by AMCO72 » Thu Mar 07, 2013 12:18 am
There has been a lot of talk on this thread about restored race cars, where, how, and even IF they should be 'raced'. Everyone has their opinion, and they have a right to that opinion, but fortunately there are still a lot of restorers out there who are happy, some very happy to give their precious machines a good workout on the track, in the company of others.
I think this is the time and place to quote Mr Justice Otton, the presiding judge in the 'Old Number One Bentley' court case...........
'Continuous history is the basis for evaluating a classic car; the car has a life of it's own that transcends the sum of it's parts, and this is surely how it should be.
A motor car is not a painting or a piece of antique furniture that you put in your house. It is a functional piece of machinery to be driven and enjoyed, and then repaired when it breaks, and driven again.
The motor car is a product of the machine age, not the craft age. The obsession in certain quarters with 'all matching numbers', is to loose the sense of what a motor car is, and risk consigning them to mothballs and museums. The thought upper most in your mind when out driving should NOT be that the car is loosing value if you break the engine'.
Amen to that.........
There has been a lot of talk on this thread about restored race cars, where, how, and even IF they should be 'raced'. Everyone has their opinion, and they have a right to that opinion, but fortunately there are still a lot of restorers out there who are happy, some very happy to give their precious machines a good workout on the track, in the company of others.
I think this is the time and place to quote Mr Justice Otton, the presiding judge in the 'Old Number One Bentley' court case...........
'Continuous history is the basis for evaluating a classic car; the car has a life of it's own that transcends the sum of it's parts, and this is surely how it should be.
A motor car is not a painting or a piece of antique furniture that you put in your house. It is a functional piece of machinery to be driven and enjoyed, and then repaired when it breaks, and driven again.
The motor car is a product of the machine age, not the craft age. The obsession in certain quarters with 'all matching numbers', is to loose the sense of what a motor car is, and risk consigning them to mothballs and museums. The thought upper most in your mind when out driving should NOT be that the car is loosing value if you break the engine'.
Amen to that.........