Lot Ended
Description
1963 Aston Martin Lagonda Rapide
No. 53 of
only 55 made; few owners, the current since 2003; over £115k spent on
restoration including rebuilt engine and uprated ZF 4-speed gearbox; interesting
history; matching numbers; a lovely example of this rare and aristocratic
Aston
The Lagonda Rapide was very much the personal project of
Aston Martin boss, David Brown, who loved the idea of a luxury saloon that he
would enjoy driving as much as being driven in. Most unusually he even put his
own face on the brochure for the car, stating that: "We wished to create
something which should, from the outset, invade the future audaciously and set
such an advanced standard of mechanical perfection, beauty of form and all-round
performance, that no other car would compare with it."
Unveiled in 1961 after three long years in development,
the Rapide was a truly bespoke motorcar that was hand-built to order, no two
cars being exactly alike. Effectively a four-door version of the outstanding DB4
but with a DB5 engine, it shared the same platform as the DB4, extended by 16"
and reconfigured by Harold Beach to allow for DB5-style De Dion suspension and a
spacious rear passenger compartment. As with the DB5, it was clothed in
lightweight Superleggera magnesium aluminium alloy coachwork by Touring of
Milan.
Powered by a 4.0 236bhp version of the Tadek
Marek-designed twin-cam six that would also power the DB5, the Rapide certainly
lived up to its name, sprinting to 60mph in 8.9 seconds on its way to a top
speed of 130mph. Borg Warner three-speed automatic transmission came as
standard, although eight cars were ordered in four-speed manual form, DB5-style
triple carbs being another option which added some 25bhp to the power
output.
Dual circuit, servo assisted disc brakes ensured sportscar
stopping power, while fittings to the ‘gentleman’s club’ interior included
electric windows, picnic tables to the rear, Wilton carpets, remote fuel filler
flap opening and a Motorola radio as standard.
Costing some £5,000 when new, the Rapide was 25% more
expensive than a DB4 and well over twice the price of a Jaguar MkX or an E-Type
so ownership was restricted to a privileged few. Just 55 examples were made
before production came to an end in 1964, of which 47 are thought to
survive.
As copies of the original factory build sheets confirm,
this particular car is the third from last of the 55 made and was built to order
for aircraft manufacturer, Hawker Siddeley. Originally Aegean Blue with a Fawn
Connolly hide interior, it was delivered on 19th December 1963 with the
registration number 1077 PP (a transferable number it retains to this day) and
is believed to have been the personal car of Hawker Siddeley Group Chairman and
Managing Director, Sir Arnold Hall (1915 – 2000).
One of the outstanding aeronautical engineers of his
generation, Hall pioneered gyro-electric gun sights for RAF fighters which
doubled their ‘kill rate’ in World War Two, designed the compressor for Frank
Whittle’s first jet engine and chaired the Anglo-French research group that
developed the supersonic engines for Concorde. Hall came to public prominence in
1954 when his brilliant detective work finally identified the design flaws
responsible for fatal crashes by the De Havilland Comet jet airliner, being
rewarded with a knighthood later that year.
A green logbook shows that by November 1974 ownership of
1077 PP had transferred to motor traders Sanders & Co of Hendon, NW4, from
whom it was acquired by Nicholas Channing of Surrey in September the following
year. Already the owner of another Rapide (chassis number 46), Channing was to
keep the car until July 1984 when he sold it to Robert McNab of Kensington, W14,
at which point an old MOT shows that it had covered just over 80,000 miles.
McNab kept the car for 19 years but barely used it, selling it to the current
owner in August 2003.
In 2004/05 the car was handed over to Graham Whitehouse
Autos of Halesowen to get it in roadworthy condition, invoices showing that some
£12,000 was spent on various jobs including an overhaul of the braking system
with new discs and pads all round, much work to the suspension and the
electrics, a thorough engine tune and a stainless steel exhaust. Most
significantly, it was fitted with a more modern ZF 4HP22 four-speed automatic
gearbox in place of the original three-speed unit, a well-known conversion in
Aston Martin circles and which transforms the driving experience.
Living in Central London and with nowhere to store the
car, the vendor loaned it to motoring journalist Martin Buckley, who was to use
it frequently and often wrote about it in Classic & Sportscar
magazine. The car clocked up around 9,000 miles over the next six years
(taking the total to 90,650) before the decision was taken to treat it to the
more extensive restoration that it now required. To this end it was entrusted to
Cotswold Classic Car Restorations of Cirencester for a stem-to-stern
refurbishment while retaining as much originality as possible.
A thick file of bills shows that over £60,000 was spent on
the car between 2011 and 2014, including a bare metal repaint in Dubonnet Rosso,
a full engine rebuild (new pistons, liners, bearings etc), a sympathetic
refurbishment of the interior, new windscreen plus a host of other improvements
too detailed to list in full here, the whole process also being recorded in
photographs on file.
In 2016 another £7,500 was spent at Aston specialist
Desmond Smail, which included a full overhaul of the braking system with
reconditioned calipers, new pads, new hoses, rebuilt master cylinder etc. It
also received new suspension bushes, new steering rack mounts and various other
minor jobs to address issues thrown up by the MOT.
In October 2019 at 91,174 miles the torque converter
developed a fault so both that and the ZF gearbox were rebuilt by Graham
Waterhouse at a cost of £5,481. The vendor estimates that well over £115,000 has
been spent on the car during his 18-year ownership with invoices to show most of
the work plus records of other expenditure for which the invoices have gone
astray.
Flying through its MOT in April this year with just a
couple of advisories, the car has been starting promptly and running nicely as
we have moved it around on site, with a sweet-sounding engine and healthy 60psi
oil pressure. As you can see in the photos, it remains in generally good order
throughout and has covered only a few hundred miles since the engine rebuild so
it will need a period of careful running in before the performance is exploited
to the full.
On offer here at a fraction of the price of a comparable
DB5, this graceful matching numbers motorcar, with few owners and a known
history from new, is ready to embark on the next chapter of its interesting life
to date.
For more information contact James on 07970 309907 or
email james.dennison@brightwells.com
* All charges are subject to VAT