Background
It was back in 1965 that the Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow made its debut. It was such a well-judged design, not only in its slow-to-age looks but in the standards it set for the Rolls-Royce driving experience, that it got all the way to the 1980s with only a single revision in 1977.
The Shadow II, as the revised version is called, gained rack-and-pinion steering, a front spoiler and rubber bumpers. If anything, this mild facelift made it harder to see them as the classics they became, but the chrome-bumper Shadows took their place as bona-fide classics some time ago. This is especially true for the up-to-1974 cars without flared wheelarches.
All Shadows offer a persuasive mix of the traditional - walnut, leather, lambswool - with the sophisticated, such as the Citroën-derived self-levelling suspension. In 1970 the engines were expanded from 6.2 to 6.75-litres, by which time a licensed version of GM’s Hydramatic three-speed auto had become standard equipment.
They remain an aristocratic way to travel but need careful assessment after a long mid-life dip in values when many cars bounced from one shoestring owner to the next. Find a good one, and there’s very little that can touch it for smooth, serene progress.







