Range Rovers Rocket!

You’d think my friend who sold his early Range Rover last year for a few hundred pounds would suffer a head-in-the-hands moment at the news that an early example has just sold for £93k. But the big number was for the first production car, built of course in 1970 and with an A-suffix to the chassis number. It was also restored to original condition.

My friend’s car was at the other end of the spectrum with a shortened chassis, hybrid Series 3/Defender bodywork and countless DIY shed-quality modifications that together transformed it into an off-road special. It was one of very many similar conversions that contributed to the rarity of the untouched originals that are so prized today. Without such attrition, I doubt that two door Range Rovers would be attracting anything like the attention and values that they are now.

It also underlines how, as a car matures from loved old classic to collectible piece of significant motoring history, buyers will put ever higher premiums on original specification, fittings and finishes. Conversely, the more that you personalise a car, the more you narrow its market until it only appeals to one person – you.

Buying advice and market analysis is part of 16 pages of buying information in every issue of Classic Cars magazine, including Quentin Willson’s Smart Buys, Russ Smith’s Market Watch, in-depth buying guides and Ads on Test.

 

Phil Bell

Editor, Classic Cars magazine

 

For more details of the latest issue, visit www.classiccarsmagazine.co.uk

 

Honda CR-X

Honda’s sharp-looking and sharp-handling CR-X coupé is a reminder that there was more to fun Eighties motoring than the much-celebrated hot hatch. And with buyers clamouring for all of the predictable Peugeots, VWs, Renaults and Fords, the now scarce Honda makes a very appealing alternative, with good examples starting at around £4k and the very best topping £12k.

Spec ranges from the early 60bhp, twin-carburettor-fed 1.5-litre model through to the sizzling 1.6i V-T (SiR in Japan) with its 150bhp VTEC (variable valve timing) engine, all driving the front wheels.

The challenge is finding the right car and keeping it in top condition thanks to scarcity of survivors and patchy parts supply, so the in-depth buying guide in the latest issue of Classic Cars magazine is a must-read for advice on where to source cars and how to check them for the sort of problems that might taint your ownership.

So a CR-X might not be as easy to own as a Ford or VW, but life would be dull without challenges, right?

Buying advice and market analysis is part of 16 pages of buying information in every issue of Classic Cars magazine, including Quentin Willson’s Smart Buys, Russ Smith’s Market Watch, in-depth buying guides and Ads on Test.

 

Phil Bell

Editor, Classic Cars magazine

 

For more details of the latest issue, visit www.classiccarsmagazine.co.uk

Price Guide Winners and Losers

To illustrate how nuanced the classic car market is right now, the monthly round-up of the top 72 price guide winners and losers in Classic Cars magazine includes everything from the Blower Bentley to the BMW M535i; and late-model Porsches appear at the top of the charts of both winners and losers, depending on model.

Sharing the winner’s top slot are the Bentley Speed Six, Blower Bentley and BMW M535i (E12 generation) with a weighty 99% growth. They’re followed by Porsche 911 Carrera (964 generation) at 70% and its Turbo brother rounding out the top five at 50%.

The losers show much less spectacular figures with even the biggest only managing a 13% fall, meaning that you can now buy a mint Porsche Boxster 2.5 for just £5k. The newer and much more powerful 3.2S has dropped 10%, making mint examples a £9k bargain. If you’ve never tried one of these tactile and practical little gems, now’s the time. While their 911 big brother boasts all of the big numbers, the Boxster is much more fun at sane and legal speeds.

The Lamborghini 400GT (pictured), Porsche 911 Turbo 4 and Carrera (both 993 generation) wound out the top five fallers, losing 6.3, 6.0 and 5.3% respectively. Hardly drastic losses considering how 2016 buyers have shunned the meteoric rises in the classic Porsche market of previous years.

They may have a way to fall yet, but special examples of these later Porsches will surely return to growth long term as a younger generation of enthusiasts seeks excitement in post-chrome-era classics.

Buying advice and market analysis is part of 16 pages of buying information in every issue of Classic Cars magazine, including Quentin Willson’s Smart Buys, Russ Smith’s Market Watch, in-depth buying guides and Ads on Test.
 

Phil Bell,
Editor, Classic Cars magazine

For more details of the latest issue, visit www.classiccarsmagazine.co.uk

 

Peugeot 205 GTI

It doesn’t seem long ago that we were tipping these sharp-looking road terriers as undervalued smart buys. It couldn’t last. First it was the perfect, ultra-low mileage examples that made the headlines – one sold recently for £30k – while inevitably cars with high mileage or needing work were left alone. But we’ve just seen a well-used 1.6 example make £2.4k.

So it seems the market is becoming hungry for them in any condition, in the way that sporting Ford Escort MkIs were chased upwards a decade ago. As history repeats itself, the generation that grew up aspiring to these, or owning them as disposable transport when they were secondhand bargains has the money to buy the best, or restore one to top condition. Faced with the realisation that supplied of perfect, unmodified examples are scarce, they’re prepared to spend ever more on chasing the dream.

But aside from headline-grabbing auction examples, good cars with normal mileages can be bought for a third of the price of a Ford Escort Mexico. For now.

Buying advice and market analysis is part of 16 pages of buying information in every issue of Classic Cars magazine, including Quentin Willson’s Smart Buys, Russ Smith’s Market Watch, in-depth buying guides and Ads on Test.


Phil Bell

Editor, Classic Cars magazine

For more details of the latest issue, visit www.classiccarsmagazine.co.uk

 

VW Karmann Ghia

It's time for the VW Karmann Ghia to shine! 

It's time for the VW Karmann Ghia to shine! 

While much of the Le Mans/Nürburgring/Brands Hatch-obsessed classic car market chases up values of hardcore performance models, cars like the VW Karmann Ghia look increasingly good value. Of course they’re not going to impress anyone with vivid acceleration, big horsepower boasts and heroic handling, but there really is more to classic motoring than driving a car like you stole it. This, coming from someone with a history of TVR and Porsche ownership.

What the Karmann Ghia does do very well is look pretty and cruise along with carefree ease. Lovely examples can be found for around £10k, which wouldn’t buy you much of a Triumph TR6 these days.

Buying advice and market analysis is part of 16 pages of buying information in every issue of Classic Cars magazine, including Quentin Willson’s Smart Buys, Russ Smith’s Market Watch, in-depth buying guides and Ads on Test.

Phil Bell

Editor, Classic Cars magazine

For more details of the latest issue, visit www.classiccarsmagazine.co.uk

 

Classic Winners and Losers

More than 60 classics have jumped in value since the last update to the Classic Cars magazine Price Guide, and the list published in the latest issue makes fascinating reading.

Despite a widely-reported cooling off in classic values in 2016 there are plenty of exceptions, ranging from obviously hot models like the BMW M535i (up 54% to £10k in top condition) to the quietly-appreciated Swallow Doretti (up 50% to £60k). Tellingly, there are no Ferraris or early Porsche 911s in the top slots, though high-performance versions of the 993 generation cars are increasingly appreciated for their last-of-the-air-cooled status.

The top ten fallers include the until-recently climbing Mercedes 190 SL and Rolls Corniche, though their single-digit declines haven’t transformed them into instant bargains just yet.

Buying advice and market analysis is part of 16 pages of buying information in every issue of Classic Cars magazine, including Quentin Willson’s Smart Buys, Russ Smith’s Market Watch, in-depth buying guides and Ads on Test.

 

Phil Bell

Editor, Classic Cars magazine

 

For more details of the latest issue, visit classiccarsmagazine.co.uk.

To see the digital edition for Android devices click here

To see the digital edition on iPad or iPhone click here 

Alfa 2600s come out of the shadows

Prices for Alfa 2600 Spiders and Sprints are being driven up by buyers who favour glamorous styling and fine engineering over backlane sporting dynamics.

You can now pay £90k and £48k respectively for the Touring and Bertone-designed Sixties cruisers respectively. With their handsome twin overhead cam straight sixes offering 145bhp, they offer a taste of the Aston Martin/Maserati highlife for a fraction of the cost. A smart and very stylish way to spend your money indeed.

Buying advice and market analysis is part of 16 pages of buying information in every issue of Classic Cars magazine, including Quentin Willson’s Smart Buys, Russ Smith’s Market Watch, in-depth buying guides and Ads on Test.
 

Phil Bell

Editor, Classic Cars magazine

 

For more details of the latest issue, visit classiccarsmagazine.co.uk.

 

To see the digital edition for Android devices click here 

To see the digital edition on iPad or iPhone click here

BMC Bargain!

The BMC 1100/1300 range is your chance to own a sharp slice of Pininfarina styling riding on an even sharper chassis for a fraction of the cost of an early Mini. 

Usable examples of the Austin and Morris versions start at £1000 while even the up-spec MG, Riley and 1300GT alternatives are only three times that in equivalent condition – the mini-limo Vanden Plas and Wolseley variants fall in between. Of course, perfection costs – you’d have to budget more like £8k for a well restored MG, Riley or 1300GT, and proportionately less for the others.

If you’re tempted, have a look at the detailed buying guide in the latest issue of Classic Cars magazine for all of the essential checks and model choice guidance you could wish for, plus specialist expert views and real owner experiences to make the process as easy as possible.

Buying advice and market analysis is part of 16 pages of buying information in every issue of Classic Cars magazine, including Quentin Willson’s Smart Buys, Russ Smith’s Market Watch, in-depth buying guides and Ads on Test.

 

Phil Bell

Editor, Classic Cars magazine

 

For more details of the latest issue, visit classiccarsmagazine.co.uk.

To see the digital edition for Android devices click here 

To see the digital edition on iPad or iPhone click here

Fiat X1/9 is a Sleeper

Fiat’s crisp, wedgy X1/9 showstopper is still being overlooked by buyers looking for the next big thing, but what else delivers such futuristic Bertone styling for well under £5k?

Choose a car in one of the more eye-catching Seventies colours and you’ll be sure to stand out from the crowd for all the right reasons during the next events season as you feel like an actor from an out-take of Blake’s 7. Shiny space jumpsuit optional.

Buying advice and market analysis is part of 16 pages of buying information in every issue of Classic Cars magazine, including Quentin Willson’s Smart Buys, Russ Smith’s Market Watch, in-depth buying guides and Ads on Test.

 

Phil Bell

Editor, Classic Cars magazine

 

For more details of the latest issue, visit classiccarsmagazine.co.uk.

To see the digital edition for Android devices click here

To see the digital edition on iPad or iPhone click here

Turbo Saab Time!

The original Saab 99 Turbo still looks good value compared to many of its period rivals, with good examples still popping up for less than £10k.

It may lack the wilder image of some of its turbocharged contemporaries, but this was a landmark car in the story of turbocharging and has always enjoyed a cult following. Owning one says, ‘I could have bought a six-cylinder BMW or turbocharged Ford, but I don’t follow fashion.’

Crucial to the appeal are those cool Inca alloys, and original fabric interiors set the package off nicely, so think twice about paying too much for modified examples.

Buying advice and market analysis is part of 16 pages of buying information in every issue of Classic Cars magazine, including Quentin Willson’s Smart Buys, Russ Smith’s Market Watch, in-depth buying guides and Ads on Test.

Phil Bell

Editor, Classic Cars magazine

 

For more details of the latest issue, visit classiccarsmagazine.co.uk.

To see the digital edition for Android devices click here 

To see the digital edition on iPad or iPhone click here

 

Car Assembly Axed at MG Longbridge Plant.

MG has announced that it will stop assembling cars at the historic Longbridge plant, despite a year-on-year rise in sales of 18%. 

MG’s parent company, SAIC Motors, currently ships in part-built vehicles for completion at the Longbridge plant. However, cars will no longer pass through the MG factory as fully built cars ready for sale will land straight in from China.

Following a cost-cutting drive, this process will “no longer be required”, despite rising sales of 18% year-on-year and a 130% increase in market share.

The firm has confirmed there will be 25 job losses as a result, but sales, marketing and after-sales operations will remain at the plant.

The announcement comes only five years after the production line was reopened, some 16 years since the last new MG began production in the West Midlands.

More than 400 design engineers and other staff employed at the SAIC Motor Technical Centre (SMTC) site are not affected. Two models are currently designed within this facility, the MG3 supermini and the GS SUV. 

Where possible, production staff would be moved into new role, a spokeman for MG has confirmed. 

The Labour MP for Birmingham Northfield, Richard Burden, has criticised the decision, labelling the announcement as “hugely disappointing and premature.”

The Government are apparently willing to meet MG to discuss options. Quite how sales will be affected now that cars are no longer assembled in the UK remains to be seen. 

MERCEDES TEMPTATION

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Classic car magazines can be guilty of unrealistically low ‘Prices from £Xk’ headlines in the hope of snaring new readers, but at Classic Cars magazine we focus on what you’d really pay for a car in a condition that you’d actually want to own. So when the latest issue says that a Mercedes 230 SLK can be yours from £2.5k, we’re talking about a good example with 60-70k miles and full service history.

Incredible value for such a refined and once expensive roadster, and one with the party trick of a push-button, folding electric hardtop. Even the 320 V6 isn’t much more than twice that for a similarly well-looked after example. All you have to do is navigate your way around the poorly maintained examples that have been glossed up for a quick profit, so it’s worth checking out the buying guide in the latest issue of Classic Cars magazine which details the most serious and expensive faults, and shows you how to spot them. After that all you need to do is seize the best bits of our sporadic summer, yours at the push of a button.

Buying advice and market analysis is part of 16 pages of buying information in every issue of Classic Cars magazine, including Quentin Willson’s Smart Buys, Russ Smith’s Market Watch, in-depth buying guides and Ads on Test.

For more details of the latest issue, visit classiccarsmagazine.co.uk

To see the digital edition for Android devices click here

To see the digital edition on iPad or iPhone click here

Fancy receiving the latest classic news direct to your inbox? Sign up to our FREE newsletter here.

 

MARKET WINNERS OF THE MONTH

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There’s a lot of talk this year about the classic car market cooling off, particularly the high-value auction darlings typified by Mercedes 300 SL Gullwings and Roadsters, chrome-bumper Ferraris and pre-impact bumper Porsche 911s. You can look for deeper meaning to this, but the most rational explanations seem to be over-supply from vendors trying to cash in on a boom, and buyer disillusionment with the belief that values will values will continue to soar at the same rate.

 

 

But this cooler mindset doesn’t apply evenly throughout the classic car market, as evidenced by the Market Movers data in the latest issue of Classic Cars magazine. The top ten climbers have all grown by at least 23 per cent since the last update, with some surprising top performers like the Austin Atlantic and Ford Corsair GT each jumping more than 40 per cent and even numerous classics like MG Midget MkII and MkIII climbing 33 per cent. Porsche 968 Club Sports and BMW CSLs have both shown another recent spurt, at 38 and 33 per cent respectively, so it’s hard to generalise where the recent growth has concentrated, and ever more challenging to predict where it will strike next. 

Buying advice and market analysis is part of 16 pages of buying information in every issue of Classic Cars magazine, including Quentin Willson’s Smart Buys, Russ Smith’s Market Watch, in-depth buying guides and Ads on Test.

For more details of the latest issue, visit classiccarsmagazine.co.uk

To see the digital edition for Android devices click here

To see the digital edition on iPad or iPhone click here

DEATH FOR DOLLARS : THE FORD PINTO

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All you need to know about the Ford Pinto: It was a compact car. It was introduced for 1970. It had an identical twin - the Mercury Bobcat. It was a best seller. Or, at least, that’s what Ford wants you to think. It actually enjoyed burning people alive. Don’t believe us? Read on.

Is the Ford Pinto the most infamous car in history?

Is the Ford Pinto the most infamous car in history?

Lets set the tone. Ford desperately needed an economical, compact car to compete with invading imports from Japan and Europe. Ford executive Lee Lacocca brought the idea of an inexpensive, small, light car costing less than $2000 to the table. To keep the car light, everything was scaled down with an inline-four engine under the bonnet. It appeared to be the perfect answer to an economic climate pushing wages down and fuel prices up. The Ford Pinto finally arrives for September 11, 1970. 

Lets set the scene two years later. A factory fresh Ford Pinto suffers engine problems and stalls in traffic. A fellow motorist travelling at 28mph hits the Pinto from behind and watches in horror as the Pinto is engulfed in a fireball, burning the driver, one Lily Gray, to death and permanently disfiguring her 13-year-old passenger, Richard Grimshaw. In true American fashion, this accident resulted in a lawsuit - with Grimshaw suing Ford for crafting dangerous cars within their factory premises. 

The danger could be found with the fuel tank, positioned between the rear bumper and the rear axle, which in the event of a shunt could separate the filler neck from the tank and spray fuel up the underside of the car. In the nastiest of circumstances this would lead to horrendous infernos where inhabitants jammed in the cabin had hot death to look forward to.  A further issue with the rear end design found protruding bolts from the differential puncturing the fuel tank - leaving you with rather poor fuel consumption into the bargain. 

Ford responded to the Grimshaw lawsuit claiming that the Pinto was as safe and robust as any other car on the road at that time. However, Grimshaw’s law team managed to obtain information gathered from rear-end collision tests on the Pinto, carried out by Ford itself in 1970, well after the first Pinto had left the production line. These results documented that out of 11 collision tests, eight vehicles impersonated a blast furnace - catching fire to a spectacular degree. Just to make things interesting, the three that didn’t go up in flames had safety devices installed. 

It wasn’t until journalist Mark Dowie started researching the subject that he discovered Ford’s Cost-Benefits analysis of the Pinto’s defect - basically, human life wasn’t worth spending money on.  Fitting extra safety features would set the Ford Motor Company back the sum total of $137 million. A large sum of money by any account, but Ford bigwigs opted for a different route. They were more than happy to continue churning out the Pinto unchanged, as litigation from victims were estimated to cost less than $49.5 million. They even went ahead and predicted that 180 people would perish in Pinto fires.

Ford didn’t therefore install any safety features on their Pinto and, by September of 1977, flaming Pintos were killing estimates of seventy people each year. To spice things up further, it was discovered that Ford lobbied to delay a Federal Bill of 1970 enforcing compulsory safety standards around the rear of vehicles. It finally became law in 1978, just as Pintos were recalled for refit. Richard Grimshaw was finally awarded $125 million in damages - although, strangely, this was reduced to $3.5 million.

Did Ford really fix the problem? Installing a deeper filler neck and a protective shield did appear to reduce fatalities - but the Pinto will be forever known as the car equivalent to a serial killer.  The ‘Devils-Hatchback’ is the confirmed cause of at least 27 deaths in America. 

This is a shame, really, as the entire fiasco overshadows the little Pinto’s merits. It was surprisingly spacious, it could achieve  reasonable fuel economy and, considering its basis, wasn’t all too horrific to gaze over. Yet, movie moments such as this help cement the Pinto firmly in place as a health hazard.

Should you buy a Pinto? Well, seeing as they are rarer than hen’s teeth in Britain, why not go for a Ford Fiesta? Besides the tendency to cook you alive, they are remarkably similar.  

A NEW WAVE OF BARGAIN CLASSICS IS HEADING TO THE UK FROM AUSTRALIA. SO WHAT’S GOING ON?

A new wave of bargain classics is heading to the UK from Australia. So what’s going on?

A new wave of bargain classics is heading to the UK from Australia. So what’s going on?

Demand for good right-hand drive vehicles combined with currency fluctuations has seen a flow of classics return to the UK from Australia. 
Sydney-based classic dealer Supercar Secrets said it originally built its business by importing cars from the UK for Australian buyers. But over the past year, it has sent both barn finds and fully-restored cars in the opposite direction.
Mark Haybittle, co-owner, said: ‘All these classics have barely any rust and low mileages because they tend to be used at the weekends as fun cars, and because of the market conditions they’re proving very attractive to UK buyers right now. 
‘It’s very similar to what happened with the Californian cars. We’ve had a few enquiries before, but as the dollar has really dropped in the last year, there’s been a lot more demand from Britain.’
But a more international market, and the ease of overseas bidding, is also making a huge difference. ‘Tiny’, a member of the sales team at the Sydney-based auction house Shannons, added: ‘We have noted increased demand from overseas since the introduction of online bidding. The demand has come from all over the world – a Sunbeam that recently returned to the UK is a good example. 
‘It’s as much about online bidding and the rarity or quality of the particular vehicles that’s driving this demand as weaknesses in the Australian dollar.’ 
Simon Purdue of Cosmopolitan Cars, North Hobart, Tasmania, reckons that although top-end cars feature in the list of cars coming to the UK from Australia, it’s not exclusively so. 
‘A friend of a friend recently sent a 25,000km out-of-the-box E28 M5 to Munich Legends in England. The seller was willing to accept A$50,000 (£27,000) here in Australia, but could not get a buyer to settle on what seemed like a lot of money. Munich Legends sold it for £56,000.’ 
Purdue currently has a Porsche 911 Turbo in stock that has two owners, with 90,000km on the odometer, and is ‘totally original’. He knows of two similar cars that have sold for A$93,000–95,000 (£50,000–51,500). He believes his 930 could be tempting for a UK buyer.
Supercar Secrets’ Haybittle added that 1970s and 1980s supercars, including the Porsche 911 and Ferrari 308GTB, were proving the most popular. He has also exported Jaguar Mk2s, Triumph TR6s and Rover P6s back to their country of origin. 
Kristian Appelt, Director of Adelaide-based Iron Lady Imports, thinks people moving to, and leaving, Australia is also having an effect: ‘In the past we mainly shipped cars from the UK to Australia, often for ex-pat Aussies returning home. 
Now traffic for cars from Australia to the UK has increased to the point where it is a fairly even split. Demand is definitely up and the closer the exchange rate approaches 50p to the Australian dollar, the more demand increases.’
He added: ‘We’ve seen an increase in people travelling to Australia for work, taking cars back with them, especially “cashed up” ex-pats with highly paid roles in the mining industry.’  
The message is clear – if you’re looking to buy, don’t discount Australia. 

David Simister, with additional reporting by Brett Nicholson and Jack Yan

RANGE ROVER VALUES STALL AS ANNIVERSARY APPROACHES

Range Rover values stall as anniversary approaches

Range Rover values stall as anniversary approaches

Prices for the second-generation Range Rover are failing to take off in its 20th anniversary year, traders have told CCfS's sister newspaper Classic Car Weekly.
With air suspension for a controlled ride, a lusty V8 to ensure enough performance, and an ‘old-money’ image which other brands fail to match, the Range Rover P38 offers compelling arguments for purchase. Yet it’s at an all-time price low. With prices for this luxury 4x4 now well under £1000, it appears to be the ideal time to buy a good example.
Mark Smith of Woodside Garage told CCW that the market is dormant for P38s: “There’s no real collectors’ market yet except for rarities such as the Autobiography or the Holland and Holland. Interest seems to have vanished in recent months – people are looking at the later L322 Range Rovers, and Classics fly off our forecourt. The issue we’re seeing with the P38 is prices are very low – a really nice car I had in stock sold for £1600, most of my part exchange cars go for £500 through auctions, and at that price point people expect to be able to get their hands dirty.
“A P38 is far too complicated for most home mechanics, so they’re just not interested.” He added that P38s acquired a reputation for complexity, and these prices may in part be due to the cost of repair bills.
Mark Calzoni of Land Rover specialist Simmonites also confirmed that prices are slow currently: “They’re getting old now, and they’re not really friendly cars for the home mechanic. They’re prone to electrical issues, the air suspension causes problems, and the 4.6 litre blocks were notorious for cracking. 
“It’s unlikely we’ll see much movement in values in the near future because it’s just too troublesome a car for many to take on. The only plus point is that, unlike many classics, they don’t tend to rust!”

• Woodside Garage 01525 862727
• Simmonites 01274 833351

FAST FORD VALUES GOING NUTS SAY MARKET EXPERTS

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Low-mileage Brooklands set to be this month’s second £35k+ Capri

The Ford Capri 280 is dubbed Brooklands because of its colour.

The Ford Capri 280 is dubbed Brooklands because of its colour.

A delivery-mileage Ford Capri is being tipped to sell for as much as £45k when it goes under the hammer on 27 February– barely a fortnight after another low mileage one made £35,500 at auction.

Silverstone Auctions is selling the 1987 280 Brooklands – which has just 936 miles on the clock – with a £35-45k estimate at its Race Retro sale. It’s set to be the second Capri MkIII to go for upwards of £35k in the space of month. Market experts are saying it’s part of a wider price surge affecting fast Fords from the 1970s and ‘80s, including hot Escorts.

The auction house says it has noticed an increase in interest in performance Fords, with blue oval-badged classics getting far more enquiries than other cars on websites like CCW sister site Classic Cars for Sale.

‘The fast Ford market seems to have gone nuts over the last year or so. If this car had come to us five or six years ago I’d say it’d have been a £18-22k car, so cars like these have comfortably doubled in price,’ says sales manager Will Smith.

‘It’s the same for hot Escorts and Sierra Cosworths, and the Escort RS Cosworth is really on the up. It’s not a trend that exclusively affects Fords – it’s more acute with them because they’re so popular with the enthusiast-driven market.’

Regular CCW reader Albert Clarkson, who owns a 1986 Capri 2.8 Injection with just 586 miles on the clock, reckons the price rises will put many of these cars out of reach of grass roots enthusiasts and into the hands of collectors. 

‘£35k is silly money for these cars. I remember the Lotus Cortinas and the Escort MkI Twin Cams really going up in price, but now it seems more and more Capris are going for a lot of money,’ he says. ‘I’d never sell mine because I enjoy it too much, but now it’s not unrealistic to think it’d go for a similar price.’

Classics Central, which is selling a 1981 Janspeed 3.0-litre Capri at its 28 February auction with a £35-40k estimate, says both the delivery mileage Brooklands and Anglia Car Auctions’ £35k 2.8i are systematic of a wider market trend for fast Fords going up in value.

‘Capris that are special or particularly well preserved are going up rapidly, as are all fast Fords from the 1970s and 1980s – they are really are dynamite for the market at the moment. You only have to look at what happened with Silverstone Auctions’ Escort RS Turbo, which went for £60k back in November, to see that,’ says managing director Justin Lazic. ‘Mediocre examples haven’t changed that much in price, but rare and low mileage examples that can’t be repeated have easily jumped up. What it doesn’t mean is that a guy’s regular 2.8 Injection is now worth ten grand where it might have been six, a significant car can easily be five or six times the price it was.’

ENDANGERED SPECIES

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We salute near-extinct classic cars that have all but vanished from the roads. Prepare to be surprised...

 

They were once as common on Britain’s roads as broken white lines – yet plenty of the family favourites of yesteryear have all but vanished from the motoring landscape.

These are the mass market gems that have been largely forgotten by today’s buoyant classic car market, which focuses on hot hatches, luxury saloons and sports car before reaching out the hand of enthusiast salvation to the Ls and GLs of this world.

While the E-types, MGBs and Range Rovers have found fans willing to put time and money into their maintenance and resurrection, there are plenty of other models whose numbers have been depleted.

Austin Montegos and Renault 9s fell by the wayside as rust, banger racing and second-hand market woes sent vast numbers to the scrapyard in the sky. This isn’t only a great shame, but it also strips us of our motoring heritage.

These humble everyday chariots deserve to be saved – and there’s now show in Scotland aimed at championing cars of which fewer than 500 remain. How Many Left?, inspired by the eponymous car data website, takes place at the Grampian Transport Museum this weekend.

All of the cars you’ll find over the next few pages are eligible to take part – which means they’re also great examples of classics that deserved to be saved. Some of which are more suprising than you might think…

 

Hillman Super Imp (1963 - 1976) - 500 remain on the road

Although journalists and owners alike confirmed that the humble Hillman Imp was more practical - yet just as amusing to drive as the market-leading Mini - the Imp has dwindled in number due largely to an unfashionable image in years gone by. With an engine positioned in the rear to attack overseas rivals and rampant corrosion issues even when new, the prospect of 37bhp and all-independent suspension just wasn’t enough to triumph over its unusual nature - which is a shame, as the Imp was and remains a competent package brimming with cheeky charisma.

 

MGC GT (1967 - 1969) - 444 remaining on the road

When launched, the six-cylinder MG was given a savage shoeing by the contemporary motoring press. Too heavy an engine, too much understeer and the potential to permanently part wives from their husbands led to the undesirable diminutive of ‘The Widower’. However, it’s subsequently come to light that the cars were supplied with the wrong tyre pressures, and but for this oversight the MGC would have got a fairer hearing. But it’s too late for the huge number of MGCs that have bit the dust, providing replacement parts for its more well loved four-pot and V8 brethren. More fool us – prices for MGCs are on the rise and nowadays, used as a relaxing cruiser, they make a good deal of sense.

 

Austin Maxi (1969 - 1981) - 401 remaining on the road.
Once a sensible practical commuter, you’d be lucky to clap eyes on an Austin Maxi these days. Branded for years alongside its Allegro and Marina siblings as a class-conscious laughing stock, the outlook for remaining Maxis appears optimistic - thanks to a committed owners’ club and its contemporary stance as an unconventional template adapted, and still used, by mainstream hatchback manufacturers. With five-speed cruising on offer it was also hugely advanced - showing the Golf MkI a thing or two. 

 

Hillman Avenger (1970 -1976) - 369 remaining on the road.
Despite being given the spotlight as the support car for the 1978 Scotland World Cup Football Team, the Hillman Avenger has suffered a surprisingly low survival rate.  Made in Britain when patriotism swayed customers into ownership, the Avenger handled with aplomb, providing good looks and practicality into the bargain. The tuning potential kept many a teenager off the streets, too and it even found brief success exported into the USA as a Plymouth and in South America as a Dodge.

 

Rover SD1(1977 - 1986) - 310 remaining on the road  
A world beater upon launch, there was so much right about the Ferrari Daytona-inspired Rover SD1. Sadly, there was a lot wrong with it, too - reliability and build quality was so poor that it shocked even the firmest of BL devotees to the core. Rust issues set about destroying any chance most SD1s had of survival, with large numbers sent off to the metal claw as Japanese rivals proved dependability with a budget saloon was no pipe dream. 

 

Austin Montego(1984 - 1994) - 296 remaining on the road.
Available with a wide range of engines and various trim levels to keep pushy executives and retirees alike more than content, the Montego used to trundle over Britain’s roads in the sort of numbers that’d give Carol Vorderman a headache. Unable to offer anything over the ordinary and branded with a parent badge most considered to be a lame duck, the Montego offered all the second-hand desirability of a Chinese-burn. Rusting around the edges in spectacular fashion, the Montego was soon deemed worthless - but with such a reputation it’s easy to overlook the Montego’s merits. Besides keeping the Austin name alive throughout the 1980s and early 1990s, the Montego provided dependable transport for thousands of families and, in Vanden Plas trim, would even speak to you using the voice of Nicolette MacKenzie.

 

Austin Allegro (1873 - 1982) - 291 remaining on the road.
Once the face of the dying British car industry, the Allegro is so deeply embedded into history and culture as a failure that the humble Austin’s merits are overshadowed. Although it failed to sell in the numbers hoped by BL management, thanks mainly to unappealing looks and a reputation for poor build quality, nearly 700,000 vehicles still found homes. Utilising hydragas suspension for all-round comfort and an endearing driving experience, the Allegro makes for an excellent introduction into classic car ownership.

 

Vauxhall Chevette (1975 - 1984) - 202 remaining on the road

Envisioned as a baby Chevrolet and based on Opel Kadett underpinnings, the shovel-nosed Vauxhall found favour with the British buying public remarkably well – from 1975 to 1978 it was the highest selling hatchback in the UK. Well-loved for its practicality and versatile body style options, 415,000 found homes across the United Kingdom. It also proved to be a useful rally car too, with the likes of Tony Pond and Pentti Arikkala behind the wheel. The latter took the 1979 British Open Rally Championship, finally defeating the Ford Escort’s domination.

 

Triumph Dolomite Sprint  (1973 - 1980) - 186 remaining on the road
Although the Triumph Dolomite had been around since 1965, the ultimate incarnation didn’t arrive until June 1973. The Dolomite Sprint offered 127bhp from a 16-valve powerhouse and a huge amount of equipment as standard - wood trim, tinted windows and alloy wheels. Then there is the gloriously 1970s vinyl roof. Good looking, rapid and utterly droolworthy, the sad decline in numbers of the Dolomite Sprint is a national tragedy. Ceasing production to introduce the Triumph Acclaim, some say the Dolly Sprint was the last true BL car.

 

Morris Ital (1980 - 1984) - 174 remaining on the road

Viewed as a facelift too far, the Ital was an effort from BL to keep the Marina going throughout the 1980s -although it offered better quality than its predecessor, the designer body couldn’t mask that the underpinnings were pure 1970s British Leyland. This meant that rival models from Ford and Vauxhall took the market lead, helping consign the Morris name to the history books. Although named after claims that design house Ital penned the lines, they actually only acted as consultants - Harris Mann, designer of the Allegro and Princess, penned the facelift. Then again, the Morris Mann would probably have sounded stupid anyway.

 

Triumph Acclaim (1981 - 1984) - 170 left on the road

Not only was the Acclaim the Triumph car company’s swansong, but it also marked the start of radical change in British manufacturing. For years British cars had been deemed largely unreliable, but the Acclaim changed all that, with a great reputation for staying in one piece – it had the lowest percentage of warranty claims for a British Leyland car. With good reason – it was actually a Honda Ballade, built at Longbridge. Effectively, it was the first Japanese car built within Europe, and was the start of a long collaboration between BL/Rover and Honda.

 

Ford Sierra XR4i (1983 - 1992) - 150 remaining on the road

Think of a fast Ford Sierra with a big wing and chances are you’ll summon up memories of the Cosworth. The XR4i got there first, however – and thanks to its 2.8-litre Cologne V6 managed to push the fascination with fast Fords into a new era – 160bhp in a relatively lightweight bodyshell yields a still-not-too-shabby 7.8-second 0-60mph sprint. Tin worm, rampant car thievery and neglect have killed off many XR4is, which is why the very best are now becoming highly prized.

 

Renault 9 (1981 - 1988) - 121 remaining on the road

You’d think Robert Opron - the creative force behind the Alfa Romeo SZ and the Citroën SM - might have brought a taste of the exotic to the Renault 9. Yet swooping back roofline aside, the 9 lacked the flair of its 11 hatchback sibling, which may explain why no-one seemed to care for what was a highly regarded car at the time of its launch. The Renault 9 won the 1982 European Car of the Year award, beating exotica such as the swoopily styled Ford Sierra. It even saw action on rally stages. But as with many saloon cars, the Renault 9 soon succumbed to banger status and then disappearance. Turbo models are well worth seeking out, however – they share mechanicals with loopy and well-lauded Renault 5 Turbo.

 

BL Princess  (1975 - 1982) - 121 remaining on the road

The definition of badge engineering, the famous wedge design could be found with Austin, Morris or Wolsely badging before finally dubbed ‘The Princess’. Utterly controversial due to BL disgruntlement and a bold Harris Mann design, the Princess was far from a bad car - it offered acres of space and made for an effortless cruiser whether venturing onto the motorway or exploring the city. The six-cylinder engine kept everything smoother than Frank Sinatra’s vocals, too.

 

Bond Bug (1970 - 1974) - 114 remainingFord_Sierra_ID7812.jpg on the road

While most three-wheelers provide snorts of derision from smug car snobs, the Bond Bug always elicits a smile. Yes, it may have a platry 29bhp but then it only weighs 394kg – it’s got enough get up and go to raise a smile, and can hit 76mph, if you’re brave. However, many have been stolen, never to be seen again, while others bought as playthings have long been forgotten, as the need for a practical car that can carry more than two very committed people becomes a priority.

 

MG 1100 (1962 - 1971) - 97 remaining on the road
While it pains us to discover only 97 MG 1100s still grace our presence, in reality we are lucky to have them at all.  Although the shape is as common as a badly written Steven Segal script, only 157,409 MG 1100s were crafted in the Cowley factory. As a plush version of the beloved Morris 1100, sales were slow to start with and thanks to corrosion issues most didn’t see the 1960s out. With an engine also used in the Mini, the beating hearts of many MG 1100s still live on -albeit at the cost of sending the rest of the vehicle off to the scrap man.

 

Lada Riva (1981 - 2012) - 54 remaining on the road

Despite its poor reputation in the UK, the Lada Riva is a remarkable car – it’s the third highest-selling car ever made after the Ford Model T and VW Beetle, and only went out of production in 2012. It was cheap, utilitarian transport that could be worked on anywhere. It was slow, cramped and about as much fun as a vet’s dissection how-to guide, but it didn’t pretend to be anything it wasn’t. However, while we Brits like that about our Land Rovers, we’re less keen on those attributes in our family saloons. As such many UK Lada Rivas have succumbed to the scrappage scheme. 


 

Jaguar MkX(1961 - 1970) - 50 remaining on the road

Revitalising Jaguar’s look for the 1960s, alongside the svelte E-type was this enormous offering. Easily capable of seating six fully grown adults in style, the MkX was amazingly agile for something wearing the same dimensions as a small house.  It wasn’t uncommon to find the front wings wearing damage as owners underestimated its girth when venturing down narrow streets or entrances. In true Jaguar style, disc brakes and power steering were standard - although the complexity of the vehicle rendered it economically unviable as time progressed.

 

Morris Isis (1955 - 1958) - 44 renaming on the road

If you were the owner of a Morris Isis back in the day, you could truthfully claim to have an Austin Healey C-Series engine under the bonnet.  As an attempt to push the Oxford underpinnings further up market, the Isis offered 86bhp from the 2.6-litre six-cylinder engine with upgraded brakes and stronger suspension to deal with extra weight. The Traveller variant was effectively Britain’s first people carrier, with a third row of seats available with legroom for children and adults alike.

 

Ford Consul GT (1972 - 1977) - 22 remaining on the road

Once seen on telly powering around London with John Thaw and Dennis Waterman in The Sweeney, the Ford Consul GT became an icon of the 1970s. With power, presence and practicality Ford’s executive saloon ticked all the boxes, and thanks to a rear-wheel drive set-up could be slung around with gusto for raw driving excitement. The GT was as hard as nails - No wonder the blaggers’ Jaguar S-Types couldn’t escape - but thanks to this aspect most ended up on the banger racing circuit.

 

Audi V8  (1988 - 1993) - 14 remaining on the road.
With the potential to explode at any given moment, the Audi V8 was largely avoided on the second hand market by all but the brave or unaware. Once going for pennies, expensive repair bills sent the majority into the hands of scrap merchants.  This is a shame, as the V8 rightly deserves its place alongside the Quattro as a significant part of Audi history - it was the first sign that Audi was about to instigate a heated executive saloon war with rivals Mercedes-Benz and BMW.

 

Daihatsu Domino (1982 - 1989) - 13 remaining on the road.
One of the smallest Japanese cars ever to be imported into Britain, the Domino found homes across the UK thanks to its economical engine and ease of ownership. Sadly, due to unremarkable road manners and the safety aspects of a carrier bag, the Domino became a worthless throwaway for those running cars into the ground on a budget. However, if you can find one they are well worth saving. And we even managed to get through that without making a pun. Save one now, as numbers are falling like dominos. Oh, darn.

 

Fiat Regata (1983 - 1990) - 11 remaining on the road.
Launched during the 1983 Frankfurt Motor Show, the Regata sold by the bucket load, with close to two million rolling out the factory gates. However, with niggly build quality issues and a square look that dated quickly, no one bothered to keep their Regata or, indeed, maintain them with any degree of mechanical sympathy. Pumping out a small amount of horsepower and rusting so badly fist sized holes could be found in the wheelarches, constant repairs ground owners down resulting in very few examples currently left on the road.

 

Volvo 265 (1974 - 1980) - 10 remaining on the road

Classless, steadfast and practically indestructible, the 260 series was something of an oddity from Volvo during the 1970s. Besides wearing the same looks as its previous siblings albeit with lashings of extra chrome, under the bonnet grumbled a freshly conceived V6 engine pumping out 148bhp. The 265 Estate offered all the usual Volvo flare yet with a tad more grunt - but thanks to a thirst rivalling Oliver Reed and little to show how upmarket you were bar a slightly larger grill, the 265 never sold in the numbers akin to other Volvo innovations.

 

Peugeot 204 (1965 - 1976) - 10 remaining on the road
Launched in 1965, the 204 quickly became one of Europe’s quickest selling family cars. Employing a transmission-in-sump layout akin to the BMC Mini alongside clean cut and chic styling, the technological advancement hidden away put the 204 top of its market. With over 1.3 million being produced, its sad to discover that Peugeot’s servo-assisted brainchild been largely forgotten by the British classic car scene.  While speed may not have been it’s forte, it kept families moving without issue until 1976.

 

VW Santana (1980 - 1987)  - 7 remaining on the road

Nowadays the Volkwagen Passat is well-known for its stoic abilities to transport the family in comfort and with minimum fuss. Minimum excitement too, but it wasn’t always that way – and it wasn’t always a Passat. From 1981 to 1985 the VW’s mid-size saloon was the Santana and while looking at it didn’t evoke memories of South American guitarist, it did have neat ItalDesign styling cues. Alas they weren’t enough to save the Santana from sliding into unloved banger territory, and then oblivion. The Santana name lives on in China with a new 2013 model.

 

Mazda RX-3 (1971 - 1978) - 6 remaining on the road

While the Mazda RX-3 can still be found on drag-strips and race tracks, having undergone some serious steroid-laden surgery for special events, the popular RX-3 used to roam our main roads in droves. It’s not surprising to see why the 100bhp import found adoring fans, with all the chuckability of a Frisbee and a successful racing pedigree to back up a before unseen Japanese desirability factor. Now rarer than a comprehensible mobile-phone advert, the rotary powered RX-3 is almost mythical.


Citroën LNA (1977 - 1986) - 5 renaming on the road

Built to take on the European supermini market, the LNA may have trumpeted Citroën badging but underneath breathed pure Peugeot 104Z, with the flat-twin 2CV engine upped to 652cc - churning out 36bhp. Introduced for 1977 and eventually bowing out as the AX arrived in 1986, sadly the interesting twin-pot engined variants never made it onto UK soil.  A million were produced, but now only 5 solitary examples survive, with both Mother Nature and Father Time being rather unkind to the Peugeot/Citroën mongrel.

 

Audi 60 (1965 - 1972) - 4 remaining on the road

Although largely overlooked due to sheer ignorance, the Audi 60 was hugely advanced when unleashed onto the buying public in 1965. With neat looks and solid engineering alongside a Daimler-Benz co-developed engine and highly sophisticated road manners, the only downside was a lack of straight-line performance. As the genesis point for modern Audi saloons, the now near extinct 60 is worth hunting down for a cost-effective chunk of German automotive history.

 

Talbot Tagora (1980 - 1984) - 1 remaining on the road
Considered slab-sided, ugly and now near extinct, the Talbot Tagora has been largely ignored by those searching for a viable classic. Viewed as an iconic failure, arriving in a cut-throat marketplace sporting a woeful combination of Peugeot and Chrysler engineering, the Tagora left drivers feeling underwhelmed.  If you were to forgive the stench of failure, you’d find the Tagora is comfortable, roomy and - in V6 form - quicker than Alastair Campbell’s temper. Apparently, there is only one example left alive from a batch of 23,400 - making it as one of the rarest cars in existence.

Calum Brown

FREDDIE MERCURY'S MERCEDES S-CLASS WANTS SOMEONE TO LOVE IT

Freddie Mercury's Mercedes S-class wants someone to love it

Freddie Mercury's Mercedes S-class wants someone to love it

Freddie Mercury's final set of wheels - an unrestored Mercedes-Benz S-class - has been put up for sale in Scotland.

The car, a black 420SEL with a matching leather interior and telephone, was bought new by the former Queen frontman's production company Goose Productions in 1986 and kept until his death in 1991.

When sold in 1996 by Sothebys, it was claimed that it had been Mercury's favourite car - taking preference over his 1974 Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow. However, it was only used by the buyer for four years and then laid up, and has since fallen into a state of disrepair.

Current owner Ross Waite said he came across the car at the back of a yard in his workplace in Fife. 'It had belonged to a former empoyee who decided he didn't want it any more and had left it there to rot. I did some research and discovered that Freddie used to own it.'

Ross added: 'It's time for it to go to someone who can restore it - I can't afford to. I'm inviting offers - it's of more interest than most SELs, but equally it does need a considerable amount of work.'


Interested? Contact Ross Waite on 07867 431443

INVESTING IN A CLASSIC

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Most of us invest in a classic car through appreciation of style, engineering and class, or from sheer nostalgia - although there are those who prefer the financial side…

Buying a Ford Sierra once cost pennies - now it's a different story.

Buying a Ford Sierra once cost pennies - now it's a different story.

Pensions are a difficult thing to manage these days; if you want a decent payout in the next 30 years we’re advised to put away £750 a month by the big wigs. £750! Only the top cretins of the country could manage to do that without sacrificing pleasures such as food, mortgage or tax payments.

For this reason, people have long been investing in artefacts that have the potential to increase in value over a short period of time, often making considerable sums of money in the process. Gold, wine, art, stamps and coins are popular collector’s items, but you will need a small fortune to buy into these nowadays. Classic cars have outperformed all of these however, with yet another considerable price jump this year. The idea of a car stock market isn’t just for those looking to boost their pension plan, it’s been worked by many simply looking for a decent investment.

In the 1980’s the likes of the original Mini and the first Land Rovers were floating around on the cheap. These vehicles are now selling for ten times the value they were bought for. A decent Mini currently changes hands for over £10,000, with a complete rust bucket going for well over a grand. Even in decent condition during the 1990’s the Mini could be bought for as little as the equivalent of £500 today. A Series I Land Rover going for £2000 in 1987 is now worth up to £20,000 in decent nick.

The biggest value leap is the E-Type Jaguar – worth a few grand in decent condition back in the late 1980’s – now worth over £75,000. This price explosion is put down to the ever-growing desirability of the brand, with new models consistently boosting the repertoire.  These vehicles don’t appear to be sliding back down the price ladder, but the problem is, who the hell has a spare £75K to fork out in order to buy them?

And what about insurance to keep them safe? Maintenance? Running costs?

The good news is that Classic Car Insurance is usually very affordable, with low premiums for low yearly mileage usage. We could fill numerous articles on insurance aspects, so we’ll leave you to shop around until we approach the subject next month.

Further good news is that older cars are often very, very basic with very few electronic aspects to trash your life. This doesn’t mean they don’t need maintaining however, and more complex designs won’t suffer fools gladly. Burn out the clutch on your old Jag and you’ll wish you’d never been born. The vehicles can’t simply sit in a shed or sit outside to be ignored and then sold on ten years down the line either, they need to be started, run and driven occasionally to keep all the parts working and oiled.

But, you don’t have to invest in something from the 1960’s or even the 1970’s. Vehicles that have been at rock bottom prices for the past 15 years are beginning to twitch just as the old Land Rovers, Minis and Jaguars did thirty years ago.

So, what if you’ve been toying with this idea or looking for a little something to bomb around in and then sell for the same price you bought it? The choice of car is endless – with Ford Sierras and Lancia Deltas still in reach for mere mortals, although not for much longer. 

Not everybody is equipped financially to just start collecting at the high-end level, but buying one you can personally afford will bring enjoyment and likeminded petrolheads into your life – cars cut through all language barriers.