
You know when you spot a really good motor car at 50 yards. I don't mean some flashy, over-restored boiled sweet; I mean a car that is honest, straight and clean, and the demeanour and stance of which tell you that it's a well-sorted piece of kit that's going to be good to drive.
I was at Jaguar specialist Twyford Moors in Hampshire a couple of months ago and spied this attractive Jaguar Mk1 parked on the forecourt. So I went and introduced myself to the owner. It turns out that Anthony Gilsenan has been the custodian of this 1959 Jaguar for 27 years and has subjected it to a continuous, rolling restoration. Ah, a long-term, committed owner - this sporting Jaguar is probably going to prove even better than it looks.
SIR WILLIAM LYONS was in the motor-manufacturing business to make money. He was a notorious penny-pincher, cutting costs wherever he could. That meant he produced motor cars at affordable prices, but his real genius was that the cars were beautifully styled and extremely well engineered. Motor racing, Le Mans success and sexy sports cars grabbed the headlines and were all good fun, but Lyons' mission was to produce in volume and the saloon car segment was where that lay compact, aspirational saloons aimed at the burgeoning middle-class driver.
He'd had success with Jaguar saloons since the late '30s, cars such as the 1.5, 3.5 and later 2.5-Litre and the huge MkVII, but with the arrival of the Jaguar 2.4 saloon in 1955 (the Mk1 nomenclature was used retrospectively after the Mk2 appeared in 1959) he introduced another game-changer for Jaguar: unitary construction. The 2.4, joined by a 3.4 in 1957, was the first roadgoing Jaguar freed from an old-fashioned separate chassis.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der October 2022-Ausgabe von Octane.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der October 2022-Ausgabe von Octane.
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HIDDEN IN PLAIN SIGHT
Having languished in a museum for 35 years, this Shelby 427 Competition Cobra has a special history that makes it one of one. Now it's come roaring back to life

Virgil Exner
A design puritan at heart, yet no one did excess more excessively

Overdrive
Other interesting cars we've been driving

HOT HATCH HEROES
They're a dying breed, yet the best transcended humdrum heritage to be among the most entertaining drivers' cars ever. Octane takes a trip to the good old days

WHAT'S IN NAME
The Fiat Dino Spider's humble marque name belies its exotic racebred Ferrari engine and curvaceous body. Richard Heseltine takes the wheel The Fiat Dino Spider's humble marque name belies its exotic racebred Ferrari engine and curvaceous body. Richard Heseltine takes the wheel

The Collector Jay Leno
Lamenting the horror of the recent LA fires

Lancia Gamma Berlina
An underdog luxury saloon, as much of an outlier now as it was half a century ago

STEALTH FIGHTER FOR THE ROAD
Following a stellar career creating legends for Audi, Roland Gumpert set out to build a radical track-day weapon. Marc Sonnery takes a brave pill

Neon signs
Colourful tubes of magic that were embraced wholeheartedly by the advertising industry

Per Gessle
The Roxette pop star now blends performing with life as a Swedish hotelier and maintaining his large collection