*** MPH07 and NEC Classic Car Show - Part 1 ***

Started by Colin, November 11, 2007, 04:42:49 AM

Colin

Here's a "reprint" of the article I wrote for "The Motor" forum.....

Here's just a small subset of the things that I saw yesterday in an excellent day at the NEC, enjoying the combination of the Classic Car Show, and MPH07, and the pleasure of the company of 4 other fine forummers, Messrs Piers, Dan Duke (Stuntman), Michael and Bryan.

We started off in the Classic Car Show. The very first stand we came to had one of the largest crowds around it, and it was not hard to see why. This was the Bugatti Owners' Club, and pride of place was given over to  Veyron.



There was some advance publicity material on this stand for "La Vie en Bleu 2", which will take place at Prescott at the end of May 2008.............. it's already in my diary, and I am appeasing the weather gods in the hope it is a nice and sunny experience. Will create a Diary Thread for this one soon!

Right next door was the Ferrari stand, with a variety of cars from the 50s to the 90s. When we were there, even the F40 was looking lonely, as everyone was crowded around the Bugattis............ anyway, here are a few of the Red Cars





At this point, I was distracted to see not 1, but 2 Fiat Stradas on the Fiat Owners Club stand. Come on, when did you last see 2 of these cars? The red one, a first gen 105TC had done a mere 18,000 miles, none of them, I suspect, in the rain, as it was immaculate, and looked unused. The black 130TC looked quite subtle for what was actually the most potent hot hatch of its day. 







Right behind these was one of those really elegant early 70s, Coupes, and of my favourites, the 130:



Change of nationality, next to BM. Several of the cars here looked familiar from shows earlier in the year, but we started with a real "HSS" spec E30 BMW 318i, again with a very low mileage, which looked like it had barely been used.



The 325i Sport next to it was almost as pristine, and here was the first time we saw the mirror strategically placed behind the car to reveal the extent of polishing of the undersides. Forummers have a long way to go in their car cleaning standards, yet, it would seem!



An Alpina 6 series, looked familiar from Gaydon.



A couple of CSLs, and a couple of convertible 2002s, completed the pictorial record from this stand.









Next stop was VW. Here we were surprised to discover that the cost a 1.1L Golf (another "HSS" spec car!) when new in March 1979 was over ?3000. Shame the owner never used his car!





Alongside it was a late model first gen GTi in Lhasa Green metallic (?)



One side of the Audi stand revealed the rarely seen 100 Coupe and a Quattro







By this time, we decided we needed to head to the MPH Hall for the Live Theatre, but we got distracted by some fabulous cars on the Maserati stand, and decided to make amends for failing to photograph the 250F at Frankfurt, much to the chagrin of Pugwash senior. So here it is:







There were some other glorious Maseratis there, too.......





This one has been abandoned in Latin America for over 40 years and only recently exhumed and restored. Thank goodness it was!



Then it really was time for MPH.......... and truly excellent it was. If Messrs Clarkson, Hammond and May were as hungover as they deserved to be, from Andy's encounter with them the night before, they did not show it..... and this was not the sort of show where you want to be hungover, with explosions and fireworks among many other spectacles in a 90 minute extravaganza. No pictures, but I am sure someone will have Youtube-d it all by now!

On emerging, we decided we were thirsty, so needed to find the TR Register and Dave's kind offer of coffee..... meandering through several halls, I managed to purloin a Show Guide, which actually had a map in it ...... ad we realised we were about as far away as youi could get. Anyway, we were reasonably focused and did not stop much to admire other dispalys and were successful in meeeting Dave, who quickly rustled up a welcome shot of caffeine for us, and we enjoyed the pleasure of his company  for a good chat. Thanks, Dave!

Coffee seemed to generate a hunger, and it was by now nearly 2pm, so we started our quest for calorei.. umimpressed by the rip off prices of a burger at ?5, with a slice of cheese and extra ?1 (!!) and chips a further ?2, eventually we found some delicious (and scorching hot pasties!) for a much more reasonable price.......... don't think they claimed  to be genuine Cornish, but they were good!

With the Classic Car show closing at 5:30, this meant we now had virtually all the show to see, and not a lot of time.......... and the place was packed. Sadly, this made photography very difficult, so many of the thing that caught our eye were too crowded out to photo, and my idea of returning later simply timed out.



After looking at the Borgward, above, we ended up on the "Unloved Soviet" stand............ oh my...........

The Borka van, the Ford Transit of East Germany for many years :



The Zaphrozets, a blatant copy of the NSU Prinz:





And the Yugo........ who can forget this dumbed-down Fiat 128?



There were a couple of Wartburgs, a Lada Samara (probably the only one left in the UK?) and a rather nice but tatty Tatra 603.

For an imporvement in standards, next into the Ford area........... lots of cars that were once familiar including a Fiesta Popular Plus, with the extravagant options of a heated rear window (!), a 1300L Mark 3 Cortina, and these rather fine Z cars:





By this stage, it was clear we were not going to be able to see everything, so we meandered around stands and halls, pausing to look at things which caught our eye, and here are just some that caught my camera, too:

Merc W123 Coupe:



Merc 220S Cabrio from the 50s........... glorious!

One of the ill-fated Jensen GTs from 1976 just before Jensen went bust for the first time



CALL_911

#1
My god, those BMW's are beautiful. The 3.0CSL is definitely one of the best looking cars of all time.


2004 S2000
2016 340xi

TheIntrepid

I still don't see the visual appeal of the E30.

The E24 on the other hand, *drool* :praise:

2004 Chrysler Intrepid R/T Clone - Titanium Graphite [3.5L V6 - 250hp]
1996 BMW 325i Convertible - Brilliant Black [2.5L I6 - 189hp]

CALL_911

Quote from: TheIntrepid on November 11, 2007, 09:53:28 AM
I still don't see the visual appeal of the E30.

The E24 on the other hand, *drool* :praise:

Thats coz j00 ar3 t3h n00b.

But yeah, the E24 is to die for.


2004 S2000
2016 340xi

MidnightDave

2006 Lexus IS350 - bone stock wouldn't change a thing
2006 MINI Cooper S - For Sale!
2002 Toyota Tacoma - A man and his truck, it's a beautiful thing!

sandertheshark

Quote from: CALL_911 on November 11, 2007, 09:54:46 AM
Thats coz j00 ar3 t3h n00b.

But yeah, the E24 is to die for.
"Kill for," you mean.  There's no point in dying for a car.

sandertheshark

My God, that Maserati 200SI... Stop the show right there and send the Bugatti owners home!

the Teuton

2. 1995 Saturn SL2 5-speed, 126,500 miles. 5,000 miles in two and a half months. That works out to 24,000 miles per year if I can keep up the pace.

Quote from: CJ on April 06, 2010, 10:48:54 PM
I don't care about all that shit.  I'll be going to college to get an education at a cost to my parents.  I'm not going to fool around.
Quote from: MrH on January 14, 2011, 01:13:53 PM
She'll hate diesel passenger cars, all things Ford, and fiat currency.  They will masturbate to old interviews of Ayn Rand an youtube together.
You can take the troll out of the Subaru, but you can't take the Subaru out of the troll!

Colin

Quote from: the Teuton on November 12, 2007, 07:12:42 PM
What does HSS mean?
Ah........... we coined this phrase at "The Motor". It is our own invention, and it stands for "Hair Shirt Spec", in other words, very basic, with no luxuries at all. In the case of the E30 BMW, that meant no radio, for instance!