1974 Jaguar E-Type V12



**THIS VEHICLE HAS NOW BEEN SOLD AND WILL NOT BE GOING TO AUCTION. WE APOLOGISE FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE **



Guide Price: £70,000 - £80,000


Highlights


﹒Fully restored, matching numbers
﹒Fascinating history
﹒Beautifully finished interior
﹒Incredibly smooth to drive


The Background

Jaguar’s E-Type was revolutionary for two key reasons. Firstly, it was relatively inexpensive for a sports car – at launch in 1961 it cost £2,160, whereas its rivals at Aston Martin were selling for double that. Secondly, it looked astonishing. Like a cross between Jessica Rabbit and a spaceship. Enzo Ferrari famously called it ‘the most beautiful car ever made,’ and he should know a thing or two. With these key attributes in its favour, status as an icon was assured.

Its genesis lay in the successful D-Type racer, with its monocoque chassis and disc brakes, and the D-Type based E1A and E2A prototypes informed the production E-Type. The model history in a nutshell runs thus: the Series 1, built from 1961-64, had a 3.8-litre straight-six and was available as a two-seater roadster or coupe; the 4.2-litre engine was offered from 1964-68, while the tricky Moss gearbox was replaced with a more amenable all-synchro unit. A 2+2 four-seater was offered from 1966, and 1968’s ‘Series 1.5’ soft-launched a few changes before the full-blown Series 2 came in for 1969 – higher bumpers, relocated headlights, splayed exhausts and a wider mouth are all S2 telltales. And finally there’s the version we have here – the Series 3, produced from 1971-74. This had a growling 5.3-litre V12, egg-crate grille, and revised suspension and braking. Contemporary ad straplines read ‘Maybe we should have called it the F-Type’. Refining the road-racer into a sumptuous cruiser, this big-hearted machine was the E-Type’s last hurrah before it was usurped by the XJ-S – talk about going out on a high!

dsc_1064_50981849643_o.jpg 4.18 MB


The History

This particular Jag has a tremendously interesting history. You see, when it was first assembled back in 1974, the steering wheel was on the other side and, indeed, the whole car was on the other side of the pond; it was delivered to its first owner in New York, by the Stateside British Leyland distributor, and we can see from the vehicle titles in the file that it subsequently made its way to Virginia. The car lived in the USA all the way up until 2015, when it was imported to the UK. Having then been stored for a year or so, it was subject to a full and comprehensive restoration by marque experts Chariots, including swapping the layout to right-hand-drive. The whole car has been refined with no stone left unturned; the bodywork is superb and has been repainted in its original shade of British Racing Green, the Biscuit interior has been fully retrimmed, and all the running gear gone through with a fine-tooth comb, as well as a new soft-top and hard-top being fitted.

The current owner has had it for around a year, having bought it for a little over £95,000 and then spending a further £5,000 or so completing a few little jobs. He’s a true-blue E-Type expert, having owned all sorts of them over the last 45 years, and he looked at a great many V12s before deciding upon this one. Sadly, however, thanks to the Covid situation and various other factors of these strange times we live in, it’s time for him to say goodbye to this truly splendid Series 3.

dsc_1077_50981848688_o.jpg 1.99 MB


The Paperwork

There’s an impressive and reassuringly substantial file of documentation with this car. The Heritage certificate is present, which is always a massive plus with a classic Jaguar; it shows that the car’s current colourway of British Racing Green over Biscuit is the same spec as it was originally supplied with. It also corroborates the car retains its matching numbers. The car was built on May 21st 1974 and first registered in New York on July 10th of that year. Endearingly, the long-standing American owner who bought it in 1984 kept incredibly fastidious records in a little notebook, detailing how much fuel they put in on each date and recording the accompanying mileage, and this charming book comes with the car. The original owner’s manual is present, as well as the import documents from 2015 and a huge amount of receipts and invoices for parts and work carried out. The V5 is present and correct, showing the car’s first date of UK registration as October 1st 2015.

dsc_1215_50982652767_o.jpg 6.28 MB


The Interior

The mark of a quality retrim is that the cabin should feel fresh and yet classic, and that’s very much the vibe in this E-Type. The trimming that’s taken place here was done to an extremely high standard, paying respect to the car’s original Biscuit hide and bringing it into the twenty-first century. The seats are pleasingly supportive and beautifully finished with just some very, very minor signs of wear. They tilt forward correctly, to reveal the hideaway cubbyholes behind - which of course have also been trimmed. The carpets are excellent and fit very well, and the quality of the headlining inside the hardtop is superb. The car still has its original Motorola push-button radio, which is a lovely period piece. The dash is in excellent order, with all gauges and switchgear present and functional. Inside the boot, there’s a new carpet beneath which resides the correct false floor with matching spare wire wheel below.

dsc_1187_50981842803_o.jpg 2.33 MB


The Exterior

The restoration work to the body is exemplary, with the paintwork completed to an extremely high standard. It’s evident that a lot of care and attention has been paid to making sure all of the panels sit correctly with even gaps, and all of these painstaking hours of work pay dividends in the overall profile. It really is a striking machine. All of the correct chrome trim is in place and in great condition, the light lenses and window glass are all good, and it’s solid beneath the filler cap. The wire wheels are straight and superb, wearing recent Michelin rubber with excellent tread. In a final flourish of correctness, the owner has recently replaced the wrong-era exhaust the car came with, fitting the proper quad tail system to complete the period-perfect aesthetic.
During the restoration, a brand new soft-top was fitted – although the seller readily admits that he’s never removed the hard-top (which is also new) simply because the car looks so good with it fitted… and we’re inclined to agree. Strong shades of the Goodwood paddock with this one.

dsc_1134_50982554096_o.jpg 3.14 MB


The Mechanicals

This is a tremendously smooth and willing E-Type. It’s most reassuring to buy such a car from someone who’s owned them for so many years, as his depth of knowledge and level of mechanical sympathy are unparalleled. Furthermore, this car has had everything done to it to ensure it’s mechanically tip-top: during the resto, the engine was treated to all the belt-and-braces stuff you’d expect, including attention to the timing chain, replacement radiator and so on, and in addition to that the current owner has had a new fuel pump, starter motor, fuel tank drain sump filter, spark plugs, distributor cap, rotor arm and plug leads fitted a few months ago.

Also addressed during the restoration were the brakes, with the front and rear calipers rebuilt and stainless braided lines fitted; the rear subframe came out so all the mountings could be renewed, and much more besides. The whole thing’s on-the-button – it fires up first time without trouble, idles evenly, pulls strongly through the gears, and makes a glorious noise. The automatic gearbox is super-slick too – no lumps or judders here, just creamy-smooth shifting.

dsc_1177_50982656387_o.jpg 4.12 MB


The Appeal

There’s something beguilingly vintage about driving a V12 E-Type. The driver’s seat is a fabulous place to be, with the cosy cabin shrinking around you like a well-cut suit. Before you reside a plethora of gauges, the likes of which a modern car could only dream of; the windscreen’s close enough that you can touch it without taking your hands off the wheel and the rear axle is as-near-as-dammit right under your backside, meaning that you steer it like a Caterham: with your hips. That 5.3-litre engine just has so much heart, and of course the principal lure of the sylph-like Jag is the way it looks. Slinky and curvaceous, it’s arguably at its very best in British Racing Green. And when you find an example that’s beautifully finished and champing at the bit to be enjoyed, how can you possibly resist?

It’s the full package, this one – everything’s been done and it’s ready to enjoy. We’ve got a great summer on the horizon, and this wonderful Jaguar would be the perfect accompaniment to your post-Covid adventures.






**THIS VEHICLE HAS NOW BEEN SOLD AND WILL NOT BE GOING TO AUCTION. WE APOLOGISE FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE **






Notice to bidders

Although every care is taken to ensure this listing is as factual and transparent as possible, all details within the listing are subject to the information provided to us by the seller. Car & Classic does not take responsibility for any information missing from the listing. Please ensure you are satisfied with the vehicle description and all information provided before placing a bid.

As is normal for most auctions, this vehicle is sold as seen, and therefore the Sale of Goods Act 1979 does not apply. All bids are legally binding once placed. Any winning bidder who withdraws from a sale, is subject to our bidders fee charge. Please see our FAQs and T&C's for further information. Viewings of vehicles are encouraged, but entirely at the sellers discretion.
See our Terms & Conditions here.

Consulta le nostre FAQ qui e i nostri Termini e condizioni qui

Domande frequenti sulle aste
Specifiche del veicolo
  • Anno 1974
  • Marca Jaguar
  • Modello E-Type V12
  • Colore Green
  • Chilometraggio 58,934 Miglia
  • Cilindrata 5300
Dettagli d'asta
  • Tipo di venditore Privato
  • Posizione Essex
  • Paese Regno Unito
Storico delle offerte
1 offerta
  • tr•••• £74,000 18/03/21
Invia messaggio a team Aste di C&C

La galleria

Il modo più sicuro per acquistare un'auto d'epoca online

Il sistema di pagamento sicuro di Car & Classic protegge acquirenti e venditori. Al termine dell'asta, l'offerente vincente trasferisce il pagamento su un conto vincolato di terzi. Una volta completato il trasferimento del veicolo, entrambe le parti confermano di essere soddisfatte della vendita e il denaro viene rilasciato al venditore. Maggiori informazioni su come acquistare con noi
Processo di pagamento sicuro e protetto

Come funzionano le offerte massime

Il processo di offerta massima ti permette di fare offerte senza preoccupazioni.

Inserisci la tua offerta massima e il sistema farà offerte automaticamente per assicurarsi che tu sia il miglior offerente - fino all'ammontare da te stabilito come tetto massimo.

Anti-sniping

Car & Classic contrasta il fenomeno dello “sniping”, ovvero il fenomeno dei rilanci all'ultimo secondo per vincere l'asta.

Se viene fatta un'offerta nei 3 minuti prima della chiusura dell'asta, la scadenza di questa viene automaticamente estesa di 2 minuti per permettere agli altri offerenti di reagire e, se lo desiderano, di rilanciare.

Incrementi di offerta automatica

  • Se la sua offerta massima è uguale o inferiore al prezzo di riserva, la sua offerta massima sarà applicata per intero se lei è il miglior offerente.
  • Se siete il miglior offerente e fate un'offerta massima superiore a quella di riserva, la riserva verrà automaticamente inserita come prima offerta.
    • Una volta raggiunta la riserva, Car & Classic si assicurerà che tu sia il miglior offerente utilizzando solo gli incrementi di offerta indicati di seguito.
    • Vi terremo in testa fino alla vostra offerta massima O all'incremento più vicino alla vostra offerta massima, a condizione che la vostra offerta massima sia sufficiente a coprire il valore dell'incremento.

Ammontare dell'offerta Incremento
Da £0 a £9,999 £100.00
Da £10,000 a £49,999 £250.00
Da £50,000 a £99,999 £500.00
£100,000 + £1,000.00

Superamento immediato dell'offerta

Quando piazzi un'offerta massima e questa viene immediatamente superata, questo significa che un altro offerente ha impostato una soglia di offerta massima superiore alla tua.

Puoi fare nuovamente un'offerta o impostare una soglia più alta di offerta massima e il nostro sistema rilancerà fino alla nuova soglia, cercando di portarti a essere il miglior offerente.

Offerte massime di pari ammontare

Quando ci sono due offerte massime di pari ammontare, quella impostata per prima è quella che viene considerata “migliore offerta”.

Pre-autorizzazione

Potremmo trattenere un piccolo importo di pre-autorizzazione sulla tua carta fino alla fine dell'asta, quando quest'ultimo verrà poi stornato. Se vinci, verrà prelevata una caparra che verrà detratta dal pagamento del prezzo di vendita per il veicolo e non comporta costi aggiuntivi per te.

Cosa sono le Offerte pre-asta?

Offerte pre-asta significa che avete la possibilità di fare offerte prima dell'inizio ufficiale dell'asta.
Verrà comunicato se si è il miglior offerente o meno all'inizio dell'asta.

Problema con l'offerta

Le offerte sono contrattualmente vincolanti. Per tutelare l'utente, sono previste alcune regole nel caso in cui si ritenga che sia stato digitato in modo errato. Si prega di controllare e modificare quanto inserito.