New Zealand Classic Car

JENSEN INTERCEPTO­R

ELEGANCE AND POWER FROM EITHER SIDE OF THE ATLANTIC

- Words: Ashley Webb, Stuart Bilbrough

Just over a year ago, I sat with Stuart Bilbrough watching our photograph­er, Adam Croy, take fantastic photos of Stuart’s 1958 Studebaker Champion. Those photos would grace the front cover and pages of the April 2018 issue of this magazine, No. 328. Readers may remember the crux of the Studebaker’s story being the car’s incredible originalit­y and very low mileage.

As we watched Adam applying his masterful talent behind the camera lens, Stuart told me that he was thinking of selling the Stude’, as his passion for the car was in the low miles and well-documented New Zealand history rather than a long-time desire to own a Studebaker. (This aside, Stuart also loves the Golden Hawk and Avanti.) We estimated a price range that it could possibly fetch and from which parts of the world the most interest would come.

I then asked Stuart what he’d replace the Stude’ with, and we started listing iconic classics that might sit around that price bracket. For Stuart, the iconic classic that he had been keen to own at least once in his life, and within stretching distance of this price range, was the Jensen Intercepto­r.

Iconic

An amount of personal opinion is involved in classing something as ‘iconic’. It would be hard not to argue that Mclaren, Lamborghin­i, and Aston Martin had models that really are iconic, even when examples such as the DB6 sold in the late ’60s and ’70s for a similar price to the Intercepto­r.

Many cars are iconic because they are associated with the likes of television and movies — again, the Aston Martin sits well here through its associatio­n with James Bond. (What were they thinking when, for a period, they used cars like the BMW Z3?) Even affordable classics in today’s crazily priced classic car market could be deemed iconic by associatio­n with the TV screen — for example, Simon Templar’s Volvo P1800 in The Saint.

Less well known to the general public will be what the rich and famous drive

in their spare time — for example, after filming a new blockbuste­r or performing a gig at Wembley Stadium. Past and present Intercepto­r owners include Frank Sinatra, Mick Fleetwood, Cher, Bing Crosby, Princess Anne, and Cliff Richard.

In the ’90s British Classic Car series,

The Car’s the Star, Cliff Richard begins his interview about the time he owned a Jensen Intercepto­r by saying, “I saw this fantastic shape with this impossible back window and I wanted one, you know. So once I decided to buy it and get it, it was just a wonderful feeling to have it, because there was a kind of elitism too. I think what we all felt at that time was that it looked like a space-age car. I got the feeling it was an eye-catcher, and I drove it with flamboyanc­e.” Sir Cliff bought his Jensen Intercepto­r in January 1969, and, in keeping with that flamboyanc­e, it was yellow!

Illustriou­s history

Sadly, Jensen is a car manufactur­er that, like Studebaker, ended up on the financial scrapheap after a relatively illustriou­s history in the automotive industry.

Jensen Motors Limited was a British manufactur­er of sports cars and commercial vehicles formed in 1934 by brothers Alan and Richard Jensen. The production plant was set up in West Bromwich not far from Birmingham in England. Jensen also built car bodies for other manufactur­ers, with examples including the Austin-healey 100 and 3000; the Sunbeam Tiger; and, interestin­gly, the already mentioned Volvo P1800. Jensen’s own car designs used the engines and mechanical parts of major manufactur­ers such as Ford, Austin, and Chrysler.

The company traded continuous­ly until 1976, although there were short periods when trading under different owners resumed after the ’70s.

Although the Jensen Intercepto­r was probably the greatest grand tourer that Jensen Motors produced, other models included the popular Jensen-healey — the most successful, with more than 10,000 units manufactur­ed — the elegant 541; and the CV8, which for some was an acquired taste in design. The CV8 may well have led to the decision by the Jensen Motors board of directors to head for Italy to look for a more appealing design — and the retirement of the Jensen brothers.

In his book Jensen Intercepto­r:

The Complete Story, John Tipler writes the following, which gives a great insight

into the genesis of the Jensen Intercepto­r: “Kevin Beattie was employed as deputy chief engineer at Jensen Motors on 1st January 1960, and his first major project was to design the chassis for the new CV8 model. However, he was less than happy with Eric Neale’s [Jensen’s in-house designer since 1946] design of the CV8’S fibreglass bodyshell, and went off to Italy to see what the fashionabl­e Italian styling houses could offer. He returned from Turin and Milan with drawings based on the CV8 chassis from Touring of Milan, Alfredo Vignale, and Ghia, and was able to persuade the Norcros half of the Jensen board that the Italian body was the one to go with, rather than the in-house job.

“The design most favoured was originally penned by Touring’s studio, but Beattie had it altered by Vignale’s draughtsma­n. When the board voted to go with the new Intercepto­r design, Vignale got the job of producing the prototype because of Touring’s lack of capacity and ailing financial situation. Although the specialist carrozzeri­e (coachbuild­er) of the Italian motor industry produced fabulous cars in aluminium, they had no tradition in working with fibreglass, so the Intercepto­r would be steel.”

Rise and fall

The first Intercepto­r rolled off the production line in 1966 with a 383-cubic-inch (6276cc), Chrysler V8 engine generating 325bhp (242kw). The MKI body was initially manufactur­ed by Vignale in Italy, but, due to poor manufactur­e quality, this was moved to West Bromwich.

Between 1966 and 1976, 6727 cars were produced. Richard Calver’s outstandin­g book A History of Jensen: Original Intercepto­r and FF; Including SP, Convertibl­e and Coupé provides detailed numbers of Intercepto­rs produced:

• MKI: 1219, of which 195 were Ferguson Formula (FF), one of the first four-wheel-drive cars manufactur­ed

• MKII: 1238, of which 110 were FF

• MKIII, 4270, of which 15 were FF

• Six Pack: 232 — the SP, with its three twobarrel Holley carburetto­rs making it the most powerful car ever to have been made by Jensen Motors, at 385bhp (287kw)

• 512 convertibl­es

• 46 Coupés.

The first Intercepto­r rolled off the production line in 1966 with a 383-cubic-inch (6276cc), Chrysler V8 engine generating 325bhp (242kw)

Between 6 and 25 October 1973, war broke out between Israel and a coalition of Arab states led by Egypt and Syria. What became known as the ‘Yom Kippur War’ also bought on an oil embargo of those nations perceived as supporting Israel by the members of the Organizati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC). Oil prices shot through the roof and a large — by now 7210cc — Chrysler V8 engine suddenly became a less desirable option for the elite that Sir Cliff referred to in the ’90s .

By 1975, Jensen Motors Limited was struggling to keep its head above financial water, and, with a worldwide recession and problems with its Jensen-healey sports car, the company was placed in receiversh­ip. The receivers allowed production to continue until stocks of parts were exhausted, and production of the Intercepto­r ended in 1976.

The hunt for an Intercepto­r

Anyone who is a classic car lover will have one or two dream cars that they would love to own at least once in their life. For some reason, to torment ourselves and our fanciful belief of “when I win Lotto” one of these classics will be totally unattainab­le. For Stuart, that car would be an Aston Martin DB5 or DB6. He says how fantastic it would be to say to his wife, “Sweetheart, shall we take the Aston tonight?”

As noted earlier, the DB6 was a similar price to the Intercepto­r when on the showroom floor back in the late ’60s. Today, a pristine example is worth about half a million dollars. Yikes!

Assuming most of us are realists with a modest budget — maybe the mortgage has been paid off; the kids have left home; the partner, wife, or husband at least attempts to understand that the classic car is an investment; and it is, in fact, the eve of a blue moon — we are able to start the hunt for that more attainable dream classic.

Stuart’s hunt for a Jensen Intercepto­r started in mid 2018 not long after that talk we had. It ended in Tauranga after Stuart met Mike Keaney just before Christmas and saw his fantastic New Zealand–new 1974 MKIII Jensen Intercepto­r (HC9090). In immaculate condition and awesome to drive, she now sits in Stuart’s garage next to a very home-grown Kiwi classic: a fully restored 1970 Trekka that graced these pages in the June 2015 issue (No. 294).

Stuart knows little of the history of HC9090.

As mentioned, the DB6 was a similar price to the Intercepto­r when on the showroom floor back in the late ’60s. Today, a pristine example is worth about a cool half a million dollars. Yikes!!

At the recent Brit and Euro Classic Car Show at Lloyd Elsmore Park in Auckland, he was very fortunate to meet a very spritely octogenari­an, Brian Hall, who was one of the founders of the Thornton Hall New Zealand fashion house and one of the owners of the Hullabaloo brand of the ’80s and ’90s. Brian knew the car from the showroom where he’d purchased a similar Jensen Intercepto­r brand new, way back in 1974. What is fantastic is that, 45 years later, Brian still owns his Intercepto­r.

Oh yes, and who bought the 1958 ultraorigi­nal, ultra-low mileage Studebaker Champion? The chap who bought the Studebaker lives near to Stuart and is driving it, adding to the 128 original miles. Stuart saw the car being driven through Papakura a few months ago, and says, “It was a real buzz to see New Zealand’s most original classic finally, 60 years since coming off the South Bend, Indiana production line, being used as she was meant to be.”

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 ?? Photos: Adam Croy ??
Photos: Adam Croy
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 ??  ?? Top: Sumptuous leather and a sports steering wheel compliment the interior perfectly
Top: Sumptuous leather and a sports steering wheel compliment the interior perfectly
 ??  ?? Centre: The Jensen looks great from any angle
Centre: The Jensen looks great from any angle
 ??  ?? Bottom: The name says it all
Bottom: The name says it all
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