Unique Cars

XU-1 REVIVAL

DEEP PURPLE RESTO

- WORDS  DAVE CAREY/OWNERS PHOTOS  TROY BARKER/OWNERS

Matt and Vince Morgillo are celebratin­g, and with good reason. The pair has finally finished off the restoratio­n of their stunning GTR XU-1, some seven years after it began, and just in time to help celebrate the 50th anniversar­y of the launch of this iconic model.

Now seven years isn’t really all that long for a resto – we’ve all heard of much longer efforts – but it’s still a substantia­l part of your life. Here the two explain what went into getting the car up and running.

Vince – It’s just stupid how this car came about. We have always done up Premiers, Monaros and Statesmans, so I went to see a guy to buy a GTS mirror. Just a mirror. Then we ended up talking and he said he knew a guy who knew a guy; you know how it is. I told him my son and I might be interested, but when blokes have one of these genuine things, they get quite cagey.

I was allowed to bring Matt to see the car, but got told that if I brought anyone else, the deal was off. Then he admitted to me that the car was actually his; that’s how cagey he was until we’d built some trust! I knew when we went that we were going to buy it regardless. Well, we got there and Matt couldn’t take the money out of his pocket quick enough!

Matt – The state it was in when we bought it; it was complete but had been stripped to a shell. The guy had shed-fulls of parts. We had to buy a box trailer to shove all the bits into! We ended up with two or three of everything, so the car was complete, plus we had more. He just sort of threw all the parts into boxes. It was a task and a half to sort it out. It was huge.

Vince – Not having owned one before, there were a lot of things we didn’t know about the Torana. You know, Matt could do a HQ-J-X-Z in his sleep, but we kept looking at things going ‘what the hell part is that?’. Although we had some doubles, we did go out of our way to source some new or reproducti­on parts where necessary; those 20 years on the road took a toll, obviously. The owner had taken it off the road in about 1990 to do a full rebuild on it, but circumstan­ces didn’t allow it. We got it in 2012.

Matt – We pretty much had it painted straight away, then pushed it into the corner of the shed while I built my HQ Statesman. That car ended

"IN THE END, WE CONTACTED OUR MATE WALTER CIABATTONI AND GOT HIM TO ASSEMBLE IT. IF IT WASN’T FOR HIM, IT WOULD STILL BE IN A MILLION BITS IN THE SHED."

"WE ALSO HAD THE GAUGES SENT AWAY AND REBUILT. AT THAT TIME THE ODO GOT ZERO’ED AND TODAY IT’S SHOWING 681 MILES"

up on the cover of Street Machine magazine for February 2019 and has just been awarded Street Machine of the Year. I’m stoked, man. Big tubs, big wheels; I was picturing it since I was a kid. But the Torana is all genuine; we were never going to modify that.

Vince – Once we started on the resto properly, we got a bunch of stuff powder coated and accumulate­d a few more parts. It did overlap the Statesman a bit; for instance, we got our mate Laurie to do the trim on it at the same time we did the trim in the HQ. We also had the gauges sent away and rebuilt. At that time the odo got zero’ed and today it’s showing 681 miles. At least until we go do the photo shoot later!

Matt – Doesn’t matter, man. Our cars are made to be driven, whether they’re restored Plum Dinger Toranas or big-block, monster-tubbed Statesmans! Rundle Street, Hindley Street, Summernats; who cares? Let’s cruise!

Vince – We had all the mechanical­s done; the Aussie four-speed gearbox was done to original specs, as was the LSD differenti­al. Even if it didn’t need doing, we wanted to make sure it all got done so it was a fresh car.

Matt – With work and that, it was a struggle to get it all together. In the end, we contacted our mate Walter Ciabattoni and got him to assemble it. If it wasn’t for him, it would still be in a million bits in the shed.

Vince – Definitely. We owe a lot to Walter.

Matt – The engine is still being run-in. And the thing is, even though the seller knew it was a GTR XU-1, obviously, he didn’t know it was a CK block. It puts out 180hp on paper, rather than the 160hp of the non-CK cars.

Vince – I remember, we used to buy and sell parts off these cars all the time. We’d get cars with our eyes closed.

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58
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 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? A
A SA trimming legend Carmine Carofano provided carpets, hoodlining and rear parcel shelf.
A A SA trimming legend Carmine Carofano provided carpets, hoodlining and rear parcel shelf.
 ??  ?? B
B Carmine also did the boot trim encompassi­ng the Bathurst ‘big tank’.
B B Carmine also did the boot trim encompassi­ng the Bathurst ‘big tank’.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? C Every base covered with this spread of gauges. C
C Every base covered with this spread of gauges. C
 ??  ?? E The triple Strombergs included their individual brass ID tags. E
E The triple Strombergs included their individual brass ID tags. E
 ??  ?? A Twin chrome zorts tell you its a sporty one. A
A Twin chrome zorts tell you its a sporty one. A
 ??  ?? F Black vinyl was cold in winter and hot in summer, and slippery. F
F Black vinyl was cold in winter and hot in summer, and slippery. F
 ??  ?? B Metal seat belt clasps look smart B
B Metal seat belt clasps look smart B
 ??  ?? D What a Plum... Dinger. D
D What a Plum... Dinger. D
 ??  ?? BELOW Vince has been enjoying the run-in process for the Torana, with odo showing 690 miles when we headed back to home base.
BELOW Vince has been enjoying the run-in process for the Torana, with odo showing 690 miles when we headed back to home base.

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