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JAGUAR - E-Type SI (1961-1968) - S1 Roadster 1966

Caratteristiche

Marca JAGUAR Tipo di auto Cabrio/Roadster Guida Sinistra
Modello E-Type SI (1961-1968) Condizione Usata Trazione Posteriore
Versione S1 Roadster 1966 Carburante Benzina Cambio Manuale
Anno 1966 KM - Colore Blu
Marca JAGUAR KM -
Modello E-Type SI (1961-1968) Guida Sinistra
Versione S1 Roadster 1966 Carburante Benzina
Tipo di auto Cabrio/Roadster Trazione Posteriore
Condizione Usata Cambio Manuale
Anno 1966 Colore Blu
Marca JAGUAR
Modello E-Type SI (1961-1968)
Versione S1 Roadster 1966
Anno 1966
Tipo di auto Cabrio/Roadster
Condizione Usata
Guida Sinistra
Trazione Posteriore
Carburante Benzina
Cambio Manuale
KM -
Colore Blu

Descrizione

This particular ’66 Jaguar E-Type Series 1.5 Roadster sits in that sweet spot collectors quietly chase. It carries the purity of the early cars, those clean lines that made the world stop in 1961, yet benefits from the more mature 4.2-litre mechanicals. The unofficial “1.5” designation says enough to those who know. For everyone else, it simply feels like the best of both worlds.

It also wears the details that matter. The early-style body with its unmistakable silhouette, the rear lights sitting proudly above the bumper, the stance that made posters unnecessary because the car itself was the poster. Later cars softened it. This one didn’t get the memo.

Finding the right car is half the story. In this case, it took years of selective searching and saying no more often than yes. The right foundations eventually appeared in Miami, an honest, complete car that hadn’t been taken apart by ambition or shortcuts. Matching numbers throughout, confirmed by the Jaguar Heritage Trust, and just the right amount of patina to tell you it hadn’t been messed with. In other words, exactly the kind of car you want before you take it all apart.

The restoration was entrusted to craftsmen who understand that “good enough” is a dangerous phrase. The car was stripped to its last component and rebuilt with a clear objective: bring it back to how it should have left the factory, and quietly improve what time had compromised. Panel fit is precise, mechanicals are fully rebuilt, and the details go down to the kind of finishes most people will never notice but every serious collector will appreciate. There is a full photographic record of the process, from its barn-find days to the finished car, for those who enjoy seeing where the hours went.

Since completion, the car has covered only a few hundred kilometres. Just enough to confirm everything works as it should, not enough to take away that fresh, tight feel. It still needs to be properly run in, which is a rather pleasant task if you think about it. Few owners get to experience a fully restored E-Type at this stage. It’s like being handed a great vintage watch that hasn’t started ticking yet and being told to wind it for the first time.

The original factory colour combination does exactly what you want it to do. Deep dark blue over matching blue leather keeps things elegant and correct, while the camel soft top now adds just enough contrast to make you look twice. 

On the road, it delivers what made the E-Type more than just a pretty face. The 4.2 straight-six is smooth, torquey and far more usable than the earlier units. It’s a car you can drive without needing a pep talk beforehand. Long distances, rallies, or simply an early morning escape, it handles them with a kind of effortlessness that modern cars try very hard to imitate and rarely achieve.

For the collector, it ticks the important boxes. Matching numbers, documented provenance, correct specification and a restoration carried out without cutting corners. For the driver, it offers that rare combination of beauty and usability. And for those who like their passion to make sense on paper as well, well-kept E-Types with this level of documentation don’t tend to sit still in the long term.

It is, in essence, one of those cars that manages to be several things at once. A statement without shouting, an investment without feeling like one, and a driver’s car that happens to look like a sculpture.

And if you ever find yourself staring at it a little longer than planned, don’t worry. That’s considered normal.

You are warmly invited to discover this remarkable S1.5 in person at our new showroom in Ternat, Belgium, where we will be pleased to introduce it to you.

 

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