Posts Tagged ‘XKSS’

Our Modern Jaguar Classics

Wednesday, July 13th, 2011

XK 120
The beginning of the Jaguar Golden age. Took the world by storm when launched in 1948 and initiated the basis of the perennial XK engine. Made a legend (and a Knight) out of Jag chief and design boss William Lyons – and demon­strated that Britain really had won the war.


XK 120 ‘C’ Type
Designated for ‘compet­ition’ the race version of the XK120 had a tuned engine and an aerody­namic shell designed by Malcolm Sayers. Won Le Mans in 1951 at its first attempt and now rare as the proverbial hen’s teeth.


XKSS
The road going version of the D type is, in our opinion certainly the most magni­ficent British car ever made: and probably one of the greatest road cars ever. Outrageous body swathes and cuts and carnal propor­tions for us out-​​redheads Ferrari’s 250 TR.


Mk 2
Brilliant middle-​​period creation much loved by blaggers as well as the coppers who’d try to chase them. In white, with red leather interior and wires it’s impossibly English and brutally elegant – but ultimately it’s the pacey mid size saloon format it pioneered forJaguar that is its truly lasting legacy.


XJ12 C
This is the only Leyland Era Jag to make our list…and we’d prefer it with the 5.3 Engine and the Walkinshaw-​​Broadspeed racing treatment as pictured. It’s incredible that this monster still looks so good. But it does.

images courtesy Mark Lacey

 

XFR
After the mediocre S and X Type, design visionary Ian Callum finally got his chops into the brand and created a winning format. The R version was and is a true challenger to the M5 Supersaloon, with a perfect blend of mentalism and practic­ab­ility.


XJ
The XJ took the refinement and the performance of the XF and clothed it a stretched and sculpted format. The result is a world beating wafter that holds its own in most areas against the Teutonic equivalent – and beats them hands down in terms of pure beauty.


XKR-​​S
We haven’t driven it yet, but this extreme version of the XKR is a stone cold certainty for future classic. It’s set to be the quickest proper series production Jag ever (no, the XJ220 didn’t count). We’re wondering, though, why did they make the launch cars in French racing blue? What’s wrong with British Racing Green?


XKSS: Bridgehead to the British Invasion

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

For us, the question of what is the sexiest, coolest, most beautiful sports car ever to be produced out of these islands is an easy one to answer. The Jaguar XKSS, of course.

Produced in 1957 in the Browns Lane Jaguar factory in Coventry, it is basically a road-​​going version of the mighty and beautiful racing D type. Whichever way you look at it, that would be cool enough credentials.

But the XK SS was more than a simple recre­ation of a racing legend. It was if fact produced and exported to the US as the apotheosis the British Sports Car. Canny Jag figurehead Sir William Lyons realised that it was in America where the deriv­ative would find its most successful market.

Thus way back in 1957, when Elvis was thrusting his pelvis all over America and the world, we Brits sent our most beautiful cultural creation in the XKSS. It was a bridgehead that predated by a half dozen years the British invasion that arrived with the Beatles.

So while the XKSS played somewhat of a clichéd role of a cultured but dashing Brit for the yanks, it’s reality was rooted in genuine racing success. If it was selling the image of itself, therefore, to the highest bidder, it was an image that every Brit could be proud.

There wasn’t that much physically to do to convert the basic D-​​Type to a road-​​going monster of desire. You added a side passenger door. You removed the aerody­namic fin behind the driver’s seat, thereby creating that gorgeously curved, clean rear three quarters that was echoed in its successor the E-​​Type.

Chrome bumpers fore and aft were also prescient of the popular XK-​​E, and of course a full suite of safety glass as well as a simple foldaway hood was included in the package.

The car was powered the same straight six engine of that appeared in the D-​​Type. There were disc brakes all round and that aeronaut­ically inspired achingly beautiful monocoque was all you needed to convince that to own an XKSS was to buy directly into the racing heritage of the Jaguar badge.

There’s a cat-​​eyed, snub-​​nosed sort of design perfection to the body that retains a functional integrity that was wrought in the white heat of WW11. Malcolm Sayer had hammered out the D-Type’s curves initially. Sayer had gone on to design Jag’s other rare superstar the XJ 13 – as well as the perennial divider of design opinion, the XJS. Enable to express his self at last with that new monocoque form, the Aeronautical designer’s applic­ation of aerody­namic principle to the D-​​Types body helped it reach untold speeds along the Mulsanne Straight.

Just sixteen examples of the XKSS were produced and sold before a fire in Jag’s factory destroyed the remaining D-​​Type chassis. A couple of hundred waiting customers’ loss resulted, and glory for the lucky 16.

Oh yes. Steve Mcqueen, of course, owned one. Nuff said. Again.