Re: Just starting out
Posted: Mon Jul 29, 2013 4:59 pm
My mother in-law complains that the RR is too high to get in to comfortably. She has hip problems rather than back issues but I just jump straight in (I'm 6'1).
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Thanks, can you post or email me some photos along with furthere details. Does the car have FSH ?Gargravarr wrote:I don't know if I should put this out here, but I noticed the mention of a Jaguar XJS. I know how this sounds, but my mother and stepfather have one - it's not a convertible, it's a hardtop - they are looking to sell. I won't lie, it's not a pristine example - it needs new front wings, hole in the exhaust patching, some power steering work and the roof liner replacing. But other than these issues the car is in good condition. It's a 1988 XJ-S HE V12 (5.3l) in grey-blue (not sure how to describe the colour). The reason I thought I should offer is because they are not looking for a lot of money for it, on the order of a few thousand pounds. If you're looking for a project, with your budget it could be fixed up quite nicely.
I do appreciate how this sounds, but the car is genuinely for sale and I can provide photos to prove it. I will probably make a For Sale thread for it, but I figured I would offer it here first in case you're still interested in the XJ-S. This one has cream leather seats and an automatic gearbox, making it sumptuously comfortable to drive.
If it's not appropriate to be offering cars in threads like this then I would like to apologise.
I have just noticed it is a hard top. I don't think it will be suitable. Thanks for letting me know about it!Gargravarr wrote:I don't know if I should put this out here, but I noticed the mention of a Jaguar XJS. I know how this sounds, but my mother and stepfather have one - it's not a convertible, it's a hardtop - they are looking to sell. I won't lie, it's not a pristine example - it needs new front wings, hole in the exhaust patching, some power steering work and the roof liner replacing. But other than these issues the car is in good condition. It's a 1988 XJ-S HE V12 (5.3l) in grey-blue (not sure how to describe the colour). The reason I thought I should offer is because they are not looking for a lot of money for it, on the order of a few thousand pounds. If you're looking for a project, with your budget it could be fixed up quite nicely.
I do appreciate how this sounds, but the car is genuinely for sale and I can provide photos to prove it. I will probably make a For Sale thread for it, but I figured I would offer it here first in case you're still interested in the XJ-S. This one has cream leather seats and an automatic gearbox, making it sumptuously comfortable to drive.
If it's not appropriate to be offering cars in threads like this then I would like to apologise.

I look the look of this, thanks !JPB wrote:Here comes an idea for a classic convertible that has a high, upright driving position with big, comfortable seats and simple mechanical stuff that's all available through a dedicated club as well as from several later, more common cars. Finding one would be the biggest problem but I once went on a run as a passenger in one of these during which we covered around 100 miles on a mixture of road surfaces, many of them poor and some unmetalled. That car was an Austin A40 Sport:
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Or in a similar sort of vein, there's the slightly later A40 Somerset convertible, hen's teeth rare but just as pleasant a place to sit, assuming (reasonably I feel) that the soft-top Somerset shares the saloon's comfy furniture:
Either of these gorgeous old cars can be upgraded discretely by using brake parts and engines from later Farina-bodied BMC family saloons or MGBs. A friend locally uses a Somerset saloon regularly and that one has a Ford Sierra-sourced 2 litre Pinto engine with five speed gearbox. OK, so they are a bit soft if you like to drive like Jason Plato everywhere but comfort is fine for people of all shapes, sizes and levels of physical capability.
