Jensen`s forgotten Interceptor S4 tested
Transcription
Jensen`s forgotten Interceptor S4 tested
may 2011 Est 1973 TVR M How to buy the best of Seventies fun for just £6k Classic e showcas for See p18il5s ta e d Greatest luxury convertibles tested Is it the Mercedes, Bentley or Alvis for you? Forget its reputation: discover the truth jowett jupiter £ 4 . 3 0 2 0 1 1 luxury convertibles l jaguar xk140 ghia l tvr m-series buying guide triumph stag v8 M a y www.classiccarsmagazine.co.uk summer in style rtise adver ar you fc e for re Heading for the hills in Yorkshire’s Porsche-beater Jensen’s forgotten Interceptor S4 tested Lancia Delta S4 rally Too wild, even for Group B? special order jaguar Beirut to Belgium via Blighty Cortina Lotus 4-door Yes, it’s real and we drive it manta ‘a’ survivor • last days of rootes rallying • mad 1915 wanderer Duesie duo takes top Amelia awards A pair of Duesenbergs took top honours at the Amelia Island Concours d’Elégance in March. One of the fastest, Harry Yeaggy’s 1935 ‘Mormon Meteor’ SJ Special, claimed Best in Show Concours de Sport, while The Nethercutt Collection’s 1933 SJ Arlington Torpedo Sedan ‘Twenty Grand’, – the most luxurious and most expensive built – won Best in Show Concours d’Elégance. Ab Jenkins drove the yellow Speedster to numerous speed records at Bonneville salt flats from 1934-36, concluding with a 148.641mph run over 48 hours with Curtiss Conqueror V12 aero engine power. It now sports its original supercharged 6.9-litre straight-eight, refitted by Jenkins in 1938 before using the Speedster as a road car. The Rollston-bodied Twenty Grand is so-named because it cost that many dollars to build as a show car for the 1933 Century of Progress Exposition in Chicago, Illinois. Its metallic platinum exterior is matched with silver leather inside. Both cars are former Pebble Beach Concours d’Elégance Best of Show winners, Twenty Grand in 1980 and Mormon Meteor in 2007. This year’s Amelia Island event pulled together around 250 cars, focusing on Duesenberg, Kurtis and Allard, with special commemorations of Chevrolet and the Indianapolis 500 (both 100 years old), 40 years since the first Cannonball Run, and Hot Rod magazine’s cover cars. For 2012’s event, keep March 9-11 free. 1947 Steyr-Allard was Sydney Allard’s own hill climb special and was one of 21 race and street Allards on display 1932 Ford Roadster was the ‘Little Deuce Coupe’ on the cover of The Beach Boys’ 1963 album Best in Show winners: Twenty Grand (left) and Mormon Meteor Alfa collection ‘is not for sale’ Speculation that Alfa Romeo’s Museo Storico museum in Arese has closed for good and the collection could be broken-up is rubbish, says the Italian car manufacturer. An Alfa Romeo spokesperson told Classic Cars: ‘The museum is temporarily closed while work is undertaken to bring it up to European and Italian Health and Safety regulations.’ ‘The Alfa Romeo Museum – building and contents – is listed by the Italian Ministry of Arts and Culture and recognised as Italian National patrimony. There are no plans to either sell the collection or close the museum.’ And far from mothballing the collection Alfa will continue to show and demonstrate its cars at events such as the Goodwood Festival of Speed. Simon Kidston Kuwait concours: full of Eastern promise ver been to kuwait? Neither had I until recently, but an invitation from a prime minister tends to grab your attention. This one came from His Highness Sheikh Nasser Al-Mohammad Al-Sabah, premier of the tiny oil-rich Gulf state and probably the Middle East’s most prolific car collector. How prolific? Nobody will say, but a credible estimate is probably a year’s worth of sales for all the world’s classic car auction houses. Suddenly Kuwait sounded very attractive… The reason for the Sheikh’s hospitality, as you might have guessed, was car-related. An avid follower of the classic car scene in the West, where he spent much of his youth, HRH is set on placing his country at its forefront in the Middle East. Giving Kuwait its own national concours d’elégance made that very clear. And that’s how I found myself in a 50-strong party of collectors, journalists and experts flying out to the second Kuwait Concours. First impressions? Sunshine wasn’t entirely unexpected, although mild temperatures were a pleasant surprise; smoking seems to be as much a national pastime as drinking is taboo; and the odd shellpocked building is a sobering reminder of the true cost of petrol. Rather than judging or presenting, I’d decided to go to Kuwait as an entrant, so my already well-travelled black Lamborghini Miura added another exotic destination to its resumé when it emerged from the hold of a Boeing 747 into the desert sunlight. I’m not much of a polisher; the biggest attraction of travelling 2536 miles was the chance to drive a favourite sports car in an unfamiliar and completely incongruous setting. The concours turned out to be leisurely, friendly, diverse and refreshingly innocent. Its organisers are starting from scratch in a country where until recently cars were disposable commodities or toys with very short life spans, but that’s slowly changing. In the meantime the exchange of contrasting cultures is fascinating. My old friend Valentino Balboni, Lamborghini test driver and one of several automotive personalities invited to judge the concours, agreed to drive the SV for a TV shoot. Having filled up with petrol ($27 – George Osborne take note) we went for a spin, at which point a 38-year-old halfshaft decided to give up. The next hour spent waiting for a tow truck by the side of Kuwait City’s main traffic artery was priceless. At the mere sight of an unusual car parked up with an audience, locals felt obliged to show off their own wheels, ranging from a trick Mercedes AMG – which floored it and sped past with the King’s smiling face emblazoned across its sun blinds – to a baby-blue Lamborghini Murciélago whose driver did a double-take and reversed the wrong way up the highway to check if it really was his hero Signor Balboni he’d just spotted. Suitably in awe, he came back with an autograph book and every other car in his collection, each more powerful than the last (800bhp in a Nissan GTR?!). Luckily we had a spare Miura – the unique Roadster, no less. I’ll never forget the sight of a smiling owner in the passenger seat as Valentino gunned the dazzling turquoise show car down the coastal road, nor the scrapyard we came across in the suburbs that revealed a treasure trove of abandoned exotics turning to dust. The Middle East? They do cars differently there, which makes it all the more fascinating. E Simon Kidston lives and works in a world filled with the finest classics. In between acting as a consultant to collectors and performing as the multi-lingual presenter at top European events, Geneva-based Simon (www.kidston.com) finds time to enjoy his own cars, including a Porsche 911 Carrera 2.7 RS and a Lamborghini Miura SV. May 2011 /classic cars [[2r]]