The vendor has owned this car for 15 or so months and enjoyed driving it around the Lake District lanes and mountain passes where he lives.
He had always wanted an MGB but was equally committed to finding something that started, drove and stopped like a modern car.
His predecessor did all the heavy lifting during a process in which his wallet must have suffered countless severe and savage beatings.
We reckon there’s about £100k worth of parts alone in this car.
This vehicle was first registered in 1974, having rolled off the production line in Abingdon (just up the road from us) the same year.
Sometime in 1991 it underwent its first restoration. Then, between 2016 and 2018, it underwent the full mechanical and aesthetic transformation you see before you today.
The then owner bought a fully roadworthy MGB as a donor car for Frontline Developments to create one of their superlative high-performance MGB GT Abingdon Black Edition vehicles.
This was shortly after Chris Evans had declared the Frontline to be the best car of that entire series of Top Gear.
As a consequence of Mr Evans’ enthusiastic rhapsodies, waiting lists for Frontline cars suddenly got a whole lot longer.
So, our man decided to gain a march on the process by purchasing all manner of parts from Frontline (including the engine, powertrain, suspension, wheels and brakes) and getting other people to put them together in accordance with Frontline’s specifications.
So, to be clear, it’s not a Frontline Developments car, but it has got plenty of genuine, high-spec Frontline bits and pieces in it.
The result is a car that looks like an MGB GT (only far better built than anything that would have left the factory in 1974) and goes like no MGB GT ever went.
In 1974 an MGB GT with a 1.8 litre engine might have managed 105mph and covered 0-60mph in a tad under 12 seconds.
And that’s if you’d just fed it some raw steak, insulted its mother and trodden on its foot.
For context, a Lamborghini Miura P4000 SV of the same era could get to 60mph in 6.7 seconds, as could a Ferrari 308 GTB.
This MGB GT, with its Mazda 2.5 litre 4-cylinder aluminium engine delivering 289bhp at 6,800 rpm, hits 60mph in about 3.8 seconds and tops out at 160mph (Frontline’s figures).
Which is, quite frankly, bonkers.
As we said – it’s come on a bit since it left the factory in 1974.
The car is in very good overall condition. It has been used sparingly (about 3000 miles in the last 1.5 years) and looked after with all the care and attention it deserves.
The quality of the components is evident almost wherever you look, and it’s obvious that an eye-watering amount of money has been spent.
We’ve taken it for a spin and can attest to its blistering performance. It feels pretty well screwed together and the only rattles, clunks, moans, groans, whistles, sighs, creaks and grunts we heard were coming from the passenger.
The 6 speed gearbox is precise and notchy. The throttle responsive is very sharp and the handling and ride are irresistibly grin-inducing.
It really is quite a car.