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1L23839BW

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 1L23839BW 13 December 1971
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 7 December 1971 United Kingdom
 
 1972 Old English White
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United KingdomUnited Kingdom
 

United KingdomGDG515K

United KingdomTSX183K

Jaguar & Daimler XJ Series 1, 2 & 3 photo

23 more photos below

Record Creation: Entered on 6 July 2023.

 

Heritage Notes

Original dealer A Clarks

Photos of 1L23839BW

Click slide for larger image. This car has 24 photos. (Dates are when image was uploaded.)

Exterior Photos (5)

Uploaded July 2023:

2023-07-06
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Details Photos: Exterior (2)

Uploaded July 2023:

2023-07-06
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Detail Photos: Interior (8)

Uploaded July 2023:

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Detail Photos: Engine (3)

Uploaded July 2023:

2023-07-06
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2023-07-06
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Detail Photos: Other (6)

Uploaded July 2023:

2023-07-06
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Comments

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2023-07-06 07:57:19 | pauls writes:

Car to be at auction 7/23

carsonline.bonhams.com/en/listings/jaguar/xj6/dd2bb49e-8150-4cc3-b3f7-b9f6fd64bc ...

Auction description:

VIN 23839

Mileage 48596

Displacement 4258cc

auto

Old English white

Dark Blue

Right-hand drive

Vehicle location Woking Surrey, United Kingdom

Estimated value £10,000 - £15,000

This Series 1 XJ6 with the 4.2-litre engine and 3-speed automatic gearbox was completed in early December 1971 and left Coventry for Glasgow shortly afterwards to Arnold Clark’s dealership, from where it was bought by the company J McGowan and Sons in January 1972.

We believe that the McGowans were from County Leitrim in north west Ireland and we have some evidence that the car spent many years there cherished within the family and then with a family friend before returning to the UK mainland in early 2017. It was then sold through Southam’s Classic Car Warehouse of Blackburn, Lancashire. During those 45 years, the car only averaged around 1,000 miles a year.

Whilst on sale with Southam’s, the car was featured in a Road Test by Classics World and the article is still online - search for “Classics World road test xj6 1972”. Aside from a wire-wheel conversion, the car has changed little since.

Another owner later - who did the wheel conversion - it was bought by our vendor in May 2020.

Having ridden in the back of XJ6s as a child in the seventies - his dad had owned two - he’d been looking for a good rust-free example for about 11 or 12 years but couldn’t find any in the UK that fit the bill. Eventually, he located a black one with a cream interior in New Zealand and imported it to the UK.

Almost immediately, this white XJ6 surfaced and it was too good for him to pass up so he decided to add it to his small collection. He’s not done a great deal with it, just a new headlining. Having two XJs and a handful of other cars, he doesn’t find much time to use it so feels that he should pass it on for someone else to enjoy. They could keep it in the super condition that it is or spend some time and money taking it up to concours level if that’s what they desire.

Finished in its original colour of Old English White, the XJ6 was repainted around 4-5 years ago and the paintwork still looks incredibly good today with very few marks or blemishes.

The bodywork appears very straight, with no obvious damage and the shut lines and panel alignments are as good as they ever were - or probably better.

The chrome grilles and bumpers, as well as all of the brightwork trims and fittings are very good for the age of the car - not perfect, there’s a little patina here and there but no apparent damage and nothing that lets the side down against the new paint.

The XJ6 sits on immaculate 15-inch wire wheels - a fairly recent and costly conversion from the original steelies and hubs, which will come with the car if the next owner wants them. All are fitted with classic Blockley tyres with an authentic period tread pattern and in good order.

Anyone who feels that wire wheels are not authentic, should check out the prototype - Project XJ4 - which was conceived as an E-type saloon and rides on wires.

But, if you prefer the original wheels, the vendor has them too.

The fabulous-looking and mostly original interior is trimmed in a combination of leather and vinyl - black around the dash and blue elsewhere. The seats are upholstered in blue Connolly leather - perforated and pleated on the facings - and are very comfortable and present very well with just the expected level of light creasing on the front seats - driver side particularly.

Tipping forward the front-hinged bonnet, the engine bay appears tidy and honest with no obvious artificial titivation save for a repainted alternator. The 4.2-litre straight six is fed by twin SU carbs and it starts well and runs very smoothly, idling at 750-850 rpm with good oil pressure.

Underneath the car, much of the chassis, suspension and running gear has been coated in a protective black paint - which not only looks good but will prevent premature corrosion. The car has clearly been kept properly garaged when not in use to maintain this level of condition underneath and to our vendor’s knowledge has never been stripped down or restored.

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