Find or Sell Used Cars, Trucks, and SUVs in USA

1967 Jaguar Xke E-type 4.2l Coupe, Manual 4 Speed, With 29,243 Original Miles on 2040-cars

Year:1967 Mileage:29243
Location:

Portland, Oregon, United States

Portland, Oregon, United States
Advertising:

Up for Sale is our 1967 JAGUAR XKE COUPE with 29,243 ORIGINAL MILES ON IT!

We are selling our Jaguar after 37 years of ownership.  This very original XKE comes with a well-documented history since new.  We are the second owners. The car has all the original parts it came with from the factory, lots of receipts from work performed over the decades, and has its ORIGINAL TOOL KIT which is largely intact. The Original California license plates and Original British Motor Distributor License plate surround, which came with the car when it was purchased new from the San Francisco dealer on Van Ness Avenue in downtown San Francisco in 1967.

 It has some NOS body rubbers and door seals which are no longer made the way they were when new.  Some brake rubbers, NOS overflow radiator tank, and one or two NOS bumper blades plus miscellaneous brake components ready for assembly and final installation. Also there is a new electric fuel pump. The fuel tank was stripped and tinned.

The engine, transmission and differential have all been rebuilt. The triple carbs have been disassembled, cleaned and lightly polished but will need new carb kits to complete. The throttle shafts feel very good.  All that remains is for the new owner to decide which way to take this project next.

This car is complete, honest and has not been tampered with and is “Numbers Matching” with a long history of happy ownership. It came from the factory in Opalescent Dark Green paint with an all-black interior.

HISTORY:

My wife and I bought this car from the original owner in 1977, in the San Francisco Bay Area. The story was an interesting one and is worth telling. The car was purchased new from British Motor Car Distributors in San Francisco by a husband and wife, on Van Ness Avenue in downtown San Francisco, the dealership is still in business today.  The car was her car and they together owned a ski resort near the California Nevada border. Sometime during the first few years of ownership she had an affair with a ski instructor and was ultimately divorced by her husband. She kept the car and monies received from the divorce and kept her new boyfriend. That lasted until they ran through all the money and when this boyfriend demanded she hand over the title to her Jag she finally threw him out.

 Financially strapped she was unable to afford simple repairs to her baby and stored it in her mother’s garage with approximately 10,000 miles on the odometer.  It sat there un-used and undiscovered until a mutual acquaintance brought us together.  She wanted the car to go to a good home and I promised that that would happen. So we bought the car.

My wife and I trailered it to Southern Oregon where we lived at the time and it was up and running within a weeks’ time.

When I was a young boy my dad would sometimes stop by British Motor’s in San Francisco so I could sit in an E-Type. I can still to this day remember the smell and look out over the bonnet while holding the steering wheel and read the nifty window sticker which promised so much. It is even possible I sat in this actual car.

 When ready, I tried the starter and it fired up, the sound and then the first drive were sensational. It is now time to get this car moving again and while there is more to the story it can wait till later. This car is a worthy candidate and will be sensational once again. I too want it to find a good home.

MECHANICS:

The engine, transmission and rear end have all been rebuilt.  The rear brakes are done and the fronts will need to be rebuilt.  The brake master and servo cylinder bores have been sleeved in stainless steel and await new rubbers and final installation.  The rear calipers were sleeved by White Post Restorations.  The engine was balanced and completely overhauled. The transmission received bearings and brass. The differential got new bearings, seals and new clutches. Mechanically much is done and ready to go. The car still has very low miles since new (approx. 29,000) so it will be interesting to see what the new owner does next.  This one is worth the effort!

BODY:

The body is straight but is now showing signs of some rust in the rocker areas and where the spare tire lives. I acquired a spare panel from a donor E-Type car which goes with the car that takes care of the spare tire area.

 The bonnet had suffered one or two minor incidents and as a result the nose section has got some wrinkles. The profile is intact and will wind up looking very nice.  The doors have some thin spots at the lower seam and the area where the parking lights fit into the bonnet have some thin sections near the lights, all very repairable.  The floor area under the seats is quite good as are the surrounding structures and the tub in general is quite good. The foot-wells have some thin spots but remain usable. As foot wells are also available it may prove the better course to simply replace them. There are new stainless steel tubes to be installed which reside near the wiper apparatus behind the fire wall and are the plumbing conduits for hot water to the cabin heater box.

GLASS/TIRES/WHEELS/CHROME:

The original glass throughout the car is all there. The original Triplex windscreen is good, with a very small rock chip repair which looks fine and the high performance window sticker can still be read. The glass covers for the head lights are in very good original condition and the body glass is mostly very good too.  The tires are still new looking and have no miles on them but are now perhaps twenty years old and still have a remnant of that new tire smell, no cracks or checks. The original chrome is good here and there and some of it should polish up quite nicely but the bumpers by and large will need to be re-done or entirely replaced. The wheels still look good and the knock offs are not deformed.   

INTERIOR: The seats are in very good condition as well and were recovered in Langlitz leathers many years ago. The rest of the interior is all original, with the exception of the leather on the center arm rest and the seats.

PAYMENT: At the close of the auction the winning bidder will need to deposit $2,000.00 within twenty four hours. Final payment within 3 days.

I will happily assist in any way possible to facilitate shipping but the new owner will be responsible for all costs.

This is going to make a terrific car and will be worth the effort. Happy Bidding!

We live in Portland Oregon and you are welcome to come take a look at the car. It is a wonderful Original example of an XKE ready for its new home.


Auto Services in Oregon

Tualatin Auto Body & So - Cal Northwest ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Body Repairing & Painting, Truck Body Repair & Painting
Address: Rockaway-Beach
Phone: (503) 692-1579

True Form Collison Repair ★★★★★

Automobile Body Repairing & Painting
Address: 801 E 1st St, Newberg
Phone: (503) 538-2905

Truck Diesel & Off Road ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Truck Service & Repair, Four Wheel Drive Vehicles-Supplies & Parts
Address: 3510 SW 209th Aveste B, King-City
Phone: (503) 649-4122

T V G Inc ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Brake Repair, Automobile Electric Service
Address: 945 SE 12th Ave, Portland
Phone: (503) 902-6269

T L Morgan Motors ★★★★★

Used Car Dealers
Address: 1855 S A St, Marcola
Phone: (541) 747-5714

T & M Towing ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Towing
Address: 29887 Kelso St, Coburg
Phone: (541) 485-3106

Auto blog

2018 Jaguar F-Pace S Long-Term Review | Wrapping up our six-month test

Mon, Mar 5 2018

It's been six months since our long-term 2018 Jaguar F-Pace S arrived to warm our hands and hearts. Jaguar's most popular model with consumers was equally popular with the Autoblog staff. We drove it 13,000 miles and would continue to rack up more if Jaguar would just let us keep the keys. It was a great follow-up to our fuel-efficient but slightly gutless 2017 Jaguar XE diesel. Our Caesium Blue bomber is loaded with nearly every option. That includes heated seats front and rear, a black package that swaps out chrome for black trim, and a full-size spare (that takes up a lot space). The S model's supercharged 3.0-liter V6 sends 380 horsepower and 332 pound-feet of torque to all four wheels through an eight-speed automatic. All in, our F-Pace S will set you back $74,640. Editor-in-Chief Greg Migliore: I spent a lot of time in the F-Pace this year. It's powerful, sporty, looks sharp (love the lively blue-purple paint) and has a solid interior. The styling resonated with me. I think Jaguar design boss Ian Callum and team nailed the proportions and curves. A crossover was sure to be controversial with Jag loyalists, but it's beautiful, and the reasoning for joining the SUV fray is ironclad. Everybody from Ferrari to Porsche is there. I appreciated the driving dynamics. The steering has decent feedback, the engine sounds good and has energy, and you ride just high enough to feel in command. The Jaguar DNA comes through. I took it to a tailgate, where I was boxed in and had to be the guy in the Jaguar who asks people to move so he can leave early. Cutting through rows of tailgaters in a purple Jag with black wheels isn't exactly subtle. But the car was versatile. I put tons of groceries in the back. My dog enjoyed the second row. It was good in snow. All the things you want in a crossover. The F-Pace was one of the more memorable long-termers we've had at Autoblog. It was fun to drive and stayed in high demand, even after we'd had it for months. It's not perfect. The interior was a little plain, and I don't love the infotainment, but in its first attempt at a crossover — Jaguar nailed it. Senior Editor, Green John Beltz Snyder: While I found it comfortable for long highway drives Up North, this thing is absolutely ferocious in Dynamic Mode with the gear selector set to S. The paddles amp up the fun. It really changed the character of this cat, and I was always surprised by the transformation. I got a lot of looks in the F-Pace.

Xcar focuses on famed Jaguar test driver Norman Dewis

Fri, Jun 26 2015

If you have any interest at all in motoring history, especially when it comes to European sports car racing from the '50s and '60s, do absolutely whatever you can to set aside 38 minutes for this interview with former Jaguar test driver Norman Dewis from XCar. Dewis had a hand in developing the British brand's vehicles from 1952 to 1985, and as expected over that time, he amassed some fantastic stories. Xcar did a great job of teasing a few of those great tales out of him here. From the very beginning, Dewis was gifted with a natural talent to read a car as a test driver. When he was just 16, he was taken out on his first chance to evaluate a vehicle and picked out even more intricacies than his instructor. Dewis eventually wound up at Jaguar, and that's where his career really took off. Among his many accomplishments there, he had a role in developing disc brakes both for racing and the road, set multiple world top speed records, and helped bring the E-Type to the world. Dewis even made the famous overnight drive in an XKE convertible from England to display it at the Geneva Motor Show. Dewis tells a first-hand account of being in the Jaguar paddock during the tragic accident during the 1955 24 Hours of Le Mans that took the lives of dozens of spectators. It's a story that we usually can only read about or watch in black-and-white films. Hearing Dewis' side really brings this history to life.

1955 Jaguar D-Type that won Le Mans sets $21.78 million record price at auction

Sun, Aug 21 2016

There's simply no denying that the Jaguar D-Type is one of the most noteworthy race cars ever devised. Jaguar pioneered the use of the monocoque chassis design, and D-Types won the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1955, 1956, and 1957. And with its bodywork pulled taught over the wheels, engine, and passenger compartment, not to mention the massive fin behind the driver's headrest, the D-Type also one of the most stunning. The car you see above, Jaguar D-Type chassis number XKD 501, won the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1956, narrowly defeating a team from Aston Martin. Along the way, this D-Type completed 2,507.19 miles at an average speed of 104.47 miles per hour, and a maximum speed of 156.868 mph on the Mulsanne Straight. It was entered by the non-factory team Ecurie Ecosse, and therefore painted in the team's traditional Scottish blue with a white cross. That kind of provenance, coupled with its pristine original race-winning condition, makes XKD 501 extremely valuable. In fact, it just sold at RM Sotheby's Monterey auction for $21.78 million (a $19.8 million bid plus auction fees), making it the most expensive British automobile ever sold at auction. Take a gander at our high-res image gallery above to soak up all its low-slung goodness. Related Video: