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Richard Hammond Drives His Jaguar XK150 For The First Time Since Restoring It

Richard Hammond is a very happy man. That’s because, for the first time since the body was taken off the frame, he can now drive his Jaguar XK150.

The car, part of a restoration that has been ongoing throughout the pandemic, was traded for a vintage Lagonda. Hammond reveals in his latest video, though, that when he got it, it was in a rotten state.

“It had been painted rather ugly dark red and underneath that dark red paint lurked, unbeknownst to me, a horror story,” explains Hammond. “It had had a hard, hard life. It had been crashed, bent, brutalized, and abused. And because, like a lot of these cars, it went through a phase of being worth two quid and a packet of crisps, it hadn’t been expensively repaired and restored. It had been bodged and lashed together.”

Read Also: Richard Hammond Gets His Own Car Restoration Show, Airs Later This Year

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Hammond and his team went through the process of painstakingly repairing it, which, since it’s an old Jaguar was hard. Millimetric precision wasn’t reality a priority for early postwar carmakers, not in the U.K., anyway. So, as Hammond puts it, there was as much building as restoration involved in this project.

With a completely rebuilt engine and hotter cam, a new diff, and better brakes the car drives brilliantly now, though. The only question is whether or not the decision to fit a slightly newer, but less precise transmission was a good idea.

To see him driving the car proudly really makes me wish I had a classic Jag of my own to toot around in, as well as some Amazon money kicking around to fund it and its restoration. Ah, to be a rich Brit.

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Which New Car Dashboards Would Drivers From 40 Years Ago Still Recognize?

Car design can be a fickle business, and some models change beyond recognition in the switch from one generation to the next.

But some carmakers are careful not throw the baby out with the bath water. Though massively wider, longer and much safer and more aerodynamic than the original 911, the current Porsche 992 is still clearly recognizable as a 911. And the styling of the Huracan and Aventador has clear links to the original 1971 Countach show car, if not the very first Lamborghinis of the early 1960s.

But what about car interiors? If you took 10 drivers from 40 years, whipped them through time to 2021 and put them in the modern equivalent of their 1980s rides, would they be able to see and feel the connection without the help of the badge on the steering wheel? Let’s compare 10 current cars with the ancestors.

BMW 3-Series

The original 1975 E21 3-Series was the first BMW with a dashboard shaped to give priority to the driver, and the E30 follow-up that appeared in 1982 refined that setup, moving the radio further up the console and taking on the now iconic instrument cluster that had first appeared on the E28 5-Series the year before.

Related: QOTD: What’s The Coolest Gauge Pack Of All Time?

Those dials are long gone, replaced by a digital gauge pack, and these days the steering wheel is actually in line with the center of the seat. But the air vents with their rotary wheel controls haven’t changed much, and the build quality is even more solid than it was back then.

Cadillac Cimarron And CT4

The Cimarron, Cadillac’s early 1980s attempt at a BMW-rivaling compact sports saloon, was based on the humble front-wheel drive Chevy Cavalier’s J-body platform and used its basic interior too.

It was also a sales bomb, so it’s not fairly obvious that Cadillac wasn’t going to be playing the retro card when it came to designing its modern day equivalent, the CT4. The strange thing is, the Cim’s metal-effect dashboard trim gives it a load more character than the bland CT4 has – though we know which one we’d rather drive.

Fiat Panda

The 1980 Panda was a brilliant bit of functional design from the pen of Giorgetto Giugiaro, and we really do mean functional. The baby Fiat had flat windows (including the front screen) to reduce built costs, and offered almost no concessions to luxury.

Touchscreens? That would have seemed like witchcraft to the driver of an original Panda, which didn’t even have a proper dashboard, owners having to make do with a rectangular box suspended above the steering column.

Honda Civic

The Honda Civic has gone all sensible for 2022, and that includes the interior, which ditches the old car’s messy, cheap-looking dashboard for something that wouldn’t look out of place in a premium German car.

But if you squint a bit, and ignore the fancy new tablet touchscreen, you can see echoes of the ’79-’82 Civic’s dashboard in the shape of the new one. And there’s one other key similarity: those shifters are both connected to CVT transmissions. Bring back the T-bar, we say.

Mercedes S-Class And EQS

The S-Class was always the first to get important new Mercedes technology, from anti-lock brakes and airbags, to radar parking sensors and key-card ignition.

These days the tech pioneer is arguably the new EQS sedan thanks to its electric powertrain and that spectacular optional triple-display Hyperscreen dashboard. Without that three-pointed star to help us though, your 1981 S-class driver would probably guess he’d stumbled into some Area 51 spacecraft rather than a future Mercedes.

Peugeot 305 And 308

Let’s be honest, Peugeot might have had the handling thing licked in the 1980s, but its interiors were awful. They looked ugly, felt cheap and squeaked and rattled like a mouse collecting for the Salvation Army. Just check out the position of the radio in this 305 sedan. It’s so low even your knee would have to crouch down to operate it.

Plenty has changed since then. The quality is seriously impressive for a non-premium brand and so is the sense of style in the latest 308. And with the instrument pack located above the rim of the weirdly small steering wheel, you can’t complain about having to take your eyes off the road.

Porsche 911

Until the water-cooled 996 replaced the 993 in 1998, 911 interiors had hardly changed at all. And neither had the abysmal ergonomics, which actually got worse as Porsche added more buttons.

The latest 911 has a large, raised central tunnel, which of course the ’81 car never had because there was no transmission routed to the front axle back then, a slick touchscreen media system, and mostly digital instruments. But it’s easy to see the connection between old and new, and having the ignition switch on the left of the steering column is an instant giveaway.

Rolls Royce Silver Spirit and Rolls Royce Ghost

It’s hard to believe that 40 years and a complete change of ownership separates these pictures. The modern Rolls Royce Ghost’s circular air vents with their organ stop controls would make a Silver Spirit owner teleported from 1981 feel right at home, though we’re not sure what he would make of the starlight headliner.

Volkswagen Golf GTI

Volkswagen’s game-changing cabin quality offensive didn’t happen until the late 1990s, so the interior of the 1981 Golf GTI was more purposeful than pretty. But there’s definitely common ground in the basic shapes of the dashboards.

What about the seats, though? VW actually switched from tartan to stripes in 1981 for the European GTI, but we’re guessing our 1980s driver would be familiar enough with the ’76-’80 GTIs to recognize the homage in the modern GTI’s upholstery.

KITT And Tesla Model S

Knight Rider made its TV debut in September 1982, and who could have imagined back then that 40 years later we’d actually be able to buy an American-made 200 mph car with a TV in the dashboard that drives by itself and comes equipped with a steering wheel that looks like it was butchered by the fire service trying to get the last driver out after a monster fender-bender. Michael Knight would love it.

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Classics Cars Owned By Frank Sinatra And Siegfried & Roy Coming To Barrett-Jackson Auction

A number of classic cars owned by some of Las Vegas’ most iconic entertainers are being auctioned off this month by Barrett-Jackson.

Kicking off things are a couple of cars from the Siegfried & Roy estate. The first of these is a 2011 Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG Gullwing that was only purchased by Siegfried during a Barrett-Jackson auction in June 2019. It originally left the factory painted in Iridium Silver but has since been adorned with a chrome wrap to really make it stand out. It also has red leather upholstery.

Read Also: Coachbuilt Mercedes 380SL Roadster From Wayne Newton’s Collection Heading To Auction

Another car from the Siegfried & Roy estate being sold is a 1994 Rolls-Royce Corniche that was a gift to Roy for his 50th birthday. It is one of just 219 produced from 1993 to 1996.

Elsewhere, a 1970 Maserati Ghibli formerly owned by Frank Sinatra is being sold. While not the most desirable of classic Maserati models, Sinatra’s car has undergone a complete nut-and-bolt refurbishment and has 21,000 miles on the clock. The car was purchased new by Sinatra’s son-in-law and in 1973, Sinatra himself purchased the car from him. After Sinatra’s ownership, the car was sold to actor George Hamilton and was later sold to Dave Thomas, the founder of Wendy’s.

“To own a vehicle that belonged to any one of these fabulous Las Vegas icons is priceless,” Barrett-Jackson president Steve Davis said in a statement. “These celebrity-owned vehicles are more than just collectibles. They’re a reflection of the icons who made them a part of their personal lives and represent a rare opportunity to own a piece of their lifestyle.”

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Image credits Barret-Jackson Auctions

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This 6800-Mile DeLorean Will Transport You Straight Back To 1985

If someone tasked you with finding them a pristine DMC 12 that had covered less than 7,000 miles in the hands of no more than two owners, you’d probably tell them to get busy finishing that time machine so you could go get one.

That’s because the last DeLoreans rolled off the Dunmurry line in Northern Ireland in 1982, meaning by the time the iconic time-travelling movie Back to the Future premiered in 1985, most of the 9200 cars built would have already passed 7000 miles – and, in the time since, passed through a few pairs of hands.

But not the car pictured here, which is being offered for sale at the Bonhams Amelia Island Auction later this month. Understood to have originally been bought by a couple who lived in Manhattan, the DMC 12 was kept in the suburbs of the city at the owner’s parents’ home during the week, only coming out to play at weekends and during holidays.

As a result, the DeLorean racked up very few miles, and by the 1990s the owners realized they had something pretty special on their hands. In fact, this DMC12 is more special than most because it’s the less common five-speed manual version. Most DeLoreans paired their PRV (Peugeot-Renault-Volvo) 2.85-liter V6 with a three-speed auto.

Related: Italdesign Teases What Looks Like A Modern-Day DeLorean DMC-12

Those two extra ratios don’t turn the DeLorean into a supercar. Because the DMC 12 effectively had two sets of body panels – a fibreglass inner body plus a stainless steel outer skin – it was heavy, and the emissions-spec Federalized engine made just 130 hp. Zero to 62mph took almost 10 seconds, which was nothing special even in the early 1980s, and makes the obligatory “Outatime” BTTF license plates seem even more pertinent.

But Bonhams suggests only 6500 of the 9200 cars produced are still on the road, and it’s unlikely you’ll find another one in this condition and spec outside of a museum. It’s not a box-fresh restored car, but a nicely preserved, slightly grubby original that shows a welcome patina from gentle use – just like the one you might have picked up at used car lot back in 1985.

H/T to Silodrome

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World Record Prices Expected At Mitsubishi Heritage Fleet Auction

Mitsubishi UK announced last month that they were to auction off their extensive collection of classic cars from the treasured heritage collection. And while the news came as a bit of a shock, it wasn’t entirely unexpected, as Mitsubishi prepares to exit the UK market at the end of the year. Now the auction is down to its last week, and many of the listings are already on track to break world records.

Perhaps predictably, the car that seems to be generating the most interest is the Lancer Evolution VI Tommi Makinen Edition. Bids currently stand at a dizzying £78,000 ($108,000) and will likely set a world record come the drop of the hammer. The example on offer to buyers is car #6 of 250. It has been owned by Mitsubishi since new and has had an engine, and turbo replacement carried out under warranty.

Read: Rare Subaru Impreza 22B STi Poised To Sell For An Extraordinary Sum

Oh, Evo, how we miss you

Three more Evos are being offered alongside the VI TME. There’s The two-time British Rally Championship Winning 2007 Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution IX Group N Works Rally Car currently sitting at a bid of £36,000 ($50,000). And at a bid of £59,000 ($82,000), there’s the 1 of 200, Evolution IX MR FQ-360 HKS. The FQ-360 was the final edition of the 7/8/9 generation Lancer Evolution platform, with this specimen having less than 5000 miles on the odometer.

2001 Mitsubishi Lancer 2.0 Evolution VI Tommi Makinen

Several other cars are doing well too, including a Mk1 Shogun, at £14,000 ($19,000), which reportedly needed only light recommissioning to get back to near original condition. Fans of odd-ball collabs will appreciate the Mitsubishi Jeep J27 priced at £12,800 ($17,800). The J27 was built by Mitsubishi under license from the Willys Company in the US to sell to the Japanese market. It was a model that saw over 200,000 being made, but only eight were imported to the UK by the Colt Car Company. Its existence helped establish Mitsubishi’s reputation for off-road vehicles in its home market of Japan.

2008 Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution IX MR FQ-360 HKS

Also offered in the collection is a Mitsubishi Starion at £16,600 ($23,000) and a Mitsubishi 3000GT, which has attracted a top bid so far of £22,700 ($31,500). One of our favorites in the collection is the first-ever UK-registered Mitsubishi — a first-gen Lancer. Although we know it as a Mitsubishi, it’s officially a Colt Lancer, Colt being the name used in many export markets. This two-door Lancer was the original car shown at the British Motor Show and became a press demonstrator. It was repurchased by Colt Cars in the 80s before undergoing a complete nut-and-bolt restoration at the company’s own Special Vehicle Operations.

1992 Mitsubishi 3000GT

Supporting the diverse nature of the auction is a rally replica Mitsubishi Galant 2.0 GLSi that was used to promote Mistubishi’s involvement in the 1989 Lombard RAC Rally. Later on in its life, it became a course and safety car for rallies, undergoing “road sweeper” duties and providing service around the track.

See: Is This 2019 Ford Mustang Shelby GT350 The Perfect Canyon Carver?

1988 Mitsubishi Starion

Also on sale, with a bid of £16,000 ($22,000), is the Mitsubishi L200 that was modified by TopGear Magazine’s Tom Ford to traverse the expanse of Namibia for a 10-page spread. Although under the skin, the L200 remained largely true to its already capable off-road self. Externally, however, the rig, dubbed “Project Swarm,” features a Motoped motorized mountain bike, 35-inch wheels and tires, a heavy-duty winch, bespoke bumper, uprated suspension, an exo-cage, racing seats, and harnesses, as well as multiple LED lights.

In addition to the 16 cars up for sale, Mitsubishi Motors UK is also auctioning off several of their cherished number plates, many of which include the CCC (Colt Car Company) or MMC (Mitsubishi Motor Company) acronym.

1987 Mitsubishi Shogun MK1 SWB (See auction)

1983 Mitsubishi Jeep J27 Soft Top (See auction)

1974 Mitsubishi Colt Galant 2.0 (See auction)

1989 Mitsubishi Galant Rally (See auction)

2017 Mitsubishi L200 Desert Warrior (see auction)

 1917 Mitsubishi Model ‘A’ Scale Model (see auction)

1974 Mitsubishi Colt Lancer 1.4 (see auction)

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Top Gear America’s Future Classics Special Doesn’t Go Well For A Saab

When it comes to choosing a used car, one of the reasons most people play it safe instead of going for something left-field is that many of them can turn out to be problematic. Case in point: Rob Corddry’s choice for Top Gear America’s future classics episode.

Pitted against Jethro Bovingdon in an BMW E46 330Ci and Dax Sheppard in a fox body Ford Mustang V8, Corddry opts instead for a Saab 900 Turbo. A hipster choice if ever there was one – and one that he suffers for.

As laid out in a behind-the-scenes featurette, Corddry suffers many, many problems in his Saab. Sadly, or perhaps smartly, he doesn’t reprise his Arrested Development persona, Frank Wrench, and lets the mechanic at Chuckwalla raceway take a wrench on his car instead.

Turns out there’s a turbo issue that doesn’t appear to get fixed. It likely wasn’t the mechanic’s fault since the Saab got towed there behind an RV, suggesting that the problems with this particular future classic went beyond what any mechanic was likely to be able to fix in the hours before a track day.

Also Read: The Cadillac CT6-V Is Shaping Up To Be A Future Classic, So Buy This One With Just Over 1K Miles On It

The Saab wasn’t the only one suffering. The 330Ci, although its faults weren’t enumerated in quite the same way as the Saab’s, was also apparently falling apart. The fox body Mustang, meanwhile, was apparently mechanically sound.

That may come down to the budget, which appears to have been $6,000. I guess you have to spend more than that on a European future classic to get something you can drive away in.

Top Gear America premiered on Motor Trend on Demand on January 29.

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Mercedes-Benz E-Class History From 1926 To 2020: The Tale Of The Essential Executive Car

Although the E-Class moniker first appeared in 1993 for the W124 generation, Mercedes-Benz‘s executive car actually can trace its roots all the way back to 1926.

It was then when the newly formed Mercedes-Benz brand launched the type 8/38 PS (W02), which was named the Stuttgart 200 two years later. The range included the 200 (W21), 230 (W143) and 260 D (W138), launched in 1933, 1936 and 1936 respectively, with the latter being the world’s first passenger car powered by a diesel engine.

1946-1955: 170 V to 170 DS

After the end of World War II, the company resumed passenger car production in 1946 with the 170 V. The model was actually produced in 1936, but it was upgraded for use by the rescue services, police and tradespeople. One year later, the corresponding saloon was launched as the brand’s first post-war car, with a 38 HP engine, which was upgraded to 44 HP from 1950.

Further development led to the expansion of the series. The 170 D diesel came out in 1949, initially with 38 HP and from 1950 with 40 HP. The 170 S Saloon, with a steel body and a 52 HP engine, which was also available as the Cabriolet A and Cabriolet B, joined the range and acted as the top-of-the-line model, until the six-cylinder 220 and 300 were introduced. The 40 HP 170 DS diesel was launched in 1952, and was followed the next year by the 170 S-V and 170 S-D, which remained in production until 1955.

1952-1962: Mercedes-Benz Ponton And The ‘Erlkonig’ Story

In 1952, German magazine ‘Das Auto, Motor und Sport’ published a picture of a 180 prototype, accompanied by a parody of Goethe’s ‘Erlkonig’ ballad, and since then, the word has become synonymous to scoop in German.

The spied four-door signaled the beginning of a new era, as the “pontoon-style” sedan came out in 1953 with a three-box design, improved aerodynamics and a 1.9-liter engine making 52 HP at first and 65 and 68 HP later on. The six-pot models were launched in 1954, alongside the 180 D diesel variant, offered with 40 HP initially, and then 43 and 48 HP from 1955 and 1961 respectively. The 190 rolled off the assembly line in 1956 with 75 HP, and three years later, it was upgraded to 80 HP, while the 50 HP 190 D was introduced in 1958.

In total, around 443,000 customers worldwide chose a four-pot Ponton attracted by the new design, competitive engines, the single-joint swing axle with low pivot point at the rear that was introduced in 1955, and passive safety with enhanced interior from 1959.

1961-1968: The Mercedes-Benz ‘Tail Fin’ With Passive Safety And Modern Comfort Features

The W110 generation debuted in 1961 with a new nickname, the ‘Tail Fin’, due to the distinctive design of the rear wings. It also came with increased passive safety features, like the incorporated passenger cell and crumple zones at both ends. Upgraded brakes with front discs were introduced in 1963, and from 1967, it also gained an impact-absorbing telescopic steering.

The family comprised of the 190 and 190 D, followed by the 200 and 200 D from 1965, and the six-pot 230, with 105 HP, which was upgraded to 120 HP in 1966. Long wheelbase versions of the 200 D and 230 were available, and independent companies produced other derivatives, including estates and ambulances. Options such as power steering, sunroof, heated rear window, air conditioning, electric windows and automatic transmission were introduced for this model.

1968-1976: Mercedes-Benz Stroke/8

With new design, a coupe derivative and a long wheelbase limo, with seven or eight seats, the W114/W115 was nicknamed the ‘Stroke/8’, based on the suffix referred to the year of launch (1968). This was Merc’s first model to sell in more than 1 million units, and by 1976, over 1.8 million saloons and 67,000 coupes were built.

The W114 designation was used for the six-cylinder engines, and the W115 one for the four- and five-pots. As for the models that stood out, these were the 250 CE, with 150 HP and Bosch fuel injection, and the 280 and 280 E, with 160 and 185 HP engines.

The Stroke/8 was offered with a more advanced suspension, with anti-roll bar as standard, a five-speed manual transmission, central locking and light alloy wheels. In 1973, the lineup was facelifted with updated looks, four-spoke safety steering wheel and standard head restraints and inertia-reel seatbelts at the front. Moreover, the world’s first passenger car powered by a five-cylinder diesel engine, the 80 HP 240 D 3.0, was launched in 1974.

1976-1986: First Official Estate And Even More Gear

In 1976, the lineup was improved once again with the introduction 123 model series. Around 2.7 million units were built until 1986, which had made it the most popular E-Class until then. Some customers had to wait up to a year to take delivery, which kept resale prices high.

Fueled by the Belgian company IMA’s ambition to launch an estate of the E-Class in 1966, which was sold in the Mercedes-Benz dealer network in Germany, the 123 series was the first to offer such a body style straight from the factory. It joined the coupe, seven- or eight-seater long wheelbase limo and saloon.

The engine lineup was also extensive, with outputs ranging between 55 and 177 HP, and it included the 125 HP 300 TD turbodiesel with an exhaust-gas turbocharger. Double wishbone front suspension, safety steering column, impact-protected fuel tank, optional cruise control, ABS, driver airbag and power assisted steering were also available.

The 123 proved its racing credentials in the London-Sydney rally, with two 280 Es nabbing the first two places, and two others finishing in the top ten.

Mercedes also experimented with alternative fuels, such as electricity, hydrogen and LPG, in this generation of the E-Class.

1984-1997: The First Mercedes-Benz E-Class Is Officially Born

More diverse than ever, this generation was offered in four body styles, namely a sedan, estate, coupe and, for the first time in recent history, a cabriolet, plus a long wheelbase variant and other special models.

Petrol and diesel engines were available for the 124 model series, starting from 72 to 326 HP in the 500 E that debuted in 1990. The E 60 AMG was launched in 1993 and upped the ante with its 381 HP engine, while features such as the 4Matic four-wheel drive system and multi-link independent rear suspension were introduced.

Falling in line with the smaller C-Class and the bigger S-Class, the 124 was dubbed the E-Class in June 1993, when the model’s mid-life cycle facelift was launched.

By the time production ended, Mercedes had built 2,737,000 units of the 124 model series, including 2,213,000 sedans, roughly 340,000 estates, 140,000 coupes and 34,000 cabriolets.

1995-2002: The E-Class With Twin-Headlamps

Launched in 1995, the second-gen E-Class brought a double-headlamp design and three equipment grades named Classic, Elegance and Avantgarde. The engine lineup included a generous host of gasoline and diesel units, with outputs between 95 and 347 HP in the E50 AMG, and an estate variant was also available.

2002-2009: Further Evolution

The W211 rolled off the assembly line with an evolutionary styling, more passive and active safety, bi-xenon headlights, automatic air-con, rain-sensing wipers and many others, as this was, after all, made in the modern era. Other highlights included the four-link front and multi-link rear independent suspension, air suspension and ESP.

At the 2006 New York Auto Show, the facelifted iteration debuted, with plenty of novelties, including the 514 HP E63 AMG.

2009-2016: More Evolution, No Revolution

The E-Class was further refined for the W212 generation, which was shown in early 2009, with a further evolution of the design language, more aerodynamic and technical improvements, as well as a selection of modern engines which were topped by the 525 HP E63.

2016-2020: The Latest E-Class That Everyone Knows

The fifth-gen E-Class was presented at the 2016 Detroit Auto Show, with a Russian doll design, advanced car-to-car communication, smartphone integration, new infotainment system and a lot of safety gear. The estate was introduced half a year later, and the coupe and cabriolet followed in 2017, while the entire range was facelifted earlier this year.

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Toyota Will Build Spare Parts Again For The Iconic 2000GT Sports Car

Toyota Gazoo Racing (TGR) has announced that it will reproduce spare parts for the brand’s most coveted classic car, the 2000GT.

TGR will build the parts as GR Heritage Parts Project and will sell them both in Japan and overseas. As part of the project, Toyota Gazoo Racing will reproduce spare parts that were no longer available, and sell them as genuine parts to customers who want to continue driving their classic cars.

The announcement follows a similar initiative from May 2019 regarding the reproduction of A70 Supra and A80 Supra parts. TGR will start taking orders for 2000GT parts on August 1, 2020, with the reproduced parts available to purchase from Toyota dealers in the same way as normal genuine parts. However, sales will be restricted to owners in order to prevent reselling; furthermore, the number of parts sold will be limited per car.

See Also: FCA Heritage And Mopar Start Producing Lancia Delta HF Integrale Bumpers Again

Toyota 2000GT final gear kit

As for the A70 and A80 Supra parts, the first round of reproduced items will be available to order through Toyota dealers in Japan and overseas from July 1. Those include the A70 sender gauge, A70 door handle, and A80 door handle.

The Toyota 2000GT is a sports car launched in 1967 as part of a collaboration with Yamaha. Production ended in 1970 after a run of only 337 units. At the time, the 2000GT adopted the latest Japanese technology, including a 2.0-liter DOHC straight six engine, four-wheel double-wishbone suspension, four-wheel disc brakes, radial tires, magnesium alloy wheels, and retractable headlamps.

The 2000GT was able to reach a maximum speed of 220 km/h (136 mph), on a par with European sports cars of the day. It became an iconic sports car for Toyota and was used in scenes shot in Japan for the James Bond film ‘You Only Live Twice‘.

Toyota 2000GT synchro hub and sleeve (front); gears (rear)

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