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Random # 305: FC Holden Station Sedan

The pages of UMPH are chockers with classic Holdens, especially over the last week or so.  First, there was an old-school HK from Wynyard, Tasmania, complete with a carbie stack poking out its bonnet ( https://uppermiddlepetrolhead.blogspot.com/2021/08/random-304-hk-holden-sedan.html ), followed by a nowadays very rare HK van photographed  in Canberra ( https://uppermiddlepetrolhead.blogspot.com/2021/09/readers-photos-114-1969-hk-holden-panel.html ) .   Today's offering - an FC station sedan, also photographed in Wynyard on Tasmania's north-west coast - looked amazing with a straight, rust free body and all the fruit!  The purists might balk at the Ford 12-slots but I reckon they really suit the car, especially given their body coloured finish that nicely complements the chrome of the centre caps and trim rings. Are you a fan of classic, sports and performance vehicles?  Do you enjoy car shows and motorsports, especially when there's a bit of Tasmanian scenery thrown in for

Readers' Photos # 114: 1969 HK Holden Panel Van, presented in Pirouette-a-Rama*!

  The Canberra correspondent has demonstrated great diligence, having captured this lovely old HK Belmont van from every conceivable angle, other than employing Road-Kill-o-Vision** and overhead spy footage!  But then he does live in a city that has its very own Chinese embassy, and where there’s a Huawei, there’s a way***, so I'm sure the latter can be arranged!     U M P H Images by the Canberra Correspondent (* & ** TM the UMPH Mega Publishing Consortium) (*** I'm possibly joking)

Random # 304: HK Holden Sedan

I really, really do love this classic old-school HK, complete with a V8 and pair of Holleys protruding through its bonnet!  It was also running a floor-mount shifter, tough alloys and four wheel-discs, the front ones appearing to be from a VN or thereabouts Commodore.  It was in good all-round nick and sure added to the beauty of surrounding Wynyard, Tasmania, where it was spotted only a few days ago.     Dammit!  Permit's expired.    Coming to uppermiddlepetrolhead.blogspot.com.au soon:  a rare HK panel van (seriously, when did you last see one of them?), and an uber-cool FC Holden station sedan. U M P H (uppermiddlepetrolhead.blogspot.com.au). iPhone images.  

Random # 303: Humber Vogue

I could - maybe even should - be kinder to cars hailing from Britain during the 1960s.  It's not that they don't have their own charm; there is a certain style - an aura, even - that I rather like.  But an bottle up your bum driving position, a bit of woodgrain trim and the aroma of pipe tobacco doesn't quite compensate for what were more often than not anaemic engines, the smell of hot oil and blancmange handling. It's not inconceivable that this Humber Vogue - photographed in Hobart, Tasmania's, more established suburbs - encapsulates all my prejudices in one slightly stuffy package.  It is no Alfa, Fiat or Lancia of the era!   However, I have been seduced.  It's a stylish car.  The bold four-light front end, glassy cabin, restrained tail fins and vertically-stacked rear light clusters are rather delightful.  It appeals to me in a similar manner as does the Triumph 2500 ( https://uppermiddlepetrolhead.blogspot.com/2021/08/random-302-triumph-2500-mk-ii-s.html )

1923 Ansaldo Corsa 4CS Racing Car / 2021 CMI Lufra Hillclimb

Today's piece was meant to be about Club Motori Italia's 2021 Lufra hillclimb.  That was the intention, anyway.  But two things derailed these flimsy intentions:  the event's course car - Mike's remarkable 1923 Ansaldo 4CS - took my eye, then my mates, Tony and Angus, whose family shack is just up the road from the starting line, thoughtfully put on a barbeque. Huddle behind a telegraph pole, trying to capture the perfect action shot or sit in a comfy chair, replete and with a beer in hand, enjoying the spectacle?  Forgive me for I am weak!     Ansaldo owner Mike C. Mike's car is marked in honour of Nuvolari, bearing both the Italian and Duchy of Mantua flags. The flag of the Duchy of Mantua bears the coat of arms of the House of Gonzaga. According to Mike, the marque was manufactured in Turin, Italy,  as well as in an ex-World War 1 aircraft factory near Genoa,  between 1920 and 1935.  Although almost unheard of today, Ansaldo was at the time an industrial giant pr