Lot Ended
Description
1989 Jaguar XJS V12 Convertible
SOLD
£8,456
Current owner 16 years; smart interior; good hood;
rust-free; sensible mileage; ready for long distance touring
Launched way back in 1975 to replace the ageing E-Type,
the Jaguar XJS Coupe was largely designed by Jaguar's legendary aerodynamicist,
Malcolm Sayer.
Low, lithe and elegant, it slipped through the air far
more efficiently than the E-Type and was a paragon of stability and silence at
speed. Based on a shortened XJ saloon floorpan, it weighed over 100kg less than
an XJ12 and in early manual form could sprint to 60 in 6.7 seconds and hit
153mph. In 1981 the XJS received the new HE (High Efficiency) engine with
Michael May-designed Fireball heads which improved fuel economy by 20 per cent
and upped the top speed to 155mph, making it the fastest automatic car in the
world.
The long-awaited full convertible version of the Jaguar
XJS was finally introduced at the 1988 Geneva Motor Show, a full 13 years after
the coupe had been launched. Thoroughly re-engineered to compensate for the lack
of a tin-top, it featured a reinforced floorpan, frameless doors and
sophisticated electric hood complete with heated glass rear window. Underpinned
by the same all round independent coil-sprung suspension and power assisted rack
and pinion steering as its fixed head siblings, the soft-top came with anti-lock
brakes as standard. Despite the hefty price tag of £40,000 a waiting list was
quick to form.
Dating from January 1989, this XJS Convertible has had
five owners from new, our vendor acquiring it in May 2004 to join a collection
of classic cars. Always kept garaged and only lightly used during his 16-year
ownership, old MOTs show that it has covered just 3,200 miles during this
period, the odometer currently showing 97,600 miles which is nothing for this
unstressed V12. Although there is precious little history with the car, there
are invoices for new rear brake calipers and pads (including handbrake) in July
this year and a new battery in April 2019.
The bodywork appears very straight and sound with good
paint and no rust anywhere, the underside appearing equally clean and solid. The
chromework is also very presentable and the magnolia leather interior is
particularly good, as is the electric soft top which works as it should. In fact
three months before the vendor acquired the car it had been vandalised which led
to it being declared a Cat D insurance loss but the damage was only cosmetic
(hood slashed; seats slashed; steering lock broken) with no damage whatsoever to
the structure of the car and all was quickly put right.
Starting instantly and running beautifully as we moved it
around for these photos, it has an MOT until July 2021 with just a couple of
minor advisories for slight play in both front wheel bearings and ‘wipers don’t
cancel’. For more information please contact James Dennison on 07970 309907 or
email [email protected]
* All charges are subject to VAT