Best of Classic Driver: 15 Articles from 15 Years
The old car market is steeped in jargon, and I don't mean of the technical kind. I mean the sort of pompous mumbo jumbo that is so often used to make a car sound a bit more upmarket, or to make a generally undesirable model seem rare.
Alfa Romeo SZ: Il Mostro
With coil springs, disc brakes and a powerful (for the day) 3.5-litre V8, the Range Rover that made its debut over 40 years ago was quite a step forward for Land Rover. Up until then, the British company was known for its hardy but basic off-roaders much beloved by users worldwide, ranging from sheep farmers in New Zealand to Her Majesty the Queen.
And while the fastest part of the 3-speed automatic transmission might be the sound of its name (‘Turbo-Hydramatic’), today, the big GTs offer the traditional, Captain of Industry Ferrari experience for the price of a regional manager’s executive saloon.
The car started life as the 1972 365 GT/4 2+2, a manual, 4,390cc replacement for the smaller 365 GTC/4. The classic Pininfarina styling echoed that of the Fiat 130 Coupé, yet the Maranello version was more aggressive and sinuous – as is entirely appropriate.
To some it was the ugly sister; to others it was a gorgeously eccentric sweetheart. The unusual Gandini styling split opinions like few other cars. Its roots are in the wild 1967 Marzal Concept from which the Espada’s main design cues were taken: that unmistakeable sloping rear roofline, the wide flat surfaces and a huge expanse of glass, among others.
Although television screens in the 80s were frequently filled with more exotic cars (and hair-dos, come to think of it), the 911 proved extremely popular with the young up-and-comers. If you had a 911, you’d made it. The 3.2 Carrera’s new 231bhp engine meant that, at the time, it was claimed to be the fastest convertible in the world.
This is the enduring image of the big-engined Healey.
And, looking at the values of Abingdon’s finest, even in today’s buoyant classic car market, recreating such a scene need not be expensive. An Austin-Healey 3000 looks good, performs adequately (124bhp, tested at 116mph with a 0-60mph of 11.7 seconds in 1960) – at a price well short of the equivalent Jaguar XK or anaemic Mercedes 190SL.
Out after 16 hours: Bentley 3 Litre Le Mans