The car’s owner commissioned our friends and well-respected classic car experts, Kennington Motors to recommission the car.
In addition to carrying out a full service, Kennington Motors also replaced the hydraulic components in the car’s clutch system, and installed new front brake calipers and front dampers in addition to rebuilding the front suspension.
The carburettors were also rebuilt prior to being tuned and balanced; try asking your local Halfords Service Centre to do that for you…
The vehicle was also sympathetically upgraded with an oil filter conversion and an electronic ignition system in addition to receiving a new battery and a stainless steel exhaust. The car also received four new matching tyres, and we don’t have to keep reminding you that this is only a Good Thing, do we?
The car’s lack of an older history makes itself felt here more than anywhere. While we have driven the car and can confirm that it drives very well indeed following the £2,500 recommissioning work, we have nothing to back up its long-term history prior to being repatriated.
But, let’s be sensible about it; anyone who loves their car enough to keep it for 55-odd years and transport it from Australia to Great Britain for a jolly isn’t going to have skimped on the maintenance, are they?
For what it’s worth, the car drives well and the engine bay and underside are tidy and clean, without being obsessively so. It’s dry under there too, with none of the oil and coolant leaks that can plague old cars. That there is no rot goes without saying.
Which is exactly what you’d expect to see given its story, isn’t it? This is a real driver’s car that has been well looked after rather than a trailer queen whose rubber seals have all shrivelled and is only one-step away from needing a complete restoration; we’d have no hesitation in jumping in it for a lengthy road-trip, just as the previous owner did, back-in-the-day.