Love this generation IS, and I love the thought of having one with a V8 in it, but my brain won’t reconcile paying a number this big for a car which in basic form can be had for under £2k in the UK.
Love this generation IS, and I love the thought of having one with a V8 in it, but my brain won’t reconcile paying a number this big for a car which in basic form can be had for under £2k in the UK.
Not the point of the car - the point of the Goodwood Revival. A place where cars from the past can very much be touched, felt and appreciated.
Back then, they pretty much were (R-R’s V12s and Bentley’s V8s aside).
It’ll die out when its customer base does. I can’t imagine many people from Gen-X onwards want this sort of crap on their roof.
That problem doesn’t exist - if you own a Rolls-Royce your butler will personally wipe every bead of precipitation from the umbrella before returning it to its holster.
They’d have a job selling off Rolls-Royce - I think BMW is rather partial to that one.
I think you may be missing something, and I say that only because I never used to see the appeal of RVs either. I’ve now been camping enough to know that experiencing the great outdoors but having somewhere genuinely comfortable to sleep, shower, or shit, is actually quite appealing.
And then, at the end, by maintaining a self-effacing attitude about their unconventional-looking “station wagon,” admitting that, no, it will never be beautiful, they manage to do more to make their car appealing than if they had five paragraphs explaining in detail about how amazing their design actually is.
That was my favourite game in the world for many years.
I always thought this as a kid, and was disappointed when I discovered the Twin Ion Engine explanation. They’re flying bow-ties, dammit.
This was my thought too. I’m all for alternative powertrains - I’d quite happily daily an EV, if I could afford one. But just let me buy an S-FR first, in luminous yellow like the concept. Then, do whatever you like.
I can’t understand why they never developed this thing further. It’s a bit too much visually, but toned-down it’d have made a fantastic follow-up to the xB.
I drove in Paris last year but thankfully at a time when the traffic wasn’t so bad. However, I did come away with the impression that Parisian streets would be at their best if everyone rode bicycles or electric scooters, with just a Citroen DS now and then to break the monotony.
Volkswagen Classics department (VW corporate’s heritage collection) doesn’t include any cars prior to 1950 and they really, really don’t like talking about that era.
In one go, or over time? If I had cash to spare, I’d probably spend about £30k without thinking too hard about it - most cars I like don’t actually cost much more than that, whether they’re new or classics.