Vancouver Sun

Jaguar Classic to build 25 ‘new’ D-Type roadsters

- CLAYTON SEAMS

Nostalgia is worth money and Jaguar knows it. We previously toured the expansive Jaguar Classic dream factory, and the latest four-wheeled fantasy to roll out of it is the D -Type.

The D -Type was a competitio­n-only though street-legal race car that won the 24 Hours of Le Mans three years in a row, starting in 1955. The company built 75 and a further nine were planned but destroyed in a monstrous factory fire.

Jaguar had originally planned on building 100 D -Types, so Jaguar is ostensibly “finishing ” the original run of 100 cars.

Unlike the Aston Martin DB4 GT remakes, the Jaguars are 100 per cent accurate replicas with zero modificati­ons for added drivabilit­y. The powerhouse is a 3.4-litre version of Jaguar’s fabled XK inline six, drinking the good stuff through three Weber side-draft carburetor­s. With 250 horsepower and a curb weight less than a Ford Fiesta, it’s good for a zero-to-100 km/ h run of around five seconds.

Pricing hasn’t been announced, but if it’s in line with what the XKSS remakes sold for, it’ll be north of a million dollars — and you can’t drive it on the street.

Good luck registerin­g this one as a homebuilt kit car or swiping the VIN tag from a real, $22-million D Type. The car doesn’t come close to meeting modern crash standards, emission requiremen­ts and driveby noise limits, so your million bucks buys you a track-only car.

 ?? JAGUAR ?? The Jaguar D-Type is expected to cost more than $1 million.
JAGUAR The Jaguar D-Type is expected to cost more than $1 million.

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