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My nephew and his father in law are rebuilding a 1952 MGTD or TC ....I think is the designation. They bought it as boxes of parts and a body. It was initially going to be a frame off restoration but the guy gave up and sold them boxes of parts and most of the body. It was going to be for my nephew but they have now decided due to the slow speed at which they work it will be for my nephew's 3 year old when he comes of age.Back in my British sports car days I was a faithful reader of Practical Classics, a British rag devoted to the care and feeding of lower-end collectible vintage cars.
But limey cars weren’t such an unusual sight back then. The cars were of recent enough vintage that many were still in regular use. You could buy a decent enough example for what a workman might knock down in a month.
That was then. Now I can’t recall when I last saw an MGA or a TR3 on the road, and I’m the sort who would notice. But then, we’re talking 50- and 60- and 70-year-old cars, not 20- and 30- and 40-year-old cars.
Sometimes it seems all the best cars are owned by all the wrong people, while the people who might appreciate the things as something more than another layer of attire are priced out.
As to “retro” rides ...
I like some styles that give a nod to their forebears. The Ford Mustang body style introduced in the 2005 model year has a clean, elegant line that strongly echoes the early years of the ’stang. (Subsequent body style changes did it no favors, to my eye.) But no one would mistake it for a ’65. It is (or was) a modern car. GM’s aim at the same market segment, the retro Chevy Camaro, just doesn’t do it for me.