| Vintage
Jaguar
E-Type
It
was pure lust on wheels. Jaguar's voluptuous E-type
had car enthusiasts' tongues hanging down to their knees
when it was introduced. And to this day the car commands
head-spinning attention whenever it makes the scene.
First conceived in 1956, the E-Type
was originally intended as a replacement for the Coventry,
England firm's mighty D-Type endurance racers. Jaguar
quit racing shortly after the E-Type's development began,
but work on the car continued nonetheless, culminating
in a production roadgoing version introduced at the
Geneva Motor Show in March, 1961. Offered as a two-seat
coupe or convertible, it was an immediate hit.
Among the car's revolutionary features
was independent rear suspension, a first for Jaguar,
at a time when almost all streetable sports cars still
used a more primitive solid-axle setup. But the E-Type's
most compelling claim at the time was its speed. The
car's smooth aerodynamics and 265-hp 3.8-liter inline
six allowed it a top speed of 150 mph -- strictly the
domain of race cars and ultra-pricey exotics back then.
Although not cheap, the E-Type offered such thrills
for far less money than similar-performing machines.
To ensure the E-Type's continuing
sales appeal, Jaguar gave the car a succession of changes
over the years. The 3.8-liter six was replaced for 1965
by a 4.2-liter version that had more torque. The following
year, a 2+2 bodystyle was introduced. In 1971, Jaguar
launched the final iteration of the E-Type, powered
by a 314-hp 5.3-liter V12. The last of the 72,507 E-Types
left the plant in early 1975.
Today, experts invariably list
the E-Type as one of the world's most beautiful cars.
Combine that sensual design with the car's pleasing
road manners and sporty smooth exhaust purr, and you've
got one of the finest sensory delights known to man.
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