Lot Ended
Description
Fresh from a total nut-and-bolt restoration; retrim alone cost £10k; a
gorgeous 'matching numbers' E-Type that was driven 30 miles to the
sale
Visually
distinguished by its slightly higher, uncowled front headlights, wider front
grille and different tail lights, the Series Two E-Type was launched in October
1968 and had many detail improvements over its Series One
predecessor.
These included twin fans for better
cooling, an all-synchro gearbox, better seats, improved switchgear and slightly
more room in the cabin. Under the bonnet the S2 can also be readily identified
by the ribbed cam covers which aided cooling and were stronger than the old
smooth type.
Power still came from the same
magnificent 265bhp 4.2-litre triple-carb XK engine which endowed the car with a
top speed nudging 140mph. During the short two-year lifespan of the Series Two,
only 4,857 were produced as fixed head coupes, all but 1,071 in LHD for the
thriving US market, before it was replaced by the V12-powered Series 3 in late
1970.
As the Heritage Certificate confirms, this
early Series Two Fixed Head Coupe was built in early December 1968 and, like the
vast majority, was a LHD model destined for the American market. It left for
British Leyland, New York, on 23rd December and was originally
finished in Sable with a Beige interior and a 4-speed manual gearbox. The
chassis number indicates that it was the 458th Coupe made in
LHD.
Nothing is known of the car’s subsequent
history but it returned to these shores about 12 years ago (with all duties
paid) and was acquired by our vendor’s father as a project to keep him busy in
his retirement. He had already restored a couple of other E-Types and XK Jaguars
and enjoyed the process, doing some of the work himself and enlisting
professional help when required.
Sadly he passed
away before this car was finished and his son, who is a professional mechanic
and garage proprietor, has spent the last couple of years finishing it off.
Although there are only a few invoices to show the full extent of the work
carried out, the car speaks for itself and it was clearly an extremely thorough
job with no corners cut.
The engine (which is
original to the car) was fully rebuilt and all other mechanical aspects were
attended to, with many new parts in evidence everywhere you look. Converted to
RHD, it was also fitted with new triple SU carbs and manifold supplied by Guy
Broad, an invoice showing that these alone cost £5,657 back in 2015. These are
far superior to the power-sapping Strombergs fitted to all the American E-Types
in period.
The
interior was also retrimmed at a cost of £10,000 using the correct materials and
perforated leather seat covers and mighty fine it looks too. Even the steering
wheel is new, as are the pedal rubbers and the attention to detail is most
impressive.
Issued with a V5C in April this year
which records no former keepers, it states the year of manufacture as 1969
although the Heritage Certificate and VIN number prove that it is actually a
late-1968 model.
Since the restoration was
completed, the car has only covered 29 miles which were all on the car’s maiden
voyage from our vendor’s premises to Brightwells. He tells us that it completed
the journey with ease although he does advise that the tracking will need to be
set up properly, the throttle pedal needs a stronger return spring because it
idles a bit high unless you pull it right up with your foot and the spare tyre
will need an inner tube.
Starting promptly and
running sweetly as we have moved it around on site, this freshly rejuvenated
'matching numbers' E-Type looks a million dollars and would be the pride of any
collection.
Consigned by James Dennison –
07970 309907 – [email protected]