Skip to main content

Posts

Classics by the Beach: November, 2020

This is Ian's 1971 Lotus Elan+2 S130.  As a +2, it's more spacious than the standard Elan, being 23 inches longer overall - with just over half that length being added to the wheelbase - 7 inches wider, and features rear seats suitable for children, although, in this case, it's actually the family West Highland terrier that occupies that space.  Lucky dog!   The S130 was the penultimate evolution of the +2, which was first introduced in 1967.  1968 saw interior upgrades, extra kit and the model designation +2S, followed by Ian's version - equipped with a big-valve head - and, finally, the S130/5 of 1972, the "/5" indicating that a five-speed gearbox had also been fitted.        Ian's car was first registered in Surrey, England, in late 1971 but I don't have any information to say when it arrived in Australia.   However, I can tell you that Ian's owned it since 1987, that blue isn't its original colour - I forget what hue it used to be, but I

Random # 320: Left-Hooker Ford

The Upper Middle Petrol Team have a strict editorial policy of not making shit up.  Therefore, we won't pretend to know anything about this awesome looking Ford, other than to observe that it is a Ford, as stated, it looks great in striking yellow and it's running front wheel disc brakes.  And it's a lefty, so it's very likely to be an ex-US import.     U M P H (uppermiddlepetrolhead.blogspot.com.au.) iPhone images.

2020 Club Motori Italia Lufra Cryptic Drive

Where - or maybe the question is how - was there a clue alluding to camel dung contained in November's CMI Lufra cryptic drive?  We contestants obviously missed it but it was no doubt there.  You may have set the bar a bit too high this time, Graham! Camel poop aside, the drive - held on Sunday the 8th of November - was  a great day out, combining glorious weather, some delightfully twisty country roads, lovely scenery and a couple of dozen or so competitors in a mainly Italian fleet pitting their wits against the devious mind of crypto-meister Graham Mitchell.  The only certainties of the day were its starting and finishing points, Salamanca's Retro Cafe and the beloved Lufra Hotel at Eaglehawk Neck. In true cryptic style, Graham set some observational, botanical and biological tasks, requiring participants to describe certain features en route and to collect specimens of eucalypts, hawthorn blossoms, feathers and sea shells, with extra points awarded for the quality and / or