2 speed power-glide automatic gear box ....................................... £29,995 1956 MGA 1500 Roadster – A sensibly priced, strong UK supplied RHD MGA Roadster, this car will prove a great buy. The underside is structurally in very good order and well over 20 years since its last re-paint, the finish is still bright and presentable. ......................£25,995 1962 Jaguar MKII 3.4 Manual with Overdrive – A brilliantly prepared MKII that is ready to use and enjoy having covered many miles touring Europe. It drives exceptionally well with a perfect rebuilt engine holding excellent oil pressure. The car presents beautifully with a strong, deep paint finish and excellent straight panels. ............ £39,995 1953 MG TD - Finished in Cream with a red leather interior and full beige weather equipment and carpets, its a beautiful specimen of the marque. Since this superb car is almost as shiny underneath as from above. TNU 415 is just stunning and quite unrepeatable ....................................... £29,995 1961 Jaguar E-Type Series I 3.8 FHC FIA Race Car – This 1961 Jaguar E-Type Series One 3.8 Flatfloor Coupe is an FIA registered Competition GT car with valid Historic Technical Passport for Hill Climb, Rally and Racing. Valid until 31st December 2026, 6182 RW is in the GTS 7 FIA Class and has competed at several circuits all over Europe including Le Mans .....£224,995 1953 Alvis TA21 Tickford DHC – Presents beautifully with lovely bodywork and a gleaming, bright paint finish. Mechanically strong with an excellent engine holding very good oil pressure, cooling is correct and the car handles and brakes well. Comes with impressive history, early Alvis records, and a detailed photograph record of its major rebuild ........ £39,995 1983 Porsche 911 SC - This beautifully presented Porsche 911SC is a full history car that has recently been subject of a program of work that has cost almost £70,000. This beautifully presented Porsche 911SC is a full history car that has recently been subject of a program of work that has cost almost £70,000 ................... £79,995 2005 Ferrari F430 Spider – 18000 Miles. Top-class example presented in immaculate condition. Mechanically as expected with the low mileage and excellent maintenance records, the Ferrari needs nothing at all and is ready to use and enjoy ........................................................ £79,995 1971 De Tomaso Pantera – Pre L - the De Tomaso is a very original looking car with a delightful patina. This is a very nicely aged, usable car, it feels genuine and very honest, and has a lovely sharp body and excellent underside. The interior is similar, it’s very well presented and feels ‘right’ .................£87,995 1957 MGA Roadster – FIA Registered. No doubt one of the very best driving examples we have owned. This is a fantastic car, one with true provenance and its long term reliability has been proven with its years of long distance overseas touring ..................................... £35,995 1952 Jaguar XK120 Roadster – This LHD Open two-seater is an ideal Mille Miglia candidate. As result of the recent major program of work, YWG 297 is glorious on the road. The body is beautiful and straight with a gleaming Gunmetal finish, chrome work is first class and the upholstery wonderful having been re-trimmed with the highest quality materials. ......................... £149,995 1991 BMW 318i M Convertible – 42000 miles. Comes with an impressive history file that includes handbooks, manuals and the original bill of sale. This is a very correct, incredibly original car that really is a fabulous find that will be hard to repeat ......... £17,995 1951 Jaguar MKV 3.5 DHC – In late 2013, early 2014 the Jaguar was stripped down to bare shell and soda blasted, commissioned by a long-standing Yorkshire based JEC member who was unbelievably meticulous with a keen eye for attention to detail. The body was then rebuilt to a top class standard. A wonderful opportunity to purchase a very special............ £114,995 1963 Austin Healey 3000 MKII – With rear seat option, wind up windows, overdrive and arguably in the most desirable Healey colour, this UK home market example offers an excellent all round package. The engine offers impressive performance, excellent oil pressure and the gearbox 600 miles on since rebuild is as new .......................................................... £69,995 1962 Hotchkiss M201 Jeep – 330 YUK is an incredibly usable, strong driving Jeep that presents in excellent condition with many of its original features and tools. Since being in the UK the Jeep has covered in the region of 6000 km’s (now 8000 km’s since rebuild) and has been MOT tested most years .......£24,995 1964 Alfa Romeo Giulia Spider – Fully rebuilt to an exceptional standard, the bodyshell is outstanding with a body colour underside. The car today is in exceptional condition and mechanically outstanding. With a recent engine and gearbox rebuild, it is quick with lots of power and is ideal for classic rallies ....... £59,995 www.classicandsportscar.ltd.uk Classic & Sportscar Centre, Corner Farm, West Knapton, Malton, North Yorkshire, YO17 8JB
Porsche 944 S2 Cabriolet 1990 Milton Keynes Aston Martin V8 Vantage Zagato Left Hand Drive Manual Aston Martin V8 Vantage Volante Manual Aston Martin DB4 GT Zagato Race Car (Replica) Aston Martin V8 Saloon Aston Martin Vanquish SDP Aston Martin DB MKIII Drophead Aston Martin DB2/4 Drophead Aston Martin DB2 Drophead Restored Aston Martin DB4 LHD Aston Martin DB5 LHD Aston Martin DB6 Saloon Man RHD Aston Martin DB6 Volante Man RHD Aston Martin DB7 Vantage Auto RHD Aston Martin One-77 LHD Aston Martin Vanquish S LHD Aston Martin 1½ Litre MKII Tourer Aston Martin Vanquish S Aston Martin V8 Vantage SWB Volante Aston Martin V8 Vantage 550 Man Aston Martin V8 Vantage V600 Man Aston Martin Virage Coupe Aston Martin Virage Volante 6.3 Aston Martin Vanquish S Ultimate Edition Number 50 of 50 Aston Martin 15/98 Touring Porsche 356C Coupe Aston Martin V8 Volante LHD Aston Martin V8 Volante RHD Man Aston Martin DB2/4 LHD Ford GT40 Jaguar C Type Land Rover series one 80 Porsche 959 Prototype
Telephone 01753 644599 Mobile 07836 222111 Sensibly Price and very desirable Classic Cars 1994 Aston Martin V600 in Buckingham Green, 78,000 miles, (looks more like 25,000) superb to drive, see our website for full description. £129,950 1998 Aston Martin V8 Long wheelbase Volante, Low mileage and very rare. £149,950 1998 Aston Martin V600, Highly collectable, reduced for quick sale at £249,500 1954 DB2/4 Drop Head Coupe (Left Hand Drive) in BRG, Matching Numbers, only 46,000 miles from new, Extremely rare. £295,000 1965 Aston Martin DB6 Vantage, Recent full restoration, perfect throughout, Too cheap at £249,950 1958 Aston Martin DB MkIII, Sold by us 13 years ago, Incredibly well maintained. £145,000 1952 Aston Martin DB2 Le Mans Lightweight, Perfect for classic events and Mille-Miglia Eligible. £225,000 1958 Jaguar XK150 FHC, Excellent restoration by a qualified engineer. £59,950 2007 Aston Martin Vantage in Pentland Green and equipped with an Aston Martin 400 bhp upgrade kit enabling a top speed of 174 mph. 48,000 miles only and in superb condition. £33,950 Stunning Aston Martin V8 with manual transmission, completely restored to 1988 Vantage specification. Perfect throughout. Needs to be seen to be fully appreciated. 1971 Aston Martin DBS V8, Older restoration but remarkably well kept. £119,500 1985 Aston Martin V8 Volante, (Left Hand Drive), 26,000 only, fully refurbished, recent engine tune by RS Williams, Reduced for quick sale £165,000 2000 Aston Martin DB7 Vantage, low mileage with manual transmission, Beautifully kept. £27,950 2005 Aston Martin DB9 Volante, 2 owners, HWM service history, Not expensive at £28,950 2001 Aston Martin DB7 Vantage finished in Skye Silver with Obsidian Black hide and Touchtronic transmission. A lovely example at £26,950 1965 Jaguar E type 4.2 Roadster, Undoubtedly one of the best in existence. £165,000 1964 Jaguar E type 3.8 Roadster, superbly restored, Nothing further needed. £129,500 1973 Jaguar E type 5.3 Coupe, Clean and tidy at a very attractive price. £49,500 ìOVER 20 ASTONS CURRENTLY IN STOCKî Email: martin@runnymedemotorcompany.com www.runnymedemotorcompany.com
CARS FOR SALE Visit our internet website www.peterjarvis.net Different Class Established 1969 Rolls-Royce ï Mercedes-Benz ï Jaguar and Prestige Automobile Specialists. Specialists in Shipping to all parts of the World Gildenhill Place, Gildenhill Road, Swanley, Kent BR8 7PD, England. Telephone: (01322) 669081 ï Mobile: (07836) 250222 VIEWING BY APPOINTMENT ONLY. Servicing & Storage - FREE DELIVERY IN THE UK Jaguar E Type 3.8 series 1 1963 LHD Roadster, Finished in gleaming carmen red with as new black hide interior with the bright aluminium dash and centre consul, CD stereo system. Brand new sparkling chrome wire wheels and tyres, spare wheel unused, complete with all tools and hood cover, the whole car looks new. This breath taking icon has been totally restored from front to back by a very well known man in the Jaguar world. And has only covered a few hundred miles since. Comes complete with handbook also the amazing history file of the restoration. A chance to own properly the finest of E Types and a superb investment ...............................................£157,500 Mercedes Sports 300SL 1988/9. Finished in Astral silver, with navy blue interior and matching soft top, complete with hard top, rear seats, over mats, tinted glass, stereo system, light up vanity mirrors. ABS, alloys, power windows, automatic, power steering, spare wheel never used, complete with all tools, Tracker and immobiliser fitted. Mercedes MoT, recent service. Only one previous owner, only 23,000 miles from new, with excellent service history from new, garaged from new. Just magnificent throughout ............................... £59,750 Jaguar SS100 repro coachbuilt by the famous Adams coach builders who were responsible for most of the exotic sports cars, being a ex lister design man. This roadster was built in 1985 based on the 1935 Jaguar SS100, one of only 17 built, finished in British Racing green, with beige hide interior, headrests, radio, CD player, powered by the popular Jaguar 4.2 engine with triple carbs, manual gearbox with overdrive, power steering, and disc brakes, making this a pleasure to drive, fold down front wind screen, all weather equipment, plus side screens, fitted with factory wire wheels, and twin side mounts with fitted mirrors, comes equipped with hood cover, full toneau cover, rear chrome luggage rack, badge bar with various badges, wire grill head light protectors, twin spots, excellent history file with invoices and old MOTs, and tax discs, complete with all tools, and very expensive in door car cover, this car is just stunning and a fine investment .................................£85,750 Mercedes Sports 280 SL 1981 with personal reg number. Finished in unmarked gleaming signal red, with hard and soft tops, rear seats, headrests, overmats, stereo system, power windows, tinted glass, complete with all tools, auto, power steering, only 87,000 miles from new, all original paper work from new absolutely first class history, with only one previous owner, amazing condition, drives smoothly just like new, pampered and garaged from new, probably one of the finest available £27,500 124 Mercedes 560SL sports 1988 LHD Finished in brilliant smoke silver with, beige hide interior,hard and soft tops, headrests, light up vanity mirrors,expensive stereo system, power windows tinted glass, air con, alloys, abs brakes, air bag, SRS, power steering, automatic, complete with all tools, 49,500 miles, history, garaged from new this car is just breath taking ................£44,750 Ford Zephyr 1954 MK 1 finished in Masons black,with superb original maroon interior, manual transmission, steel sun visor, twin spots, side hunting lamp, new slim band tyres badge bar and badges, original working radio, good history, only 48,000 miles from new, many old MOTs.original handbook, complete with all tools, and jack, known to us from new, entered in many shows, this remarkable original car runs superb, probably only a few available excellent investment ........................ £26,750 Jaguar E Type 4.2 Series 11 Roadster 1970. Finished in Primrose Yellow with Black hide interior, headrests, stereo system, manual transmission, sparkling chrome wire wheels, zero miles since nut and bolt restoration, lots of bills, magnificent throughout........................£135,750 Mercedes 300SL sports 1989 signal red with cream hide interior, headrests, rear seats, cruise control, abs, light up vanity mirrors, tinted glass, hard & soft tops. Automatic, power steering, spare wheel unused, complete with all tools, stereo system, power, windows. Virtually a one owner, last owner for 33 years, this car is just remarkable condition 86,000 miles from new, full history, garaged, papered from new drives like new, very difficult to find a better one of this last model ...£45,750 Ford 1955 Zephyr Mk1 Three position convertible, Finished in Dorchester Grey with a Maroon soft top and hood cover,Matching interior and carpets, Period radio, Sun visor, Pillar spotlight, Badge bar, Twin spots, white side tyres, complete with tools , handbook and invoices, retored to the highest standard, absolutely stunning, more pictures on website................£49,750 Mercedes 450 SLC 1978 Finished in gleaming Astral Silver with superb blue contrasting interior,also matching navy blue carpets,automatic and power steering, excellent chrome,tinted glass, power windows, period radio with bluetooth, walnut veneer dash, with a power sunroof, original factory alloys, complete with all original tools, only covered 46,000 miles from new, complete with all service history and various invoices. Very difficult to find a car in this condition, a rare find,always garaged and pampered from new, hence this condition. A very fast appreciating asset..............£45,500 Jaguar E Type 1970 2+2 finished in opalescent silver blue, with superb matching hide interior, overmats, headrests, original stereo, manual transmission, chrome wire wheels, 42,000 miles from new two owners, invoices, original handbook, service book, excellent example .......................................................... £69,750 Daimler Sovereign 420 1967 finished in golden sand with cherry red hide interior, automatic, power steering, badge bar, chrome wire wheels, stereo. These Daimlers are very rare and probably never in the condition of this car, being kept in remarkable condition from new, and only 53,000 miles with a folder full of history and old MOTs. complete with original tool kit, having only three owners from new the last owned 34 years,a superb classic that drives excellent and can be driven every day, garaged from new. Excellent value for this appreciating classic. .................................. £36,750 Jaguar SS100 built in 1975 by the famous coach builders Birchfield in hand crafted aluminum based on the1935 SS100. These cars are very rare only 22 were ever made this one is No 18, these cars have over tripled in price because of the investment side of them plus they drive beautiful. Powered by the Jaguar 4.2 engine with twin carbs. Hardly ever see these for sale because of the rarity of them. Although we have been fortunate to have owned seven of these master pieces. Finished in gleaming red with beige hide interior piped in red with embroidered headrests. Power steering, automatic,sparkling chrome wire wheels, Beige convertible top, and spare wheel cover and hood cover, large chrome headlights with chrome mesh grills, twin spots, side pillar light,stereo,disc brakes. All weather equipment. Probably the finest coach built repro in the world this car is just breathtaking................£145,000 Jaguar E Type V12 1971 2+2 finished in unmarked gleaming signal red with black hide interior, sparkling chrome wire wheels, with white side tyres, tinted glass, stereo system, power steering, automatic, drives superb, thousands spent to bring this E Type maintained to the highest of standards, with service invoices, original handbook, many old MOTs, this car is just stunning one of the best there is garaged from new ............................................................ £86,500 Mercedes Sports 1985 280SL. Finished in gleaming unmarked classic white, with black hide interior, rear seats, hard and soft tops, automatic, power steering, power windows, ABS brakes, alloys, stereo system, 69,000 miles, service history, complete with all tools, new MoT supplied on purchase, only three previous owners, always garaged, drives superb, excellent example ........................£27,750 Jaguar Series 1 E Type 1965 4.2 FHC Finished in British Racing Green with Beige hide interior, Sun roof, Radio, Upgrades, Engine by Forward engineering, Coopercraft brakes, this unmolested car has only 15,000 miles from new and looks only two years old, A chance in a lifetime to own a very rare E type, Which has mellowed to an amazing condition, This car is just remarkable ................ £165,500 For thousands of cars for sale visit classiccarsforsale.co.uk
Central Londonís Largest Classic Car Showrooms 1964 Rolls-Royce Silver Cloud III DHC 1 of 26 original LHD cars 1973 Jaguar E-Type ëCoombsí Tribute 6.1 litre 4-cam engine 1964 Bentley S3 Continental Flying Spur )YPSSPHU[OPZ[VY`ƒSLPTTHJ\SH[LJHY 1964 Mercedes-Benz 230SL / 280SL *VTWSL[LS`YLI\PS[ZWLLKTHU\HSIV_ 1964 Mini Cooper S 4H[JOPUNU\TILYZTPUPSPNO[Z Z[LLS6,> 1963 Aston Martin DB4 Series V <[[LYS`PTTHJ\SH[LM\SS`YLZ[VYLK +44 (0) 20 7937 8487 mail@graemehunt.com
Ferrari F40 (1992) Only 10.000 KM from new, Marcel Massini report, EU delivery, recent major service by F40 Specialist. Lamborghini Diablo Roadster VT (1996) Top quality example, extensive (dealer) history file. Mercedes-Benz 300 SL Roadster (1957) Fully examined with structural analysis of vehicle components, full concours restoration. Ferrari F430 Scuderia (2009) Less than 5100 kilometers on the odometer, Offered with its original book pack and service booklet. Porsche 911 2.4 S Targa (1973) 'Porsche Geburtsurkunde', matching numbers and colours , Recaro sports seats, Swiss delivery. Aston Martin DB6 Vantage Mk1 (1966) With manual gearbox,original factory Vantage, matching numbers and colours, Dubonnet (red) over brown leather. MORE THAN 400 EXQUISITE CLASSIC AUTOMOBILES IN STOCK Arnhemsestraat 47 | 6971 AP Brummen | Netherlands | T. 0031 (0)575 564055 | E. info@gallery-aaldering.com www.gallery-aaldering.com
FACEBOOK & INSTAGRAM www.silverladyservices.co.uk SALES - SERVICE - RESTORATION 2010 BENTLEY GTC. Finished in Stunning Blue Crystal with Main Hide in Linen with Secondary Hide in Imperial Blue, Blue Convertible Hood, Dark Stained Burr Walnut Veneer, Contrast Stitching, Bentley Motifs Embroidered to Seats, Bright Chrome to Lower and Upper Grille’s, 3 Spoke Duel Tone Hide Trimmed Steering Wheel with Multi-Function Buttons, Diamond Quilted Seats, Diamond Quilted Inserts to Front Doors and Rear Quarters, Heated + Electric + Memory, Power Opening and Closing Boot, Mulliner Driving Specification, 20 “ 7 Spoke 2 Piece Alloy Wheels Finished in Silver Unmarked. Stunning Condition Throughout.43000 Miles. £34,950 1989 ROLLS-ROYCE SILVER SPIRIT. Only 10,000 Miles with One Owner, Finished in College Blue with Parchment Hide Piped in Light Blue with Blue Carpets and original unmarked Lambs Wool Rugs. Supplied New by Jack Barclays Ltd to the Original Owner who still lives in Bournemouth. The Rolls-Royce has always been garaged & never been out in the rain. This vehicle is as if it has just come out of the factory in 1989 & could easily win any show. This vehicle must be seen. £29,950 2001 BENTLEY ARNAGE RED LABEL LE MANS. Finished in Stunning Sherwood Green with Main Hide in Barley and Secondary Hide in Spruce, Burr Walnut Veneer with Le Mans Inlays to Door Capping’s and Radio Cover, Only 153 Bentley Arnage Le Mans Were Ever Made, Dark Green Le Mans Dials, Embroidered Headrests with Bentley Motif, Le Man Style Seats, Lambswool Rugs in Conifer, 4 Bentley 18” Chrome 5 Spoke Alloy Wheels, Fantastic History, 3 Keys, Excellent Condition Throughout. £24,950 2007 BENTLEY GTC. Finished in Stunning Silverlake Blue with Blue Roof, Main Hide in Magnolia and Secondary Hide in Portofino, Magnolia Headlining, Birds Eye Maple Veneer, Low Mileage Example, Upgraded Infotainment Unit with Bluetooth Capability, 4 Spoke Dual Tone Hide Trimmed Steering Wheel with Multi-Function Buttons, Deep Pile Overmats, Venner Front and Rear Door Inserts, Soft Close Doors, Keyless Entry/Exit, Keyless Start, Front and Rear Parking Sensors, Embossed Bentley Motifs to all Headrests, 19” 2 Piece Split Rim Alloy Wheels, Pirelli P Zero Tyres, Genuine Bentley Trickle Charger, 2 Keys, Fantastic Service History, Stunning Condition Throughout. 31000 Miles. £34,950 2000 BENTLEY ARNAGE. Finished in Stunning Silver Pearl with Main Hide in Stratos and Secondary Hide in Peacock, Peacock Piping, Burr Walnut Veneer, Burr Walnut Door Inserts, Power Folding Mirror’s, Rear Quarter Cushion Pad, Parking Sensor’s, Upgraded 19” Arnage T Wheels, Head Gasket’s replaced in 2022. 68,000 Miles. £17,500 PLEASE CALL STEVE DREWITT ON: Tel: 01202 388488 O Mobile: 07860 512368 www.silverladyservices.co.uk O e-mail: silverlady@btconnect.com 64-70 ALMA ROAD, BOURNEMOUTH BH9 1AN
CARS FOR SALE epping motor company Friendly family business established for over 50 years 2002 ASTON MARTIN V12 2+2 VANQUISH. Silver, Grey hide, 26,000 miles, FSH. Stunning! £57,500 1964 AUSTIN HEALEY 3000 MK3 BJ8. Colorado Red, Black leather, UK RHD, show condition. £67,500 2011 JAGUAR XKR SUPERCHARGED COUPE. White, Black hide, 16,000 miles. FSH. As new! £26,500 1952 RILEY RMF 2.5 LITRE SALOON. Black/Maroon, Red leather, very nice condition £15,950 2001 MERCEDES SLK320. Metallic Travertine, Siam Beige /Anthracite leather, 45000 miles, FSH £6,750 2006 MASERATI 4200 COUPE CAMBIOCORSA. Mediterranean Blue, Black hide, 54,000 miles. £13,500 1959 JAGUAR XK150 3.4 S DHC. Carmen Red, Black hide, RHD, CWW, O/D. £78,500 2003 PORSCHE 996 TURBO CABRIOLET X50 (450 BHP) TIPTRONIC. Black, Black hide, 69000 miles, FSH £36,950 1992 BMW E30 318I CONVERTIBLE AUTO. Alpine White, only 58,000 miles, FSH. Pristine £10,950 2009 MG TF LE500. Intense Blue, Black hide, A/C, 23,000 miles, FSH. Pristine. £8,500 1970(H) ROVER 3.5 LITRE P5B COUPE. Burnt Grey/Silver Birch, Black hide, immaculate. £15,950 2000 ROVER MINI COOPER MPI. Tudor Red, Black leather, 84000 miles, FSH. £15,950 2002 BMW 330 CI M-SPORT CONVERTIBLE AUTOMATIC. Topaz Blue, Grey Hide, 58000 miles, FSH £7,950 2013 PORSCHE 981 BOXSTER 2.7 PDK. Porsche White, Black hide, only 24000 miles, FSH. Stunning £29,500 2000 BMW Z3 2.8I ROADSTER. Topaz Blue, Blue hide, 79,600 miles, FSH. £5,950 1996 VOLKSWAGEN GOLF VR6 5 DOOR. Candy White, 68,000 miles, FSH. £5,750 2004 AUDI TT 1.8T ROADSTER. Avus Silver, Black trim, 47,000 miles, FSH. £4,950 2019 BMW 1 SERIES 118I ( 1.5 ) SE 5 DOOR. Black, Anthracite trim, only 19300 miles, FSH. £12,500 2008 MERCEDES SLK280. Tellurium Silver, Anthracite hide, 27400 miles, FSH. £8,950 1998 MERCEDES SLK230 KOMPRESSOR MK1. Obsidian Black, Quartz / Anthracite hide, 79000 miles. FSH £3,950 Up to date stock situation on our Website: 128 www.eppingmotorcompany.com For thousands cars or for left sale hand visit classiccarsforsale.co.uk We are always keen to purchase or take in part exchange modern and classic cars in ofright drive Tel: 01277 365415 | Email: sales@eppingmotorcompany.com
CARS FOR SALE Panorama Bay 36 Panorama Road, Sandbanks, Poole, 01202 709407 or 07785500990 Dorset, BH13 7RD www.panoramabay.co.uk · panoramabaysales@live.co.uk 2017 AUDI A7 SLINE BLACK EDT TDI QUATTRO SA 4G SPORTSBACK white with black leather trim, 20000 miles new in excess of £60k excellent condition £28,995 2021 (21) MINI HATCHBACK 2.0 Twin Turbo PADDY HOPKIRK EDT 1998cc RHD 100 made w/wide inspired by Paddy Hopkirk 1964 M’ Carlo Rally winner and his iconic number 37 Mini Cooper 5000 miles, 1 owner £28,995 1971 YAMAHA R5 347CC Well-restored twin-cylinder two-stroke motorcycle that would fit into any collection of early Japanese classics. Wheel rims, tyres and brakes all new. Forks, controls, handlebars, lights, shocks and seat all new or refurbished. £7,995 2000 ASTON MARTIN VANTAGE DB7, blue with cream leather trim, 54000 miles, excellent condition £26,995 2004 BMW ALPINA 3.4 AUTO SWITCHABLE CONVERTIBLE SE LTD EDT. Dashboard plaque No90/106 made, Valuable reg B3S OK included, 76000 miles, 6 keepers. Black with hellbeige leather trim exc cond, hard and soft top £19,995 1930s STYLE BENTLEY SPEED SIX LE MANS, BRG with green leather trim, black hood, straight eight 6500cc. low ownership and mileage, immaculate condition. Please call for more information £POA 1956 JAGUAR XK140SE Fixed head coupe hard top in white red leather trim, vgc. excellent history file £69,995 2004 JAGUAR XJ 3.5 X350 V8 SE SWB 4 door AUTO Black Edt in BRG with charcoal leather trim, fully loaded, super luxury, 3 owners, 62000 miles lovely condition £8,995 1956 JAGUAR MK1 2.4 SALOON black/red leather trim, fully restored by Cooper Craft and now with lovely patina, manual w o/drive, wire wheels, disc brakes, waxoyled £28,995 2016 MERCEDES AMG GT black with black leather, fully loaded, 8000 from new – immaculate FMBSH £69,995 1991 TOYOTA SUPRA 3.0I TURBO AUTO SPORTS COUPE just arrived red with grey leather trim, becoming very collectable and desirable £14,995 2002 RONART LIGHTNING blue with cream leather hide, cobra engine, 20000 miles, fsh, Large history folder, 1 out of 5 made w/wide, ex condition £89,995 MASSIVE MEMORABILIA AND CLASSIC CAR SPARES FOR SALE PLEASE EMAIL FOR LISTING/PHOTOS. For thousands of cars for sale visit classiccarsforsale.co.uk 129
CARS FOR SALE   €‚ƒ‚„  www.uksportscars.com For everything Lotus & Caterham „        ‚     ‘      ’  †   1967 VW SPLIT SCREEN CAMPER VAN. FACTORY RHD. FULLY RESTORED JANUARY 2024. CUSTOM INTERIOR. £POA 1977 VW T2 BAY WINDOW CAMPER VAN. RIGHT HAND DRIVE. WALK THROUGH. LOVELY SPEC & INTERIOR - £24,995 LOTUS ELAN S4 DHC, 1970. CIRRUS WHITE WHICH WAS THE ORIGINAL FACTORY COLOUR. - £34,995 LOTUS ELAN PLUS TWO S130, 1971. SUPERB NUT AND BOLT BODY-OFF CHASSIS UP REBUILD. £29,995 1960 VOLKSWAGEN KARMAN GHIA. FACTORY RIGHT HAND DRIVE. RESTORED IN BEAUTIFUL COLOUR SCHEME PAPRIKA RED OVER WHITE - £29,995 LOTUS ELAN+2S130/4, 1972. 23,000 MILES FROM NEW. LAGOON BLUE METALLIC WITH CHAMPAGNE METAL-FLAKE ROOF. £28,995 VOLVO P1800E, 1971. BLUE METALLIC WITH BLACK LEATHER INTERIOR. 4 SPEED WITH OVERDRIVE - £38,995 CATERHAM SEVEN 1.8K VVC, 5 SPEED DE DION, 1999. FACTORY BUILT. SUPERB EXAMPLE IN FORD PACIFIC BLUE PEARLESCENT PAINTWORK. £19,995 LOTUS ESPRIT S2.2, 1980. 40TH OF 60 BUILT. CROSSOVER FROM THE S1 AND S2 ESPRIT WITH THE LARGER CC FROM 2.0L TO 2.2L AND THE INTRODUCTION OF THE FULLY GALVANISED CHASSIS. £38,995 Please visit our website at www.uksportscars.com for thirty other carefully selected Lotus, Caterham, performance and classic vehicles. Should you be thinking of selling any of the above or similar please contact us for a no obligation discussion - YOUR CAR WANTED FULL PAINT SHOP & SERVICING FACILITIES COMMISSION SALES UNDERTAKEN ON MOST BRITISH CLASSIC & SPORTSCARS TEL: 01227 728190 WEBSITE: www.uksportscars.com E-MAIL: sales@uksportscars.com Total Headturners ­   € ‚    ƒ„ƒ       †         ‡ ˆ‰‡    Š  † ‹ŒŽ            ­                 ‡ˆˆ ‡‰‚Š “”   ”   Over 40 Replicas / Classic Cars in stock www.totalheadturners.com TVR TAIMAR TURBO. TVR produced only 30 Taimar Turbos With Broadspeed to supply the turbocharging system for the Ford Essex V6. Complete chassis up restoration Registered 1987 and only 16398 recorded miles. I don’t think you will find a better example in the world £39,995 CLASSIC HAWK 289 COBRA. correctly registered & retains the registration date of 15/08/1967. Historic vehicle status / Tax exempt. ULEZ Compliant. Powered by an aluminium rover V8 3500cc, 5 Speed manual gear box. A superb £49,995 driving and looking classic Cobra. NEW AK COBRA POWERED BY FORD. Registered 1st March 2024 (New 24 plate). Stunning classic Gards blue coachwork. Powered by a Ford 302ci 5000cc V8 by Roadcraft. New 5 Speed Tremec manual gear box. A rare chance to own a Ford £64,995 powered Cobra on a new 2024 plate. MG TC. This beautiful MG TC was manufactured in 1947. Full mechanical engine and gearbox rebuild by XPAG Engineering including unleaded conversion (More details on £22,995 request). Great fun to drive. BACKDRAFT RACING RT3 COBRA “KEITH CRAFT FORD 408CI STROKER”. Finished in superb Salsa Red with Black magic stripes. Powered by an absolutely awesome Ford 408ci 6686cc Stroker V8 by Keith Craft. Rolling road test show 529 bhp and 550 lbft! This is an absolutely awesome super fast Cobra! £59,995 AC ACE BY HAWK. Correctly SVA/IVA registered 01/04/2017, ULEZ Complient. Only 50 recorded miles from new! Powered by a Daimler 2548cc V8, 5 Speed manual gear box. A superb rare Hawk Ace. £49,995 COBRA BY R.V. DYNAMICS. This beautiful Cobra was correctly registered 01/12/2004 . Cream leather interior with red piping, Power steering ! . Powered by BMWs 3500cc Straight six fuel injected. A super easy to drive fast and fun Cobra £29,995 RAM SC COBRA “ POWERED BY FORD. Correctly registered 10/11/1999. Its one owner from new has only covered 2788 recorded miles. Powered by a FORD 351ci V8 engine. A superb classic Cobra with a FORD V8. £42,995 DAX RUSH “HAYABUSA”. Special tubular Camber comp De-dion chassis (Highest spec of Rush chassis available). 1300cc Hayabusa engine with power commander. Quaif reverse gear box. Limited Slip Differential – LSD ULEZ compliant. £21,500 DAX TOJEIRO COBRA + LAMAN HARDTOP. Only 3473 recorded miles. Removable colour coded Lemans hardtop by 427 Hardtops. Powered by a Chevrolet V8. Fully re-built by Thurston Engineering in 2023 (Only running in miles since) Classic looks and awesome fun £46,995 UNIQUE AUTOCRAFT COBRA. Finished in unmarked black coachwork. Powered by an aluminium Rover V8 3500cc. A super cool looking and sounding Cobra. £39,995 CHEVROLET CAMARO ZL1. Registered 2018 and only 14512 miles. PLG Tax class and ULEZ compliant. Hyper Blue metallic coachwork. Ten speed automatic gear box !!! Only a few of these cars are in the UK £64,995 Telephone: 07711 630348 or 01992 573564 Email: mark@totalheadturners.com 130 For thousands of cars for sale visit classiccarsforsale.co.uk
CARS FOR SALE 1965 ASTON MARTIN DB5 - CALIFORNIAN SAGE COACHWORK MAGNOLIA INTERIOR ................................................................£675,000 1966 ASTON MARTIN DB6 VANTAGE - MANUAL GEARBOX, WHITE COACHWORK, LOW MILEAGE. PREVIOUSLY OWNED FOR MANY YEARS BY AN ASTON MARTIN SPECIALIST. THE ONLY WHITE DB6 VANTAGE PRODUCED. THIS IS A VERY HIGH END CAR .........£425,000 1999 ASTON MARTIN DB7 VANTAGE COUPE - SILVER, PARCHMENT INTERIOR 93K, FSH ......................................................................£19,995 1959 BMW ISETTA 250 - BLUE COACHWORK, RED LEATHER.FULLY RESTORED. RARE 4 WHEEL VERSION .......................................£26,995 1962 BMW ISETTA 300. RHD - BURGUNDY COACHWORK, TARTAN INTERIOR ......................................................................................£26,995 1964 BMW 700 CS COUPE. RHD - WHITE COACHWORK. OVER £75K SPENT ON FULL PHOTOGRAPHIC RESTORATION AND CONVERSION TO ELECTRIC ................................................................................£39,995 2005 BMW 760 LI ARMOURED CAR - VR6 RATING. SHOWING JUST 14,000 KMS FROM NEW. LHD. BLACK COACHWORK ...............£35,000 1968 DAIMLER 250 V8 SALOON - PRESENTED IN WOODCOTE GREEN COACHWORK WITH RECENT RED LEATHER. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. POWER STEERING ..........................................£19,995 2001 FERRARI 456 GTA - SILVER ARGENTO WITH GREY LEATHER INTERIOR. 35K MILES, FSH .........................................................£49,995 1963 FIAT MULTIPLA. LHD - ELECTRIC CONVERSION. FULLY RESTORED. RED OVER BLACK COACHWORK, RED LEATHER £54,995 1969 FIAT GAMINE - RARE RHD MODEL. RED COACHWORK, BLACK INTERIOR. SOFT TOP. SYNCRO GEARBOX. FULLY RESTORED .......................................................................................................£25,995 1972 FIAT 695 ABARTH RECREATION - PEARLESCANT WHITE OVER PURPLE COACHWORK. LHD. FULLY RESTORED AND UPGRADED, 650 CC ENGINE, ALL ROUND DISC BRAKES, ELECTRIC STARTER, SYNCRO GEARBOX, ALLOY WHEELS, PERSPEX FOLD BACK SUNROOF .....................................................................................£24,995 1963 FORD ANGLIA CUSTOM ëMISFITí - UK AWARD WINNING CAR. BMW E30 M42 ENGINE. AMAZING CAR .....................................£39,995 1958 JAGUAR XK 150 3.8S DHC. LHD - WHITE COACHWORK, RED LEATHER INTERIOR. RESTORED AND UPGRADED AT A COST OF OVER £50,000 TO 3.8 S SPEC, XJ6 AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION AND POWER STEERING .......................................................................£99,995 1960 JAGUAR XK 150 DHC 150S - RHD, RED COACHWORK. SUBSTANTIAL RESTORATION/UPGRADE TO RACE/RALLY SPEC INCLUDING SIGMA COMPETITION ENGINE ................................... POA 1969 JAGUAR E TYPE SERIES 2 2PLUS 2.UK RHD CAR. BRG COACHWORK ,CINNAMON LEATHER INTERIOR .......................£39,995 For thousands of cars for sale visit classiccarsforsale.co.uk 1972 JAGUAR E TYPE V12 ROADSTER. UK RHD. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. REGENCY RED COACHWORK, TAN LEATHER INTERIOR ......................................................................................£74,995 1961 MERCEDES 190 SL. LHD - SILVER COACHWORK, RED LEATHER INTERIOR. EUROPEAN CAR. PREVIOUS RESTORATION IN HOLLAND. RECENT EXPENDITURE OF OVER £30K.................£129,995 1961 MERCEDES 190 SL. RHD - MATCHING NUMBERS CAR. HARD AND SOFT TOP. IVORY WHITE COACHWORK, RED LEATHER INTERIOR. RECENT FULL RESTORATION AND ENGINE REBUILD WITH EXTENSIVE PHOTOS TO SHOW WORKS CARRIED OUT .....................................................................................................£159,995 1962 MERCEDES 300SE CABRIOLET. RHD - ONE OF ONLY 78RHD MODELS PRODUCED. GRAPHITE GREY COACHWORK, RED LEATHER INTERIOR. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, POWER STEERING. SUBJECTED TO A £230,000 RESTORATION BY HAYNES MOTOR MUSEUM ........................................................................... £POA 1967 MERCEDES 250 SL. RHD - AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, POWER STEERING MATCHING NUMBERS UK CAR. HARD AND SOFT TOPS. PRESENTED IN WHITE COACHWORK WITH ITS ORIGINAL BLACK M B TEX INTERIOR. RECENT REPAINT. ENGINE REBUILD. ORIGINAL SERVICE BOOK STAMPED. THIS IS A VERY HIGH END EXAMPLE ....................................................................................£119,995 1970 MERCEDES 280 SL. RHD - AUTO - P/S. MATCHING NUMBERS. ENGINE REBUILT. LOW FAMILY OWNERSHIP. WHITE COACHWORK, BLACK LEATHER INTERIOR. THIS CAR HAS BEEN SUBJECTED TO A 10 YEAR HIGH END RESTORATION ............................................... £POA 1988 MERCEDES 300 SL - NAUTIC BLUE COACHWORK, GREY LEATHER,112K MILES ..................................................................£39,995 1989 MERCEDES 300SL - WHITE COACHWORK, BLACK LEATHER INTERIOR, 89K MILES ..................................................................£34,995 1990 NISSAN S CARGO - LIGHT GREEN OVER DARK GREEN COACHWORK. ORIGINAL GREY CLOTH INTERIOR .....................£7,995 2013 PIAGGIO APE CALESSINO 200 - WHITE COACHWORK, WHITE INTERIOR. VERY LOW MILEAGE....................................................£9,995 1987 PORSCHE 911 TURBO TARGA. RHD - 1 OF ONLY 58 RHD MODELS PRODUCED. SHOWING 68,000 MILES. WHITE COACHWORK, BLACK INTERIOR. RECENT NEW TURBO AND CLUTCH .................................................................................£79,995 1969 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE MK3 - WHITE COACHWORK, BLACK INTERIOR. JUST ONE LADY OWNER FROM NEW WITH 75K MILES ON THE CLOCK .........................................................£12,995 131
Advertise for FREE ONLINE EMAIL (unlimited text and photographs) Include a jpg image of the car, description (no more than 200 characters) including make & model, price, contact number inc. STD code & county where the car is based. *Trade advertisers, please call 01733 979447. www.classiccarsforsale.co.uk ccphotos@bauermedia.co.uk CALL 01733 979476 Please enter this information so that Bauer Media Group (the publisher of Classic Cars) can keep you up-to-date by email, post, phone and free mobile messaging with fantastic offers and promotions. We promise that you can subscribe at any time and you’ll only get messages about things that we’ve chosen especially for you from ourselves and our network of great partners whose products and services we think you will enjoy. For our privacy policy visit www.bauerdatapromise.co.uk. Bauer Media Group consists of Bauer Consumer Media Ltd, Bauer Radio Ltd and H Bauer publishing Ltd. Conditions of acceptance: Private sellers only. Trade advertisers please call 01733 979447. Please see full T&Cs on the back page. PLEASE DO NOT GIVE OUT ANY PAYMENT TO ANY PERSONS CALLING/EMAILING TO UPGRADE YOUR “VEHICLE FOR SALE” ADVERT - PLEASE CALL THE OFFICE ON 01733 979476 IF YOU HAVE ANY CONCERNS OR QUESTIONS In association with Call 01480 400783 Tel. 0208 688 4443 132 For thousands of cars for sale visit Britain’s best marketplace for buying and selling classic cars in PRINT| MOBILE|ONLINE
In association with Call 01480 400783 Sharing your passion for over 35 years Melvyn Rutter Limited International Morgan Sales, Service, Parts and Restoration for Morgan Cars from 1936 to Present Day For over 35 years Call 01480 400783 for a quote 2022 Morgan Plus Four Automatic Our own registered demonstrator. Nightfire Metallic Red with Morgan Biscuit leather, stainless wire wheels including spare, maroon carpets, quilted twin-needle seat stitching, Morgan logo embroidered to headrests, speakers with bluetooth, puddle lighting, stainless steel grille mesh, maroon mohair hood, sidescreens and hood cover, Tawny ash dashboard and centre console, comfort & heated seats, CAT5S tracker - £79,950 + road fund license 2022 Morgan Plus Four A manual car finished in Sport Blue with black Pebble Grain leather, silver painted wire wheels, Slate Grey horizontal seat stitching, air-conditioning, speakers with bluetooth, lockable storage compartment behind seats, black steering wheel centre, mohair hood cover, mohair sidescreen bag, luggage rack with sidescreen stowage, driving spotlights, Only 910 miles from new, cherished registration ‘AFN 76’ not included in price, but available by separate negotiation. A stunning car - £65,995 2019 Morgan Plus 4 Metallic Red with Cream leather interior, stainless steel wire wheels, red mohair hood & sidescreens, walnut dashboard, Moto-Lita steering wheel, luggage rack, stainless door check straps, only 8,717 miles from new and cherished registration ‘LL07 MOG’ included - one of the last ‘traditional’ Morgans - £48,950 Largest Parts Store Outside The Morgan Factory anywhere in the world 47 years International mail order & over the counter sales WE BUY MORGAN CARS, INCLUDING PROJECTS – WE COLLECT The Morgan Garage, Little Hallingbury, Nr Bishops Stortford, Herts CM22 7RA England Tel: 01279 725725 www.melvyn-rutter.co.uk Email: mr@melvyn-rutter.net For thousands of cars for sale visit Britain’s best marketplace for buying and selling classic cars in PRINT| MOBILE|ONLINE 133
In association with Call 01480 400783 Sharing your passion for over 35 years Classic Car Insurance Experts Call 01480 400783 for a quote 134 For thousands of cars for sale visit Britain’s best marketplace for buying and selling classic cars in PRINT| MOBILE|ONLINE
In association with Call 01480 400783 1955 Bentley R-Type HJ Mulliner Continental Fastback, BC3E. Incredibly original & undisturbed with just four owners & 69,000 miles. 4.9 litre engine with Auto g/box, faded Dragonfly Blue & soft Beige leather piped Blue. Absolute pleasure to drive; £675,000 Ten post-war Bentleys – see website for details & lots of videos Sharing your passion for over 35 years Choice of Repairer Call 01480 400783 for a quote 1934 20/25 Park Ward ‘Brougham de Ville’ 4 Door Sedanca Very attractive & delightfully different from the usual with Sham Canework & Opera lamps, excellent history & lovely condition throughout; Just Arrived as well as fabulous PII Three Position DHC & 1937 PIII Sedanca de Ville 1937 Bentley 4¼ Vanden Plas 3 Position Drophead Coupe Handsome, desirable & practical with wind up windows. About £200k spent by last 2 owners on restoration including MX g/box, engine rebuild & much more, PRICE REDUCED; £125,000 Good selection of Derbys inc lovely MX Park Ward Saloon. For thousands of cars for sale visit Britain’s best marketplace for buying and selling classic cars in PRINT| MOBILE|ONLINE 135
In association with Call 01480 400783 Sharing your passion for over 35 years Club Member Discounts Call 01480 400783 for a quote enquiries@mgsforsale.com URGENTLY WANTED ANY MG ANY YEAR, ANY CONDITION View our stock online at: www.mgsforsale.com 01707 876089 or 07831 556666 136 For thousands of cars for sale visit Britain’s best marketplace for buying and selling classic cars in PRINT| MOBILE|ONLINE
In association with Call 01480 400783 The MoTor Shed LTd Tel: 01869 249999 Mobile: 07718 764463 Email: elder.vintage.services@gmail.com 1921 1922 1923 1923 1923 1923 1925 1925 1926 1927 1927 1928 1928 1928 1928 1929 1929 1930 1930 1930 1931 1932 1932 1932 1932 1932 1932 1933 1933 1933 1934 1934 1934 1934 1934 1934 1934 1935 1935 1935 1935 1935 1935 CADILLAC V8 Type 59 open 4-seat tourer........................................£24,500 VAUXHALL 14/40 M-type tourer ......................................................£15,500 MORRIS Bullnose Special, replica of the ‘Keen’ racer ......................£24,000 VAUXHALL 23/60 OD Kington tourer................................................£49,500 ROLS ROYCE 20 hp open drive by Barker ........................................£34,500 CADILLAC V8 Town Sedan ...............................................................£25,000 MORRIS Cowley 4-seat tourer .........................................................£14,000 MORRIS Oxford “Bullnose” 2-seat tourer & dickey...........................£11,500 RENAULT NN tourer ........................................................................ £12,800 ALVIS 12/50 Sportsman Saloon ...................................................... £29,500 RENAULT NN tourer ........................................................................ £11,000 ALVIS 14.75 2-seat Beetleback ...................................................... £37,000 HUMBER 20/55 Limousine ............................................................. £20,000 HUMBER 14/40 all weather tourer, none runner. ............................. £17,500 RILEY 9 Monaco Mk 3 saloon ......................................................... £15,250 RILEY 9 Brooklands ‘The Gerard Special’Brooklands history ......... £136,500 STAR 18/50 Charlesworth Sunshine Saloon, newly rebuilt engine. .. £14,750 AUSTIN 7 EA Sports (Ulster), none S/charged, Original .................... £60,000 AUSTIN 7 S/charged 2-seat Special, VSCC eligible, road & track, 61 bhp £24,000 SUNBEAM 16 (18.2) six-light Saloon .............................................. £24,000 AUSTIN 7 Ulster Special, full race eng. track or road....................... £20,000 RILEY 9 Gamecock ......................................................................... £27,500 RILEY 9 Holbrook tourer, twin carb., rebuilt engine ......................... £28,000 SUNBEAM 16/23.8 open 2-seat special ......................................... £28,000 ALVIS 12/60 TL 4-seat tourer by Cross & Ellis, 1 owner since 1961 £24,500 RILEY 9 2-seat special project, with V5 .......................................... £14,500 AUSTIN 7 RN Saloon ........................................................................ £7,750 RILEY 9 Lynx .................................................................................. £34,000 SUNBEAM 18.2 Limousine ............................................................. £24,750 AUSTIN 18/6 Carlton saloon ........................................................... £17,250 MG K3 replica, boat tail, VSCC ‘Buff Form’ .................................... £195,000 LAGONDA 16/80 T5 tourer, pre-selector gearbox, full history .......... £62,000 MG PA Midget 2-seat sports, super history and correct ................... £37,500 AUSTIN 7 Ulster Special, track car ready to go ............................... £17,000 RILEY 9 Kestrel .............................................................................. £16,500 SUNBEAM ‘Twenty’ (18.2) Saloon ................................................... £15,750 MORRIS 15/6 4-door Saloon .......................................................... £12,500 RILEY 12/4 Lynx ............................................................................. £40,000 TRIUMPH Gloria Vitesse saloon, 2-litre, 6-cylinder .......................... £29,500 RILEY 12/4 Kestrel ......................................................................... £27,000 RILEY 9 2-seat Special prodject, with V5C ...................................... £15,500 AUSTIN 7 RTC 2-seat special ......................................................... £12,750 AUSTIN 7 APD 2-seat tourer ............................................................. £7,500 1935 1936 1936 1936 1936 1936 1937 1937 1938 1938 1938 1949 1949 1952 1952 1955 1957 1958 1958 1958 1958 1959 1959 1959 1961 1962 1963 1965 1965 1967 1970 1971 1973 1973 1973 1974 1974 1976 1980 1982 1987 1987 1993 STANDARD 10/12 Speed Saloon ...................................................... £9,850 AC 16/70 2-seat drop-head coupé with dickey ............................... £57,500 ALVIS Silver Eagle Drophead Coupe................................................ £50,000 TRIUMPH Vitesse 4-door saloon ..................................................... £22,000 AUSTIN 7 Speedex 750 .................................................................. £20,000 RALEIGH Safety Seven .................................................................. £11,500 AUSTIN 7 Cambridge Special, new ‘Pigsty’ engine.......................... £18,000 AUSTIN 10 Cambridge saloon........................................................... £7,500 ALVIS Speed 25 SC Charlesworth 3-position drop-head coupé ....... £70,000 ARMSTRONG SIDDELEY 14 hp 4-door saloon ................................... £8,000 OPEL Kadet 2-door Coupe, restored................................................ £12,750 BENTLEY Mk VI Drop-head coupe by Park Ward ............................. £99,900 ALVIS TA14 4-door saloon, restored................................................ £14,000 JOWETT Jupitor 2-seat sports ........................................................ £29,500 ARMSTRONG SIDDELEY 18 hp Whitley Saloon................................ £12,000 JAGUAR XK140 Fixed-head Coupé ................................................. £59,500 M.G. A 1500 ................................................................................... £20,000 RAY-FORD Sports Racing Special ................................................... £75,000 AUSTIN HEALEY 100/6, Scottish Motor Show Car ........................... £56,500 M.G. A race car, road registered ..................................................... £26,500 TURNER 950S Sports racing car ..................................................... £22,500 AUSTIN A35 road/race.................................................................... £19,500 AUSTIN A40 Farina, low miles ........................................................ £11,500 CITROEN 2CV ................................................................................... £9,500 FORD Anglia 1500 GT Rally car ....................................................... £16,500 MORRIS Minor 1000 Convertible, low miles.................................... £10,000 HILLMAN Super Minx convertible ..................................................... £6,500 MINI Cooper S race car, 1298cc short stroke, total restoration ........ £67,000 ALVIS TE21 Saloon, 5-speed ZF gearbox, power steering................ £27,000 MINI Cooper S race car, 998cc short stroke, HTP papers ................ £55,000 TRIUMPH Vitesse 2-seat special..................................................... £10,000 LOMAX 3-wheeler, Citroen 2CV based open sports car ..................... £5,500 JENSEN HEALEY MkI 2-seat sports................................................ £11,500 MERCEDES BENZ 450SL .................................................................. £5,000 TRIUMPH Spitfire Mk. III, modified .................................................... £9,800 M.G. B roadster, Osselli engine & up-rated suspension ................... £13,500 M.G. B GT ....................................................................................... £10,000 M.G. Midget 1500........................................................................... £12,000 MINI MkIV, restored to MkII, Metro 1300 engine.............................. £16,500 CITROEN CX series I 4-door saloon 2400 injection............................ £2,500 CITROEN 2CV6 Special ..................................................................... £6,750 AC Cobra Replica by Gardner Douglas, 6 litre, 400 bhp ................... £48,000 RANGE ROVER Vogue EFI, ‘Classic’................................................. £12,000 Cars sold on consignment - can I help? Visit our web site: www.vintageandclassiccars.co.uk We perform Service & Renovations of all types of classic cars. MERCEDES 220 SE COUPÉ, 1961 VIN 02110013522 This car was bought by businessman Thorsten Segerfalk. Thorsten and his wife moved to Switzerland for health reasons and later started a foundation that to this day donates money to medical research in neuroscience. The car came to Rohdins in June 2022 to be ”brought back to life” after standing still for a number of years and the cost for this was about 60,000 Skr. It is very well preserved and quite untouched, for example, the upholstery is original and in a very nice condition. On the minus side, there are some dents on the bumpers as well as some paint damage on the rear edge of the left rear door and the front edge of the left rear fender (see pictures). Now it is for sale and the current owner asks for 398 000 Skr, aproximately £30 000 or 35 000Euro. Industrigatan 4, 46137 Trollhättan, Sweden Tel. +46520-18800 anders@rohdinsclassiccar.se, www.rohdinsclassiccar.se Follow us on For thousands of cars for sale visit Britain’s best marketplace for buying and selling classic cars in PRINT| MOBILE|ONLINE 137
In association with Call 01480 400783 Sharing your passion for over 35 years Choice of Repairer Call 01480 400783 for a quote 138 For thousands of cars for sale visit Britain’s best marketplace for buying and selling classic cars in PRINT| MOBILE|ONLINE
GHOST MOTOR WORKS LTD Exclusively Rolls Royce and Bentley CARS FOR SALE WE NOW OFFER A FULL TRANSPORTATION SERVICE THAT CAN PROFESSIONALLY MOVE YOUR VEHICLE ANYWHERE IN THE UK 1988 ROLLS-ROYCE SILVER SPIRIT finished in Cobalt Blue with Beige Hide interior. Covered 155,000 with just 4 owners from new. A very well presented and highly usable example..............................................................£12,750 1970 ROLLS-ROYCE MULLINER PARK WARD FIXED HEAD COUPE. Finished in Seychelles Blue with Blue/ Grey hide interior. Special factory specification including cocktail cabinet, cigar box and wool cloth headlining. An outstanding example. .............£55,000 1977 ROLLS-ROYCE SILVER SHADOW II. Finished in Walnut over Silver Sand. Interior Tan Hide piped Brown. 75,000 miles. Huge history file. A beautiful and well maintained example ...................... £32,000 1977 ROLLS-ROYCE SILVER SHADOW 2 finished in Champagne with Beige Hide. 63,000 miles from new Comprehensive history file. Every MOT. An 1964 ROLLS-ROYCE SILVER CLOUD III. Astral Blue eye catching example in beautiful condition over Shell Grey Blue Hide Interior. 104,000 miles. Air throughout .............................................. £32,000 Conditioning. Beautiful original condition..... £78,000 1982 ROLLS-ROYCE CORNICHE CONVERTIBLE Finished in Scots Pine with Beige hide interior. Covered just 60,000 with comprehensive service history. One of the finest we have seen ........ £78,000 1984 BENTLEY MULSANNE TURBO finished in Georgian Silver with Grey Hide interior. Same family ownership for 36 years. An extremely fine and unmolested example................................... £16,500 1929 ROLLS-ROYCE 20 HP SEDANCA DE VILLE BY WINDOVERS finished in Black over Yellow. Brown leather to front, Beige west of England wool cloth to rear. Impressive history file. Sylvester Stallone’s wedding car. A stunning example with some very unusual features ..........................................£55,000 1951 BENTLEY MK VI MULLINER Aluminium Sports Saloon finished in Green and Cream with Dark Green Hide Interior. Just 2 owners since the 1970’s. Excellent history with marque specialists. A beautiful example, driving exceptionally well ............ £48,000 1934 ROLLS-ROYCE 20 HP OPEN TOURER, finished in Blue over Black with Black Hide Interior. Recent specialist engine rebuild. A charming example, running and driving extremely well ..................................................................£55,000 1977 ROLLS-ROYCE SILVER SHADOW 2 finished in Georgian Silver with Dark Blue Hide. Covered 100,900 miles. Supplied by us to its last keeper in 2008. 2 stamped service books. A very smart and usable example ..................................... £22,000 1990 ROLLS-ROYCE SILVER SPIRIT II finished in Rhapsody Blue Parchment hide piped Tahiti Interior 79,000 miles Excellent service history with main agents and specialists. A very eye catching and attractive example in outstanding condition throughout.. ................................................ £25,000 35 ROLLS-ROYCE & BENTLEYÕS IN STOCK SIMILAR CARS URGENTLY REQUIRED, INSTANT DECISION. LANDWAY FARM BASTED LANE CLAYGATE CROSS KENT TN15 8PY ENGLAND CALL US ON 01732 886002 OR EMAIL INFO@GHOSTMOTORS.CO.UK VISIT OUR WEBSITE WWW.GHOSTMOTORS.CO.UK 01253 723411 • 07831 440991 • 07935 502596 scott@scottjamesoflytham.co.uk w w w.sco t tjamesofly tham.co.uk ASTON MARTIN DB9 6.0 V12 Carbon Edition T-TronicII Euro 6 2dr LAMBORGHINI GALLARDO 5.0 V10 SPYDER 2DR Semi Automatic BMW 8 SERIES 4.4 840CI SPORT 2DR Automatic JAGUAR XJ 3.0 D V6 PREMIUM LUXURY 4DR Automatic 2014 (64) • 17,000 miles • Auto White • Coupe • Petrol 2007 (07) • 47,000 miles • Semi Auto Black • Convertible • Petrol 1998 (S) • 65,000 miles • Auto Silver • Coupe • Petrol 2015 (15) • 39,000 miles • Auto Blue • Saloon • Diesel RARE CARBON EDITION SUPERB EXAMPLE RARE CAR STUNNING EXAMPLE £62,950 £59,950 £24,950 £16,950 JAGUAR XJ-S HE 5.3 HE 2DR Automatic MERCEDES-BENZ SL SERIES 3.5 SL350 2DR Automatic MERCEDES-BENZ SL CLASS 5.4 SL55 KOMPRESSOR AMG 2DR BMW Z4M CONVERTIBLE 3.2 Z4 M ROADSTER 2DR Manual 1990 (G) • 31,000 miles • Auto Blue • Coupe • Petrol 2007 (57) • 67,000 miles • Auto Black • Convertible • Petrol 2003 (03) • 59,000 miles • Auto Silver • Convertible • Petrol 2006 (56) • 66,000 miles • Manual Red • Convertible • Petrol TIME WARP CONDITION VIEWING HIGHLY RECOMMMENDED STUNNING EXAMPLE STUNNING EXAMPLE £24,950 £9,950 £16,950 £15,950 For thousands of cars for sale visit classiccarsforsale.co.uk Scott James of Lytham. The Courtyard, Alexandria Drive, Lytham St Annes, Lancashire, FY8 1JD 139
In association with Call 01480 400783 ENGINEERING Rolls-Royce and Bentley Motor Car Specialists in Pre and post war car Mechanicals Restorations - Servicing Tel: 01420 541257 Fax: 01420 542122 Unit 1, Weyside Park, Newman Lane, Alton, Hants GU34 2PJ A omec Eq pmen & P r L d 36 Ballmoor, Buckingham Industrial Park Buckingham MK18 1RQ United Kingdom T. +44 (0)1280 822 818 E. support@automec.co.uk Order onl ne for 10% d co n Code CC2024 Br ke, cl c & f el l ne Re dy M de Copper & Copper N ckel Br ke P pe Se Easily fitted. Will not rust. Fast delivery. DOT 5 S l cone Br ke Fl d Eliminates brake system wear. Never needs changing. C . omec.co. k O er prod c ncl de: Brass Brake & Clutch Fittings Copper & Copper Nickel Coils Flaring & Bending Tools Goodridge Braded Hoses ABA Hoseclips A een on TIMBER GARDEN BUILDINGS TIMBER GARAGES GARDEN OFFICES WORK ROOMS WARWICK BUILDINGS NIGHTINGALE LANE, LONG ITCHINGTON SOUTHAM CV47 9QL 01926 815757 www.warwickbuildings.co.uk 140 For thousands of cars for sale visit Britain’s best marketplace for buying and selling classic cars in PRINT| MOBILE|ONLINE
SPECIALISTS & SERVICES CLUB LOTUS www.clublotus.co.uk TEL: 01362 691144/694459 EMAIL annemarie@clublotus.co.uk THE ORIGINAL & BEST CLUB FOR ALL LOTUS OWNERS & ENTHUSIASTS COLOUR MAGAZINE, INSURANCE & PARTS DISCOUNTS, FREE TECHNICAL HELP, LOTUS REGALIA & MORE FOR ONLY £39 PER YEAR CLUB LOTUS, 58 MALTHOUSE COURT, DEREHAM, NORFOLK, NR20 4UA Millfield Car Storage LOCKHEED & GIRLING BRAKE & CLUTCH HYDRAULIC CYLINDERS FOR BRITISH VEHICLES 1935-1980 MASTER CYLINDERS, WHEEL CYLINDERS, CALIPERS, CLUTCH SLAVES, FLEXIBLE HOSES, PADS, KITS Etc. WORLDWIDE MAIL ORDER POWERTRACK Ltd Tel/fax: 01344 886522 www.powertrackbrakes.co.uk DON HOODS UNBEATABLE QUALITY - UNBEATABLE VALUE! ★ Climate Controlled Storage ★ Fully Secure Alarmed Unit ★ Collection & Delivery Options ★ 15 Minutes from Gatwick Tel: 01342 300493 Mobile: 0777 358 2202 Email: info@millfieldcarstorage.co.uk www.millfieldcarstorage.co.uk To advertise in DIRECT FROM THE MAKERS WITH OVER 40 YEARS EXPERIENCE Choice of heavy duty PVC, ICI Vynide, Everflex, Duck and Mohair CARPET SETS FOR MOST MODELS ● BETTER THAN ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT QUALITY ● STITCHED AND WELDED FOR MAXIMUM LIFE ● WIDEST CHOICE OF COLOURS AVAILABLE ● ALL FASTENERS & FITTINGS INCLUDED 24 hour express service available - worldwide order service FOR LEAFLET AND PRICE LIST CONTACT Don Trimming Co. Ltd. Hampton Road, Birmingham B23 7JJ Tel: 0121 373 1313 SOUTHERN SALES OFFICE Tel: 01202 742200 MECH-MATE MOTORPITS Maintenance Free www.mech-mate.com please contact Qas on 01733 979443 or email qasim.nasib@bauermedia.co.uk CASTLE POLISHING & CHROME PLATING LTD Unit F1, Shaw Road, Dudley, West Midlands DY8 5YJ Tel: 01384 214429 Email: info@castlechrome.co.uk www.castlechrome.co.uk Motorcycle & Classic Car Part Restoration Large & Small Batches All Polishing & Plating Undertaken in Copper, Nickel & Chrome. Made in the UK and exported worldwide 01524 737095 - Mobile: 07707 247 007 info@mech-mate.com www.mech-mate.com Classic Car Restorations • Over 40 years practical experience • Family-run company • Nationwide collection • Warranty on work carried out • Call us for a free estimate & advice Station Yard, Kirk Hammerton, York, YO26 8DN info@poollaneclassics.com 01423 330591 www.poollaneclassics.com Car Storage Scotland you ca ... ou passion • • • • • • FRIENDLY EXPERT SERVICE IN HAMPSHIRE. WITH MORE THAN TWO DECADES OF EXPERIENCE. IN SERVICING, SMALL REPAIRS AND FULL RESTORATIONS. E: mvclassics@gmail.com T: 01489 878059 Follow us on Facebook For thousands of cars for sale visit classiccarsforsale.co.uk Secu e disc eet location Collection & delive y Fully enclosed t anspo t Routine maintenance Inte national shipping Ca coon sales agents Tel: 0131 663 9020 info@ca sto agescotland.co.uk www.carstoragescotland.co.uk 141
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Classic Car Insurance Featured Insurer: Lancaster Insurance At Lancaster Insurance we have specialised in arranging Classic Car insurance since 1984. Our staff understand how important your Classic vehicle is to you, so when arranging your insurance we use our knowledge and experience to find a policy which is tailored to meet your needs. Please use our handy section to record and compare quotations from advertisers in this magazine Visit our website at: www.lancasterinsurance.co.uk or call us on 01480 400 795 ClassicLine Insurance Adrian Flux tel: 0800 587 5472 w: www.adrianflux.co.uk Price: Excess: Monthly Payment: Ref No.: tel: 01455 639000 w: www.classiclineinsurance.co.uk Price: MonthlyPayment: Payment: Price: Monthly Excess: No.: Excess: Ref No.: Lancaster Insurance Footman James Company Name Company Name tel: 01480 400 795 w: www.lancasterinsurance.co.uk Price: Monthly Payment: Excess: Ref No.: tel: w: Price: Excess: Monthly Payment: Ref No.: Company Name tel: w: Price: Excess: tel: 0333 207 6023 w: www.footmanjames.co.uk Price: Monthly Payment: Excess: Ref No.: tel: w: Price: Excess: Monthly Payment: Ref No.: Company Name Monthly Payment: Ref No.: For thousands of cars for sale visit classiccarsforsale.co.uk tel: w: Price: Excess: Monthly Payment: Ref No.: 143
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[ 50 Years Ago Today] Looking back without hindsight ‘I frightened myself more than the car’ In July 1974, CAR was lucky to test the new Volkswagen. Little did it realise it had driven the future n the MunichSalzburg autobahn I saw 100mph, in pouring rain, until aquaplaning forced me to lift off,’ wrote CAR’s George Bishop in July 1974 after testing an unassuming new small car hailing from Wolfsburg. ‘I was the first English journalist to drive the Golf for any reasonable distance.’ And it wasn’t the GTI either – that was still a few years away. Bishop was lucky. VW UK withdrew its invitation to British journalists to the Golf’s launch at the last minute, on the justification that the car would not be available in Britain for some time. Bishop had to obtain permission from Wolfsburg, and wait until a Monday after the intended weekend – in the wake of the oil crisis, driving was still heavily restricted in Germany at weekends. ‘I believe that it is a winner but we will have to wait and see.’ Despite its reputation nowadays as a car industry template, it’s remarkable how many of the MkI Golf’s features were radical in 1974. ‘It idled on three cylinders which made takeoff a bit sluggish until the fourth plug came in,’ said Bishop, encountering VW’s fuel-saving cylinder-deactivation system 146 for the first time. ‘Tyre noise is minimal. Wind noise is conspicuous by its absence and I could listen to speech radio at maximum speed. There is also a five-door hatchback body in the modern idiom with a rigid tonneau cover which lifts with the fifth door but hides the luggage when closed,’ wrote Bishop, struggling to describe a parcel shelf. ‘It also has bolt-on wings for cheap repairs, optional passive-restraint seat belts and padded knee bar.’ New measures to make servicing easier were unusual too, yet highly familiar nowadays. ‘Every Golf has an electronic diagnostic socket for connection up to the VW computer to tell the car what is ailing with itself. Rivals say this is more of a sales gimmick than anything because it only monitors certain functions.’ A plug-in diagnostic session was part of an annual service schedule, and interestingly, the engine had been designed for ease of servicing – it was possible to remove it entirely without opening the bonnet by dropping it down into an inspection pit, and the cylinder head could be replaced ‘with the engine in situ and without much dismantling.’ ‘Volkswagen says emphatically that Golf is not a successor to the Beetle,’ Bishop noted. Chronology has retrospectively decided that it is, but the Golf was so much more – it was a modern car as we’d still recognise it today.
A S E L ECT IO N O F OUR CUR R E NT S TO CK : 1999 ASTON MARTIN V8 VANTAGE V550 £199,950 Finished in Antrim Blue over Parchment hide interior, piped Pacific Blue over Blue carpets, we are pleased to offer this superb quality Vantage V550. Built and delivered in April 1999, being within the last 10 cars produced and incorporating late build refinements including improved door mirrors, door handles, exhaust and cooling systems. Boasting a superb service record with Aston Martin agents and ourselves, (26 services in its 25 year life!), invoices for which are contained in the extensive history folder and demonstrate that no expense has been spared in the maintenance and upkeep of this car. Now having covered 24,700 miles from new, the exterior coachwork is virtually unmarked and the cabin remarkably well preserved. Supplied with all original hand books, tools, vehicle jack and factory build sheet, inclusive of a manufacturer scheduled service, 12 months Warranty and MoT certificate. Available for viewing and demonstration now at our Hertfordshire showrooms. 1965 Aston Martin DB5 Convertible 1988 Aston Martin V8 Vantage Volante £POA £350,000 1965 Aston Martin DB5 £595,000 1960 Aston Martin DB4 Series II 1988 Aston Martin V8 Efi £165,000 1998 Aston Martin V8 Coupe £425,000 £89,950 1LFKRODV0HH &R/WG(VVHQGRQEXU\)DUP+DWfiHOG3DUN(VWDWH+HUWIRUGVKLUH$/$) LQIR#QLFKRODVPHHFRXNQLFKRODVPHHFRXN CAR SALES & PURCHASES, SERVICING & MAINTENANCE, RESTORATION, PARTS & MERCHANDISE, TRIM & UPHOLSTERY, TRANSPORTATION & STORAGE
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Price Guide Our quarterly guide brings you freshly updated prices for 1400-plus classics 1 134 148 148 144 50 ALLARD K1 K2 K3 L/M P J2/J2X 46-50 50-53 52-54 46-53 49-52 50-54 85,000 97,500 110,000 50,000 44,000 300,000 Allard Owners’ Club (allardownersclub.org) 65,000 42,000 28,000 3622 100 77,500 55,000 36,500 3917 102 90,000 66,000 47,500 4375 96 35,000 22,000 15,000 3622 86 32,000 17,500 10,000 3622 90 225,000 150,000 100,000 4375 130 ALPINE-RENAULT A110 A310 1600 A310 V6 GTA GTA Turbo 65-77 74-77 77-86 85-91 85-91 80,000 30,000 34,000 12,500 15,000 Club Alpine-Renault (clubalpinerenault.org.uk) 60,000 37,500 27,500 1565 115 21,000 15,000 9500 1605 130 24,000 16,500 10,500 2664 137 9750 5000 2500 2849 139 111,250 6000 3000 2458 149 ALVIS Speed 20 Tourer Speed 25 Tourer 4.3 Litre Tourer TA14 TA14 convertible TA21/TC21/100 TA21/TC21/100 con TD21 TD21 convertible TE/TF21 TE/TF convertible 32-36 37-40 37-39 46-50 46-50 50-55 50-55 56-63 56-63 63-67 63-67 Alvis Owner Club (alvisoc.org); Alvis Register (alvisregister.co.uk) 125,000 100,000 75,000 55,000 2762 90 160,000 125,000 90,000 65,000 3571 85 155,000 120,000 85,000 62,500 4387 100 16,000 11,000 6000 3250 1892 72 32,000 24,000 13,500 6750 1892 72 26,000 17,500 10,000 5000 2993 100 58,000 37,500 19,000 12,500 2993 95 30,500 22,500 12,500 7000 2993 104 82,500 56,500 36,000 20,000 2993 102 42,500 30,000 17,500 10,000 2993 110 90,000 65,000 42,000 25,000 2993 107 AMPHICAR 770 IAOC (amphicar.com) 61-65 65,000 45,000 26,500 16,000 1147 70 ARMSTRONG SIDDELEY Lancaster Hurricane dhc Typhoon coupé Whitley Sapphire Star Sapphire 46-52 46-53 46-50 50-53 53-59 58-60 12,250 22,000 15,750 15,000 16,400 20,000 ASTON MARTIN DB2 DB2 con DB2/4 MkI/II DB2/4 con DB3S DB MkIII DB MkIII con DB4 DB4 Vantage DB4 con DB4 GT DB4 GT Zagato 50-53 51-53 53-57 53-57 53-56 57-59 57-59 58-63 61-63 61-63 60-63 60-63 220,000 325,000 177,500 300,000 5.3m 195,000 325,000 390,000 460,000 775,000 2.25m 8.2m Armstrong Siddeley Owners’ Club (01225 723809) 8750 4850 2650 1991 70 15,000 8000 5200 1991 70 11,000 6950 4250 1991 70 10,000 5000 2650 2309 85 12,750 6250 3250 3435 100 15,000 7000 3500 3990 104 ▼ 160,000 255,000 130,000 225,000 4.9m 150,000 260,000 320,000 400,000 650,000 1.95m 7.5m Aston Martin Owners’ Club (01865 400400) 115,000 67,500 2580 110 175,000 110,000 2580 109 88,500 62,000 2580 120 160,000 97,500 2580 120 4.4m 3.9m 2922 145 112,500 70,000 2922 120 200,000 150,000 2922 120 250,000 190,000 3670 141 325,000 240,000 3670 149 550,000 450,000 3670 140 1.6m 1.2m 3670 155 6.9m 6.25m 3670 154 Top speed 1970 2959 2959 2959 3179 Price change 400 650 2750 750 4000 cc Alfa Romeo Owners’ Club (01787 249285) 1.1m 950,000 1754 95 700,000 475,000 2309 94 110,000 80,000 1884 112 125,000 90,000 1975 112 6750 3500 1290 90 8250 4000 1290 103 25,000 15,000 1290 110 30,000 17,500 1570 108 49,000 32,500 1570 120 50,000 30,000 2584 124 16,500 8000 2584 125 300,000 250,000 1290 120 800,000 725,000 1570 124 8000 3750 1570 105 4500 2000 1962 115 19,000 11,000 1570 112 160,000 110,000 1570 115 13,000 6000 1570 115 16,000 7500 1962 118 15,000 6500 1962 118 16,500 9750 1290 110 22,000 11,000 1570 113 8000 3000 1962 119 3600 1650 1962 114 5000 2400 1962 114 35,000 24,000 2593 132 3000 1100 1286 103 3650 1400 1490 104 3000 1000 1962 113 5250 2000 1962 118 ▼ 7000 2850 2492 130 3000 1400 2959 135 2000 900 1962 130 2500 1200 2959 147 30,000 20,000 2959 153 2000 1000 2498 140 1500 600 1970 131 ▼ 1000 1600 5500 1750 6250 Rough 1.4m 900,000 160,000 175,000 13,000 18,000 42,000 52,500 74,000 77,500 29,000 350,000 900,000 17,000 10,000 34,000 205,000 24,000 32,500 32,000 32,000 36,000 18,000 8250 10,500 53,500 7000 8500 6500 11,500 15,500 7750 4750 6500 47,500 4000 3500 2250 4000 11,000 3950 9250 Good 1.9m 1.1m 200,000 212,000 18,000 25,000 56,500 75,000 97,500 110,000 40,000 410,000 1m 24,000 15,000 42,500 260,000 32,000 43,500 42,000 42,000 50,000 28,000 13,000 15,250 70,000 10,000 12,000 10,000 17,000 24,000 10,750 6750 9750 62,000 6500 5400 4350 6000 15,000 5950 12,000 Private sale Mint 30-33 33-37 51-55 55-58 55-62 57-64 55-64 55-65 57-66 58-65 62-66 60-62 63-65 62-74 68-76 63-68 65-71 66-77 67-72 71-77 70-75 66-69 69-82 82-89 89-93 70-77 72-83 76-90 72-84 76-87 81-87 86-92 88-98 88-98 89-94 92-97 96-02 96-02 98-02 01-02 98-07 03-04 Price change At-a-glance indicator showing the market trend of the latest updates Concours/ Dealer ALFA ROMEO 6C 1750 GS Zagato 6C 2300 Touring 1900C Sprint 1900C Super Sprint Giulietta berlina Giulietta ti Giulietta/Giulia Sprint Giulietta/Giulia Spider Giulietta, Giulia SS 2000/2600 Spider 2600 Sprint SZ-1 TZ-1 Giulia Ti/Super 1750/2000 Berlina Giulia Sprint GT/Vel. Giulia GTA 1300/1600 GT Junior 1750GTV 2000GTV 1300/1600 Junior Z Duetto/1750 r,tail Spider S2 Spider S3 Spider S4 Montreal Alfasud/Alfasud Ti Alfasud Sprint Alfetta sal GTV 2000 GTV6 75 sal 164 2.0 TS 164 3.0 V6 SZ/RZ 155 Spider 2.0 TS GTV 2.0 TS GTV 3.0 V6 GTV V6 Cup 166 147 GTA NE DENOTES NEW ENTRY TO PRICE GUIDE Rough In reality a project car in need of much care and expense, even though it may still run and drive Year AC Owners’ Club (acownersclub.co.uk) 6750 4000 1991 83 12,500 8000 1991 83 160,000 105,000 1991 102 175,000 115,000 1971 118 66,500 46,500 1991 104 77,500 50,000 1971 128 37,500 21,000 1971 107 550,000 475,000 4727 138 650,000 575,000 6998 145 90,000 60,000 7014 143 110,000 75,000 7014 143 8500 5000 2994 125 65,000 45,000 4942 134 16,000 8500 4942 140 Top speed 12,000 22,500 210,000 230,000 88,000 110,000 57,500 725,000 825,000 125,000 150,000 15,000 90,000 21,500 cc 16,500 32,500 267,500 290,000 115,000 150,000 75,000 900,000 1m 167,500 210,000 22,500 110,000 26,500 Private sale Rough 47-56 49-56 54-63 56-63 54-63 56-63 59-63 62-69 65-67 67-73 67-73 79-84 83-92 93-00 Usable Tidy and ready to use, but needing cosmetic attention. You’ll have to spend more money if you want it looking really smart Mint Shiny and bright, but not concours condition. Any defects should be small. You’ll get a fine example for this money Good AC 2-litre 2-litre dhc/Buckland Ace (AC engine) Ace-Bristol/-Ford Aceca-AC Aceca-Bristol Greyhound Cobra MkI/MkII/289 Cobra 427 428 cpe 428 con 3000 ME Cobra MkIV Ace Brooklands Concours/ Dealer If you can afford it, do it. This is what to pay for a top-notch example; also a good guide to concours value Mint Abarth Club GB (01869 340289) 57-61 100,000 75,000 50,000 40,000 747 95 63-71 54,000 42,500 27,500 17,500 595 80 Our price guide is in every issue of our digital edition. Subscribe on p92 Concours/ Dealer ABARTH Zagato 750 595, 595SS, 695SS USING THE GUIDE Year Top speed Price change cc Rough Good Private sale Mint Concours/ Dealer NE DENOTES NEW ENTRY TO PRICE GUIDE Year Whether you’re buying or selling, our guide illustrates how the market is treating that model. We consult specialists, clubs and dealers, and scour auction results to ensure our guide is as accurate as possible. But an individual car’s value can only be assessed in person. Cars with exceptional mileage, history, unrestored originality or fresh restorations can be worth disproportionately more. On ‘bluechip’ models our price spreads reflect the importance of provenance and history over condition. Price change WHAT’S IT WORTH? NEED TO SEE PRICES EVERY MONTH? DB5 DB5 con DB6 DB6 Vantage DB6 Volante DBS 6/V8 DBS 6 Vantage V8 V8 Vantage V8 Volante V8 Vantage Volante Zagato Virage Virage Volante V8 Vantage V8 Coupé Vantage V600 DB7 DB7 Volante DB7 Vantage DB7 Vantage Volante DB7 GT/GTA DB7 Zagato Vanquish DB9 V8 Vantage 4.3 63-65 63-66 65-70 66-69 66-70 67-72 72-73 72-90 77-89 78-90 86-89 86-87 89-96 92-96 93-00 96-99 98-00 94-99 96-99 99-03 99-03 02-03 03 01-04 04-08 05-08 650,000 1.3m 265,000 360,000 625,000 107,500 120,000 100,000 265,000 185,000 250,000 220,000 56,000 67,500 180,000 62,500 235,000 22,500 27,500 25,000 28,500 42,000 250,000 51,000 33,000 30,000 540,000 1.1m 210,000 275,000 525,000 80,000 92,500 75,000 210,000 137,500 200,000 170,000 40,000 50,000 145,000 50,000 190,000 18,250 22,000 20,000 22,750 32,000 210,000 45,000 27,000 26,500 400,000 700,000 150,000 200,000 425,000 47,500 57,500 46,000 155,000 90,000 147,500 120,000 21,000 32,000 110,000 34,000 150,000 13,000 16,000 15,000 17,000 22,500 165,000 40,000 19,000 20,500 285,000 525,000 100,000 150,000 330,000 27,500 36,500 26,500 95,000 50,000 72,500 80,000 13,500 22,000 70,000 25,000 95,000 7500 11,000 10,500 13,500 17,500 n/a 35,000 15,000 16,750 3995 3995 3995 3995 3995 5340 3995 5340 5340 5340 5340 5340 5340 5340 5340 5340 5340 3239 3239 5935 5935 5935 5935 5935 5935 4280 143 141 140 148 145 162 149 147 168 130 162 180 158 157 ▼ 186 155 200 157 155 185 165 185 190 190 186 175 AUDI 60/70/80/90 sal 100 1.8/1.9 sal 100S Coupé Quattro turbo Quattro 20V Quattro Sport Coupé Quattro RS2 Avant Quattro S2 TT S3 Quattro S4 Quattro 65-72 68-76 69-76 80-89 89-91 84-85 84-88 94-95 90-96 98-06 99-03 98-02 7750 8000 19,500 50,000 80,000 395,000 14,250 60,000 18,000 5500 6750 8000 5500 5750 15,000 36,500 60,000 300,000 10,500 45,000 12,000 4000 5000 6000 Audi Owners’ Club (audiownersclub.com) 2500 1100 1760 100 2750 1250 1871 109 7500 3750 1871 112 22,000 12,000 2144 135 37,500 22,000 2226 142 210,000 n/a 2133 154 4750 2000 2226 125 33,000 20,000 2226 162 6500 3500 2226 147 1350 500 1781 145 2500 1300 1781 148 3500 2500 2771 153 AUSTIN Seven saloon Seven Chummy Seven 65/Nippy Seven Ruby saloon A40 Devon/Dorset A70 Hamps/Heref A90 Atlantic con A90 Atlantic coupé A40 Sports A40 Somerset Metropolitan A30/A35 A40, A50, A55 A55/A60 Cambridge A90, A95, A105 A40 Farina 30-34 25-34 33-37 34-39 47-52 48-54 49-50 50-52 50-53 52-54 54-61 51-59 53-59 59-69 54-59 58-67 pwa7c.co.uk; austincounties.org.uk; britishminiclub.co.uk 10,250 8250 4750 2500 747 50 21,000 16,500 10,000 5500 747 50 26,500 20,000 11,500 7500 747 60 9250 7000 4000 2000 747 53 8250 5500 2400 1200 1200 76 7500 5000 2400 1000 2199 83 29,000 20,000 12,000 6250 2660 92 20,000 15,000 9750 5000 2660 92 17,500 12,500 6750 4000 1200 80 2000 1000 1200 72 7000 4750 16,950 11,750 5500 2500 1489 78 8500 5500 2400 1000 948 75 7000 4850 2250 1100 1200 70 ▲ 8000 5500 2400 1100 1622 78 10,750 7500 3500 1500 2639 91 7000 5000 2000 800 1098 82 NE DENOTES NEW ENTRY TO PRICE GUIDE
13,500 (autobianchiregister.com) 7250 499 68 BENTLEY 3-litre Tourer 4.5-litre Tourer 6.5 Litre Speed Six 4.5 Litre ‘Blower’ 8 Litre Derby 3.5 Park Ward Derby 3.5 coachbuilt Derby 4.25 PW Derby 4.25 coachbuilt MkVI 4.3/4.6-litre MkVI con R-type saloon Coachbuilt con R-type Continental S1/S2 saloon S1 Cont Mulliner S1 Cont PW coupé S1 Cont P Ward con S2 Cont Mulliner S2 Park Ward con S2 Flying Spur 4dr S3 saloon S3 MPW 2dr coupé S3 MPW con S3 Flying Spur 4dr T1 saloon T2 saloon MPW/Corniche cpé MPW/Corniche conv Mulsanne/Eight Mulsanne Turbo Turbo R/RL Turbo RT Continental con Continental R Continental T Brooklands Azure 22-25 27-31 28-30 29-31 29-31 33-37 33-37 36-39 36-39 46-52 51-52 52-55 52-55 52-55 55-62 55-59 55-59 55-59 59-62 59-62 59-62 62-65 62-65 62-65 62-65 65-76 77-80 66-80 67-85 80-92 82-86 85-97 95-97 84-94 91-02 96-02 92-98 95-03 BERKELEY Sports SA322/SE328 Sports SE492 B95/B105 T60 3-wheeler 56-58 9000 58-59 12,000 59-61 12,500 59-61 8250 BIZZARRINI 5300GT Strada (isobizclub.com) 65-69 850,000 625,000 500,000 400,000 5354 165 400,000 925,000 2m 12m 1.4m 105,000 195,000 115,000 220,000 38,500 125,000 44,000 150,000 775,000 45,000 400,000 300,000 600,000 250,000 315,000 167,500 52,500 225,000 250,000 170,000 20,000 18,000 46,500 68,500 12,500 14,000 15,500 22,000 77,500 38,500 67,500 14,000 55,000 275,000 725,000 1.7m 8m 1m 72,500 140,000 80,000 150,000 27,500 92,500 31,000 115,000 625,000 30,000 300,000 225,000 450,000 180,000 210,000 130,000 36,000 150,000 170,000 120,000 14,250 13,500 32,500 48,000 9750 10,500 11,000 15,500 60,000 32,500 53,500 11,000 45,000 Bentley Drivers’ Club (01295 738886) 197,500 127,500 2996 80 500,000 365,000 4398 92 1.35m 1.1m 6597 86 ▼ 5m 3m 4398 98 700,000 475,000 7982 101 42,500 22,500 3669 91 70,000 35,000 3669 91 45,000 25,000 4257 96 75,000 38,000 4257 96 14,000 6000 4566 100 ▼ 45,000 27,500 4566 100 16,500 8000 4566 106 ▼ 62,500 36,000 4566 106 ▼ 500,000 400,000 4566 115 ▼ 15,000 7000 4887 101 175,000 135,000 4887 115 135,000 100,000 4887 114 265,000 195,000 4887 114 105,000 75,000 6230 115 125,000 80,000 6230 115 67,500 48,500 6230 120 19,000 9000 6230 116 85,000 50,000 6230 120 110,000 65,000 6230 116 75,000 50,000 6230 118 6500 2500 6750 120 6000 2250 6750 120 19,000 9000 6750 120 27,000 16.500 6750 118 4750 2000 6750 119 5000 2250 6750 135 ▼ 5600 2200 6750 135 10,000 5000 6750 152 40,000 24,000 6750 140 22,500 17,000 6750 151 36,000 29,000 6750 175 8000 4500 6750 140 36,500 27,000 6750 150 Berkeley Enthusiasts’ Club (berkeleycarclub.com) 6250 3650 2400 328 65 7000 3750 2500 492 80 7500 4250 2750 692 90 6000 3600 2000 328 60 BORGWARD Isabella TS Isabella coupé 54-61 12,500 55-61 27,500 BRISTOL 400 401, 403 Arnolt-Bristol 404 405 saloon 405 con 406 407, 408, 409 410, 411 412, Beaufighter 603, Britannia,Brig. Bristol Owners’ Club (boc.net); Owners & Drivers Assn (bristoloda.org) 47-50 72,000 49,000 28,500 17,500 1971 92 49-55 60,000 45,000 25,000 16,000 1971 94 54-61 260,000 220,000 165,000 110,000 1971 109 54-55 72,500 52,500 35,000 22,000 1971 110 54-56 52,000 35,000 20,000 10,000 1971 94 55 150,000 110,000 60,000 40,000 1971 100 58-61 45,000 31,000 16,000 9000 2216 104 62-69 47,500 34,000 17,500 9250 5130 122 69-76 56,000 39,000 20,000 10,500 5900 140 76-93 38,500 28,000 16,500 10,000 5900 150 ▼ 76-94 37,500 26,500 16,000 8250 5900 150 BUGATTI Type 57 Galibier sal Type 57 Ventoux 2dr Type 57 Stelvio con Type 57 Atalante cpe Type 57S Atalante cpe EB110 Veyron 34-39 34-39 34-39 35-38 36-38 92-95 05-11 CATERHAM Seven (sp) 73-91 20,000 14,000 325,000 600,000 640,000 1.4m 7m 1m 1.25m 8000 19,500 250,000 400,000 450,000 1.1m 6.25m 800,000 1m Bond Owners’ Club (bondownersclub.co.uk) 2250 1000 250 55 1850 850 1147 83 1750 850 1998 100 5000 2500 701 75 Borgward Drivers’ Club (07788 973884) 4250 2000 1493 93 12,000 7000 1493 98 Bugatti Owners’ Club (01242 673136) 185,000 130,000 3257 95 275,000 175,000 3257 95 300,000 220,000 3257 96 850,000 600,000 3257 100 5.5m 5m 3257 115 600,000 475,000 3499 209 ▲ 900,000 795,000 7993 253 8000 Lotus Seven Club (lotus7.club) 5250 1599 110 Top speed 48-65 6250 4750 63-70 6600 4500 67-70 7750 5400 70-74 14,500 10,000 Price change BOND Minicar MkA-G GT2+2/4S Equipe GT Bug BMW Car Club (01970 267989) 350,000 1971 100 60,000 3168 115 1.3m 3168 135 5750 298 60 10,000 585 65 2400 1990 105 2500 1573 100 2650 1990 112 ▲ 6500 1990 110 6250 1990 120 32,000 1990 130 5000 2788 120 2000 2494 110 12,500 2985 130 45,000 3003 134 100,000 3153 138 2000 3210 132 3500 3453 140 ▲ 7500 3453 158 180,000 3453 162 1650 1990 120 2200 2315 126 2000 2495 135 1750 2788 133 5250 3453 139 1650 2788 146 3000 3453 152 12,000 3420 152 1200 3982 149 4750 3535 155 5750 4941 155 1000 1990 123 1650 2494 130 6500 2494 133 ▲ 1750 2494 130 ▲ 25,000 2302 143 32,500 2302 143 11,000 2494 140 2500 4941 155 20,000 5576 155 5100 3201 155 550 1895 127 975 2793 139 6400 3201 155 8500 3201 159 85,000 4941 155 5750 3246 155 20,000 3246 155 10,000 3246 155 CHEVROLET Corvette roadster Corvette roadster Corvette Corvette Corvette Corvette S-W coupe Corvette Sting Ray Camaro cpe/conv. Corvette Stingray Corvette Stingray Corvette Corvette C4 Corvette ZR1 Corvette C5 53 54 55-57 58-60 61-62 63 63-67 67-69 68-72 73-77 77-82 84-96 90-95 96-04 160,000 77,500 72,500 82,500 72,500 95,000 70,000 27,500 35,000 27,500 17,500 12,000 19,000 18,000 CISITALIA 202 coupe (cisitalia.net) 47-54 300,000 175,000 130,000 82,500 1089 105 CITROËN Light 15/Big 15 2CV ‘ripple’ 2CV Ami Dyane DS19/ID19 Safari estate DS décapotable DS20/21/23 DS21/23 EFi SM V6 GS/GSA CX CX Prestige CX GTi/GTi turbo BX GTI 16V 35-55 48-60 60-90 61-78 68-85 56-68 59-75 63-78 68-75 70-75 70-75 70-85 74-89 77-89 77-89 87-93 21,000 15,000 10,000 6650 5750 23,500 27,500 187,500 29,000 38,000 57,500 4500 8500 11,000 14,000 7000 CLAN Crusader coupé 71-74 6000 4000 Clan Owners’ Club (01295 255539) 2000 1000 875 102 DAF 55 Marathon coupé 68-72 3500 2250 DAF Owners’ Club (dafownersclub.co.uk) 950 500 1108 83 DAIMLER DB18/Consort DB18 con DB18 Sports Special Conquest/Century Conquest Rdstr/DHC 104/Majestic Majestic Major SP250 sports 2½-litre/V8 250 Sovereign (420) Sovereign (XJ6) SI Double-Six SI 4.2 coupé Double-Six Coupé Sovereign SII/III Double-Six SII/III 39-53 39-50 49-53 53-58 54-57 56-62 60-68 59-64 62-69 66-69 69-73 72-73 75-78 75-77 73-86 74-86 10,000 26,000 42,500 8750 36,000 9000 22,500 43,500 21,000 16,950 16,250 16,250 24,500 26,500 9000 13,500 Daimler & Lanchester Owners’ Club (01787 247436) 7000 3500 1650 2522 76 18,500 9500 5000 2522 76 30,000 16,500 8250 2522 80 6000 2500 1250 2433 90 25,000 15,000 9000 2433 100 6500 3000 1500 3794 100 15,000 7000 3000 4561 119 27,500 19,000 12,000 2548 123 15,000 6000 2400 2548 112 12,000 5500 2400 4235 117 10,750 4250 1350 4235 120 10,750 4750 2000 5343 140 14,500 7250 4250 4235 120 17,500 9250 4650 5343 140 6000 1850 750 4235 126 9000 3950 1500 5343 150 DATSUN 240Z 260Z 280ZX/2+2 240K Skyline 69-74 74-79 78-83 73-81 36,000 27,500 15,000 19,500 27,500 15,000 20,000 10,500 10,0000 5000 14,250 7500 DELAHAYE 135M/MS Coupé 135M/MS Cabriolet 135M/MS Coupé 135M/MS Cabriolet 235 Chapron coupé 35-39 35-39 46-53 46-53 51-54 350,000 500,000 145,000 250,000 110,000 240,000 320,000 100,000 175,000 75,000 The Delahaye Club (clubdelahaye.com) 100,000 45,000 3557 n/a 160,000 90,000 3557 n/a 60,000 32,500 3557 n/a 115,000 65,000 3557 n/a 45,000 25,000 3557 120 DELLOW Mark I-V sport-trials 49-57 20,000 15,000 Dellow Register (dellowregister.co.uk) 9000 4000 1172 65 cc 440,000 85,000 1.5m 9000 16,000 5000 5500 6000 13,500 13,000 50,000 9750 4250 20,000 67,500 160,000 5000 8500 16,000 240,000 4000 5000 4500 3850 11,500 3600 6250 20,000 2400 9500 10,000 2500 4000 12,000 4750 35,000 48,000 18,000 5250 29,500 8750 1300 1900 9250 15,000 110,000 10,000 30,000 12,250 Rough 550,000 130,000 1.75m 14,000 22,000 11,000 12,500 14,500 26,500 26,000 80,000 16,500 9250 36,500 110,000 235,000 11,000 17,500 30,000 300,000 9000 10,500 10,000 7750 20,000 7500 13,500 35,000 5000 18,500 19,500 5750 9000 20,000 10,000 50,000 72,000 32,500 13,000 38,500 14,000 2500 4000 15,000 22,500 135,000 20,000 50,000 15,000 Good 700,000 175,000 2.1m 20,000 29,500 15,000 17,500 19,000 37,500 36,000 105,000 24,000 14,000 55,000 145,000 325,000 18,500 26,000 44,000 375,000 11,500 15,000 14,000 11,000 27,500 10,750 19,500 50,000 7000 27,500 28,500 8500 13,000 26,000 14,000 65,000 89,000 43,500 20,000 47,500 20,000 3650 5750 20,000 32,500 175,000 30,000 70,000 17,250 NE DENOTES NEW ENTRY TO PRICE GUIDE Mint 36-39 56-59 56-59 55-65 58-59 66-72 66-77 68-75 71-74 71-75 73-74 69-71 69-77 71-75 72-75 72-75 76-87 78-89 85-89 79-80 75-83 77-82 81-85 75-81 80-81 81-87 85-87 85-88 88-95 88-95 98-04 82-91 85-91 89-91 86-93 86-90 88 86-91 90-99 92-96 92-99 96-01 96-02 98-02 98-02 00-03 01-06 03-05 06-08 Concours/ Dealer AUTOBIANCHI Bianchina Trans/Cab 57-68 25,000 19,500 BMW 328 503 coupé 507 Isetta 250/300 600 2000/ti lux/tii 1600/1602/1502 2002/Touring 2002 cabrio/targa 2002tii 2002 turbo 2800CS/CSA 2500/2800/3.0/3.3 3.0CS/CSi 3.0CSL 3.0CSL ‘Batmobile’ 633/628CSi 635CSi M635CSi M1 3 Series (E21) 323i (E21) 320/325 Baur cabrio 5 Series (E12) M535i (E12) 5 Series (E28) M535i (E28) M5 (E28) 5 Series (E34) M5 (E34) M5 (E39) 3 Series sal (E30) 325i sal (E30) 325i Sport (E30) 3 Series (E30) conv M3 (E30) M3 Evo II (E30) Z1 840/850 coupé 850CSi M3/Evo (E36) Z3 4-cyl Z3 6-cyl Z3M Roadster Z3M Coupe Z8 M3 (E46) M3 CSL (E46) Z4M NE Private sale Year AUSTIN-HEALEY Austin-Healey Club (austin-healeyclub.com) 100 BN1/2 53-56 65,000 45,000 30,000 20,000 2660 103 100M 55-56 120,000 95,000 70.000 42,500 2660 109 100S 55 600,000 525,000 450,000 375,000 2660 119 100/6 BN4/6 56-59 57,000 39,000 24,000 15,000 2639 105 3000 MkI 59-61 52,500 38,500 25,000 13,500 2912 112 3000 MkII 61-64 62,000 42,000 30,000 18,000 2912 117 3000 MkIII 64-68 65,000 44,400 28,500 18,000 2912 121 ‘Frogeye’ Sprite MkI 58-61 20,500 14,500 7250 4000 948 82 Sprite MkII 61-64 13,250 9000 4250 1900 1098 86 Sprite MkIII 64-66 12,500 8000 3750 1700 1098 90 Sprite MkIV 66-71 12,000 8000 3500 1350 1275 96 Top speed 102 85 96 106 96 101 87 104 71 71 ▼ 79 82 90 95 82 96 96 70 89 82 Price change 2912 1098 1275 2912 1798 1748 1275 1748 848 848 998 998 998 1071 970 1275 1275 998 1275 1098 cc 1400 700 1300 1600 900 700 550 850 12,000 3400 1950 1400 6000 14,000 14,500 14,000 9500 4250 2650 1250 Rough Top speed 3400 1400 2750 3000 2000 1500 1150 1750 15,000 6000 4250 3500 11,000 20,000 21,000 19,500 14,000 7500 6250 2500 Good cc 7500 3250 6500 6500 4500 3500 2400 3400 22,500 11,500 8500 6250 19,500 31,000 32,000 31,000 22,500 15,000 13,500 5000 Mint Rough 11,000 5000 9250 9750 7500 5000 3400 4500 27,500 16,000 12,000 8500 27,500 40,000 42,500 40,000 32,000 24,000 20,000 7500 Concours/ Dealer Good 59-68 63-74 69-74 68-71 64-75 69-79 73-82 73-75 59 60-67 67-69 70-90 61-69 63-64 64-65 64-67 67-71 64-85 69-80 70-80 Private sale DENOTES NEW ENTRY TO PRICE GUIDE Year Mint Price change Concours/ Dealer A99/A110 1100/1300 1300GT 3-litre 1800/2200 Maxi Allegro 1100-1500 Allegro 1750/Sport TC Seven/Mini MkI Mini MkI Mini MkII Mini MkIII-V Mini Cooper 997/998 Mini Cooper 1071S Mini Cooper 970S Mini Cooper 1275S Mini C’r 1275S MkII/III Mini Moke Mini 1275GT Mini Clubman Private sale Year NE DENOTES NEW ENTRY TO PRICE GUIDE Classic Corvette Club UK (corvetteclub.org.uk) 120,000 80,000 60,000 3800 107 55,000 36,000 26,500 3800 107 50,000 32,500 22,500 4343 119 62,500 35,000 25,000 4639 130 55,000 32,000 22,000 5359 132 72,500 40,000 30,000 5359 142 50,000 27,500 20,000 5359 142 21,000 10,000 5000 5735 130 26,000 15,000 6500 6997 151 17,500 9000 4500 5737 125 12,500 7250 4000 5733 125 9000 4500 2200 5733 145 15,500 12,500 9500 5727 180 14,500 12,000 10,000 5666 175 Citroën Car Club (citroencarclub.org.uk) 14,500 7500 3500 1911 72 11,000 5500 2500 425 49 7000 2850 1250 602 71 4500 2000 1000 602 75 3750 1850 900 602 78 16,500 7500 2750 1911 88 18,500 8250 3000 1911 88 142,500 100,000 65,000 2175 100 20,000 9000 3500 2347 109 26,000 12,500 5500 2347 120 42,000 22,000 12,500 2670 135 3000 1500 700 1220 100 5500 2200 900 2165 115 7000 3000 1250 2347 116 10,000 4000 1750 2347 137 4850 2100 1000 1905 130 8500 6500 2250 4000 Z Club (zclub.net) 2393 125 2565 127 2753 111 2392 112 DELOREAN DMC-12 coupé DeLorean Owners’ Club UK (07915 673889, deloreans.co.uk) 81-82 50,000 40,000 24,000 15,000 2849 109 DE TOMASO Mangusta Pantera Deauville Longchamp 67-72 72-89 70-88 72-89 225,000 120,000 36,000 42,000 De Tomaso Drivers’ Club UK (detomasodc.co.uk) 175,000 140,000 110,000 4727 150 80,000 42,500 24,000 5763 160 26,000 15,000 7000 5763 150 34,000 16,500 8500 5763 150 Buying or selling? 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ELVA Courier sports/cpé MkIII/MkIV T-type 58-61 27,500 22,000 62-69 25,000 20,000 12,000 12,500 Elva Owners’ Club (01903 823710) 6750 1498 100 7000 1798 110 FACEL VEGA FV 4.5/4.8/5.4/5.8 HK500 Facel II Facellia/Facel III 54-59 59-61 62-64 60-64 160,000 162,500 230,000 70,000 120,000 125,000 175,000 48,500 Facel Vega Car Club (01621 818608) 82,500 42,500 5801 125 ▼ 99,000 45,000 6286 130 ▼ 135,000 75,000 6286 132 ▼ 30,000 16,500 1647 114 FAIRTHORPE Electron Minor TX-GT/S/SS coupé 57-73 67-73 5000 4500 3750 3250 Fairthorpe Sports Car Club (01895 256799) 2250 1250 948 80 1850 750 1998 112 3.2m 725,000 875,000 2.6m 1.175m 3m 600,000 4.25m 4.2m 325,000 7.25m 13m 6.5m 11.25m 950,000 250,000 50m 13.5m 1.1m 1.75m 1.45m 1.5m 2.25m 1.05m 2.4m 195,000 365,000 1.35m 395,000 300,000 350,000 150,000 450,000 500,000 2.1m 165,000 50,000 225,000 190,000 165,000 37,500 100,000 52,000 40,000 48,500 59,500 40,000 33,000 27,500 30,000 42,000 62,000 60,000 50,000 85,000 125,000 175,000 40,000 42,000 2.2m 1.9m 2.5m Ferrari Owners’ Club (01485 544500) 3m 2.7m 1995 125 550,000 400,000 1995 115 725,000 600,000 2562 120 2.3m 2m 4101 136 1.05m 995,000 2963 126 2.35m 2.1m 4962 165 425,000 300,000 2953 157 3.9m 3.5m 2953 155 3.9m n/a 2953 143 235,000 160,000 2953 145 6.5m 5.75m 2953 155 12m 11m 2953 149 6.2m 5.6m 2953 150 10m 9m 2953 155 750,000 590,000 2953 160 200,000 1520,00 2953 140 43m n/a 2953 158 11.75m n/a 2953 159 950,000 750,000 2953 150 1.6m 1.5m 3967 162 1.1m 4962 170 ▼ 1.25m 1.25m 1m 3286 150 2m 1.8m 3286 150 950,000 795,000 3286 150 2.1m 1.8m 3286 165 135,000 90,000 3967 150 285,000 240,000 3967 150 1.15m 875,000 3967 150 295,000 195,000 1987 145 200,000 125,000 2418 150 260,000 165,000 2418 150 95,000 60,000 4390 152 375,000 320,000 4390 155 415,000 315,000 4390 173 1.65m n/a 4390 170 125,000 100,000 4390 152 30,000 19,000 4390 150 185,000 150,000 4390 163 145,000 112,500 4942 163 135,000 107,500 4942 168 25,000 18,000 2926 156 ▼ 72,500 52,500 2926 154 35,000 24,000 2926 155 30,000 21,000 2926 155 35,000 23,000 2926 155 46,500 32,500 3195 163 26,000 16,500 4823 158 22,000 14,000 4942 158 16,500 9500 2926 143 19,000 12,000 2926 146 33,000 25,000 3405 170 49,000 36,500 3496 185 48,000 37,500 3496 183 43,500 36,500 3586 184 60,000 44,000 4942 181 90,000 62,500 4943 193 ▲ 135,000 95,000 4943 194 28,500 20,000 5474 184 28,500 22,000 5474 185 1.95m 1.75m 2855 190 1.4m 1.25m 2936 201 2.1m n/a 4698 202 3 48-50 48-51 51-52 51 53-55 56-59 56-59 57-59 57-59 58-62 58-62 60-63 60-63 59-62 60-62 60-63 62-64 64-66 62-64 60-64 64-67 64-66 64-66 64-66 66-68 64-67 66-68 66-68 68-69 69-73 72-74 67-71 68-70 68-74 72-73 70-72 72-76 75-76 76-81 81-85 73-80 75-77 77-80 80-82 82-85 85-88 76-89 76-89 81-94 84-94 89-94 94-99 95-99 99-05 84-90 91-94 94-96 92-98 98-03 84-87 88-92 95-97 3.5m 950,000 1m 2.95m 1.375m 3.9m 750,000 4.7m 4.5m 425,000 8.25m 14m 7.5m 12.5m 1.1m 320,000 58m 15.5m 1.35m 1.95m 1.65m 1.7m 2.5m 1.2m 2.75m 272,500 460,000 1.6m 485,000 390,000 475,000 185,000 550,000 625,000 2.4m 210,000 69,500 285,000 225,000 195,000 52,500 135,000 65,000 55,000 63,000 73,500 50,000 44,000 35,000 38,000 50,000 75,000 72,500 57,500 105,000 155,000 225,000 47,500 55,000 2.6m 2.25m 2.9m FORD 9500 8000 19,000 10,000 24,000 20,000 6000 9500 1750 8500 13,000 10,750 42,000 11,000 95,000 36,000 4500 14,000 4000 6000 6000 2750 5500 14,000 5000 4250 Fiat Motor Club (0208 372 4028) 2000 569 60 1400 633 66 6750 767 59 2000 499 61 10,000 1568 105 ▲ 10,000 2280 120 ▼ 1400 903 96 2400 903 96 400 1438 100 1250 1756 115 3500 1608 112 2000 1756 108 17,500 1756 118 2250 1995 104 47,500 2418 130 15,000 1987 122 ▼ 1100 3235 112 3600 3235 118 1000 1301 102 1200 1301 102 1400 1290 100 550 903 87 1100 999 83 2000 1995 117 600 1998 149 1000 1747 118 AVO OC (01527 542251); RS OC (0118 984 1583); Capri Club Intl (01386 860860); Sporting Escort OC (01359 231384); Mustang OC GB (mocgb.net) Prefect 40-53 8000 5500 2500 1250 1172 68 Pilot V8 47-51 19,000 12,000 6000 3000 3622 82 Anglia/Popular 103E 46-59 8000 5750 2500 1350 1172 61 Anglia 100E/Popular 53-62 6750 4750 2000 1100 1172 71 Prefect 107E 59-61 7000 5000 2500 1350 997 73 Anglia 105E 59-68 9000 6500 2950 1600 997 74 Anglia 123E 62-68 11,000 8000 3650 2000 1197 82 Consul MkI 50-56 10,000 7000 3000 1500 1508 73 Zephyr Six MkI 50-56 14,000 10,000 4500 2000 2262 82 Zephyr Zodiac 53-56 16,500 12,500 5500 2650 2262 84 Consul MkI con 52-56 16,500 12,500 6750 4000 1508 73 Zephyr MkI con 52-56 23,000 18,000 12,000 6750 2262 82 Consul MkII 56-62 10,000 7000 3000 1400 1703 79 Zephyr MkII 56-62 15,000 11,000 5000 2000 2553 88 Zodiac MkII 56-62 17,500 13,000 6250 2750 2553 88 Consul MkII con 56-62 14,000 9500 4750 2500 1703 78 Zephyr MkII con 56-62 20,000 15,000 9000 5500 2553 88 Zodiac MkII con 56-62 24,000 17,500 10,500 6250 2553 88 Zephyr MkIII 62-66 13,500 9500 3500 1500 2553 95 Zodiac MkIII 62-66 17,000 12,000 5750 2000 2553 100 Zephyr 4/6 MkIV 66-72 8500 6000 2600 1200 2994 100 Zodiac MkIV/Exec 66-72 9500 7000 3250 1400 2994 100 Consul Classic 61-63 11,500 8000 3750 1650 1498 79 Consul Capri 61-64 17,000 13,000 6000 2500 1340 84 Consul Capri GT 63-64 20,000 14,000 8000 3500 1340 95 Corsair/V4 64-70 9000 6250 2650 1250 1663 90 Corsair GT/2000E 64-70 10,000 7000 3250 1600 1996 100 GT40 64-68 5.4m 4.6m 3.3m 2.75m 4736 198 Mustang coupé 64-68 28,000 20,000 11,750 6250 4727 120 Mustang fastback 65-68 38,500 28,000 16,500 8500 4727 120 Mustang con 64-68 35,000 26,000 16,500 9000 4727 111 Mustang GT350 65-66 255,000 210,000 130,000 100,000 4727 133 Mustang GT500 67-70 155,000 125,000 85,000 62,500 6800 130 Cortina MkI 62-66 11,000 7500 3500 1600 1498 82 Cortina MkI GT 63-66 24,000 17,500 8000 3500 1498 91 Cortina MkII 66-70 10,500 7000 3400 1500 1599 87 Cortina MkII GT 66-70 14,000 9500 4250 1750 1599 98 Cortina 1600E 67-70 15,000 10,000 4650 2000 1599 98 Cortina MkIII 70-76 10,000 7000 3400 1500 1993 101 Cortina MkIII GT/GXL 71-76 11,500 8000 3950 1900 1993 104 Cortina MkIII 2000E 73-76 12,000 8500 4250 2000 1993 105 Cortina MkIV/V 76-82 11,000 7000 3000 1350 2293 110 Escort MkI 1.1/1.3 68-75 11,000 8000 4000 1750 1298 83 Escort Twin Cam 68-71 54,000 42,000 30,000 22,500 1558 113 Escort GT/Spt/1300E 68-75 19,000 13,500 7000 4000 1298 96 Escort Mexico 70-75 40,000 30,000 20,000 13,000 1599 99 Escort RS1600 70-75 67,500 50,000 37,500 27,500 1601 113 Escort RS2000 73-74 47,500 37,500 22,000 14,000 1993 108 Escort MkII sal 75-80 10,000 6500 2950 1250 1297 93 Escort MkII Ghia 75-80 12,000 8000 4000 2000 1599 97 Escort MkII Sport 75-80 20,000 15,000 7500 3750 1599 101 Escort MkII Mexico 76-78 40,000 30,000 20,000 12,500 1593 105 Escort MkII RS1800 75-77 80,000 65,000 42,500 30,000 1835 112 45,000 12,500 12,000 36,500 10,000 9500 28,500 24,000 13,000 21,000 24,000 28,000 52,000 55,000 15,000 25,500 24,000 26,500 18,000 18,500 10,000 20,000 14,000 8000 18,500 160,000 11,000 10,500 65,000 95,000 32,500 9000 13,500 55,000 21,000 30,000 9000 8250 26,500 7500 7000 20,000 17,500 9250 14,250 15,000 18,500 42,000 45,000 10,000 18,000 16,500 20,000 12,000 12,500 7000 14,000 9500 5750 12,850 130,000 7250 6750 44,000 72,000 25,000 6000 10,000 45,000 17,500 16,000 4250 3850 13,500 3000 3000 10,000 8250 4500 7500 7750 8500 27,500 26,500 3000 7500 7000 9250 5000 5250 3000 6500 4000 2750 6500 100,000 3200 2850 22,500 49,500 12,500 2750 7500 32,500 12,000 8000 1750 1460 7000 1400 1250 4750 3750 2000 3750 4000 3850 18,500 17,500 1300 3250 2950 4750 2000 2200 1400 3000 1800 1300 3500 75,000 1500 1400 13,500 30,000 5500 1400 5500 24,000 6750 1993 1597 1597 1597 1597 1597 1597 1597 1599 1996 2994 2994 2637 3091 1993 2994 2792 2792 2994 2994 2792 1599 1597 1596 1596 1803 2792 2792 1993 1993 1993 1998 1998 1993 1988 109 113 116 117 116 107 122 124 95 107 113 113 124 125 110 116 129 129 113 111 117 106 109 116 129 140 125 127 145 149 154 131 130 144 144 Price change Year Top speed Price change cc Rough Good Mint Concours/ Dealer 13,000 11,500 27,000 16,000 29,500 28,000 9000 15,000 2650 12,000 18,500 15,500 57,500 16,000 125,000 50,000 6250 20,000 6250 9750 10,000 4000 8000 19,500 7500 6750 Top speed 16,000 7974 165 4500 3650 12,500 4000 16,000 16,000 2750 4500 850 3500 7750 5750 32,000 6250 65,000 22,500 2250 7500 2000 2500 3000 1250 2500 6000 1750 2200 48-55 55-70 55-60 57-75 59-66 61-68 65-73 65-73 66-73 66-75 66-74 75-81 72-75 82-85 67-73 67-73 69-76 72-76 81-83 75-78 77-89 80-96 84-92 84-88 94-00 95-02 cc 21,000 FIAT 500 Topolino 600/600D 600 Multipla (MPV) 500/D/F/L/R 1500S/1600S Osca sp 2300S 850 Coupé 850 Spider 124/Special 1.2/1.4 124 Coupé 124 Spider 1.4/1.6 124 Spider 1.8/2.0 124 Spider Abarth Pininfarina Spider Dino Spider 2.0/2.4 Dino Coupé 2.0/2.4 130 saloon 2.8/3.2 130 Coupé 127 Sport 1300 128 3P coupé X1/9 Panda Panda 4x4 Strada Abarth 130TC Coupé/Turbo Barchetta NE Escort MkII RS2000 75-80 Escort XR3 81-83 Escort XR3i 83-86 Escort RS1600i 83-84 Escort XR3i (MkIV) 86-90 Escort XR3i cabrio 84-90 Escort RS Turbo S1 84-85 Escort RS Turbo S2 85-90 Capri MkI 1.3/1.6 69-74 Capri GT 1.6/2.0 69-74 Capri 3000GT 70-74 Capri 3000E/GXL 70-74 Capri RS2600 71-74 Capri RS3100 73-74 Capri II/lll 1.6/2.0 74-82 Capri II/III 3.0 74-82 Capri III 2.8i 81-87 Capri 280 Brooklands 87-88 Consul/Granada 3.0 72-77 Granada 3.0 Coupé 74-77 Granada MkII 77-85 Fiesta XR2 MkI 81-83 Fiesta XR2 MkII 84-89 Fiesta XR2i MkIII 89-94 Fiesta RS Turbo 90-92 RS200 85-86 Sierra XR4i 83-85 Sierra XR4x4 85-90 Sierra RS Cosworth 85-87 Sierra RS500 87 Sapphire RS Cos. 88-92 Escort RS2000 91-96 Escort RS2000 4x4 94-96 Escort RS Cosworth 92-96 Focus RS MkI 02-03 Rough 92-02 35,000 28,000 52,500 42,500 5474 199 1.75m n/a 5998 220 Private sale Good DODGE Viper RT 10/GTS FERRARI 166MM Barchetta 166 Inter 212 Inter 340 America 250 Europa SI/SII 410 Superamerica 250GT Boano/Ellena 250GT Cabrio S1 250GT Berlinetta TdF 250GT PF coupé 250 Cal’ Spider lwb 250 Cal’ Spider swb 250GT SWB (steel) 250GT SWB (alloy) 250GT Cabrio Se2 250GTE 2+2 250GTO 250LM 250GT Lusso 400 Superamerica 500 Superfast 275GTB (steel) 275GTB (alloy) 275GTS 275GTB/4 (4-cam) 330GT 2+2 330GTC 330GTS Dino 206GT Dino 246GT Dino 246GTS 365GT 2+2 365GTC 365GTB/4 Daytona 365GTS/4 Spider 365GTC/4 2+2 365GT4 2+2 365GT4 BB 512BB 512BBi 308GT4 2+2 308GTB (grp) 308GTB/GTS 308GTBi/GTSi 308GTB qv/GTS qv 328GTB/GTS 400/400i/412i man. 400/400i/412i auto Mondial Mondial cabrio 348/Spider F355 GTB F355 GTS/Spider 360 Modena Testarossa 512 TR F512 M 456GT 456MGT 288GTO F40 F50 DKW Owners’ Club (dkw.org.uk) 3500 896 76 3750 980 82 2000 980 80 900 1175 84 550/575M Maranello 96-06 90,000 72,500 Enzo 02-04 2.6m 2.25m DENOTES NEW ENTRY TO PRICE GUIDE Mint 7000 6500 3750 1750 Private sale Concours/ Dealer DKW Sonderklasse/3=6 53-59 19,000 14,000 1000SP/A Union sp 58-65 17,500 12,500 1000/1000S sal/cpé 58-63 11,000 7500 F102 saloon 64-66 4750 3250 NE DENOTES NEW ENTRY TO PRICE GUIDE Year Top speed Price change cc Rough Good Private sale Mint Concours/ Dealer Year NE DENOTES NEW ENTRY TO PRICE GUIDE ▼ ▲ ▲ ▲ FRAZER NASH Le Mans Replica VSCC Frazer Nash section (01285 720483) 48-52 600,000 500,000 395,000 325,000 1971 115 GILBERN Genie Invader I/II Invader III 66-70 13,500 9500 69-72 14,000 10,000 72-74 16,000 11,500 GINETTA G4 1.0/1.5 G15 875/998 G21 1800/1800S G33 61-68 68-74 71-78 91-93 GORDON-KEEBLE GK1/IT 64-67 97,500 72,500 HEALEY Silverstone sports Abbott con Tickford saloon Association of Healey Owners (01425 480243) 49-50 150,000 125,000 97,500 67,500 2443 107 50-54 40,000 30,000 20,000 12,000 2443 100 ▼ 50-54 33,000 22,000 12,500 7500 2443 102 ▼ HEINKEL/TROJAN Cabin Cruiser/200 56-65 22,000 15,000 HILLMAN Minx Ph. I-II Minx Ph. I-II con Minx Ph. III-VIIIA Minx Ph. III-VIIIA con Californian Minx SI-IIIC Minx SI-IIIC con Minx SV-VI Husky II/III estate Super Minx SI-IV Super Minx con Imp Imp Californian Husky (Imp) Hunter GLS Avenger GT/GLS Avenger Tiger 39-48 39-48 48-56 48-56 53-56 56-63 56-62 63-67 58-66 61-66 62-64 63-76 67-70 66-70 72-76 71-81 72-73 Owners’ Club (01522 823778); Imp Club (01789 414789) 6750 5250 2200 1000 1185 65 11,500 8500 4000 2000 1185 65 6000 4000 1750 800 1390 73 10,500 7250 3500 1600 1390 73 8750 5750 2950 1500 1390 74 6250 4250 2000 900 1592 80 10,000 7000 3500 1650 1494 80 4250 2750 1250 625 1725 81 6600 4500 2000 1000 1390 74 5500 3500 1650 800 1725 86 8500 6000 2900 1500 1592 84 5750 4000 1850 900 875 81 6400 4500 2200 1000 875 81 6000 4200 1900 1000 875 80 20,000 14,000 6500 3000 1725 110 6000 4000 1750 800 1598 98 16,500 11,000 6000 3000 1599 100 HONDA S800 coupé S800 sports CRX 1.6i/V-TEC NSX 3.0 Beat 66-70 66-70 86-91 90-02 91-95 25,000 18,500 30,000 21,000 8500 6750 72,500 55,000 4750 3000 Gilbern Owners’ Club (01926 512136) 4750 2200 2994 120 5000 2500 2994 116 5500 2850 2994 120 Ginetta Owners’ Club (01724 352801, membership@ginetta.org) 22,000 17,000 12,000 8000 1498 115 13,000 8000 4000 1850 998 108 14,000 10,000 4750 2000 1725 120 15,000 11,000 7000 5000 3946 137 Gordon-Keeble Owners’ Club (0121 459 9587) 49,500 30,000 5395 135 9250 Heinkel/Trojan Club (01527 501318) 5750 198 60 Honda S800 Sports Car Club (0121 444 2988) 12,000 6750 791 96 15,000 9750 791 96 2750 1250 1595 125 ▲ 37,500 26,500 2977 158 1500 900 656 84
49-57 57-68 45-48 45-56 49-52 58-67 64-67 63-67 67-76 Post-Vintage Humber Car Club (01604 404363) 7500 5500 2500 1200 2267 80 7500 5000 2350 1150 2267 86 9500 7500 3000 1400 2731 72 10,000 7000 3250 1500 4139 91 22,000 15,000 10,000 5000 4086 80 10,000 7000 2750 1250 2651 106 11,000 8000 3250 1400 2965 102 8750 6000 2500 1000 1725 90 7000 4500 1750 750 1725 98 62-70 63-74 69-74 70-74 Iso Bizzarrini Club (020 8891 6663) 40,000 30,000 5359 140 195,000 130,000 5359 161 225,000 155,000 6998 170 15,000 7500 5736 145 ISO Rivolta Grifo Grifo 7-litre Lele JAGUAR SS100 2½-litre SS100 3½-litre 1½-litre 2½-litre 3½-litre MkV 2½-litre con MkV 3½-litre con XK120 alloy rdstr XK120 roadster XK120 dhc XK120 fhc C-type XK140 roadster XK140 fhc XK140 dhc D-type XK150 roadster XK150 fhc XK150 dhc XK150S 3.4 roadster XK150S 3.4 fhc XK150S 3.4 dhc XK150S 3.8 roadster XK150S 3.8 fhc XK150S 3.8 dhc MkVII-MkIX MkX/420G Mk1 2.4/Mk2 2.4 Mk1 3.4 Mk2 3.4 Mk2 3.8 S-type sal 240 340 420 E-type 3.8 rdstr (ff) E-type 3.8 cpé (ff) E-type 3.8 roadster E-type 3.8 coupé E-type 4.2 S1 rdstr E-type 4.2 S1 coupé E-type S1 2+2 E-type S1½/S2 rdstr E-type S1½/S2 fhc E-type S1½/S2 2+2 E-type V12 roadster E-type V12 fhc 2+2 XJ6 2.8 Series 1 XJ6 4.2 Series 1 XJ12 Series 1 XJ6 Series 2 XJ6 Series 3 XJ12 Series 2-3 XJ6 Coupé XJ12 Coupé XJR 3.6/4.0 sal XJ12 (XJ81) sal XJR X300 sal XJ12 X300 sal XJ-S manual XJ-S V12 auto 85,000 315,000 375,000 45,000 62,500 260,000 300,000 26,000 Car Club (01773 741784); Drivers’ Club (01582 419332); Enthusiasts’ Club (0117 969 8186); XK/E-type Club Club (01584 781588) 36-39 365,000 275,000 205,000 150,000 2663 94 38-39 450,000 350,000 250,000 190,000 3485 104 45-49 30,000 20,000 12,000 6750 1776 70 46-51 33,500 22,000 13,000 7250 2663 87 46-51 37,500 26,000 15,500 8750 3485 92 49-51 60,000 44,000 27,500 12,000 2663 87 49-51 72,500 50,000 35,000 19,000 3485 92 49-50 225,000 180,000 135,000 110,000 3442 132 50-54 114,000 79,000 52,000 33,000 3442 122 50-54 100,000 77,500 48,000 30,000 3442 122 51-54 85,000 61,500 38,000 25,000 3442 121 51-54 5m 4m 3.5m 3m 3442 144 54-57 118,000 79,000 50,000 32,000 3442 126 54-57 70,000 50,000 36,000 24,000 3442 125 54-57 110,000 77,500 49,000 32,000 3442 125 54-57 6.25m 5.5m 4.3m 3.9m 3442 160 58-60 109,000 79,000 45,000 27,500 3781 130 57-61 70,000 50,000 33,000 20,000 3781 128 57-61 100,000 70,000 39,000 26,000 3781 127 58-60 140,000 100,000 75,000 55,000 3442 130 58-60 90,000 69,000 49,000 37,500 3442 129 58-60 122,000 90,000 67,500 48,000 3442 130 59-60 188,000 155,000 124,000 87,500 3781 136 59-60 102,500 80,000 57,500 45,000 3781 132 59-60 160,000 125,000 95,000 70,000 3781 130 51-61 33,000 22,500 11,000 5000 3442 105 61-70 21,500 15,500 7250 3000 4235 120 55-67 26,000 18,000 7500 3250 2483 96 57-59 41,500 27,500 15,000 9000 3442 120 59-67 35,000 25,000 10,000 4000 3442 114 59-67 50,000 30,000 14,000 5000 3781 121 63-68 23,000 16,000 7750 3250 3781 121 67-68 22,000 15,000 6750 2650 2483 105 ▼ 67-68 27,500 20,000 9000 4000 3442 123 66-68 16,000 11,500 5000 2400 4235 123 61-62 155,000 105,000 82,500 60,000 3781 145 61-62 120,000 97,500 75,000 50,000 3781 145 62-64 140,000 95,000 70,000 47,500 3781 145 61-64 110,000 80,000 53,500 33,000 3781 145 ▼ 64-67 132,500 92,500 67,500 45,000 4235 145 64-67 100,000 70,000 48,500 30,000 4235 145 66-67 60,000 45,000 22,000 11,000 4235 136 67-70 92,500 72,500 44,000 26,500 4235 145 67-70 72,500 50,000 32,500 18,500 4235 145 ▼ 67-70 50,000 36,500 18,500 10,000 4235 136 ▼ 71-75 85,000 62,500 35,000 22,500 5343 150 71-74 55,000 40,000 22,500 10,500 5343 150 68-73 10,000 6750 2500 1000 2791 117 68-73 15,500 10,000 3750 1250 4235 124 72-73 16,000 10,500 4500 2000 5343 140 73-79 12,000 7500 3000 1000 3442 117 79-86 10,000 6000 2500 950 4235 125 75-93 13,000 8750 3750 1500 5343 146 75-78 24,000 14,000 7000 4200 4235 120 75-78 26,000 17,500 9000 4500 5343 143 88-94 11,000 7000 3500 1600 3980 142 93-94 10,000 6500 2850 1350 5994 155 94-97 12,000 8000 2850 1200 3980 155 94-97 8500 6250 3000 1500 5994 155 75-80 27,500 20,000 10,000 6000 5343 154 75-91 12,500 7750 3250 900 5343 150 8000 2750 1000 3590 141 4000 1750 3590 134 5000 2000 5343 150 5250 2400 5343 150 5000 2200 5994 161 5500 2500 5994 160 9000 3750 5993 158 4000 1650 3980 138 6750 3600 3980 138 215,000 200,000 3498 212 2500 1500 3996 155 3700 2250 3996 155 2000 1000 3996 155 3600 2000 3996 157 3000 1000 3960 107 JENSEN 541/R/S C-V8 Interceptor MkI Interceptor II-III FF Interceptor SP Interceptor con Jensen-Healey/GT 54-63 62-65 67-69 70-75 67-71 71-73 74-76 72-76 Jensen Owners’ Club (01625 525699); Jensen Club (01296 614072) 55,000 40,000 22,500 13,000 3993 123 55,000 40,000 20,000 11,000 6276 143 60,000 40,000 18,500 8500 6276 140 51,750 33,500 15,000 7500 6276 140 120,000 82,500 60,000 40,000 7212 141 55,000 36,500 16,500 8000 7212 144 70,000 52,500 30,000 16,000 7212 140 15,000 10,500 5000 2000 1973 120 JOWETT Javelin Jupiter Jowett Car Club (01245 256944); Jupiter Owners’ Auto Club (01394 385709) 47-54 11,000 7500 3600 1750 1486 77 50-54 30,000 23,000 16,000 9000 1486 85 LAGONDA 2.6/2.9 2.6/2.9 con Rapide Saloon SI-III Saloon SIV 48-57 49-57 61-64 76-87 87-90 56,500 87,500 137,500 67,000 70,000 37,500 65,000 100,000 42,500 47,500 LAMBORGHINI 350GT/400GT Inter 400GT Miura P400 Miura 400S Miura SV Islero Jarama Espada I Espada II/III Urraco P250 Urraco P300 Jalpa C’tach LP400‘Peri’ Countach LP400 C’tach LP400S Countach 5000 Countach 25th Anni Diablo Diablo VT 64-67 67-68 66-69 69-71 71-75 68-70 70-78 68-70 71-78 73-74 75-76 82-86 74-76 76-78 78-82 82-90 89-90 91-01 93-01 510,000 325,000 1.3m 1.5m 2.5m 235,000 130,000 145,000 110,000 75,000 87,500 75,000 950,000 450,000 400,000 350,000 225,000 160,000 175,000 Lamborghini Owners’ Club UK (lamborghiniclubuk.com) 430,000 340,000 250,000 3497 147 270,000 225,000 175,000 3929 150 1.1m 825,000 600,000 3929 170 1.25m 900,000 675,000 3929 172 2.2m 1.8m n/a 3929 175 175,000 135,000 105,000 3929 160 90,000 60,000 40,000 3929 162 110,000 65,000 37,500 3929 154 82,500 54,000 30,000 3929 154 52,500 30,000 20,000 2463 148 62,500 35,000 22,500 2997 158 50,000 30,000 22,000 3485 153 765,000 630,000 450,000 3929 192 350,000 250,000 175,000 3929 192 300,000 200,000 140,000 3929 164 295,000 200,000 140,000 5167 179 195,000 152,500 120,000 5167 179 130,000 95,000 70,000 5707 202 150,000 105,000 82,500 5707 200 LANCHESTER Ten (LD10) 46-51 7500 Daimler & Lanchester Owners’ Club (07000 356285) 5000 2400 1200 1287 69 LANCIA Aprilia saloon Appia saloon Aurelia B10/21/22 Aurelia B20GT Aurelia B24 Spider Aurelia B24 conv Flaminia saloon Flaminia coupé Flaminia GT/GTL/3C Flaminia convertible Flaminia Sport Zag Flavia saloon Flavia coupé 1.5/1.8 Flavia Sport Zagato Flavia 2000 saloon Flavia 2000 coupé Fulvia Berlina Fulvia coupé Fulvia Sport Zagato Fulvia HF SI/SII Stratos Beta sal 37-49 53-63 50-55 53-58 55-56 57-58 57-70 59-67 59-67 59-67 59-67 61-70 62-68 63-67 70-74 69-73 63-73 65-76 68-72 68-72 72-74 72-81 26,500 15,000 28,500 137,500 800,000 275,000 10,000 475,00 75,000 145,000 320,000 12,000 25,000 59,000 13,500 17,000 6750 20,000 40,000 50,000 510,000 6500 20,000 10,000 22,500 100,000 650,000 210,000 7000 34,000 60,000 100,000 230,000 7750 17,500 45,000 8500 12,000 4000 14,500 30,000 35,000 420,000 4250 20,000 30,000 60,000 26,500 32,000 Lagonda Club (01252 845451) 9500 2922 100 ▼ 18,000 2922 100 37,500 3995 135 ▼ 18,000 5340 140 22,000 5340 140 Lancia Motor Club (lanciamotorclub.co.uk) 11,000 6000 1486 80 5250 2600 1089 80 ▼ 12,500 6500 1754 90 70,000 50,000 2451 113 550,000 500,000 2451 115 165,000 125,000 2451 108 3750 1750 2458 100 20,000 13,000 2775 112 46,000 27,500 2775 115 70,000 47,500 2775 110 155,000 105,000 2775 130 3250 1500 1488 105 8000 4000 1800 112 32,000 18,000 1800 120 4000 1600 1991 110 5750 2650 1991 115 1750 800 1216 100 6400 2750 1298 96 16,500 9000 1298 109 17,500 11,500 1584 115 325,000 240,000 2418 130 1750 650 1995 118 Top speed Price change 7500 10,000 11,000 8250 12,000 25,000 5000 9000 450,000 300,000 12,000 33,500 65,000 85,000 16,500 5000 7000 7750 5750 8000 17,500 3250 6000 375,000 250,000 8000 24,000 50,000 65,000 12,000 LAND ROVER Series I 80in Series I SII/IIA 2.2/2.6 88in SII/IIA 2.2/2.6 109in SIII 2.2/2.6/3.5 SIII Stage 1 V8 Defender Defender V8 Defender Tdi Defender Td5 Range Rover 2dr Range Rover Range Rover Range Rover 3.9SE Range Rover 4.2LSE 48-53 53-58 58-71 58-71 71-85 79-83 84-90 85-90 90-98 98-07 70-72 73-78 78-89 89-96 92-95 Series I Club (01363 82666); SII Club, PO Box 251, Barnsley S70 5YN 43,000 27,500 14,000 5750 1595 60 32,500 18,500 8000 2000 1997 60 21,000 11,000 4500 1500 2286 69 22,500 12,000 5000 1650 2625 75 17,500 10,000 3000 1200 2625 73 19,000 12,500 5500 1950 3528 86 14,500 10,000 3650 1750 2495 77 20,000 14,000 6000 2500 3528 86 19,000 12,000 5500 2000 2495 80 20,000 14,000 6000 3000 2495 85 42,000 32,000 18,500 10,000 3528 96 ▼ 34,000 24,500 14,000 6000 3528 99 ▼ 25,000 16,000 4500 750 3528 106 17,500 9000 4000 1000 3947 108 30,000 18,000 6500 1750 4192 110 LEA-FRANCIS 14hp/14/70 saloon 46-54 12,500 10,000 14hp/2½-litre Sports 50-53 47,500 32,500 cc 73-84 83-84 75-82 75-85 83-85 75-84 76-84 76-84 82-83 85-87 84-90 87-91 91-93 93-95 88-90 NE Rough Beta Coupé 1.6/2.0 Beta Coupé Volumex Beta Spider 1.6/2.0 Beta HPE Beta HPE Volumex Montecarlo Gamma Gamma Coupé Rally 037 Stradale Delta S4 Stradale Delta HF Turbo HF Integrale Integrale Evo 1 Integrale Evo 2 Thema 8.32 DENOTES NEW ENTRY TO PRICE GUIDE Good Top speed Price change 92-01 12,500 cc JEEP Cherokee Rough 6250 8250 10,000 12,500 10,500 12,000 18,000 9500 13,750 300,000 5250 7000 4750 7750 Good 9250 11,500 15,000 19,000 16,000 17,500 25,000 14,000 21,500 350,000 8000 10,000 7500 11,250 Mint HUMBER Hawk MkI-VI Hawk SI-IV Snipe Snipe/P’man MkI-IV Super Snipe dhc Super Snipe SI-VA Imperial Sceptre MkI-II Sceptre MkIII 83-89 83-87 85-88 88-91 91-96 91-96 88-93 91-96 92-96 89-92 96-02 96-02 97-03 98-02 NE Private sale Concours/ Dealer 38-56 60,000 46,500 32,000 22,500 1496 81 XJ-S 3.6 XJ-SC 3.6 cabrio XJ-SC V12 cabrio XJ-S V12 con XJS V12 XJS V12 con XJR-S XJS 4.0 XJS 4.0 conv XJ220 XK8 4.0 fhc XK8 4.0 con XJR (X308) sal XKR 4.0 fhc/con DENOTES NEW ENTRY TO PRICE GUIDE Year HRG 1100/1500 Mint 1787 143 1997 147 98-01 19,500 14,000 99-09 14,000 10,000 Concours/ Dealer 3500 3250 Integra Type R DC2 S2000 (AP1) Private sale Year cc Top speed Rough 7000 5500 Price change Good Private sale Mint Concours/ Dealer NE DENOTES NEW ENTRY TO PRICE GUIDE Year [ Price Guide ] 2100 900 1995 114 3250 1500 1995 126 3250 1500 1995 114 2900 1100 1995 116 3750 1750 1995 116 8000 3000 1995 120 ▼ 1500 650 2484 121 3000 1250 2484 121 325,000 265,000 1995 128 175,000 n/a 1759 140 3750 1750 1585 121 13,000 6750 1995 134 30,000 15,000 1995 135 40,000 20,000 1995 136 6000 3000 2927 140 Lea-Francis Owners’ Club (01865 407515) 5000 2000 1767 75 22,500 12,500 2496 100 LOTUS Club Lotus (01362 694459); Historic Lotus Register (01293 871541); Lotus DC (01926 859918); Lotus 7 Club (07000 572582); Lotus Cortina Register (01923 776219) Six 53-56 35,000 26,500 17,500 13,000 1172 93 Elite 57-63 85,000 67,500 50,000 32,500 1216 113 Seven SII 60-68 35,000 24,000 15,000 9000 1098 92 Super Seven 1.3-1.6 61-69 35,000 27,000 19,000 14,500 1498 103 Seven SIII 1.3/1.6 68-70 28,000 19,500 13,000 8250 1599 108 Seven S4 69-73 15,500 11,000 7000 3500 1599 108 Lotus Cortina MkI 63-64 62,500 48,500 32,500 25,000 1558 108 Lotus Cortina MkI 64-66 56,000 42,500 29,500 22,000 1558 107 Cortina II Lotus 67-70 33,000 26,000 16,500 10,000 1558 102 Elan S1 dhc 62-64 38,500 30,000 21,000 14,500 1558 119 Elan S2-S4 dhc 64-71 33,500 25,000 16,000 10,000 1558 120 Elan S3/S4 cpé 66-71 29,000 21,500 12,000 7250 1558 123 Elan Sprint con 71-73 47,500 37,500 24,000 15,000 1558 121 Elan Sprint Coupé 71-73 40,000 32,000 20,000 13,500 1558 121 Elan Plus 2 67-74 28,000 20,000 11,000 6000 1558 121 Europa S2 67-71 20,000 14,500 7500 4500 1470 110 Europa TC/Special 71-75 32,500 22,500 11,000 6000 1558 123 Elite, Eclat 74-82 11,000 7750 3000 1250 2174 129 ▲ Esprit S1 76-78 40,000 31,000 22,000 15,000 1973 124 Esprit S2 78-81 29,500 22,000 14,000 9000 1973 130 Esprit Turbo 80-87 37,500 26,500 14,000 8000 2174 148 Esprit S3 82-87 26,500 18,500 11,000 6000 2174 134 Excel 82-88 10,000 7000 3000 1500 2174 130 Esprit X180 87-90 24,000 17,500 9250 5250 2174 135 Esprit Turbo/SE 87-92 32,000 22,000 12,000 6750 2174 156 Esprit S4 Turbo 93-96 39,000 29,000 15,000 8500 2174 161 Esprit GT3 96-99 38,500 29,500 17,500 12,500 1973 163 Esprit V8 96-04 44,000 34,000 22,500 15,000 3506 175 Carlton/Omega 90-92 50,000 35,000 19,000 12,500 3615 177 Elan SE turbo 89-92 9950 6750 3850 2000 1588 137 ▼ Elan S2 94-95 10,500 7750 4750 2850 1588 137 ▼ Elise S1 95-00 20,000 15,000 11,000 7000 1796 126 Elise S2 00-05 16,000 12,750 10,500 9000 1796 125 Elise 111/S 99-05 19,500 15,500 12,000 10,000 1796 132 340R 00-02 35,000 28,500 22,000 16,000 1796 133 Exige S1 00-02 31,000 24,000 17,000 13,500 1796 136 MARCOS GT1800 1500/1600 3-litre Mini-Marcos Coupé/Mantula Mantara Marcos Owners’ Club (01384 561524); Club Marcos Int (01225 707815) 64-66 20,000 16,000 11,500 7000 1780 115 66-68 22,000 17,000 12,000 7500 1598 117 69-72 21,750 16,000 11,000 6750 2978 120 65-74 8250 6000 3250 1600 1275 100 81-87 14,500 10,000 6000 3500 2792 130 93-97 16,000 13,000 10,500 8000 3946 158 MASERATI A6G/2000 Zag. cpé 54-57 2.75m 2.2m 1.75m Maserati Club (01494 717701) 1.4m 1986 131 Buying or selling? 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73-79 12,000 80-83 14,000 MAZDA Cosmo 110S RX7 RX7 S2 RX7 S3 MX-5 MX-5 67-72 78-86 86-91 92-95 90 91-97 McLAREN F1 93-98 MERCEDES-BENZ 500K Cabrio A/B/C 500K Sports/Rdster 540K coupe 540K Cabrio A 540K Cabrio B/C 540K Special Rdster 180/190 Ponton sal 219/220S Ponton sal 220S/SE cabrio 220S/SE coupé 300A/B/C/D sal 300 cabrio D 300S cab/rdstr 300Sc cab/rdstr 300Sc coupé 300SL Gullwing 300SL roadster 190SL roadster 190/200 Fintail sal 220/230 Fintail sal 300SE/L Fintail sal 220SEb coupé 220SEb cabrio 300SE coupé 300SE cabrio 230SL sports 250SL sports 280SL sports 600 saloon 250/280S/SE sal 250SEC/280SEC cpé 250/280SE cab 280SE cpé (low grille) 280SE cab (low grille) 280SE 3.5 coupé 280SE 3.5 cabrio 300SE/SEL sal 280/300SE/SEL 3.5 300SEL 6.3 saloon 200/220/230.4 sal 230.6/250/280 sal 250CE/280CE coupé 280/350/380/420SL 500/560SL sports M-Benz Club Ltd (07071 818868); M-Benz Owners’ Assoc. (01892 860922) 34-36 1.35m 1m 700,000 450,000 5016 102 34-36 3.2m 2.5m 1.95m 1.3m 5016 102 36-39 500,000 400,000 300,000 200,000 5401 104 36-39 1.9m 1.5m 1.2m 950,000 5401 101 36-39 1.2m 900,000 600,000 450,000 5401 100 36-39 5.75m 4.85m 4m 3m 5401 106 53-62 16,500 11,500 5500 2500 1897 87 56-59 19,500 14,000 6750 3500 2195 101 56-60 130,000 90,000 47,500 29,500 2195 101 57-60 54,000 37,500 23,500 15,000 2195 101 51-62 56,500 36,500 20,000 10,000 2996 101 57-62 225,000 165,000 100,000 55,000 2996 100 52-55 440,000 345,000 250,000 170,000 2996 112 55-58 695,000 500,000 350,000 240,000 2996 112 55-58 375,000 300,000 230,000 155,000 2996 112 54-57 1.45m 1.2m 1m 775,000 2996 145 57-63 1.45m 1.2m 900,000 695,000 2996 130 55-63 130,000 100,000 65,000 45,000 1897 109 61-68 13,000 9000 4000 1750 1988 90 59-68 16,000 11,000 5200 2250 2281 100 61-65 24,000 17,500 8500 3250 2996 109 61-65 45,000 32,500 17,500 10,000 2195 107 61-65 85,000 60,000 39,500 24,000 2195 107 62-67 55,000 36,500 25,000 16,000 2996 110 62-67 160,000 125,000 70,000 47,500 2996 109 63-67 87,500 62,500 34,000 21,000 2306 121 67-68 92,500 65,000 36,000 23,000 2496 121 67-71 115,000 75,000 40,000 26,000 2778 121 64-81 100,000 75,000 43,000 25,000 6330 120 ▼ 65-72 19,500 12,750 5500 2250 2778 116 65-69 56,500 38,500 22,200 13,500 2778 116 65-69 125,000 90,000 44,000 24,000 2778 116 ▲ 70-72 50,000 35,000 20,500 13,000 2778 116 70-72 100,000 77,500 40,000 22,500 2778 116 69-71 94,000 70,000 37,500 25,000 3499 127 69-71 250,000 190,000 135,000 95,000 3499 127 65-69 22,000 14,000 6000 2500 2996 115 69-72 25,000 16,500 7500 3500 3499 128 67-72 50,000 37,000 22,500 10,000 6329 132 67-76 10,000 6500 2850 1200 2197 105 67-76 11,000 7250 3250 1300 2746 125 68-76 18,000 12,000 6000 2500 2746 125 71-89 30,000 20,000 7500 2750 4196 130 82-89 36,500 22,000 9500 3750 5547 142 5 8000 9000 Matra Enthusiasts’ Club (01892 652964) 3500 1250 1442 102 4000 1500 2155 121 mazdarotaryclub.com; MX-5 Owners’ Club (mx5oc.co.uk) 90,000 65,000 40,000 25,000 982 125 15,000 10,000 4500 1250 2292 119 7000 4750 2250 900 2254 140 8000 6500 4000 2000 2608 156 6000 4000 1850 1000 1597 121 4750 3000 1250 500 1839 123 17 16m 15m 14m 6064 240 ▼ MG Owners’ Club (01954 231125); Octagon Club (01785 251014); Car Club (01235 555552) SA saloon 36-39 40,000 32,500 23,500 13,500 2322 80 ▼ SA tourer/dhc 36-39 64,000 46,500 31,000 19,500 2322 80 ▼ VA saloon 37-39 28,000 22,000 14,000 8000 1548 80 ▼ VA tourer/dhc 37-39 42,500 28,000 20,000 13,500 1548 81 WA saloon 38-39 46,500 37,000 27,500 16,000 2561 91 WA tourer/dhc 38-39 80,000 60,000 40,000 24,000 2561 91 ▼ TA/TB/TC 36-49 33,500 24,500 15,000 9750 1250 78 TD 49-53 22,000 16,000 10,500 6500 1250 80 TF1250/1500 53-55 29,000 20,000 13,000 7500 1466 85 ▼ YA/YB 47-53 15,000 10,000 4400 1250 1250 71 Magnette ZA/ZB 53-59 16,250 11,500 4750 2400 1489 82 MGA Roadster 55-62 31,000 21,000 12,500 8000 1489 98 ▼ MGA Coupé 56-62 26,000 17,500 10,000 6250 1489 98 MGA Twin Cam Rdstr 58-60 47,500 34,000 23,500 15,000 1588 115 ▼ MGA Twin Cam Cpé 58-60 37,500 27,500 17,500 12,000 1588 115 ▼ Magnette III/IV 59-68 10,000 6750 2900 1350 1622 87 1100/1300 62-71 9500 6750 2850 1250 1275 97 MGB roadster p/h 62-65 21,000 15,000 8000 4000 1798 103 MGB roadster 65-67 17,500 12,750 6000 3000 1798 103 2350 1798 103 MGB GT 65-67 16,000 10,750 5000 MGB MkII roadster 67-71 16,500 11,500 5500 2500 1798 103 MGB MkII GT 67-71 14,000 8750 4000 1800 1798 103 MGB MkIII roadster 71-74 16,000 11,000 5250 2250 1798 100 MGB MkIII GT 71-74 12,000 8000 3400 1500 1798 96 ▲ MGB roadster 75-80 12,000 7500 3000 1250 1798 96 MGB GT 75-80 8500 5250 2100 850 1798 104 MGC roadster 67-69 26,000 20,000 10,000 4500 2912 120 MGC GT 67-69 23,500 16,500 8250 3750 2912 120 MGB GT V8 chrome 73-74 26,000 17,000 8000 4000 3528 125 ▲ MGB GT V8 rubber 74-76 20,000 13,500 6500 3250 3528 125 Midget MkI 61-64 12,250 8250 4000 1750 1098 86 Midget MkII 64-66 11,750 8000 3650 1600 1098 90 Midget MkIII 66-74 12,000 8000 3250 1250 1275 96 74-79 6400 4250 1500 550 1498 101 Midget 1500 Metro 82-90 7000 5000 2650 1500 1275 100 Metro Turbo 83-89 14,000 10,000 5000 2500 1275 110 Montego Turbo 85-91 9000 6500 3500 1850 1994 124 Maestro Turbo 89-91 15,500 11,500 7000 4000 1994 128 Metro 6R4 85-86 135,000 110,000 80,000 57,500 2991 120 RV8 93-96 19,000 14,500 10,000 6250 3946 136 MGF/TF 95-05 3300 1950 800 375 1796 126 ZT260 V8 03-05 11,000 7500 4500 3250 4601 155 MITSUBISHI Starion Turbo 3000GT/GTO Evo IV-VI 82-89 14,000 10,000 90-01 8000 5750 97-99 24,000 17,500 MORGAN 4/4 Series I Plus 4 (Vanguard) Plus 4 (TR) Plus 4 SS 4/4 SII/III/IV/V 4/4 1600/CVH Sports Car Club (01384 254480); Three-Wheeler Club (01823 277852) 36-50 39,000 29,000 20,000 12,000 1267 70 50-53 38,000 27,500 18,500 10,000 2088 85 54-69 38,500 28,000 18,000 9500 1991 96 61-69 75,000 55,000 35,000 22,000 2138 120 54-68 28,000 20,750 13,000 8000 1498 85 68-93 25,500 18,500 11,250 7000 1597 105 4500 2750 9000 2000 1250 4750 1997 133 2972 153 1997 150 Top speed Price change Owners’ Club (01293 871417); Enthusiasts’ Club (01483 769270) 53-64 25,000 17,500 11,000 6500 191 65 58-61 100,000 80,000 60,000 40,000 493 75 4/4 1800 (Zetec) Plus 4 Plus 4 Plus 8 Plus 8 Plus 8 injection 93-06 85-87 88-00 68-72 73-86 84-04 21,000 21,000 23,500 49,500 42,000 36,500 MORRIS Minor MM lowlamp Minor MM L-L Tourer Oxford MO Six Minor MM/SII Minor MM/SII conv. Minor SII Traveller Minor 1000 Minor 1000 conv. Minor 1000 Traveller Isis Oxford/Cowley II-III Oxford V-VI Marina Coupé Marina TC/GT Morris Register (01934 832340); Morris Minor Owners’ Club (01332 291675) 48-51 13,000 9000 4500 2250 918 64 48-51 20,000 12,500 6750 3500 918 64 48-54 7000 5000 2400 1100 1476 72 49-54 8500 6500 2500 1200 2215 86 50-56 9000 6750 2850 1100 803 63 50-56 13,000 8750 3750 1850 803 63 53-56 15,000 10,000 4250 1500 803 63 56-70 11,000 7000 3000 1000 1098 77 56-69 13,500 9250 4000 1850 1098 77 56-71 16,000 10,500 4400 1400 1098 76 55-58 6750 4850 2250 1000 2639 90 54-60 6000 4000 1650 800 1489 78 59-71 8000 5500 2250 1100 1622 80 71-78 3500 2250 1100 550 1798 95 71-78 4000 2500 1300 700 1798 100 NISSAN 300ZX Turbo 300ZX Figaro Skyline GT-R R32 Skyline GT-R R33 84-89 89-00 91 89-94 95-99 10,250 7000 3250 1500 2960 14,500 9500 4000 2000 2960 8500 5500 2250 1000 987 52,000 40,000 22,000 15,000 2568 47,500 37,500 20,000 12,500 2568 NSU Prinz Sport Prinz coupé Wankel spider 1000 1200TT Ro80 58-72 59-67 64-67 64-72 67-72 67-76 NSU Owners’ Club (01883 744431); Ro80 Club (01274 484091) 9000 6000 2750 1200 598 71 9500 6750 3000 1500 598 76 16,000 12,000 7000 4000 497 95 7500 5000 2400 1200 996 80 18,500 12,750 8000 5000 1177 110 13,000 9000 4000 1250 995 108 NE cc MESSERSCHMITT KR175/200 TG500 Tiger 9000 3650 2962 124 5000 1750 4520 137 3250 1250 2746 118 4400 1600 4520 130 3600 1500 2299 114 3750 1650 2746 124 5000 2000 2746 125 7500 3500 2746 102 14,000 7000 6834 140 3500 1600 2960 142 4750 2300 4973 155 7500 3750 5987 155 7000 2400 4973 138 8000 3000 5547 151 1900 800 4973 147 2800 1200 5547 156 1600 650 1997 119 10,000 5000 2299 143 2000 650 2962 139 5500 2650 3199 142 1650 600 3199 146 17,500 10,000 4973 155 1000 500 2295 140 9000 6000 5439 155 150,000 n/a 5439 208 ▲ Rough 21,000 12,500 7000 10,000 8000 8250 11,000 17,500 27,500 8000 10,750 17,500 13,000 15,000 5400 7500 3950 18,500 5500 12,000 4500 35,000 2750 12,750 180,000 Good 34,000 20,000 11,500 16,000 11,750 12,000 16,000 27,500 38,500 13,500 17,500 25,000 19,500 22,000 8000 12,000 6250 27,500 8500 18,000 6750 45,000 4500 17,750 230,000 DENOTES NEW ENTRY TO PRICE GUIDE Mint 85-89 71-81 72-80 72-80 75-84 75-84 77-85 79-92 76-80 89-01 89-01 92-01 81-91 86-91 80-91 80-91 82-92 83-92 87-95 91-97 84-95 90-95 97-04 02-08 03-10 NE Concours/ Dealer MATRA Bagheera Murena 300SL (R107) 350/380/450SLC cpé 280S/SE sal 350/450SE/SEL sal 200/230E sal 250/280E sal 230/280CE coupé G-wagon (W460) 450SEL 6.9 sal 280SL-SL320 (R129) 500SL/SL500 (R129) 600SL/SL600 (R129) 380/420/500SEC 560SEC 300SE-500SE sal 500/560SEL sal 190E sal 190E 2.3/2.5-16 W124 Coupé E220, E320 Cabrio W124 sal/est 500E saloon SLK230 Komp’ SL55 AMG SLR McLaren Private sale Year 131 142 ▼ 140 ▼ 138 147 147 130 122 150 156 155 154 172 170 160 ▼ 135 147 151 150 138 138 155 158 180 177 Top speed 1986 3485 3485 3485 3692 3692 4136 4930 4719 4719 4719 4719 4930 4930 4719 2965 2965 4930 4930 2491 2491 2790 2790 3217 4244 Price change 350,000 70,000 250,000 52,500 37,500 250,000 15,000 3500 27,500 24,000 60,000 350,000 72,500 425,000 45,000 12,000 15,000 40,000 15,000 1200 2000 3000 2650 5000 4800 cc Top speed 400,000 102,500 350,000 90,000 72,500 325,000 25,000 6500 42,000 34,000 90,000 425,000 120,000 525,000 92,500 20,000 25,000 65,000 28,500 2500 4000 6000 5000 7400 8500 Rough cc 450,000 135,000 415,000 120,000 110,000 410,000 40,000 12,000 70,000 49,000 150,000 525,000 180,000 625,000 130,000 32,500 45,000 100,000 45,000 6000 8500 12,000 8000 11,000 11,500 DENOTES NEW ENTRY TO PRICE GUIDE Good Rough 500,000 165,000 465,000 152,500 140,000 490,000 60,000 19,000 95,000 65,000 200,000 620,000 235,000 695,000 167,500 47,000 60,000 142,500 57,500 10,000 13,250 18,000 10,500 15,000 14,500 Mint Good 54-57 58-64 58-64 62-66 63-70 64-70 63-71 79-90 65-72 66-74 67-70 69-71 70-73 71-72 71-79 72-75 76-83 74-82 76-83 81-88 84-94 94-97 94-01 98-01 02-07 NE Concours/ Dealer Mint A6G/2000 coupé 3500GT coupé 3500GT Spider Sebring 3.5/3.7/4.0 Mistral coupé Mistral Spyder Quattroporte 4.1/4.7 Quattroporte III Mexico Indy Ghibli 4.7 Ghibli Spyder Ghibli 4.9 SS Ghibli SS Spyder Bora 4.7/4.9 Merak Merak SS Khamsin Kyalami 4.1/4.9 Biturbo 220-425 Biturbo Spyder Ghibli II Quattroporte IV 3200GT 4200GT Private sale Year Concours/ Dealer Price change Year Private sale DENOTES NEW ENTRY TO PRICE GUIDE 17,500 13,500 8500 1796 16,000 11,000 8000 1994 19,500 15,000 11,000 1994 32,000 20,000 14,000 3528 28,500 17,500 12,000 3528 27,000 17,000 11,000 3528 106 109 115 125 ▼ 125 ▼ 125 ▼ 149 155 ▼ 98 155 155 OPEL Vauxhall-Opel Drivers’ Club (01362 692020); Opel Manta OC (manta.club.org) Commodore/GS/E 67-77 10,000 6000 2650 1250 2490 121 GT 68-73 15,500 11,000 5500 2600 1897 111 Manta A coupé 70-75 16,000 11,000 5500 2500 1897 105 Manta GT/E 75-88 13,500 9500 4500 2000 1979 122 Monza cpé 78-87 13,000 8500 3650 1600 2968 128 PANHARD PL17 saloon 24CT coupé 59-64 8750 6000 64-67 15,000 10,000 PANTHER J72 De Ville Lima/Kallista Kallista 2.8/2.8i/2.9i 72-81 74-85 76-90 82-90 PEERLESS/WARWICK GT 57-62 27,500 20,000 PEUGEOT 203 saloon 403 cabrio 204/304 saloon 204/304 coupé 204/304 cabrio 404 saloon 504 saloon 504 cabrio 504 coupé 504 V6 cabrio 205 T16 205GTi 1.6 205CTI cabrio 205GTi 1.9 309GTi 106 Rallye S1/S2 106 GTI 406 Coupé 48-60 57-61 65-74 67-75 67-75 60-75 68-83 69-83 69-83 74-83 83-85 84-90 86-92 87-94 87-93 94-99 96-04 97-03 PIPER GTT/P2 1.6 Piper Sports and Racing Car Club, email: contact@thepiperclub.org.uk 68-74 25,000 18,500 13,500 9500 1599 115 PORSCHE 356 pre-A Gmund 356 pre-A 356 cabrio 1.3/1.5 Porsche Club GB (01608 652911); Enthusiasts’ Club (01246 279358) 49-50 1m 800,000 600,000 500,000 1086 90 ▲ 51-55 210,000 150,000 110,000 85,000 1488 90 ▲ 51-55 265,000 200,000 155,000 110,000 1488 90 50,000 70,000 13,000 14,500 8500 30,000 4000 7500 10,500 8000 3850 22,500 11,250 27,500 185,000 17,250 7500 20,000 8250 9000 7750 3250 Panhard et Levassor Club GB (0161 483 8262) 2750 1400 845 75 4750 2250 845 100 Panther Car Club Ltd (07971 866829) 35,000 25,000 17,500 4235 115 48,500 35,000 25,000 5343 135 10,000 5000 2750 1596 98 10,750 5750 3250 2933 112 11,500 TR Register (01235 818866) 7000 1991 105 Club Peugeot UK (020 8888 8772) 6500 3000 1350 1290 70 22,500 12,500 7000 1468 81 2750 1400 750 1288 90 5500 2500 1200 1288 90 7000 3500 1500 1288 88 5750 2850 1400 1618 90 2750 1350 650 1971 104 16,000 8500 4500 1971 105 7750 3750 1750 1971 107 19,000 11,000 5500 2664 117 155,000 125,000 100,000 1774 130 11,500 4500 1600 1580 122 ▲ 5000 2200 900 1580 120 13,000 5250 1800 1905 126 6000 2850 1250 1905 122 6250 3000 1500 1587 121 5500 2500 1250 1587 122 2000 750 400 2946 141
90 72 84 108 105 96 109 124 123 134 134 RILEY RMA/RME 11⁄2 saloon RMB/RMF 21⁄2 saloon Roadster RMC RMD convertible 2.6/Pathfinder One Point Five 4/68, 4/72 Elf MkI/II 848/998 Kestrel 1100/1300 45-55 46-53 48-50 48-51 53-59 57-65 59-69 61-69 65-69 Riley RM Club (01352 700427); Riley Motor Club (01902 773197) 15,000 11,500 5750 2650 1496 81 19,250 14,750 8000 4000 2443 91 42,500 29,000 17,500 9000 2443 100 28,500 22,000 13,500 7000 2443 91 12,000 8000 3400 1650 2443 101 11,000 8000 3500 1500 1489 85 12,500 8000 3250 1400 1622 88 8500 6000 3000 1500 998 75 7500 5000 2250 1000 1098 87 ROCHDALE GT Olympic 57-61 8750 60-73 11,000 ROLLS-ROYCE Silver Ghost Silver Ghost Phantom I/II Phantom III Silver Wraith 4.3/4.6 Silver Dawn sal Silver Dawn PW con Silver Cloud I sal SCI Mulliner con Silver Cloud II sal SCII Mulliner con Phantom V/VI limo Silver Cloud III sal SCIII MPW con Shadow/Wraith MPW/Corniche cpé MPW/Corniche con Camargue Silver Spirit/Spur Corniche II/III 07-14 18-25 25-35 36-39 47-59 49-55 51-55 55-59 55-59 59-62 59-62 60-77 62-66 62-66 66-80 66-80 67-90 75-86 80-89 87-94 ROVER 2.35m 400,000 330,000 240,000 50,000 44,000 120,000 38,000 450,000 44,000 275,000 100,000 50,000 250,000 20,000 46,500 70,000 52,000 13,500 63,000 6000 7500 1.9m 325,000 200,000 150,000 36,500 31,000 90,000 27,000 330,000 30,000 200,000 72,500 35,000 170,000 13,000 32,500 50,000 42,000 9500 47,500 Rochdale Owners’ Club (01364 654419) 3000 1250 1172 85 4250 2750 1489 105 Rolls-Royce Enthusiasts’ Club (01327 811788) 1.5m 1.25m 7428 75 250,000 175,000 7428 78 90,000 30,000 7668 88 ▼ 70,000 27,500 7340 92 ▼ 20,000 10,500 4257 92 ▼ 16,000 8000 4566 98 ▼ 55,000 35,000 4566 98 16,500 8000 4887 101 250,000 190,000 4887 101 17,500 8500 6230 115 125,000 85,000 6230 112 40,000 25,000 6230 112 19,000 9000 6230 116 95,000 60,000 6230 116 6250 2000 6750 120 18,500 8750 6750 119 27,000 15,000 6750 119 25,000 13,000 6750 115 4500 1650 6750 119 35,000 19,000 6750 119 P4 Drivers’ Guild (01582 572499); P5 OC (01784 25816); P6 Rover OC (01704 560929); Rover P6 Drivers’ Club (01902 689975); Rover SD1 Club (08451 306230) 48-49 12,500 9250 4250 1900 1595 75 48-49 15,000 11,750 5000 2200 2103 85 50-52 16,000 11,500 5500 2400 2103 84 52-62 9250 6000 2250 800 2286 85 54-59 10,750 7250 3000 1000 2638 90 57-58 8500 5950 2200 800 2638 91 57-62 11,000 7500 3400 1400 2638 96 62-64 11,000 7250 3000 1100 2625 100 58-67 13,000 8000 3250 1250 2995 107 63-67 17,500 12,000 5750 2250 2995 108 67-73 16,750 11,500 5500 2200 3528 113 67-73 32,000 22,000 9500 3000 3528 115 63-69 8250 5000 2350 1000 1978 115 70-77 7500 4000 1850 750 2205 112 68-76 10,000 6500 2250 1000 3528 117 71-76 12,500 8000 3000 1400 3528 126 ▲ 76-86 6500 4000 1750 750 2597 117 76-86 8000 5500 2250 1000 3528 125 80-86 10,000 7000 3000 1400 3528 126 82-86 12,500 8500 4000 1750 3528 133 85-86 20,000 14,000 6500 3000 3528 135 90-00 8000 5500 2750 1100 1275 88 91-00 12,500 9500 4000 1650 1275 97 98-99 5500 3750 1750 850 1796 127 04-05 9250 6500 4000 3000 4601 150 P3 60 P3 75 P4 75 ‘Cyclops’ P4 60/75/80 P4 90 P4 105R P4 105S/100 P4 95/110 P5 3-litre P5 Coupé P5B 31⁄2-litre P5B 31⁄2-litre Coupé P6 2000/TC P6 2000/2200/TC P6 3500 P6 3500S SD1 2.0/2.3/2.6 SD1 3500 SD1 VdP SD1 Vitesse SD1 Vitesse TP Mini Mini Cooper/S 200 BRM LE 75 V8 SAAB 96 Bullnose 96 Longnose Sport/Monte Carlo 96/95 V4 Sonett 99 99 Turbo 900 Turbo (sal/con) Saab Owners’ Club (07071 719000); Enthusiasts’ Club (01942 878738) 60-65 9500 6500 3500 2000 841 80 65-68 8500 6000 3250 1750 841 79 62-66 12,000 9000 5250 2750 841 88 67-79 10,000 7250 3500 1400 1498 93 67-74 15,000 11,000 5500 2750 1498 100 68-84 6750 4750 2000 1000 1985 101 77-82 14,000 10,000 4750 2200 1985 125 79-93 11,500 8000 3250 1600 1985 133 Top speed 1108 1108 1108 1255 1565 1289 1397 1397 1397 1998 1988 Price change 2000 1000 800 12,000 1500 600 450 22,500 3250 4000 9500 cc 4500 2200 2000 17,000 3500 1500 1000 32,500 7000 8000 12,000 Rough Renault Owners’ Club (renaultownersclub.com/) 47-61 8500 6000 3600 2000 747 65 54-63 8000 5500 2500 1100 845 70 58-67 15,000 10,500 5000 2500 845 83 59-68 11,000 8000 3500 1600 1108 90 9000 5000 4250 25,000 8000 2650 2000 57,500 15,000 16,000 16,500 Good RENAULT 4CV Dauphine Dauphine Gordini Floride/Caravelle cpé 13,000 8000 6400 32,500 11,500 3500 3000 80,000 20,000 24,000 22,000 Mint Sabre & Scimitar Club (020 8977 6625); Scimitar Drivers’ (01453 548887) 61-64 11,000 8750 5750 2600 2553 110 64-70 16,000 10,000 4000 2000 2994 121 68-75 12,000 7750 2850 1100 2994 123 75-80 10,000 6750 2500 1000 2792 120 80-85 12,000 8000 3250 1500 2792 119 80-86 9400 6650 2650 1000 2792 122 88-90 30,000 24,000 16,000 10,000 2933 140 85-89 5000 3200 1350 550 1596 108 86-89 5900 4000 1750 800 1809 126 59-68 62-80 62-71 67-70 65-79 72-84 84-96 83-86 86-91 94-95 95-97 NE Private sale Concours/ Dealer RELIANT Sabre 4/6 Scimitar SE4/a/b Scimitar GTE SE5/5a Scimitar GTE SE6/6a Scimitar GTC Scimitar GTE SE6b Middlebridge Scim’ Scimitar SS1 Scimitar SS1 1800Ti Floride/Caravelle con R4 R8/R10 R8 Gordini 16GL/DL/TS/TX 5 hatch 5 hatch 5 Turbo 2 5GT Turbo Clio Williams Sport Spider DENOTES NEW ENTRY TO PRICE GUIDE Year 92 92 113 113 113 113 113 113 125 131 131 140 112 131 138 144 112 125 144 149 149 135 140 148 156 146 ▼ 126 144 150 136 155 ▲ 161 168 171 160 158 149 158 155 158 158 190 154 134 157 140 149 149 150 158 167 162 150 151 154 160 180 182 171 172 175 187 149 156 164 ▲ 170 188 189 198 Top speed 1488 1488 1582 1582 1582 1582 1582 1582 1966 1991 1991 1991 1582 2195 2341 2195 1795 1991 2341 2687 2687 2687 2687 2687 2995 2994 1984 1984 1984 2479 4664 4957 4957 5396 3299 3299 2994 3164 3164 3164 3164 2994 3164 2479 2479 2479 2990 2990 2479 3600 3299 3600 2990 2990 2990 3600 3600 3600 3600 3746 3746 3600 2480 2687 3179 3387 3600 3600 3600 Price change Top speed 160,000 70,000 25,000 22,000 48,500 50,000 40,000 200,000 250,000 65,000 40,000 60,000 17,500 24,000 27,500 53,000 4000 22,500 57,500 400,000 190,000 11,000 16,000 85,000 55,000 25,000 750 2500 24,000 1250 4500 4500 7000 12,000 32,500 32,000 15,000 12,500 12,500 26,500 55,000 525,000 42,000 1200 3250 1400 1800 2400 7500 20,000 40,000 115,000 4000 6000 8000 21,000 55,000 150,000 30,000 175,000 200,000 550,000 1700 1950 2500 6750 38,500 21,000 72,500 cc cc 200,000 110,000 39,000 33,500 75,000 80,000 64,000 275,000 295,000 100,000 57,500 85,000 27,500 34,500 37,500 75,000 8000 33,500 80,000 500,000 275,000 18,000 25,000 110,000 80,000 37,500 1600 5400 36,000 2500 10,000 10,500 15,000 25,000 48,500 45,000 24,000 21,000 20,000 39,000 75,000 700,000 68,000 3000 7500 3400 4200 5000 14,000 30,000 75,000 145,000 7250 10,000 15,750 30,000 85,000 185,000 50,000 225,000 245,000 700,000 2600 3200 3850 10,500 46,000 25,000 85,000 Rough Rough 250,000 150,000 65,000 57,500 115,000 130,000 100,000 375,000 350,000 140,000 90,000 120,000 42,000 57,500 65,000 105,000 17,500 53,000 110,000 650,000 355,000 32,500 37,500 140,000 110,000 55,000 3950 11,500 52,500 6250 20,000 20,000 24,000 42,500 80,000 72,500 41,000 38,000 33,000 60,000 110,000 825,000 100,000 7000 15,000 7500 10,000 11,000 21,000 50,000 110,000 195,000 12,750 16,500 28,500 47,500 120,000 240,000 76,500 275,000 290,000 800,000 4350 5500 6500 17,000 57,500 33,500 97,500 Good Good 325,000 215,000 90,000 82,500 160,000 175,000 137,500 500,000 425,000 190,000 125,000 155,000 57,500 77,500 87,500 137,500 25,000 78,500 150,000 850,000 475,000 42,500 48,500 180,000 140,000 85,000 6250 17,000 70,000 9250 27,500 28,500 35,000 56,500 110,000 97,500 53,000 54,000 48,500 77,500 145,000 1m 130,000 10,500 22,000 11,000 14,000 15,000 28,500 67,500 140,000 240,000 16,000 24,000 42,000 60,000 150,000 300,000 95,000 335,000 350,000 950,000 6500 7500 9000 24,000 70,000 44,000 110,000 Mint Mint 54-58 58-59 55-59 60-65 55-59 60-61 60-65 55-62 63-65 64-65 66-68 66-69 65-69 67-73 68-73 69-71 69-75 69-72 71-73 72-73 72-73 73-77 73-77 73-77 75-77 76-77 76-85 78-83 80-81 85-88 77-87 86-95 89-92 91-95 77-90 86-90 77-83 83-89 83-89 84-89 88-89 87-88 87-89 82-87 85-91 86-88 88-92 89-92 91-92 89-94 90-94 92-94 92-95 94-95 93-95 94-97 95-98 97-98 95-97 94-95 95-96 95-98 96-99 99-04 99-04 97-05 99-05 99-05 01-05 NE Concours/ Dealer Concours/ Dealer 356 Speedster 356 Convertible D 356A 356B/C 356A cabrio 356B roadster 356B/C cabrio 356A/B Carrera Carrera 2 911 2.0 911/L 2.0 911S 2.0 912 911T 911E 911S 2.2 914-4 914-6 911S 2.4 Carrera RSL Carrera RST 911 2.7 911S 2.7 Carrera 2.7MFI 911 Turbo (930) 3.0 Carrera 3.0 924 924 Turbo 924 Carrera GT 924S/Le Mans 928/S/S2 928S4 928GT 928GTS 911 Turbo (930) 3.3 911 Turbo Cabrio 911SC 3.0 911 Carrera 3.2 911 Carrera cabrio Carrera Supersport 911 Speedster 959 Carrera Club Sport 944 944 Turbo 944S 944S2 944S2 Cabrio 944 Turbo Cabrio 911 (964) 911 Turbo (964) 911 Carrera RS (964) 968 968 Sport 968 Club Sport 911 Carrera (993) 911 Turbo 4 (993) 911 Turbo S (993) 911 C4S/C2S (993) 911 Carrera RS (993) 911RS Clubsport 911 GT2 (993) Boxster 2.5 Boxster 2.7 Boxster 3.2S 911 Carrera (996) 911 GT3 (996) 911 Turbo (996) 911 GT2 (996) Private sale Year DENOTES NEW ENTRY TO PRICE GUIDE Year Private sale Price change [ Price Guide ] 900 Convertible 86-93 8250 5500 2500 1000 1985 126 SIMCA 1000GLS/Special 1000/1200S coupé 69-78 3250 62-71 16,000 2000 11,000 1000 5000 Simca Club UK (01737 765331) 500 1294 105 2000 1204 105 NE DENOTES NEW ENTRY TO PRICE GUIDE SINGER Singer Owners (01780 762740); Association of Singer Car Owners (01923 778575) 9 Roadster/4A/4B 39-52 15,000 10,500 6000 3750 1074 70 SM Roadster 51-55 14,000 9500 5000 3000 1497 72 Gazelle saloon 55-67 7500 4750 2250 1050 1497 77 Gazelle con 56-62 11,500 8250 4000 1950 1497 77 Vogue I-IV 1.6/1.7 61-66 8000 5000 2200 1000 1725 91 Chamois 64-70 6000 4250 2000 950 875 80 Chamois coupé 65-70 6750 4750 2400 1100 875 81 New Gazelle/Vogue 66-70 6000 4000 1650 725 1725 94 SKODA Octavia 1.1/1.2 Felicia convertible 1000MB, S100 S110R coupé Rapid coupé 59-64 4500 59-64 8500 65-77 3250 70-80 4750 84-91 3250 3000 6000 2200 3600 2500 Skoda Owners’ Club of GB (01279 815183) 1500 800 1089 75 3000 1500 1221 82 850 450 988 80 1500 750 1107 90 1200 650 1289 93 STANDARD Vanguard I Vanguard II/III Vanguard Sportsman Vanguard Vignale Luxury Six Eight Ten/Pennant Ensign/De Luxe 48-52 10,000 53-58 6000 56-58 6000 58-61 5250 61-63 5600 53-59 5250 54-59 5750 57-63 5500 7000 4200 4250 3750 4000 3600 4000 3850 Standard Motor Club (01676 522181) 3200 1500 2088 79 1850 950 2088 79 2000 1000 2088 83 1850 900 2088 81 ▲ 1900 1000 1998 87 ▲ 1650 750 803 61 1900 900 948 69 ▲ 1850 900 2138 85 ▲ STUDEBAKER Avanti 62-64 47,500 35,000 25,000 SUBARU Impreza Turbo Impreza WRX STi Impreza 22B Impreza WRX P1 SVX 93-00 97-00 98 00-01 91-97 6500 10,500 100,000 45,000 4900 Talbot 80 Talbot 80 Coupé Talbot 90 (all Mks) Talbot 90 Coupés Alpine convertible Alpine I sports Alpine II sports Alpine III sports Alpine IV sports Alpine V sports Harrington GT Tiger I Tiger II Rapier I-V Rapier II-IIIA con Rapier/Alpine Rapier H120 Imp Sport Stiletto 48-50 48-50 48-57 49-57 53-55 59-60 61-63 63-64 64-65 65-68 61-63 64-66 67-68 55-67 58-63 67-76 68-76 66-76 67-72 Sunbeam Talbot Alpine Register (01621 778492); Sunbeam Alpine OC 01376 342025); Tiger OC (01207 508296) 8750 5600 2500 1250 1185 72 11,000 8000 4250 2500 1185 72 10,000 6250 3000 1500 1944 90 17,000 12,500 6000 3650 1944 90 48,500 33,500 20,000 10,000 2267 95 17,750 11,500 5500 2400 1494 95 14,000 9500 4250 1750 1592 101 16,250 11,000 5500 2250 1592 100 13,000 9250 4000 1650 1592 92 20,000 13,000 7000 3000 1725 100 28,000 19,750 9500 4000 1592 105 67,500 47,500 26,000 16,500 4261 120 ▼ 87,500 64,000 36,500 25,000 4727 125 ▼ 12,500 8000 3500 1500 1725 95 15,000 11,000 5000 2500 1592 87 7250 5000 2200 1000 1725 102 ▲ 9250 6500 3000 1500 1725 106 ▲ 7500 5000 2500 1200 875 90 8500 6250 2750 1300 875 90 SUZUKI SC100 Cappuccino 79-82 92-96 SWALLOW Doretti 54-55 62,500 45,000 30,000 TALBOT Sunbeam 1600 Ti Sunbeam-Lotus 79-81 12,000 7250 79-81 50,000 29,500 TALBOT-LAGO T150 SS ‘teardrop’ T26 Record Cabrio 36-39 4.7m 3.9m 3.1m 2.3m 3996 115 47-50 175,000 147,500 95,000 60,000 4482 108 TOYOTA 2000GT Crown 2600 MkI/II Celica ST 1.6/2.0 Celica GT 1.6/2.0 Celica Supra 2.8i 67-70 71-79 70-77 74-77 82-85 SUNBEAM 3500 6500 495,000 6500 18,000 20,000 14,000 18,500 4737 120 The Subaru Impreza Drivers’ Club (sidc.co.uk) 4200 2000 800 1994 144 7500 3750 1850 1994 150 80,000 60,000 47,500 1994 154 37,500 20,000 14,000 1994 150 3350 1850 900 3300 143 2500 4250 1500 1800 SCORE (suzuki-cappuccino.com) 800 970 87 750 657 83 ▲ TR Register (01235 818866) 19,500 1991 102 Sunbeam Lotus Owners’ Club (01423 734624) 3500 1750 1598 107 15,000 8500 2174 120 400,000 4500 12,500 15,000 10,000 Toyota Enthusiasts’ Club (020 8898 0740) 330,000 285,000 1988 128 2000 1000 2563 106 6500 3200 1588 105 ▲ 7250 3500 1968 111 ▲ 5000 3000 2795 126 Buying or selling? 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Trident Car Club (020 8644 9029) 7000 4727 140 TRIUMPH Club Triumph (020 8351 9544); TR Register (01235 818866); TR Drivers’ Club (01452 614234); Stag Club (07071 224245); Sports Six Club (01858 434424) 46-49 27,500 20,000 12,500 7000 2088 77 46-54 10,000 7000 3200 1600 2088 74 50-53 5500 3650 1650 750 1247 65 53-55 35,000 26,000 15,500 9500 1991 107 55-61 32,500 24,000 13,500 7000 1991 106 61-65 29,500 20,000 11,500 6250 2138 109 64-67 32,500 22,500 12,500 6750 2138 110 67-68 50,000 39,000 25,000 16,500 2498 121 69-73 27,000 17,500 10,000 5500 2498 119 73-76 22,500 15,000 8750 4900 2498 116 75-81 5750 3750 1650 750 1998 110 80-81 7500 5250 2400 1000 1998 109 78-81 12,500 9000 4500 2000 3528 135 80-81 13,500 10,000 5500 2500 3528 130 59-64 6250 4400 1800 900 1147 76 ▲ 59-64 7500 5600 2750 1400 948 79 ▲ 60-61 8500 6250 2650 1250 948 79 61-70 5850 4250 1600 750 1147 80 ▲ 61-67 8250 6000 2500 1200 1147 80 63-67 6750 4750 1800 950 1147 84 67-71 5750 3750 1500 750 1296 87 ▲ 67-71 8000 5750 2400 1200 1296 85 62-66 8500 6000 2600 1200 1596 88 62-66 12,000 7500 3500 1500 1596 91 66-68 8000 5500 2400 1100 1998 95 66-68 11,500 7250 3400 1500 1998 95 68-71 8750 6250 2650 1200 1998 102 68-71 14,000 9500 4000 1750 1998 100 62-65 20,000 13,500 6500 3000 1147 94 65-67 18,000 12,500 5750 2650 1147 94 67-70 12,500 8000 3750 1750 1296 100 70-78 9500 6400 2750 1100 1493 101 66-68 24,000 15,500 7500 3200 1998 109 68-70 22,500 14,250 6750 3000 1998 109 70-74 21,500 13,500 6000 2500 1998 112 63-69 8000 5750 2750 1300 1998 98 69-77 6500 4750 2250 1000 1998 98 1200 2498 107 68-77 7000 5000 2500 75-77 7750 5500 2750 1350 2498 108 70-77 24,000 14,500 6000 2200 2997 117 65-73 4250 2800 1350 600 1296 86 65-70 5000 3250 1700 700 1296 93 72-81 5500 3650 1650 750 1854 100 73-81 15,000 10,000 4000 2000 1998 117 81-84 1850 1200 600 300 1335 97 Roadster 1800/2000 1800/2000/Renown Mayflower TR2 TR3/3A 2.0/2.2 TR4 TR4A TR5 PI TR6 ‘CP’ TR6 ‘CR’ TR7 TR7 convertible TR8 TR8 convertible Herald/S saloon Herald coupé Herald conv Herald 1200 Herald 1200 conv Herald 12/50 Herald 13/60 Herald 13/60 conv Vitesse 1600 Vitesse 1600 conv Vitesse 2-litre MkI Vitesse MkI conv Vitesse MkII Vitesse MkII conv Spitfire 4 Spitfire Mk2 Spitfire Mk3 Spitfire MkIV/1500 GT6 MkI GT6 MkII GT6 MkIII 2000 MkI 2000/2500 MkII 2.5PI/2500TC 2500S Stag 1300/1500 fwd 1300TC fwd Dolomite 1850 Dolomite Sprint Acclaim TUCKER Torpedo 48 TURNER 803/950 Sports 1.35m 1.2m 55-59 14,000 10,000 1m (tuckerclub.org) 800,000 5474 120 5500 Turner Register (01895 256799) 2000 948 90 32,500 90,000 30,000 25,000 20,000 19,000 22,000 27,500 7500 7000 10,000 10,500 20,000 12,000 10,500 15,500 15,250 20,000 14,750 17,000 21,000 25,000 20,000 24,000 22,000 27,500 67,500 25,000 70,000 21,500 18,500 14,500 14,000 16,000 18,000 5250 5000 6250 7000 16,000 9000 7500 12,000 12,000 16,000 10,750 12,500 16,000 21,000 16,000 21,000 17,500 22,000 60,000 16,000 49,000 14,250 13,000 8500 8750 9500 11,000 2500 2750 3400 4500 11,000 6250 4000 8500 8750 12,000 6500 8500 10,000 17,000 12,000 17,000 15,000 16,500 50,000 TVR Car Club (01952 822126) 10,000 VAR 107 36,500 4727 155 9000 2994 125 8750 1599 107 5250 1599 105 5500 2498 109 6000 2994 121 7000 2994 119 1250 2792 126 1550 3528 136 2000 3528 130 2400 3905 143 7000 4441 165 4250 4441 155 2000 2922 141 6500 3943 150 6000 4228 161 8250 4988 161 4500 3950 152 6500 4988 162 7000 4280 180 13,500 4441 195 9500 3948 170 13,500 3996 184 12,000 3605 160 13,000 3605 175 ▲ n/a 3996 185 ▼ VANDEN PLAS 4-litre Princess 3-litre I/II 4-litre R Princess 1100/1300 1500/1.5/1.7 57-68 59-64 64-68 63-74 74-80 VdP Club, Cherry Trees, Llandyfaelog, nr Kidwelly, Dyfed SA17 5PS 12,750 9000 3750 1750 3995 89 12,500 8750 3950 1600 2912 105 15,000 9500 4000 1800 3909 110 ▼ 7500 5000 2400 1100 1275 87 ▲ 5000 3200 1500 750 1748 90 VAUXHALL Wyvern/Velox L sal Wyvern/Velox E Cresta E Velox/Cresta PA Victor F Victor FB VX4/90 FB Velox/Cresta PB Victor 101 FC VX4/90 FC Cresta PC/Viscount Victor FD 1.6/2.0 VX4/90 FD Ventora FD Victor FE 1.8/2.3 VX4/90 FE Ventora FE Viva HA Viva HB Viva Brabham HB Viva HB GT Viva HC Firenza/Magnum Firenza Droopsnoot Chevette 2300HS Vauxhall-Opel Drivers’ Club (01362 692020); Droop Snoot Grp (0118 981 5238) 48-51 9500 6500 2950 1450 2275 75 51-57 13,500 9500 3600 1650 2262 82 54-57 14,000 10,000 4650 2000 2262 84 57-62 20,000 13,000 5750 2400 2651 94 57-61 9000 6000 2400 1200 1507 74 61-64 6000 4500 1900 950 1594 77 61-64 7200 4750 2400 1200 1507 88 62-65 6000 4250 2000 850 2651 94 64-67 5000 3650 1700 850 1594 83 64-67 6750 4500 2250 1100 1594 89 65-72 5750 4000 1950 950 3293 99 67-72 3200 2200 1100 550 1975 95 2000 1000 1975 98 69-72 6500 4250 68-72 5000 3250 1600 750 3294 105 72-78 3250 2000 975 550 2279 100 73-76 4500 3000 1500 750 2279 104 72-76 4000 2400 1200 700 3294 106 63-66 6000 4500 2200 1050 1057 76 66-70 5700 4000 1900 900 1159 82 67-68 6500 4500 2250 1250 1159 90 68-70 7500 5500 2750 1500 1975 101 70-79 5500 3600 1750 800 1256 83 72-78 7750 5500 2400 1100 VAR 100 74-75 16,000 12,000 6500 3750 2279 119 78-80 35,000 25,000 15,000 10,000 2279 117 Top speed 57-67 63-65 69-71 67-73 72-77 72-77 72-79 78-79 80-87 83-89 83-89 85-88 86-91 88-91 86-92 91-94 91-93 93-00 93-98 96-03 96-03 97-03 00-03 99-05 02-06 02-06 04-06 Price change TVR Grantura I-1800S Griffith 200/400 Tuscan V6 Vixen S1-4 1600M 2500M 3000M/Taimar 3000S convertible Tasmin/280i fhc/con Tasmin/350i inc 2+2 V8/350i convertible 390SE 400/420/450SEAC 400/450SE S 2.8/2.9 V8S Griffith 4.0/4.3 Griffith 500 Chimaera 4.0/4.3 Chimaera 450/500 Cerbera 4.2 Cerbera 4.5 Cerbera Speed Six Tuscan Speed Six Tamora T350 Sagaris 1098 102 1498 100 Chevette HSR Astra GTE MkI Astra GTE MkII VX220 VX220 Turbo 79-80 83-84 84-91 00-05 03-05 60,000 19,000 15,000 14,000 17,000 VOLKSWAGEN Beetle (split ) Cabrio Beetle (oval) Cabrio Beetle 1200/1300 Cabrio Beetle 12/13/1500 Cabrio Beetle 1302/1303 Cabrio 1302S/1303S Karmann-Ghia cpé Karmann-Ghia con Karmann-Ghia T-34 Kombi/Camper Camper T2 (Bay) Camper T2 (Bay) 1500/1600 Type 3 411L/E, 412 1.7/1.8 Scirocco MkI Scirocco MkII Golf GTI MkI Golf GTI MkII Golf convertible Golf GTI MkIII Golf MkIII VR6 Polo G40 Corrado Corrado G60 Corrado VR6 46-53 49-53 53-57 54-58 57-68 58-67 68-78 67-70 70-75 70-80 55-74 58-74 62-69 50-67 68-71 72-79 61-73 68-74 74-81 82-92 75-84 84-91 80-93 92-97 92-97 91-94 90-95 90-92 92-95 VW Owners’ Club, PO Box 7, Burntwood, Walsall, Staffs WS7 8SB 30,000 19,000 12,500 7500 1131 66 40,000 28,500 18,500 10,000 1131 66 20,000 14,000 8500 4750 1192 69 26,500 18,000 11,250 7000 1192 66 15,000 9750 4400 2000 1192 72 20,000 14,000 6750 3400 1192 72 12,500 8500 3500 1400 1493 81 16,500 11,500 5750 3000 1493 81 9000 5750 2750 1000 1584 84 13,000 9000 4500 1750 1584 82 22,000 14,000 6000 2750 1584 92 25,000 16,500 8250 4500 1493 87 23,000 14,500 6250 3250 1584 87 60,000 42,500 16,500 8750 1493 65 26,000 15,500 8750 4500 1584 79 23,500 13,500 6750 3500 1970 79 12,000 8500 3750 1500 1584 87 7250 5000 2400 1200 1795 90 9500 6500 3250 1650 1470 114 6750 4750 2250 1100 1781 130 21,000 14,000 6500 2650 1781 116 19,000 12,000 5500 2200 1781 123 12,000 8500 3500 1250 1781 116 4650 3000 1300 550 1984 134 6750 4500 2200 1200 2792 138 6750 5000 2500 1250 1272 119 5500 3750 1650 800 1781 132 9500 6500 2750 1250 1781 140 15,000 10,000 4000 1600 2861 146 VOLVO PV544 1.6/1.8 121/122/122S 4dr sal 131/132 2dr sal 123GT 2dr sal P1800 P1800ES 144/164 sal/est 244/264 sal/est 262C coupé 240 sal/est 480 480 Turbo 740/760 Turbo 940 Turbo sal/est T-5R/850R V70R Volvo Owners’ Club (01705 381494); Enthusiasts’ Club (01872 400039) 59-65 16,000 12,000 6000 3000 1778 95 55-67 12,000 8250 2500 900 1778 95 61-70 12,500 8500 3250 1250 1778 96 67-68 22,000 15,000 7000 3500 1778 108 61-72 36,000 27,500 11,000 4500 1778 105 71-73 27,500 20,000 9500 4000 1986 111 67-74 9000 6000 2750 1250 2979 115 74-79 7000 4750 2200 1000 2127 106 78-81 12,500 8500 4000 1600 2849 109 79-93 7500 5250 2400 950 2316 111 85-95 3000 2000 1000 450 1721 112 88-95 4000 2750 1250 650 1721 123 86-92 6750 4750 2200 1000 2316 125 1850 850 2316 127 90-96 6000 4000 95-97 12,500 9000 4250 2200 2319 155 ▲ 97-00 8750 6000 2850 1500 2319 153 WOLSELEY 6/80 4/44 & 15/50 6/90 SI-III 1500 15/60, 16/60 6/99, 6/110 SI/II Hornet SI-III 1100/1300 18/85, Six 48-55 52-58 54-59 57-65 59-71 59-68 61-69 65-73 67-75 10,500 12,000 10,000 9000 11,000 13,000 8000 6500 8000 cc 5000 3500 Rough 10,000 7250 Good 15,000 12,000 NE DENOTES NEW ENTRY TO PRICE GUIDE Mint 12,500 58-66 17,500 59-66 16,000 Concours/ Dealer 67-78 31,500 24,000 Climax Mark I/II/III Private sale Year TRIDENT Clipper V8 Top speed 130 135 124 137 135 142 156 120 Price change Top speed 1998 1998 1587 1998 2954 2954 2997 1496 cc cc 800 1400 1100 1000 1750 2400 4000 500 Rough Rough 1400 2750 2400 2250 3650 5250 7750 1100 Good Good 2800 5750 6000 5750 7000 11,500 15,000 2500 Private sale Mint Mint 4250 8000 8500 8000 11,000 16,500 21,000 3950 Concours/ Dealer Concours/ Dealer 85-90 86-90 84-90 90-99 86-93 88-92 93-02 90-95 NE DENOTES NEW ENTRY TO PRICE GUIDE Year Year Private sale Celica GT Celica GT-Four MR2 MR2 Mk2 Supra Supra Turbo Supra Turbo Sera NE DENOTES NEW ENTRY TO PRICE GUIDE Price change [ Price Guide ] 47,500 30,000 20,000 2279 125 14,000 8500 4500 1796 110 11,000 5500 2750 1998 134 11,000 7500 5000 2198 137 13,500 10,500 9000 1998 151 Wolseley Register (0161 368 2388, wolseleyworld.com) 6750 3000 1500 2215 81 9000 4000 2000 1489 78 6500 3000 1500 2639 96 6500 3000 1250 1489 77 7000 3000 1300 1622 78 9000 4000 1650 2912 98 5750 2750 1400 998 77 4250 2000 1000 1098 84 5000 2200 1000 2227 104 FIND YOUR NEXT DREAM CAR AT CLASSICCARSFORSALE.CO.UK The best classic car marketplace to search for your next purchase High-quality stock from dealers, auctions and private sellers Specialist buying and selling knowledge and expertise Free stock alerts and free classic news Buying or selling? 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