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Welcome to Lancaster Insurance News

Keep up to date with the latest news and events from the world of classic cars.

Reliant

DO YOU REMEMBER – THE ORIGINAL RELIANT REGAL?

  • Andrew Roberts |
  • 16th December, 2020

The Reliant 3/25 family is so well-known in the UK that the impact of the original Regal three-wheeler is frequently overlooked. Today they are chiefly spotted at car shows or in the background of 1950s and 1960s British film, but this was the vehicle that helped to transform the marque’s image.

Granada Estate

MEET THE OWNER – MATT HOUGHTON AND HIS FORD GRANADA MK. I ESTATE

  • Andrew Roberts |
  • 15th December, 2020

The Ford Granada Mk. I Estate has to be one of the most attractive station wagons of the 1970s – and the rarest. Some of us of a certain age will remember the green metallic example driven by “Jeffrey Fourmile” in George and Mildred and today Matt’s 1975 2.5 “Series 2” is almost guaranteed to cause a sensation. After all, there can be very few examples of a ‘completely unrestored original 45,000-mile car never been welded or messed about with’ still on the road.

A mechanic handing the keys back after an MOT

What to do if you’ve lost your MOT certificate

  • 15th December, 2020

An MOT has been an important part of owning a vehicle for many years. It’s a test that is carried out on cars, vans, campervans, motorbikes and lorries annually. If you’re buying a new vehicle, it will require its first test after three years – and yearly after that.

Sunbeam Harrington

DO YOU REMEMBER - THE SUNBEAM HARRINGTON ALPINE?

  • Andrew Roberts |
  • 14th December, 2020

In the years immediately before the launch of the MGB GT in 1965, a sports car enthusiast who craved greater weather protection for winter had a limited choice. None of the “Big Five” manufacturers offered a sleek 2+2 tourer with the partial exception of the Consul Capri GT. However, the sort of motorist who favoured flat hats and club blazers would probably have regarded the Ford as transport for flashy types who used too much aftershave.

A red convertible Austin Healey parked on a gravel driveway

How to care for your classic convertible’s hood

  • 11th December, 2020

While you might have classic car insurance in place to protect you against any mishaps, you don’t really want to be claiming on your policy for something that was avoidable. That’s why we’re bringing you some tips on how to care for your classic convertible’s hood.

Armstrong Sideley 236

SPOT-ON MODELS – A CELEBRATION

  • Andrew Roberts |
  • 11th December, 2020

During the 1960s Tri-ang’s “Spot-On” models - so-called because its products were precisely to 1/42 scale – often seemed a cut above those of Corgi or Dinky. Sales commenced in April 1959 and from the outset their die-cast toys featured interior detailing, predating both of its major rivals. They also adopted a ‘constant scale’ policy, at a time when the products of other manufacturers would vary according to need.

Fiat X1 9

THE FIAT X1/9 - A CELEBRATION

  • Andrew Roberts |
  • 10th December, 2020

When Tony Bastable took the Fiat X1/9 through its paces for Thames Television’s Drive In - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wvLyqB8MPrQ - he reported ‘it’s got style, its lively and it handles beautifully’. At that time British motorists had been awaiting imports of the X1/9 for several years. By 1974 Radbourne Racing Ltd. offered a RHD conversion, but it would not be until January 1977 when Fiat would officially launch a UK-market version.

Sunbeam Stiletto

DO YOU REMEMBER – THE SUNBEAM STILETTO?

  • Andrew Roberts |
  • 10th December, 2020

The year is 1967, and your dilemma is a) craving a new Porsche 911 while b) having a most unsympathetic bank manager. Fortunately, the Rootes Group had just launched a new car ‘for men whose wives think they’ve given up sports cars’. The advertisement further invited the reader to ‘show her how luxuriously saloon it is – four deep seats, the front ones reclining, plenty of room, and swish twin headlamps’.

Aston Martin DB5

CORGI TOYS - A TRIBUTE

  • Andrew Roberts |
  • 10th December, 2020

In July 1965, the nation’s toy shops stocked a new type of die-cast model car – ‘Corgi Toys - ‘The One’s With Windows’.  At a time when rival products lacked such a feature, this was important news indeed for the discerning consumer. Corgi cars also came in individual illustrated boxes while Dinky Toys supplied their products in trade-packs to retailers.

Vauxhall Cavalier

DO YOU REMEMBER – THE VAUXHALL CAVALIER SPORTS HATCH?

  • Andrew Roberts |
  • 9th December, 2020

When Autocar tested the 2.0 GLS Sports Hatch in February 1980, they accurately described it as ‘just plain nice’. It was a truly desirable machine – less overtly aggressive in appearance than the Ford Capri Mk. III - and a Jade Green Metallic Sports Hatch was as much of its era as bomber jackets and Harp lager in thin glasses. And although the Cavalier Mk. I was Luton’s interpretation of the Opel Manta B; the Sports Hatch was a British creation.

Morris Major

THE AUSTIN LANCER AND THE MORRIS MAJOR – A CELEBRATION

  • Andrew Roberts |
  • 9th December, 2020

While watching certain Australian television shows during the 1970s and 1980s, I sometimes noticed a very peculiar looking car in some background shots. Whether the programme was Skippy – which I will admit to enjoying, Prisoner: Cell Block H (which I won’t) or the early BBC screening of Neighbours (ditto), there might be a vehicle resembling a love-child of a Wolseley 1500 and a Ford Anglia 105E.

1973 Porsche

Car of the month!

  • Andrew Roberts |
  • 9th December, 2020

We wanted our last ‘Car of the Month’ award of 2020 to be extra special and the winning recipient’s classic is just that – a 1973 Porsche 914-4! Paul Hibbert entered his example into the Lancaster Insurance Pride of Ownership display at last month’s online NEC event and was crowned the winner! Painted in period ‘’Zambezi Green’ and with classic Fuchs alloy wheels, we can see why it captured viewers’ attention.

VAUXHALL VIVA HC

MEET THE OWNER – DEAN USHER AND HIS VAUXHALL VIVA HC

  • Andrew Roberts |
  • 8th December, 2020

During the (very remote) youth of this writer, there were three virtually guaranteed sights in his Hampshire village. Firstly, as if by ancient rite, every farmyard had to contain a disused Audax-series Hillman Minx. Secondly, every week a dark green Ford Transit Mk. I mobile shop would dispense Twix bars and other essentials to the remote settlements of the A27-belt. And thirdly, no day seemed to pass without sighting of at least one Vauxhall Viva HC.

Renault 16 TX

MEET THE OWNER – TONY HORWOOD AND HIS RENAULT 16 TX

  • Andrew Roberts |
  • 7th December, 2020

Tony very accurately describes his 1978 Renault as ‘Uniquely stylish’, for the 16 could never be confused with any other car. It is a vehicle that revels in its idiosyncrasies such as the virtually hidden handbrake and the many and various ways of arranging the passenger accommodation. After all, very few cars can boast a rear seat folding mechnanism that involves suspending the backrest from the grab handles.