CATEGORIES
MY FARE LANDAULET
This fastidiously restored 1926 Citroën could be the last-surviving link to the working streets of Paris
EXTRA TIME
Our three sports car greats sped past their original lifespans, becoming classics in their own lifetimes and eventually inspiring a new generation
FITTED OUT FOR A KING
Ordered new by a Belgian monarch, this sole surviving Vignale-bodied Aston Martin DB2/4 is back on form after decades in the doldrums
CREWE CUT
If you were going to build a single-seater, you probably wouldn’t start with a Rolls- Royce Silver Shadow. But this unlikely old warhorse recently won its first race
A CENTURY OF SPEED
What better way to celebrate our birthday than with our most valuable photoshoot ever, gathering together 100 years of Britain's fastest cars?
1980s FERRARI F40 - 201mph
And so we arrive at a notable a benchmark on this journey: the Ferrari F40 was the first production car to exceed the magic 'double-ton'.
1920S VAUXHALL 30-98 OE-TYPE - 100.7mph
A century ago, the very idea of a production car achieving 100mph would have been eulogised by schoolkids and automobile makers alike.
1970s FERRARI 365 GT4 BB - 188mph
Our first Ferrari entry here was not only the fastest car of the 1970s (based on the factory's own claim of 188mph), but a significant one because it marked the start of a mid-engined era for Maranello's 12-cylinder, two-seater cars that was to endure for nearly a quarter of a century.
1930s BENTLEY 8 LITRE - 107.3mph
Establishing the top speeds of pre-war cars is a fraught business that not only requires a solid and incontestable baseline for each nominee, but also an awareness that very few cars from high-end marques would look or perform in the same way after they left their respective factories.
1950s MERCEDES-BENZ 300SL - 163mph
They say that racing improves the breed, but in the case of the Mercedes-Benz 300SL ‘Gullwing'Coupé, it actually inspired its creation.
EUROPA LEAGUE FINAL
Developed on opposite sides of the English Channel, the Alpine A310 and Lotus Europa offered supercar technology in miniature
FUTURE CLASSICS
As CGSC turns 40, motoring enthusiasts have been asked to vote for the modern cars they believe will be the classics of 40 years' time
1940s JAGUAR XK120 - 132.6mph
Of all the cars gathered here today, and taking into account the vagaries of inflation, the Jaguar XK120 was not only the least expensive when it was new, but also a relative bargain. Who would have thought that £1263 would buy what was, in 1948, not just the UK's but the world's fastest production car?
EL MAESTRO'S MASERATI
The Maserati 300S driven to sports car victories by Juan Manuel Fangio is a rush of racing history restored to its original, long-nose glory
WHERE EAGLES DARE
A chain-drive eccentricity of the Italian vintage era, this Bianchi 40hp is as fine and sporting today as it was in period
OILING THE WHEELS
Shell's early advertising posters were works of art in their own right, and are now being celebrated in a lavish new coffee-table book
THE BOURNE SUPREMACY
When the engineering gurus at BRM got their hands on the little Lotus Elan, they turned an already brilliant sports car into a sensation
VAUXHALL CALIBRA
The super-sleek leading act of GM Europe's 1990s revival now makes a usable modern classic
PRETTY LITTLE THINGS
With their feisty twin-cam engines and elegant style, the Fiat 1500S and Alfa Giulia Spider brought La Dolce Vita romance to the mainstream
JOHN MATTOS
Master of the airbrush style revives Art Deco in automotive illustrations
FORD vs FERRARI RELOADED
A former Ford product designer recalls the forgotten GN34 supercar, the Blue Oval's biggest attempt at taking on the Prancing Horse since the GT40
ENGINEER'S CUT
The DB4 that Aston Martin Lagonda chief engineer Tadek Marek called his own is a special blend of bespoke touches
CLASSIC SHRINE: OPEL'S FRUITS
This showcase of one of Germany's lesser appreciated marques is a hidden gem, with many of its 600 vehicles still in running condition
BLACK & BLUE
In an era when WRC success made a real impact on showroom sales, Subaru and Ford launched bruising rally-bred machines that would become performance icons
The Making Of Mg's Monster
Mike Taylor reunites designer Peter Stevens and production engineer Ian Moreton with the wildly aggressive V8-engined XPower SV, 15 years on.
Alfa Takes Top Gong At Blenheim
Heavy showers didn’t dampen spirits at the prestigious Salon Privé Chubb Concours on 31 August. Overall victory at the event, which was being held at Blenheim Palace for the third year running, went to the magnificent 1960 Alfa 3000CM Superflow.
Roverfest Fetes Solihull V8
More than 700 classics converged on Roverfest at Wroxall Abbey from 11-13 August to celebrate a half-century since the launch of the first Buick V8-engined Solihull model, the P5B. Enthusiasts came from as far afield as Australia, New Zealand and the US, while cars had been driven from across the continent – including Italy, Germany and The Netherlands – to the Joint Rover Clubs Midlands gathering.
Smith On The March At Oulton
Northern Irishman Darwin Smith took a hard-earned double as the Historic Sports Car Club returned to Oulton Park for its Gold Cup meeting from 26-28 August. Smith led a 25-strong field in the FIA Historic Formula Two encounters, his March 722 coming home ahead of Richard Evans (March 742), who ran Smith close in Monday’s race.
Beautifully Functional
Hand-built for discerning buyers, the Mercedes Universal and Vanden Plas Countryman are the zenith of ’60s estates.
Oldtimers Turn Back The Clock
Classics spanning five decades gathered for the Blackheath Village Day celebrations on 2 December.