Tag Archives: cars

1997 Mercedes-Benz SLK230 Kompressor – SOLD

The SLK – a compact, luxurious sports model with folding hardtop roof and a perky supercharged engine was a formula for success.

Standard equipment in Australia included leather upholstery, power windows, power steering, dual-zone climate control and alloy wheels. Safety features include front and side driver and passenger airbags, anti-lock brakes and electronic stability control. 

In October 1997 this car was delivered new in Sydney and features the ‘sport package’ upgrades. This includes an optional design of alloy wheels, slightly lowered suspension, dual exhaust outlets, sideskirts and the lower section of the bumpers and grille colour-coded.

Ten years ago the owner purchased the SLK as an ‘extra’ car for weekend open-top motoring, to go with his vintage MG. The SLK saw little use in his decade of ownership and today the odometer reading is 128,000km. I sold the car recently and the new owner has since found a unique SLK with just a few hundred km on it from new. Hence this car’s back on the market.

The car starts instantly, runs smoothly and is completely easy to drive. The owner assures that everything works as it should.

These SLKs enjoy Mercedes-Benz quality and luxury and this two-seater sports model ads a lot of fun to the equation. This is a good, straight, well-presented example in above average condition. Unbeatable value…

Please request an email with more detailed information and a set of photographs, from paul@classicrally.com.au

Whilst every effort to ensure accuracy is made when preparing the description of a car, much of the information is provided by the owner and cannot be guaranteed to be accurate and complete. Some errors and omissions occur occasionally and we cannot be held liable for any loss or damage arising from incorrect or incomplete information or any reliance which might be placed on information provided. Any potential purchaser is advised to make his or her own independent investigations or inspections to determine title and whether a vehicle is suitable for purchase. MD28143

1967 Triumph GT6 Mkl 2.5 PI – SOLD

This car has been comprehensively rebuilt for multiple uses. As a country cruising car, as a competition car and as a club car.

Acquired by the current owner almost twenty years ago, a six year restoration was completed in 2012.

For the comfort angle, the car would be fitted with later type GT6 seats with headrests, trimmed in cream leather. The rest of the interior was trimmed and carpeted to match, with “Jaguar” carpets. Beneath is sound deadening material.

The owner’s intention was to create a car his wife could drive and which could also be used in club level motorsport events. Thus, a more powerful version of the Triumph 6-cylinder unit was built-up for the car. At 2.5 litres, with fuel injection the car’s power output is 130bhp. A stronger gearbox from a Triumph sedan is fitted, with electric overdrive.

Some $40,000 was spent on the build and when finished, the car began appearing at club events. At the Triumph Nationals, it was voted runner-up in the People’s Choice award. Upgrades to the suspension and brakes while refining the car for events saw an additional $12,000 spent.

The result is a potent, predictable sporty coupe which has competed in Albany Round the Houses events, track days at Wanneroo raceway with the VSCC and competed in motorkhanas with the Triumph club. The GT6 has attended Triumph Nationals in 2014, 2018 and 2024. It’s won several trophies…

There’s a Heritage Certificate with this car. The selling dealer was Premier Motors in Perth, WA state distributor for Triumph.

The rebuild was completed some years ago now and there’s the odd chip and blister, but overall it still presents very well. The GT6 drives very well, as one might expect after such a sorting campaign.

If the car sells to a Western Australian buyer the number plates GT6 will be available for $1000, otherwise standard issue plates will be provided.

The owner advises that the car has been very reliable and is keen to point out that it has no oil leaks and never runs hot. On the road it quickly becomes evident that while the car offers plenty of grunt, it can be docile and easy to use in traffic. It’s ready for use as a weekend fun car or in club motorsports.

Please request an email with more details and photos from paul@classicrally.com.au

Whilst every effort to ensure accuracy is made when preparing the description of a car, much of the information is provided by the owner and cannot be guaranteed to be accurate and complete. Some errors and omissions occur occasionally and we cannot be held liable for any loss or damage arising from incorrect or incomplete information or any reliance which might be placed on information provided. Any potential purchaser is advised to make his or her own independent investigations or inspections to determine title and whether a vehicle is suitable for purchase.

1985 Cadillac Eldorado Biarritz Convertible – SOLD

Cadillac’s top of the line model with convertible bodywork makes a big statement today, as it did when new. Extremely luxurious and well appointed, the Biarritz version was loaded with everything Cadillac could provide, from plush leather upholstery to self levelling rear suspension.

The motor is a 4.1-litre V8, tuned for economy and torque rather than outright performance.

This was the first American full-size car with fully independent suspension. Four-wheel disc brakes and an upgraded 4-speed automatic transmission helped keep the spec up to date.

Cadillac offered the Convertible (only in top spec Biarritz) for 1984 and 1985 only. Just 2300 were made in 1985.

Delivered new in Augusta, Georgia, USA on February 1 1985, the car was fitted with the desirable option are the chrome wire wheels, which suit the car well.

The Eldo was imported to Western Australia 15 years ago and changed hands two years later. The new owner was a Cadillac Club member. He took the car to club events and the 2014 Cadillac Nationals. It sold to another Cadillac Club member, two years ago. He has done some work to the car to bring it up to top condition. Details provided in full description.

The car was taken to the 2024 Cadillac Nationals in Busselton, where it performed faultlessly.

The condition of the car is very good inside and out. It’s all tidy and intact, showing the low mileage (78,000 miles) is accurate.

With the car are the original books compendium, Gold Key card, a factory-issued cassette of 1985 Cadillac information, a history file, two workshop manuals and other documentation specific to 1985 Eldorado. The car has two keys.

The number plates CADDY 1 go with the car if sold to a Western Australian buyer.

The colour scheme suits the car very well. Wherever the owner has displayed the Eldorado it has gained a lot of positive attention. Chances of finding such a good, original Convertible are slim in Australia.

Please request full details by email from paul@classicrally.com.au

Paul Blank Classic Car Broker MD28143

Whilst every effort to ensure accuracy is made when preparing the description of a car, much of the information is provided by the owner and cannot be guaranteed to be accurate and complete. Some errors and omissions occur occasionally and we cannot be held liable for any loss or damage arising from incorrect or incomplete information or any reliance which might be placed on information provided. Any potential purchaser is advised to make his or her own independent investigations or inspections to determine title and whether a vehicle is suitable for purchase.

1977 BMW E12 528i – SOLD

This car was the range-topping 528i model featuring the fuel injected 2.8-litre version of the company’s much admired straight six engine. This was the largest engine in the E12 marketed in Australia. The modern sports saloon had arrived – and changed the face of BMW in Australia.

This fine example was delivered new in December 1977 in Launceston to a local doctor. A comprehensive log of work was kept by the owner, still present in the service book. From these notes, it appears that the same owner retained the car right through to the year 2000, by which time the car had covered 200,000km. Today, the car has covered a low 210,800km, all of which explains the 528i’s impressive, original condition.

The previous owner purchased the car in Tasmania and shipped it to Perth having it recommissioned after arrival.  There were no issues getting WA registration for the car.

He sold the car 5 years ago through this brokerage service to a collector who is now selling. The present owner has covered some 9000 enjoyable kilometres in the car, while it’s been one of several cars in his collection.

In his ownership, work undertaken saw some $6300 spent to ensure the car runs perfectly.

Finished in attractive Polaris silver metallic, it features multi-spoke alloy wheels, 4-wheel disc brakes, air conditioning and power steering.

The car is in especially good, original condition and is a prime collector’s piece. The bodywork is straight and rust-free and the paint has an excellent shine to it. The external hardware, bumpers, lights, badges, etc are all excellent for their age, though a couple of small cosmetic items could benefit from attention.

The complete OEM tool kit inside the boot lid, etc, are all present, as is the complete original set of books. Currently on club license it can easily be changed to full license or transferred as is. Reg: 1FAR916

It is rare to see one of these cars that has been so well preserved – clearly it has always been cherished. This car would be one of the better examples in Australia.

Chances of finding such an original, correct E12 are slim, moreso for the desirable 528i version. Don’t miss your chance…

Please request an email with full details and more photographs from paul@classicrally.com.au

Paul Blank Classic Car Broker – MD28143

Whilst every effort to ensure accuracy is made when preparing the description of a car, much of the information is provided by the owner and cannot be guaranteed to be accurate and complete. Some errors and omissions occur occasionally and we cannot be held liable for any loss or damage arising from incorrect or incomplete information or any reliance which might be placed on information provided. Any potential purchaser is advised to make his or her own independent investigations or inspections to determine title and whether a vehicle is suitable for purchase

Classic – Honda Coupe 9 and 7

by Paul Blank

Now and then you’ll see a car from the ‘70s which rings a bell somewhere in the back of your memory. An occasional sighting of a Honda 1300 Coupe might just get some of your synapses snapping, taking you back to a time when these high-tech Japanese cars were seen on our roads.

And outside of Japan, Australia was the most likely place you’d see one.

Having achieved world domination in selling motorcycles, on entering the car market, Honda was keen to establish a wide range of cars, starting with the little S500/600/800 sports models and small commercial vehicles.

By the end of the 1960s, their cars ranged from the small Kei cars, the N360, called the Scamp in some markets, through the stylish S800 sports and Coupe to the larger 4-cylinder 1300 range of 4-door sedans.

Then, derived from the 1300 sedans were the very attractive Coupe 7 and Coupe 9, as top of the range versions. The first Coupes were sold as 1970 models. Featuring sleek fastback bodywork, and distinctive split-grille front styling, these cars incorporated many of the sorts of excellent high-tech features for which Honda was famous.

The Coupes were a big step, and a big statement for Honda. They were in fact, the last model that company founder Soichiro Honda was involved with the development of. The transversely-mounted, aluminium alloy engine of the Coupe 9 featured four Keihin carburettors and a dry sump lubrication system – real racing car level of technology, which only the most exotic Italian supercars shared. The engine was also air-cooled – pretty radical for a front engined car at that time. Mr Honda’s creatrive influence was pretty clear.

Other technical features included front wheel drive, a forged steel, nitrided double-counterweighted crankshaft and chain drive from engine to gearbox, plus a side-mounted clutch – able to be changed in just 30 minutes. Standard fitment was a 4-speed gearbox, though for the Japanese market an auto was offered, and late in the model life, a 5-speed manual was optional.

Honda’s engine construction was dubbed Duo Dyna. Two fans forced air through cavities, much like a water pump would on a liquid-cooled car. One fan forced cooling air through the passages, while a second fan blew the heated air from the engine.

The 1298cc engine produced an impressive 85kW (116 bhp) at 7300rpm, or (95 bhp) in the cheaper, single carburettor Coupe 7. The high performance 9 also boasted a higher compression ratio. The Coupe 9 weighed 905kg, which seems light today but compares to 940kg for a Mk1 Celica or 966kg for a Ford Capri. Speeds achievable in the gears were 55, 93, 138 and 185km/h – very good performance for a 1300cc car in 1970. The 0-100km/h time for the 9 was 11.5 seconds and the 7 was a second slower.

Suspension was all independent, with McPherson struts up front. Steering was rack and pinion and front disc brakes were fitted. The Honda Coupes handled very well for their era, with excellent stability and handling which was greeted well by the press at the time.  While they had quite a bit of bodyroll, the road-holding is still pretty good. In 1971 Wheels magazine tested the car and were very impressed, saying “We tested the Honda on the greatest variety of roads we could find and we say its suspension is one of the best-sorted of any car, regardless of size or configuration.

Front wheel drive was still unusual back then and gave extra space in the cabin, which was probably necessary as the Coupes were claustrophobically upholstered, completely in black. The interior was certainly well decked-out, with comfortable reclining seats, comprehensive instrumentation and a stylish 3-spoke sports steering wheel. 

In 1971 the Coupe 7 was listed in Australia for $2894 and the Coupe 9 for $3180. These prices compared to a Mazda R100 Coupe for $2695, a Mazda Capella RE Coupe $3333, Ford Capri Deluxe 1600 for $2775 or Capri XL $3040. In the more overtly sporty competition, a Fiat 124 Sport 1600 BC was $4250 and a Datsun 240Z would have set you back $4666.

After just two years, the models were dropped from all export markets, as the huge-selling Honda Civic was ramped up. An updated version of the Coupe, called the 145 was sold in Japan for a period.

These Hondas are virtually unknown outside Japan, except in Australia where they were sold in reasonable numbers. Very small numbers were sold in other Asia-Pacific countries. Interestingly, it’s one of the few vehicles which was never sold in New Zealand, though a few migrated as private imports. The Coupes were evaluated for the American market and even a brochure featuring a US registered car was made, but no sales were made there. Equally Europe and the UK never saw sales of these cars.

The Honda dealership network in Australia had found its legs by this period, with popular small models such as the Scamp, Life and Z all doing well. Legend has it that all of the Australian delivered 1300 Coupes were originally “S” models (with all the extras), but when they landed here, they risked attracting higher insurance fees (due to anything with an “S” or “GT” being regarded as a Sports version), so the dealers replaced all “S” badges with “Deluxe”.  

They were also raced and rallied with some success by Aussie enthusiasts who appreciated their high tech specs, the cars even featuring in the Bathurst enduros. In 2008 in Victoria a 1972 Coupe 9S was offered for sale, the owner stating the car was; “Believed to be 1 of 3 built by Honda Japan for rally and race, but never raced or rallied”. 

By today’s standards, the Coupes are still relatively easy to drive. There’s no power steering, but it’s only at parking speeds that you notice. The rack and pinion steering still shows eagerness to turn in well when approaching a corner. Inside, the seats feel a bit flat but the driving position is quite good – if a bit like an Italian car of the era. The steering wheel seems set quite high, possibly exacerbated by the tail-down stance the Coupes have.

You can see that car makers have learned from the black with black on black interiors that some designers thought was sporty in the 1970s.

From driving a Coupe 9 some years back I recall that if you ring the neck of the eager engine, the performance is pretty good – this of course being relative to the era of the car.

Fortunately for 1300 Coupe owners, sales figures are available; about 38,000 of the Coupes were made, with 1053 being exported, 731 of which were sent to Australia. The breakdown was: NSW 235, Victoria 176, WA 168, SA 62, QLD 51, Tasmania 33 and ACT 6.

Today, probably because of their fascinating mechanical layout, a few remain in existence in each state though their values are still relatively low. Only a handful of these survivors remain on the road today. Old age has caught up with most of these cars, most of which are in need of some love. The rarer 4-carby Coupe 9 is the much more collectable version.

Are they a significant classic or a piece of curious marginalia? Even with increasing interest in Japanese classics, I’d probably be leaning more towards the latter…

Copyright Paul Blank

Lamborghini Gallardo LP550-2 Valentino Balboni

Looking back at a drive and review of a special Lamborghini

By Paul Blank

Part way through its model life, Lamborghini has taken an unusual turn with its popular Gallardo model. Normally improved high performance models added to a range get more and more high tech equipment added or become stripped out noisy faux competition cars.


Well, Lamborghini has taken a different path. Along with the updates that the other Gallardos have gained (predominantly bigger, more powerful engines), a limited edition version called the Valentino Balboni is the new star model. The biggest difference is that the Balboni is rear wheel drive only – while all Lamborghinis since the Diablo gained another diff, have been all-wheel-drive. It’s been a major point of differentiation with the Murcielago and Gallardo, helping make them sales successes. So it’s an interesting and important change of direction to see a lighter, simpler 2-wheel drive car released.

It features a 5.2-litre version of the V10 engine and a 6-speed manual or optional E-gear transmission. My test car had E-gear, though I think I would have preferred to shift gears myself – there’s something about clacking the gears through an aluminium gate… I drove the Balboni (the first in Australia) on Barbagallo Raceway, and fortunately also had the chance to compare its on-track performance with the new LP560-4 Gallardo (560bhp, 4-WD). While the all-wheel-drive model has a surefootedness, it’s natural inclination when pushed hard into a corner, is to understeer.

Not so the Balboni. Firstly, it turns in beautifully – no – magnificently. The steering response on your way in to and through a corner is spectacularly good. Push the car harder through a corner and the tail moves out, ever so controllably. Grip is absolutely confidence inspiring. Try driving a lap of a track in this car without grinning…

The Balboni feels lighter and nimbler than its all-wheel-drive sibling, even though the factory figures mark it as fractionally slower. In fact the Balboni is lighter at 1380kg (compared to 1410kg). Aside from removing the drive to the front wheels, the suspension has been changed and even the aerodynamics have seen modifications t suit the 2-wheel drive model.

The 408kW engine sounds glorious and pushes the car along completely thrillingly. Whilst this isn’t the big Lamborghini, it’s certainly a supercar in all respects.

Fit and finish appear to be up to parent company Audi’s high standards. Inside the Balboni is very well kitted out. It’s not a stripped-out competition car.

In case you don’t know, Valentino Balboni is famous as Lamborghini’s test driver, having been employed by the company since 1967. And that ties in nicely with his eponymous car being a real driver’s car.

Lamborghini plans to make only 250 of the Valentinio Balboni model, however interest and responses have been so positive that a rear wheel drive model is likely to join the range permanently – and that’s very, very good news.

Copyright Paul Blank

Classic – Goggomobil Dart

By Paul Blank

Failure is something that sports car makers have faced in droves. Aspiring sports car manufacturers, in all parts of the world, have tried to crack the code to success. Many have tried, most have failed.

A popular sports car needs to be cheap to buy and run. It needs to be attractive. And above all it needs to be fun – by the bucket load.

There have been some very out-there designs and some just plain dreary attempts. Few have hit the nail on the head, and unlikely though it may seem, the Goggomobil Dart did.

In spite of Australia’s warm climate, very few companies have designed and made open cars in the Land Down Under.

New South Wales man Bill Buckle (who I was fortunate to know) was to become a successful importer and Toyota dealer. He had developed his own Ford Zephyr-engined sports coupe, not unlike an AC Aceca, called the Buckle GT. Announced in 1955, it was one of very few sports cars of the era to achieve a level of commercial success, with 24 cars reportedly made, some gaining success in motorsport. Using a fibreglass body, the GT was a fairly sophisticated design both technically and stylistically.

This was to provide Buckle with expertise in design and manufacturing which would see him on the way to success, but with a most unlikely car.

Buckle’s company had been assembling cars for other makers in Sydney from CKD kits and he had searched for a vehicle for which he could have manufacturing rights. In 1957 he reached an agreement with German microcar producer Hans Glas, for their diminutive Goggomobil.

It took some persuasion, but Buckle convinced the Germans that he should manufacture the bodies for the Goggomobils fibreglass, rather than steel like the originals. These were made exactly replicating the design of the steel body, utilising the same fittings and hardware. The benefits of fibreglass for low volume production were obvious to Buckle, though at the time few companies around the world had yet embraced the material.



The running gear of the little Goggomobil was ideal for having alternative bodies fitted, having a pressed-steel floorpan with all running gear attached, much like a Volkswagen Beetle. The rear-mounted engine was an air-cooled twin of just 300cc, and had been proven to be extremely reliable. Later, an uprated 400cc version was used.

Sales of the Goggomobil sedan and Coupe grew strongly in Australia and Buckle decided to expand the model range. Using the existing platform and running gear, he designed his own very sleek, 2-seater open body. A prototype body was created in aluminium and moulds taken from it for fibreglass bodies to be made.

One of the innovations of the body was that it was essentially made in two halves, a bottom section, and the top with a lid let into it for access to the motor. There were no doors or front bonnet. A rubber strip ran around the centre of the car where the two halves joined. This technique was taken up by Lotus in the 1970s.

Above: This Dart was flown to England where Buckle’s sister Anne met the car.

The windscreen was the rear window from a Renault Dauphine and the car wore the same tail-lights and rear vent as the Goggo sedan. Apart from the stylish faired-in headlights, a chrome strip down the centre of the front, wipers and badges, there was nothing else fitted to the exterior.

The folding roof was simple to operate, which was fortunate as it took a very agile person to get in or out with the roof up – remember, there were no doors.

Weighing only 345kg the little Dart made the most of its tiny engine’s power and torque. It was low enough geared to feel like there was some acceleration and anyone stepping out of an Austin 7, a side-valve Hillman or Ford Popular in 1959 would have been impressed.

The Dart was very well priced, which no doubt added to its popularity. It cost thirty percent less than a Berkeley and over 40 percent less than an Austin Healey Sprite.

The car was an instant hit and in Australian sports car terms, it sold very well. By 1960 Buckle was employing 50 people to assemble their Goggos – nine of them women, as they proudly pointed out at the time. Production was up to 86 vehicles a month. Eventually 5000 Aussie Goggomobils were built, 700 of them Darts before production stopped in September 1961.

To drive a Dart today is an interesting experience, and a good one. I was fortunate to have Bill Buckle’s sister’s Dart in my care for over a year and drove it a lot. You lift the top the seat backrest and the entire seat cantilevers backwards and up to make entering the car easier. Step over the edge, get into the seat and while holding the side, or top of the steering wheel, drop the seat down to the floor. Bump, you’re in position. While the flat floor helps a feeling of spaciousness the small overall size of the car makes a strong impression.

The driving position is very good, legs almost straight out ahead of the driver and the wheel and gear-stick falling easily to hand. The 4-speed gear change is unusual, having a sideways throw between gears, with an upside-down, back to front shift pattern. Once you’ve got that in your head, the gearchange itself is very good to use, positive and quite quick.

For people of a particular height, like me at 6-foot, the top of the windscreen is exactly at eye level, so it’s lucky that the chrome surround is thin.

Ignition on, and the little two-stroke twin thrums into life, sounding for all the world like you’re being chased by an angry lawn mower. The air intake is just behind your shoulder and plenty of noise emanates from it. In fact, after a long drive it is quite a relief when you switch off and the noise stops.

As you might imagine, the rack and pinion steering is very light, and pleasingly direct. The car turns in well and responds much better to driver inputs than most microcars – in fact, it’s quite sporty. The Dart scuttles around very well, cornering quite flat and braking true – there’s hardly any weight to pull up.

With so much of its weight at the back, the very light front pitches and bobs a bit on the road. Push really hard and the swing-axles and rear weight bias allow the car to oversteer, according to road tests of the time, quite dramatically. I didn’t try that hard…

On the road, while everyone can overtake you, the attention that a Dart gets can be surpassed by very few vehicles.

What I did try – having heard a rumour it was possible – was to drive the Dart from the passenger’s seat. Reaching the pedals was easy, gear-change okay, left elbow on the ledge (to look cool), right hand on the bottom of the steering wheel (to look like nobody’s driving – no problemo! It did get some attention!

The press liked the Dart, Sports Car World exclaiming “performance is never exciting, although seldom is it actually depressing”. Automobiles Australia Yearbook of 1960 proudly proclaimed the Dart as “Australia’s contribution to Goggomobil progress”.

Today the Dart is a well respected microcar and very sought after. A bit of a cult following was inspired by two popular television advertisement campaigns referring to the Dart. Perhaps a hundred or more examples survive, including one in England, two which have gone to Germany and at least one exported to the USA in recent years.

The Dart is certainly a lovely and quite pure shape, it drives remarkably well and has an abundance of the crucial fun factor.

One old-time racer told me the story of a new Dart entered in a marathon 6-hour race at the Caversham circuit in Western Australia. It wasn’t exactly the fastest car on the track, and during the race, the driver was seen passing the pits holding up a newspaper as if reading it – with carefully torn out small viewing holes.

As a fun sports car the Goggomobil Dart was certainly no failure, rather, it was a great success, remaining Australia’s best selling home-grown sports car until the 1980s.

If you get the chance to drive one – Drive it!  If you get the chance to buy one – Buy it!  These cars are unique!

Copyright Paul Blank

Classic – Porsche 356

 Pre-A at Villa d’Este Concorso on Lake Como, Italy – photo Paul Blank

Ferdinand Porsche was a prolific car designer and engineer, having planned many cars for other makers before beginning his own company, the first product of which was the 356. A pretty, if plain little sports car, utilising much of the thinking which went into the Volkswagen Beetle, the 356 turned out to be a runaway success.

Few people know that the Porsche marque began making its cars not in Germany, but in Gmund, Austria. Equally today, many Porsches are built in factories in Austria and Finland… 356 production moved to the suburb of Zuffenhausen in Stuttgart, Germany in 1950, taking over a Recaro seat factory, where Porsche has remained ever since.

The life of the 356 spanned 1948 to 1965, with a vast array of versions offered. So many versions were made that only a true fanatic would know them all. There were several fundamental versions over the years and a few different body styles offered. Let’s try to pick our way through the model’s development, in basic terms.

Competing in the Mille Miglia – photo Paul Blank

PRE-A 1948-55. The earliest cars, both Gmund and Zuffenhausen built, are referred to as Pre-A cars. These are pretty desirable today. Easiest way to identify these cars is the 2-piece windscreen, and from 1951 a single-piece flat screen with a bend in the middle. Three engine sizes were available – 1100, 1300 and 1500cc, each with correspondingly more performance. Power ranged from 40 to 70 horsepower. But the 356 was light, so even an 1100 engine gave reasonable performance (for the era). These cars had old fashioned lever-arm shock absorbers and no synchromesh… so pretty basic to drive. Coupe and convertible bodies were offered. 7627 were made.

356A 1956-59. Here Porsche hit its stride. While the differences were all minor, they added up to a much improved car, which had international appeal – and sales matched. A curved windscreen and updated dashboard were the major visual changes, but moving the bumpers up slightly from the bottom of the bodywork made a significant stylistic improvement. A hardtop became available for the Cabrio. Suspension and steering were improved. But the big news was a new 1600cc engine with options of increased power. The 1300 hung in there too for a while, just for the German market. The Carrera name appeared for high performance 4-cam versions, but these are very rare. 21,045 356As were made.

356B 1960-63. The bumpers were moved up again, bonnet reprofiled, headlights raised, quarter windows fitted to the doors and the rear window was enlarged. Two new body styles arrived – a notchback coupe and Roadster. An addition to the engine line-up was the Super 90 (90bhp). Sales continued to increase, the USA taking many 356s. 30,963 were built.

356C 1963-65. Last of the line. The 356 was getting long in the tooth by now, but the C brought with it 4-wheel disc brakes, new ZF steering, with flat hubcaps as the visual identifying feature. A raft of name changes saw the old Super now sold as the 1600C, the old 1600S, Super 75 and Super 90 became the 1600SC (with a 5bhp boost). The 130bhp Carrera 2 version continued to the end, but only 506 were made of B and C versions combined. Total 356C production was 16,668 cars.

Speedster. Worth describing as a separate model. Made to satisfy the request of US Porsche distributor Max Hoffman, the stripped-down convertible was made from 1954-1958. The cut-down windscreen gave a rakish look. Light weight (no side windows, for example, helped), and uprated engines gave spirited performance. The Speedster is the iconic collector’s model in the 356 range and many companies make fibreglass replicas to this day. Only 4858 were built (by Porsche).

DRIVING A 356

Don’t expect big performance and you won’t be disappointed. A 356 isn’t a powerhouse car, even with the trickiest engine.

However, it is a well balanced car, with sharp responses and a delicate precision about the driving experience. Remember, that the newest 356s are now sixty years old, and they weren’t the most advanced car of their time either.

On the absolute limit, the swing axles and rear engine can be a lethal combination, but rarely these days does a 356 owner really push their car hard. But the steering is pin sharp and feedback is excellent, so a decent driver can get a really good result when pushing a 356 along. The font of the car can bob up and down but that becomes a characteristic that’s easy to live with.

In typical Porsche tradition, the brakes offer little feel of progression, but are nevertheless very effective.

 

WHAT TO LOOK FOR

By now, virtually all 356s have been restored. That opens up a big question: How well restored? As 356s are fairly high value vehicles, most recent restorations will have been done to a high standard – a reflection of the finished car’s value. Older restorations may not have been so carefully done.

The biggest problem area is rust in the structure. Floors rust badly in all 365s and while usually repaired, a potential buyer must check how well this work has been done. This really means getting a car up on a hoist and taking a look – preferably by a Porsche specialist. The investment in their time could save a fortune. The battery box at the nose of the car can also be a rust trap.

Mechanically 356s are pretty robust. Early 356 engines (pre 1958) shared quite a lot with Volkswagens, and some cars have had VW engine swaps in years gone by when a 356 wasn’t as valuable.

Other areas such as brakes and suspension are not really any different to what you need to be looking at on any 60+ year old car.

TO BUY OR NOT TO BUY?

A 356 can be a very rewarding car. Aside from the fact that values shot upwards worldwide during 2015/16 and again in the Covid-era, there is a great deal of pleasure to be gained from a 356. They are simple cars yet provide great feedback and fun on the road. The original build quality was to a very high standard and they can be very reliable cars. But it’s the Porsche name and unique styling of the 356 which attracts most buyers. Provided you’re not looking for a fast car, and check carefully, a 356 can be a pretty safe buy.

Above and below: A couple of 356s sold by Paul Blank Classic Car Broker

Copyright Paul Blank

New car review – Lexus LBX Sport Luxury AWD

Is the LBX a game changer? A quite compact actual luxury car – not an economy car masquerading as a luxury car by having a few electronic gadgets fitted…

Well, in many ways, it would seem to meet the criteria that very few cars do. Although based on the platform of a low-cost Toyota model, Lexus have made a raft of changes which lift the LBX way into a different league.

There’s beautiful Ultrasuede upholstery on the seats, dashboard and door trims. The windows are made of sound-reducing double glazing. Electric buttons for door handles. Head-up display. Heated seats and steering wheel. Power tailgate. A lot of well-considered luxury. And it’s very quiet to ride in.

The hybrid mechanicals are a 3-cylinder, 1.5-litre petrol with a pair of electric motors, making it all-wheel-drive – giving confidence in grip in any weather on any roads. It’s not especially fast, but that’s not what the typical buyer is seeking. The CVT transmission is fine except when extra performance is required and it sounds like a slipping clutch as the engine revs to provide more motivation. The LBX is especially economical.

Rear seat space and boot space are both quite compromised, like many other cars of the same size.

The tyres have quite high-profile sidewalls which means the chances of kerb damage are much less than the typical set-up on too many cars these days. That also helps the ride quality. Where many small cars pitch over speed bumps and big road irregularities, the LBX is quite composed.

The Lexus stylists have created a muscular look to the LBX but pleasingly, they have avoided the aggressive styling elements that so many current cars suffer from.\

The model tested sells for $56,990, but a 2-wheel drive version is also offered, from $47,550.

So does the littlest Lexus live up to the aim of being a proper luxury car in such compact dimensions? In most respects it does. With a better engine/transmission combination it would be an easier sell as a luxury car. And with a few centimetres more rear legroom the car’s other issue would be gone… Maybe you can’t have everything.

The legendary Lexus build quality and after sales service are the envy of all other luxury car brands, which should give any LBX buyer great confidence. The LBX is an easy car to live with and one that I found unusually appealing.

Lexus LBX, captured on 29.11.2023 in Valencia, Spain. Photo: Daniel Reinhardt for LEXUS

Copyright Paul Blank

Classic – Ferrari Dino 246

By Paul Blank

The Ferrari’s Dino is one of the all-time classics – and for very good reason. Very occasionally a car manufacturer builds a car which hits the nail so squarely on the head that it becomes an instant classic. The 246 captured the spirit of the moment and maintained its stature for years to come.

The shape, the mechanical layout, the price and above all, the way it drove, would capture the very essence of the pleasures of sporting motoring.

Operating since 1940, initially as a racing car manufacturer, Ferrari had long been a dominating force in racing and sports car design, manufacture and marketing, the name becoming a household word by the 1960s. But times were a-changing, and Enzo Ferrari, along with his many cohorts understood that there was demand for sports cars other than large, front-engined V12 machines.

Enzo’s engineers had long looked at the idea of smaller models – the ASA 1000GT of the early 1960s being the closest anyone had seen. Designed by his team, this pretty 4-cylinder design ended up being manufactured by another company after Enzo got cold feet.

The time when Ferrari was working on new small car concepts coincided with a period when styling house Pininfarina was at its zenith, creating modern, smoothly curved, voluptuous shapes. Their design work would become an important part of the process that Ferrari would follow. Pininfarina showed a V6 mid-engined, 3-seater styling exercise at the 1965 Paris Salon, the 206S, from which the styling of the eventual production car would evolve.

While Ferrari had built the 250LM competition car as their first mid-engined car (1963-1966), it used their venerable 3.3-litre V12, which was mounted north-south behind the cockpit, in the same manner as most mid-engined cars. A new engineering feature was gaining ground, which the new small sports car would incorporate – a transversely mounted mid-engine.

A couple of towns away, Lamborghini was also working on a transverse mid-engine design, the spectacular V12 Miura, which would see the light of day in 1966.

Ferrari’s engineers developed the new small car to incorporate a 1987cc 65-degree V6 engine. With quad cams and triple Weber carburettors, the aluminium alloy engine was an absolute jewel. A new 5-speed gearbox was developed along with many other specially-designed major components for the all-new car.

The Dino 206 was launched at the Turin motor show in 1967, the new car was an immediate hit. The name Ferrari chose for the car was Dino, the name of his son who had died in 1956 from leukaemia at the age of 24. In fact, Enzo thought that there was some risk to the Ferrari image involved with the new small car project, so the name Ferrari did not appear on the car. While designed, built and sold alongside traditional Ferraris, Enzo was cautious and distanced the new Dino from his larger cars.

That said, from day one, just about every owner fitted Ferrari badges to their Dinos. Even dealers did it.

The Dino 206 was so right for the time that it became an instant success. The media hailed the new sports car as one of the greatest of all time – quite likely unaware that it would be perceived as such many decades later.

Well respected racing driver and journalist Paul Frere was among the first to drive the car saying it was “a revelation … perfectly neutral and incredibly agile.” British magazine Car tested a Dino in 1970 and enthused about the driving characteristics “Driving the Dino is quite an experience, for it is probably closer to a mid-engined racing car than to most road vehicles. It has that instant responsiveness and chuckability that the French so delightfully term ‘nerveuse’, which makes it a joy on twisting roads.” They summed it up saying the Dino “probably has the best handling of any high performance GT car”.

Developing 180bhp at 8000rpm, the 206GT could accelerate to 100km/h in 7.6 seconds and achieve a top speed of 240km/h.

The car’s handling was a revelation. Pin-sharp steering, strong brakes, very little body-roll and excellent adhesion made the Dino one of the best handling cars of the time.

The styling of the Dino has long been acclaimed as among the all-time greats. Curvaceous and so very sexy, the design incorporated modern features such as the cut-off Kamm-tail and a long, low rear deck, allowing good rear three-quarter vision (something severely lacking in many early mid-engined cars). The Dino had a very balanced overall shape, with a wide stance and many lovely details such as the side air intakes and delicate chrome trim (often the little tab external door handles were a bit too delicate).

It wasn’t until 1968 that production got underway, with Scaglietti in Modena assembling the alloy-bodied cars. In the following year, the car would see some major changes. After only 152 cars had been built, Ferrari announced the revised Dino 246GT.

As the 246 name suggests – 2.4-litre, 6 cylinder – the engine capacity was enlarged. But significantly, the new engine also changed to a cast iron block. The 2419cc engine offered increased power and torque, giving the new version a 0-100km/h time half a second quicker and an additional 12km/h top speed. The torquier engine characteristics suited the Dino well, making it an even better drivers’ car.

Alongside the engine changes, Ferrari saw fit to make several other changes. Material for the bodies was changed to steel. The centre of the body was lengthened by 580mm, and detail changes such as a fuel filler flap were incorporated. The previously off-centre gear-selector tunnel was centred so that right-hand-drive cars could be built.

These changes coincided with an agreement with Fiat, which saw the huge conglomerate take Dino engines for cars of their own. Fiat introduced the Fiat Dino Coupe (with Bertone body) and Dino Spider (by Pininfarina), both initially with the 2-litre V6, then the 2.4 – and Lancia used the Dino engine for their dramatic and seriously effective Stratos rally car. For the first time ever, Ferrari had the benefits of economy of scale from relatively mass manufacture of an engine.

Ferrari themselves offered a couple of variations on the 246 theme. There were several options available on the 246, one of the best known, being the ‘Chairs & Flares” option, which consisted of seats upholstered in the Daytona style ventilated trim, along with flared wheelarches to accommodate a wider wheel and tyre package.

More significant though, was the GTS version which was introduced in 1972. This adaptation incorporated a removable centre section of the roof. The targa-roofed GTS also differed by having three small vents where the rear side windows were on the coupe version – matching the vents on the bonnet. This open-topped version proved very popular.

The Dino introduced a whole new range of clientele to the brand and by the time production ceased in 1974 over 3700 246s had been made, making it far and away the company’s best seller to date.

Values
The Dino sold in an interesting marketplace, where its natural enemy was the Porsche 911 – still a relatively new model at the time. By comparison, in 1972 a 246GT listed in Australia at $16,000, a 911S 2.4 was $15,628 and a Jaguar E-Type V12 was just $11,929. Pricey though it may have been, the Dino cost half as much as a V12 Ferrari.

Values of Dinos commonly dipped as low as $15,000 in the late 1970s, before reaching sky-high figures in the boom at the end of the following decade. Amounts as high as $200,000 were achieved by some lucky sellers – only to halve when the recession hit. Today, prices have gone completely crazy, seemingly regardless of condition and history. Starting prices in excess of half a million dollars are commonplace now…

Dinos were prone to rust, and were often not particularly well looked after by early owners. Quite a few local cars were also imported second-hand from the UK. Hence, the vast majority of Dinos in Australia today have been restored at least once.

Driving a Dino
Today, a good Dino is still a pleasure to drive. I’ve driven Dinos on road and track. The Dino insists that you become involved in the driving process – beginning with a slightly un-natural driving position, with the pedals offset to the centre. Then there’s the warming up process; both the engine and gearbox like quite a few kilometres before they’re friendly.

But once you and the Dino are ready to play there is a harmony you develop with the car which is reassuring, confidence inspiring and quite exciting. The Dino is one of those rare cars where you really feel it is a part of you. The controls respond instantaneously, accurately and inspiringly.

Before your first drive, you might imagine the 2.4-litre car to be a sweet, if delicate, reasonable performer, with its strength being handling, not performance. When you’ve got the feel of the Dino and explore what it has to offer, perhaps the greatest surprise is the engine’s performance. A buried accelerator brings out a wonderful howl from behind the cockpit, accompanied by impressive acceleration. Combine that with brilliant – almost intuitive steering and handling, and the Dino makes exceptional progress.

Click the gearstick through that famous Ferrari alloy gate, gently ease the steering wheel, and feel the thrum of the V6 just behind your shoulders – the Dino offers an  entirely pleasurable driving experience. And one that certainly lives up to the expectations that such an iconic car has.

It is a pleasure to explore what the Dino has to offer in the confines of a race track, or on open country roads. And unlike some large supercars, it isn’t unwieldy around town. Compared to a new hot hatch though, it isn’t that fast and the lack of power steering is noticeable when parking.

It does, however, attract attention like few other cars.

The shape, the name, the aura, the classic, exotic icon status of the Dino all add up to make it one of the true greats – quite justly recognised as such.

Text and photos copyright Paul Blank