1966 Jaguar E Type Series 1 4.2

15 Bids
7:15 PM, 30 Jun 2021Vehicle sold
Sold for

£126,500

Background

Invariably in everyone’s top three of the best-looking cars ever made (and for Enzo Ferrari it famously took the number one spot), the Jaguar E Type boasts inch-perfect lines, some of the best engines in the business and about half a mile of quite suggestive (in a Freudian way) bonnet.

The car was first launched in 1961, just 16 years after the end of the war. So, young men (and women) who’d dreamed of flying Spitfires when they were children in 1945 were almost guaranteed to fall head over heels for a car that looked like a fighter plane from the outside and had a cockpit and dashboard that would have made any elaborately-moustached and Brylcreemed RAF pilot feel right at home.

Their fathers would have been bank managers or family doctors, worn tweed and brogues, smoked a briar pipe, and driven an Alvis or a Riley. But this next generation were architects, advertising execs or designers, wore slip-ons and turtle-necks, smoked Rothmans filter tipped and, if they were very lucky, drove an E Type.

It’s hard to believe, but in March 2021 the Jaguar E Type was 60 years old.

Offered initially with the gorgeous 3.8-litre straight-six engine that develops a heady 265bhp, the Jaguar was a democratic car for all its potent sexual symbolism and mouth-watering performance.

Its list price was £2,096 for the coupé - the equivalent of just over £30,000 in today’s money - which even its detractors (yes, there were a few of those, believe it or not) had to admit was an absolute bargain. Interestingly, the roadster was about £100 less than the coupé.

Its engine capacity grew to 4.2-litres in 1964, at which point the Jag started to go as well as it looked. It also benefitted from bigger disc brakes and an all-synchromesh gearbox.

Production of this iteration of Series 1 didn’t last long before it was superseded, so these are relatively rare cars.

The so-called 1½ Series cars arrived in 1967 and the main changes were that the headlights now lacked the Perspex covers of the first cars, they featured twin Stromberg carbs, and the eared spinners on the wire wheels were now hexagonal.

The Series 2 cars lasted between 1968 and 1971. This model grew larger bumpers, relocated its rear lights and gained a new and safer interior.

Introduced to the range in 1966, the 2+2 body added nine inches to the wheelbase and considerable practicality to the car, thus expanding its potential ownership market.

The coupé was still available as a two-seater, something that was to change with the introduction of the series 3 cars in ’71. Thereafter, all coupés would be 2+2.

The Series 3 cars spanned 1971 through to its death in 1975. The 2+2 was now the only coupé on offer and a 5.3-litre V12 engine sat beneath the bonnet.

  • IE12571
  • 01259
  • 4235
  • Manual
  • Green
  • Tan Leather
  • Right-hand drive
Vehicle location
Bonhams|Cars Online HQ, United Kingdom

Background

Invariably in everyone’s top three of the best-looking cars ever made (and for Enzo Ferrari it famously took the number one spot), the Jaguar E Type boasts inch-perfect lines, some of the best engines in the business and about half a mile of quite suggestive (in a Freudian way) bonnet.

The car was first launched in 1961, just 16 years after the end of the war. So, young men (and women) who’d dreamed of flying Spitfires when they were children in 1945 were almost guaranteed to fall head over heels for a car that looked like a fighter plane from the outside and had a cockpit and dashboard that would have made any elaborately-moustached and Brylcreemed RAF pilot feel right at home.

Their fathers would have been bank managers or family doctors, worn tweed and brogues, smoked a briar pipe, and driven an Alvis or a Riley. But this next generation were architects, advertising execs or designers, wore slip-ons and turtle-necks, smoked Rothmans filter tipped and, if they were very lucky, drove an E Type.

It’s hard to believe, but in March 2021 the Jaguar E Type was 60 years old.

Offered initially with the gorgeous 3.8-litre straight-six engine that develops a heady 265bhp, the Jaguar was a democratic car for all its potent sexual symbolism and mouth-watering performance.

Its list price was £2,096 for the coupé - the equivalent of just over £30,000 in today’s money - which even its detractors (yes, there were a few of those, believe it or not) had to admit was an absolute bargain. Interestingly, the roadster was about £100 less than the coupé.

Its engine capacity grew to 4.2-litres in 1964, at which point the Jag started to go as well as it looked. It also benefitted from bigger disc brakes and an all-synchromesh gearbox.

Production of this iteration of Series 1 didn’t last long before it was superseded, so these are relatively rare cars.

The so-called 1½ Series cars arrived in 1967 and the main changes were that the headlights now lacked the Perspex covers of the first cars, they featured twin Stromberg carbs, and the eared spinners on the wire wheels were now hexagonal.

The Series 2 cars lasted between 1968 and 1971. This model grew larger bumpers, relocated its rear lights and gained a new and safer interior.

Introduced to the range in 1966, the 2+2 body added nine inches to the wheelbase and considerable practicality to the car, thus expanding its potential ownership market.

The coupé was still available as a two-seater, something that was to change with the introduction of the series 3 cars in ’71. Thereafter, all coupés would be 2+2.

The Series 3 cars spanned 1971 through to its death in 1975. The 2+2 was now the only coupé on offer and a 5.3-litre V12 engine sat beneath the bonnet.

Video

Overview

The Swann Collection consists of a Works Lightweight C Type replica, a Jaguar Proteus D Type, and this 1966 E Type Series 1 4.2 Roadster.

These cars are offered by the vendor, Roy Swann, a retired aeronautical electronics engineer, business owner and passionate Jaguar enthusiast.

Together they form an important and rare grouping of legendary British motoring icons.

This Series 1 4.2 litre E Type was manufactured on the 9.2.66 as a LHD car and exported to Jaguar Cars New York on 18.2.66.

At some point after that it went off to live in Canada.

In the late 1980s an antiques dealer with premises at the wonderfully addressed Armoury of St. James, Piccadilly Arcade, London, saw the car while on holiday in Montreal.

It was undergoing a restoration and it may (or may not) have been at this point that it became a RHD model in anticipation of finding a UK buyer.

The antiques dealer instantly found himself attracted to the car and arranged to buy it and have it shipped back to England for a full restoration.

He chose Mill Lane Engineering of Godalming to carry out the work with instructions that he would like everything done to the highest standards but with an eye to the fact that he was by no means, “as rich as Croesus”.

Sensible man.

Mill Lane took one look at the car and informed the then owner that a new body would be required. One such was promptly ordered from the premier supplier of E Type bodies, Martin Robey.

The car then underwent a total restoration that addressed every inch of the car, mechanically, structurally, aesthetically – inside, outside and underneath.

Mill Lane Engineering went bust at some point towards the end of the process and the job was then handed over to another classic car restorer, Uniclip Automotive, for completion.

Eventually, having spent a great deal of money and fought the odd legal battle or two in order to regain ownership of his own car from the administrators, the antiques dealer put the car up for sale.

This is when our vendor, Roy Swann, saw the car exhibited at the 1995 Goodwood Festival of Speed and decided that the E Type would be the perfect (and alphabetically logical) complement to his C Type and D Type.

The vendor then sent the car off to K&N Motors for a full and final fettling and tweaking, making sure that absolutely everything was spot on.

By the time the car came back to him it was, he tells us, as good or better than a brand new Series 1 4.2 E Type.

This car, like the others in the Swann Collection has seen very little use in recent years.

We have given the car a very basic recommisioning (new oil, filter, plugs) and driven it up and own the road a couple of times (it started, went and stopped perfectly well).

We didn’t drive it further because the brakes are currently in the habit of locking on. We suspect this may be an issue with the master cylinder, but we’re not mechanics.

The car will require a comprehensive recommissioning to be fully fit for serious use.

Exterior

The green paintwork is gloriously rich and deep with a lustre and shine to it that perfectly accentuates the car’s sensuous, svelte lines.

It really is an exceptionally good looking car, with smooth, ripple-free flanks; solid sills and gutters; tight, consistent shut lines and door gaps; and panels that are remarkably free of any dinks, dents, scuffs, nicks, chips or other unwanted blemishes.

The chrome work on the bumpers, wire wheels, spinners and trim is un-pitted, bright and shiny.

The hood, although barely used, has suffered slightly from years of being folded away. So, it’s a trifle dusty, baggy and crumpled and has, literally, come unstuck from the rubber surround in a few places. It’s not torn, or otherwise terminally damaged, but it does need some TLC.

We haven’t seen any rust anywhere and the only blemishes we’ve spotted are a couple of stone chips to the paint.

And you can only see those if you look sideways, use a powerful torch and squint a bit.

Interior

The interior is warmly inviting and, by E Type standards, really rather luxurious.

With pretty much everything renewed, replaced, repaired or refurbished during the restoration process, it’s a glorious symphony of tan and beige shades and is very easy on the eye and, it should be said, the buttocks.

The leather seats are in top condition and are both comfortable and supportive.

This is a car you could take on long journeys without having to crawl out of it on your hands and knees and phone a chiropractor when you finally arrive at your destination.

The carpets, door cards and roof lining are very good, as is the interior of the boot.

The dashboard (with its period radio), transmission tunnel, handbrake and centre console all look as good as new. So, too, does the steering wheel.

The gear lever gaiter has come loose on one side.

As far as we can tell, all dials, gauges, knobs, levers, toggles, switches and buttons work as intended.

Lifting up the carpets reveals….nothing to worry about whatsoever.

Mechanical

The engine bay doesn’t contain any surprises. Everything appears to be as it should be and is in its right and proper place. There is no sign of any leakage, seepage or weepage.

The engine looks like what it is: a powerplant that’s put in fewer than 1300 miles of work since being completely rebuilt.

The undersides of the car look only barely acquainted with any kind of road use.

They are clean and dry and the only oxidisation in evidence is of the entirely standard ‘rust dust’ variety.

All visible components look to have a great deal of structural integrity.

History

The car comes with big box of paperwork and bits and pieces, the highlights of which we have detailed in our photographic gallery.

As far as we can see, the exhaustive list of restoration work is well documented and there are bills, invoices and receipts to attest to the savage beatings taken by the previous owner’s wallet.

You’ll also find all manner of press cuttings and articles and plenty of old MoT certificates.

As with the C and D Type from the Swann Collection, what you won’t find is a detailed service history.

The vendor did the basic servicing and maintenance work himself and the car has never required more than that.

It’s effectively barely run-in.

The car doesn’t currently have an MoT certificate. Its last MoT test, taken on 8.8.13, was passed with no advisories and recorded a mileage of 1206 miles.

The car’s 2007 MoT records the then mileage as being just under 1147 miles, which should give you some indication of just how little use this vehicle has had.

Please visit the documents section of the gallery of this listing where you will find photos of this and other paperwork to support our claim that this car has been maintained to a very good standard.

If you’d like to inspect the car prior to placing a bid – something we would encourage – then please use the Contact Seller button to arrange an appointment.

Summary

This is a very special, rare car that comes to us courtesy of the Swann Collection – a high quality grouping of exceptional classic Jaguars.

It is in superb condition and wants for little more than a decent recommissioning and a mechanic to sort out the brakes.

To buy a tired or even just average example and bring it up to this standard would involve a very serious outlay indeed. An outlay you might well struggle to recoup.

With this car, someone else has done all the heavy lifting and taken the financial hits.

While you’re pondering that, here’s a short list of some of the people who have owned an E Type.

Frank Sinatra, Britt Ekland, George Best, Charlton Heston, George Harrison, Tony Curtis, Steve McQueen, Elton John, Adam Faith, Bruce McLaren, Jackie Stewart, Donald Campbell, Roy Orbison, Sid James, Brigitte Bardot and…..[your name goes here].

You’ll be a long time waiting for a better chance than this.

Carpe diem?

We’re confident to offer this vehicle for auction with an estimate in the range of £90,000 - £120,000.

Viewing is always encouraged, and this particular car is located with us at The Market HQ near Abingdon; our offices are open Mon-Fri 9.00 am to 5.00 pm.  To arrange an appointment please use the Contact Seller button at the top of the listing. Feel free to ask any questions or make observations in the comments section below, or try our ‘Frequently Asked Questions’.

About this auction

Seller

Private: asdunn


Viewings Welcome

Viewing is strongly encouraged, and is strictly by appointment. To book one in the diary, please get in contact.

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