lesapandre Posted April 19 Posted April 19 I'm launching this to cover all things Pre-War. Not sure of the interest but let's see. But thought it might be a place to promote these vehicles - including commercial vehicles etc. Up to say 1948 - when the first Post-War designs took off and the RAC horsepower rating was abandoned. I don't own one yet - but will. They are just so interesting. And an antidote to current vehicles. So here we go. D.E, SiC, Kringle and 10 others 13
lesapandre Posted April 19 Author Posted April 19 Here is the first post - cars for sale on Ebay. Enjoy. Morris - £3,500 Austin - bids under £2000 atm. Shite Ron, Westbay, Dyslexic Viking and 1 other 4
rustdevil Posted April 19 Posted April 19 3 minutes ago, lesapandre said: Here is the first post - cars for sale on Ebay. Enjoy. Morris - £3,500 Austin - bids under £2000 atm. Bmc number plate on that Austin isn’t that when it all went wrong lesapandre 1
lesapandre Posted April 19 Author Posted April 19 4 minutes ago, rustdevil said: Bmc number plate on that Austin isn’t that when it all went wrong First response prize. 🎁 Yes - that was after WW2 and the Austin-Morris marriage - at this time they were rivals - Oxford Cambridge car race.
rustdevil Posted April 19 Posted April 19 10 minutes ago, lesapandre said: First response prize. 🎁 Yes - that was after WW2 and the Austin-Morris marriage - at this time they were rivals - Oxford Cambridge car race. Tally ho pip pip lesapandre 1
Popular Post Nick57 Posted April 19 Popular Post Posted April 19 This is my 1936 Riley Kestrel Back_For_More, Dyslexic Viking, Six-cylinder and 47 others 46 2 2
HMC Posted April 19 Posted April 19 Lovely! always liked the styling of 30s rileys lesapandre and eddyramrod 2
HMC Posted April 19 Posted April 19 As an aside, these cars are so divorced from the modern day that people stare in wonder as you potter past. (this might be bad, or good depending on mindset) Matty, Stinkwheel, worldofceri and 14 others 15 2
lesapandre Posted April 19 Author Posted April 19 Holding up the traffic and being jolly and iconoclastic is for me part of the appeal - the ultimate motoring 'disrupters'. 😂 HMC, groovyboovy, eddyramrod and 1 other 3 1
tooSavvy Posted April 19 Posted April 19 Hmmm.... Like a bit o' Foyles War, ahh duzz 👍 🚙💨 lesapandre 1
Rustybullethole Posted April 19 Posted April 19 Quite a bit on c and c A Lovely Nippy 7 If you have to ask you can't afford Ulez exempt van Matty, Dyslexic Viking, lesapandre and 1 other 4
Matty Posted April 19 Posted April 19 Always fascinating. Not sure if want one just yet but lovely non the less . Now where's @horriblemercedes when he's needed? (Obvs @barrett as well). lesapandre and horriblemercedes 2
Dyslexic Viking Posted April 19 Posted April 19 Pre-war cars in Norway were and are dominated by American cars and the highest surviving ones are the Ford model A which is incredible as most of these were in use until well into the 1960s and had hard lives, like the story I shared about an A that was used by a postman and did over half a million km in the years from 1948 to the end of the 1960s and this one still exists today. I have always liked and wanted an A so it is possible a car I will own one day. There are 10 for sale here right now and these 2 are the cheapest. https://www.finn.no/mobility/item/367184130?ci=1 https://www.finn.no/mobility/item/398562141?ci=1 But late 1930s American cars are something I really want. Much more usable and easier to drive than a Model A and really great cars which is part of the reason I think these survived less as they were used and used until there was nothing left. Like this 1939 Chevrolet sold new in Norway and for sale now. https://www.finn.no/mobility/item/402065134?ci=1 RayMK, Justwatching, lesapandre and 8 others 11
Dyslexic Viking Posted April 19 Posted April 19 But I have a thing for late 1930s Dodge and Plymouth I really like these and probably quite unknown outside Norway Chrysler products and especially Dodge were in the 1930s assembled in Norway at Strømmen Værksted and these Dodges are called Strømmen Dodges here and were very common and popular as taxis but few have survived today. Dodge under assembly at Strømmen. 1939 Dodge as a taxi in Norway 1948 possibly a Strømmen car but can't say. lesapandre, Surface Rust, bangernomics and 4 others 7
Dyslexic Viking Posted April 19 Posted April 19 There are a lot of great cars coming up for sale in Norway. Like this Norwegian sold 1930 Buick that was owned by the wife of an engineer and from 1935 to 1957 owned by a rural policeman who probably used the car in police service which was common then so it has probably experienced things especially during the war years. I would recommend going to the link to see the rest of the pictures as this one is just beautiful. https://www.finn.no/mobility/item/367327100?ci=1 Back_For_More 1
Dyslexic Viking Posted April 19 Posted April 19 This also Norwegian sold when new 1937 Packard is also just beautiful. https://www.finn.no/mobility/item/402319665?ci=1 Back_For_More, eddyramrod, Rightnider and 1 other 4
Momentary Lapse Of Reason Posted April 19 Posted April 19 State she was when I first saw her. garethj, Stinkwheel, Six-cylinder and 3 others 6
Momentary Lapse Of Reason Posted April 19 Posted April 19 The other one. RayMK, Six-cylinder, Back_For_More and 7 others 10
UltraWomble Posted April 19 Posted April 19 I get to play with these every so often The 10-4 was finished the night before my eldest daughters "prom" night, I say finished, none of the lights actually worked, but it was running. I keep looking at 8's (later Series E ones) preferably that someone has grafted an A series into rather than the old side valve lump. Stinkwheel, Joey spud, garethj and 4 others 7
Vantman Posted April 20 Posted April 20 Not far from me but my left leg says no deal--- https://www.facebook.com/marketplace/item/1366190901049335/?ref=category_feed&referral_code=undefined&referral_story_type=listing&tracking={"qid"%3A"-9202621707014548915"%2C"mf_story_key"%3A"9467931766605449"%2C"commerce_rank_obj"%3A"{\"target_id\"%3A9467931766605449%2C\"target_type\"%3A0%2C\"primary_position\"%3A68%2C\"ranking_signature\"%3A7156987835369385042%2C\"commerce_channel\"%3A504%2C\"value\"%3A0.00017702373791923%2C\"candidate_retrieval_source_map\"%3A{\"9467931766605449\"%3A111}}"} eddyramrod, lesapandre, Joey spud and 4 others 7
Six-cylinder Posted April 20 Posted April 20 I had some exposure to Vintage cars in my late teens/20s helping to look after a friend’s vintage cars. The car I liked the most was an Invicta 4.5 Ltr low chassis and I wanted one. I even got to take it to West Wycombe Steam fair once on my own. Unfortunately no way, they have always been well out of reach. Moving forward through the years I had a couple of bucket list cars, which were to own a Rolls Royce and a Pre-war car. The Rolls Royce I thought would be a Shadow but no idea what pre-war car I should buy. Then talking to @Saabnut in Lockdown zoom he told me about has Rolls Royce 20/25s and the idea of owning a pre-war Rolls Royce was born. I looked at a few and settled on a 1933 Rolls Royce 20/25 with Park Ward owner driver saloon body. I have had it getting on for 2 years now and it is so different to anything I had before. It used to be anything that cannot do 70 mph has never really been on my radar and I sold my BMW M3 Evo that I had for nearly 10 years to help pay for it. How things change. I know there is a lot of other stuff there but the highs and lows of vintage Rolls Royce ownership are all in “Six Cylinders Motoring Notes” coachie, Back_For_More, artdjones and 26 others 27 2
worldofceri Posted April 20 Posted April 20 I moved maybe just a handful of pre-war cars in my shiteshifting days. This Nash was possibly the most interesting. 1927 if memory serves. LightBulbFun, eddyramrod, Stinkwheel and 14 others 17
lesapandre Posted April 20 Author Posted April 20 Another Austin Pre-War for sale. https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/306201081952?itmmeta=01JS9XXHHWX8A6MSJ10WWRTJJN&hash=item474b01b860 bangernomics 1
UltraWomble Posted April 21 Posted April 21 Bob just sent me this that he has his eye on.... lesapandre 1
SiC Posted April 21 Posted April 21 I think there will be an ever increasing amount of cars having similar reasons for sale. UltraWomble, eddyramrod, RayMK and 2 others 1 4
Spottedlaurel Posted April 21 Posted April 21 Saw this 1938 MG TA on Saturday: Before I found it parked-up I'd seen it on the move on a country lane, where it looked and sounded just right. I believe it was recently up for sale at around £16,000. The MG isn't the sort of thing I personally find so appealing, I'd be more interested in the big late '30s American cars @Dyslexic Viking is posting. I'm not sure I'd have the mechanical skills to do one of them justice however. Back_For_More, garethj, eddyramrod and 2 others 5
Six-cylinder Posted April 21 Posted April 21 2 hours ago, Spottedlaurel said: Saw this 1938 MG TA on Saturday: Before I found it parked-up I'd seen it on the move on a country lane, where it looked and sounded just right. I believe it was recently up for sale at around £16,000. The MG isn't the sort of thing I personally find so appealing, I'd be more interested in the big late '30s American cars @Dyslexic Viking is posting. I'm not sure I'd have the mechanical skills to do one of them justice however. MG TA I have always found the MG T series very attractive, but they just don't make them in my size. lesapandre, eddyramrod and Matty 2 1
artdjones Posted April 21 Posted April 21 3 hours ago, Spottedlaurel said: Saw this 1938 MG TA on Saturday: Before I found it parked-up I'd seen it on the move on a country lane, where it looked and sounded just right. I believe it was recently up for sale at around £16,000. The MG isn't the sort of thing I personally find so appealing, I'd be more interested in the big late '30s American cars @Dyslexic Viking is posting. I'm not sure I'd have the mechanical skills to do one of them justice however. US cars of the 30s are very easy to deal with mechanically. They were designed for use in a country with lots of big empty spaces, where repair shops could be few and far between. Similar to Norway, really. lesapandre and eddyramrod 1 1
garethj Posted April 21 Posted April 21 42 minutes ago, Six-cylinder said: MG TA I have always found the MG T series very attractive, but they just don't make them in my size. I’d love a TC. I sat in one a while ago and it was snug but manageable I think. Once I get my ankle replaced with a treble ball joint, anyway. At 6’1” tall and portly, I’ve found that I can fit in any car if I like it enough. Discomfort can go fuck itself for a few hours at a time. Matty, Six-cylinder and lesapandre 3
Momentary Lapse Of Reason Posted April 21 Posted April 21 1 hour ago, Six-cylinder said: MG TA I have always found the MG T series very attractive, but they just don't make them in my size. I love the looks of the MG J2, until I sat in Carol Cooper's one and discovered how small people were back then. Six-cylinder 1
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