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Mar 28, 2011 10:14 am
TimGresty Offline
Member
Registered since: Dec 05, 2007
Location: Astbury, Cheshire, England


Subject: BARN FINDS : Will they continue to appear ?
I've posted the following on the LG45 Section of this Forum.
Do readers think we will continue to see such barn finds ? Or are we coming to the end of this era ?

1936 LAGONDA LG45 SALOON : The Final Barn Find ?

A complete LG45, with everything in place, although suffering from the dust of decades. Just check out the photos !
Chassis as redesigned by WO Bentley, bodywork by Frank Feeley, Meadows 4.5-litre engine to final LG specification.

Online at : http://www.classic-auctions.com/...essSaloon-33077.aspx
Tim Gresty
 

Mar 29, 2011 8:58 am
DavidLG45 Offline
Member
Registered since: Dec 05, 2007
Location: -


Subject: Re: BARN FINDS : Will they continue to appear ?
A Lagonda acquaintance told me of an LG45 saloon near him a few years ago. Not the same one and in poor condition as kept under just a tarpaulin. The owner wasn't interested in selling. Possibly still there.

David
 

Mar 29, 2011 11:18 am
Colin M34 Offline
Member
Registered since: Dec 01, 2007
Location: Suffolk, UK


Subject: Re: BARN FINDS : Will they continue to appear ?
Sadly, I think the car featured in the H&H auction is destined to be yet another Le Mans replica and no doubt the VSCC will allow it to race as such.

Here is one that used to belong to somebody I knew at work in the late 1960's. He used it as regular transport and then put it away in a garage to restore later. He never did. This is a photo taken around 2000 with me beside it.

It is now beautifully restored and if the registration number looks familiar, it featured on the front cover of the Summer 2010 Lagonda Club magazine.

By the way, I believe that early LG45 saloons were not designed by Frank Feely, but Walter Buckingham. These have the designation "SB1" which is presumably "First Series Saloon Body". I understand that the SB1 body was derived from the short-lived M45A saloon which was revived after the bankruptcy as the LG45.

"NJ" is a very early LG - chassis number 12002, though interestingly it had a Sanction 2 engine - so perhaps it was a factory demonstrator. In comparison, the one featured in the H&H auction is chassis number 12014 and has a Sanction 1 engine.

I will be interested to see its fate.

Colin M34

Thumbnails of attached images:

Filename: NJ 9185.jpg
Filetype: File Type Information for: jpg jpg
Downloads: 785
Filesize: 132.16 KB
Image size: 956 x 784 Pixels

 

Mar 29, 2011 1:17 pm
DavidLG45 Offline
Member
Registered since: Dec 05, 2007
Location: -


Subject: Re: BARN FINDS : Will they continue to appear ?
The saloon I mentioned is another early one, 12007. I'm told has a M45 engine though.
 

Mar 29, 2011 3:44 pm
Colin M34 Offline
Member
Registered since: Dec 01, 2007
Location: Suffolk, UK


Subject: Re: BARN FINDS : Will they continue to appear ?
David,

The Sanction 1 engine is in most respects an M45 Rapide engine so might this be the correct engine for it? Main external difference is a Scintilla Vertex rather than distributor on the nearside.

Colin
 

Mar 29, 2011 4:07 pm
DavidLG45 Offline
Member
Registered since: Dec 05, 2007
Location: -


Subject: Re: BARN FINDS : Will they continue to appear ?
Colin,

I don't know. I'm only repeating what I was told. Not seen the car myself, only photos.

David
 

Mar 29, 2011 4:12 pm
h14 Offline
Member
Registered since: Nov 30, 2008
Location: Chalandray, France


Subject: Re: BARN FINDS : Will they continue to appear ?
Let's hope this does get restored. Saloons are becoming an endangered species...perhaps rarity will increase values & help justify restoration costs? Many 30s saloons are pretty dull if not ugly, but Lagonda saloons were always handsome, so surely that must help?!
My own LG6 was bought by the previous owner as a pretty derelict rolling chassis in 1985. I assumed it had lost its original saloon body in the 60s...but on getting what history I could from DVLA, was appalled to discover it had been taxed & on the road in 1979! What upsets me is that I've since been contacted by the families of the original owner and second owner, so I now have pictures of it on the day of delivery in 1939, and in the early 50s. Difficult explaining to them that, yes, "their" car survives, but not in a remotely recogniseable form. This is particularly galling for me, as I'd love similar photos of my V12, which is an original factory dhc...but no such luck.
At least the guy I bought it from, Richard Kelsall, had a body made up to his own design, as I would not have bought a replica.

Laurence
 

Mar 30, 2011 4:41 pm
M70 Offline
Member
Registered since: Dec 04, 2007
Location: Silchester, England


Subject: Re: BARN FINDS : Will they continue to appear ?
For what it is worth I am sure there are lots more "barn finds". Personally I know of two separate LG45 saloons that are in long term storage with absolutely no hope of being back on the road with their current owners. I have tried quite hard to buy them over the years and although the owners have no intention of doing anything with them they are equally determined not to let them go. Such is life.

For the record, I took the body off NJ 9185 and spent five years recreating a 1936 four-seater Le Mans car, as near as I could to the two original cars that the factory broke up in the late 1936. The reason I took the body off was the car had been stored in a very damp hanger and the ash frame had gone to pulp - it was simply way beyond repair, economic or otherwise. In my experience the VSCC is as through as one could expect from a membership organisation and certainly my buff form had to be justified with a supporting statement from the Club verifying the body was beyond repair - by no means a given- and no one would welcome serviceable saloons being broken for whatever reason. I also have a LG45 Saloon and what perhaps is not obvious is that they require a lot more maintenance than a tourer as well as being a more leisurely drive; I find that reasonably frequent use and lot of TLC appears to work well. Perhaps those of us with saloons should use them more often at Club events - so often there is only one or two out.

Hope that helps.

Stephen
Stephen Matthews
 

Mar 30, 2011 10:24 pm
Colin M34 Offline
Member
Registered since: Dec 01, 2007
Location: Suffolk, UK


Subject: Re: BARN FINDS : Will they continue to appear ?
Just to add to Stephen's observation about NJ's 'pulpy' ash frame, when we pulled it out of the garage, I put my foot through the rotten boards of the then owner's pit which the car had been standing on for something like 30 years! The garage roof had been leaking so I am not surprised that it was an uneconomic restoration!

Hopefully the LG45 12014 was stored in drier conditions.

Colin

 

Mar 31, 2011 11:08 pm
peter weir Offline
Member
Registered since: Dec 03, 2009
Location: Oban Scotland


Subject: Re: BARN FINDS : Will they continue to appear ?
Hi all
I've been reading the replies with interest. I don't think it's strictly correct to say that any car is past restoration when such as Crossthwaite and Gardner can manufacture new AutoUnion GP cars from scratch and replica Bugattis are being made in South America so close to the original that the parts are interchangeable and Rod Jolly restores the most decrepit wrecks. However it reminds me of an article about a vintage racing yacht that was 'restored'. It needed new keel,stem and stern, new frames and planks, new deck beams and deck, new machinery and rigging. Oh and the carefully preserved interior couldn't be re=used because the layout had been changed. They did however use the steering wheel! So any car could be restored but would it be 'original' at the end.The dilema comes down to the economics and if the dealers can't sell a LG45 saloon for £65,000 (a two tone blue has been advertised for months) there is not much money for both purchase and restoration. It is just unfortunate that saloons are the poor relation and only valued at 40% of an open model or a well constructed replica. I bought my M45 saloon body some 10 years ago and have been collecting parts ever since. It had been roadgoing until being sold at auction, a bit loose in the joints and the door used to come open so it had to go. With only 19 M45 saloons recorded in the Register of Members Book I think they are an endangered species and deserve to be restored to original, even though my end product may be from a dozen cars and probably worth half of what a replica tourer would
fetch at auction. I also have a special, shortened chassis and lowered radiator but it was made in the 1950's when even a genuine LeMans car was shortened and lowered and a LG45 Rapide was cut about to make a racer and many Lagondas just went to the scrap yard. That was 50=60 year ago but today I raelly think it is about preserving what we have rather than chopping up and throwing away the body which was perhaps the biggest contribution made to the car by the Lagonda workforce.Just my personal views but I hope the car at auction ends up as a restored Lagonda saloon.
 

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