OzBenzHead
Master
Am delighted to find that Topklasse now includes the venerable "poor man's Rolls-Royce", of which I've owned 16 – one less than I've owned Benzes. (Having also owned an S3 Bentley during that time I can attest to the Royce-like qualities of the "real" Rovers, those series made before Leyland completely buggered the brand.)
When I lived in Melbourne (1972–77) I accumulated Rovers like they were going out of fashion (which they were elsewhere, but Melbourne was Rover capital). Many of those I found sitting in paddocks or deceased-estate garages.
Those I owned were:
1949 P3 75 (it wasn't well, but I wanted a car made the same year as myself)
P4 75 "Cyclops"
P4 90 x 4 (2 with freewheel, 1 overdrive)
P4 95
P4 100 (overdrive)
P4 105 x 2 (one overdrive, one Roverdrive)
P4 110
P5 3-litre Mk Ia
P5 3-litre Mk IIc
P5 3-litre Mk III
P5 3-litre Mk III coupé
P6 3500 series I.
My favourite was a P4 90 with freewheel. I frequently drove it between Melbourne and Sydney. The dear old auntie took a while to reach its top speed of 90 mph but would sit there, purring quietly, all day. I retired it when it blew a head gasket at 516K miles. Divorce took care of my Rover collection (common tale, I'm sure).
The only complaints I could level at those cars were the terribly British phenomenon of "running oil changes" (whereby one never needed to change the oil, only replace that which constantly landed on the garage floor – ahem) and the accursed Lucas Prince of Darkness electricals.
It wasn't until I acquired my first Benz in 1980 (1970 W108 280 SE) that I again became passionate about any particular marque.
When I lived in Melbourne (1972–77) I accumulated Rovers like they were going out of fashion (which they were elsewhere, but Melbourne was Rover capital). Many of those I found sitting in paddocks or deceased-estate garages.
Those I owned were:
1949 P3 75 (it wasn't well, but I wanted a car made the same year as myself)
P4 75 "Cyclops"
P4 90 x 4 (2 with freewheel, 1 overdrive)
P4 95
P4 100 (overdrive)
P4 105 x 2 (one overdrive, one Roverdrive)
P4 110
P5 3-litre Mk Ia
P5 3-litre Mk IIc
P5 3-litre Mk III
P5 3-litre Mk III coupé
P6 3500 series I.
My favourite was a P4 90 with freewheel. I frequently drove it between Melbourne and Sydney. The dear old auntie took a while to reach its top speed of 90 mph but would sit there, purring quietly, all day. I retired it when it blew a head gasket at 516K miles. Divorce took care of my Rover collection (common tale, I'm sure).
The only complaints I could level at those cars were the terribly British phenomenon of "running oil changes" (whereby one never needed to change the oil, only replace that which constantly landed on the garage floor – ahem) and the accursed Lucas Prince of Darkness electricals.
It wasn't until I acquired my first Benz in 1980 (1970 W108 280 SE) that I again became passionate about any particular marque.