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Random # 280: Mk 1 Escort

I don't know about you, but this is my kind of car: classic styling; a rigid, simple and relatively light body; good weight distribution, coupled with tight suspension,  big brakes and  aggressive rubber; all powered by a robust, grunty four-cylinder motor driving the rear wheels via a manual 'box.  No electronic aids.  A visual and aural feast.  A driver's car!         U M P H (uppermiddlepetrolhead.blogspot.com.au.) All iPhone images.

Readers' Photos # 37: Ted Stourton's Aston Martin DB7

Would you if you could?  I'm not convinced that it's the, shall we say, most alluring livery I've ever seen on an Aston Martin.  But, then again, I'm not Ted Stourton - artist-in-residence at, and co-owner of - Camelot Castle in Tintagel, Cornwell ( https://tedstourton.com/ ).      Let's just say the car's Fetching , shall we?  And leave its desirability to art collectors and classic car buffs to debate. U M P H Photos by regular correspondent Matt O.

Readers' Photos # 36: Antonia the Beetle

The pristine looking Beetle on the right - shown here at the Lubiana Osteria at Granton, approximately twenty five minutes' drive from Tasmania's capital city of Hobart - goes by the name of Antonia .  She certainly gets around, does Antonia, having also been spotted at the 2019 Picnic at Ross in the north of the state, as well as having made guest appearances at Lake Margaret, Sheffield and Railton.      Antonia's visit to the osteria coincided with an appearance by Nick's work-in-progress XB GS hardtop, which has recently had all its mechanical issues sorted, and has also benefited from a tiny bit of reupholstery.  The driver's seat has come up particularly well.  Some rust remediation and a new paint job is next, with an estimated completion date of some time late in 2019. The images above an below are of Antonia's engine compartment and power-plant - a Formula V race-spec Volksie flat four - and were taken at her recent showing at the 2019 Picni

Random # 279: XT Falcon Van

I don't know that last time I saw an XR, XT, XW or XY Falcon van, let alone one that looked this good.  The example shown here - an 1969 XT, according to its personalised number plates - featured glossy duco, straight chrome and a good looking set of Aunger Dragway mags.  The meaty looking twin exhausts suggest it was fitted with a V8 donk, too. U M P H (uppermiddlepetrolhead.blogspot.com.au.) All iPhone images.

Readers' Photos # 35: Matt's Targa Tasmania Longley Stage

These are a few of fellow photographer Matt's images from the Longley stage of 2019's Targa Tasmania, showing cars exiting the right hander opposite the Wadsleys' farm on their way from the Longley International Hotel towards Neika.  I may be guilty of having suggested that I'd seen more enthralling motor racing in my earlier post about this year's Longley stage.  However, that's not to say that everyone was playing it safe, as Matt's photos prove.   Can't quite see what I'm banging on about?  Have a look at the close-ups! See what I mean?  They say that a picture paints a thousand words and, if so, the ones shown here of the off-side rear wheels of the thunderous Torana above, plus the nimble Lotus Exige and high-tech Nissan GTR below, speak volumes for how hard some drivers were pushing their machines! U M P H (uppermiddlepetrolhead.blogspot.com.au.) Nikon dSLR images courtesy of Matt O.

Classics by the Beach: Sunday the 5th of May, 2019

I'm not sure if the owners of these two Lotuses - an Exige that had only the day before completed the 2019 Targa Tasmania tarmac rally, and an  Elan - parked together on purpose, but their proximity to each other did make for a rather good photo.  To my mind, Lotus epitomises the purest form of the sports car and always has; from the original clubman through to today's Elises, Exiges and Evoras, they have stayed true to founder Colin Chapman's maxim "simplify, then add lightness."  It's a lesson that some of Lotus' more corpulent competitors would do well to heed as they get weighed down with more and more superfluous features!  Robin's stately Daimler 104 - named for its top speed of 104 miles per hour - is an entirely different beast.  However, it's also a vehicle that demonstrates a continuity of purpose throughout the lifespan of the marque, exhibiting as it does all of the hallmark luxury and refinement expected of vehi