Autocar

Steve Cropley

Alpine A110 Pure, Morgan, Williams F1

-

MONDAY

That’s twice this year. For the second time in 2021, renewed acquaintan­ce with a car I’ve previously driven induces me to promote it to the top of this column’s tiny list of unimpeacha­ble favourites. The first was the Porsche Taycan (world’s best saloon). The latest is the entry-level Alpine A110 Pure (world’s best sports car) that landed this week. Of course, this petite coupé establishe­d itself long ago as a favourite with Prior, Saunders and co, but ‘favourite’ in my head means something extra: a car I’d unhesitati­ngly buy with my own money.

You can argue that the A110 is a simple mixture of Clio and Mégane bits in a £60,000 envelope, but this leaves out the brilliance of the decisions its creators took on design (this A110 looks even better than the original), on specificat­ion (it’s sophistica­ted and delicate, yet simple to drive) and on comfort (even another 5% of suspension stiffness would harm its composure). Occasional­ly, the best motor industry talents produce an even better result than they thought they could. This is one of those times.

❝ I presume a wonderful recovery must be coming

TUESDAY

What a pleasure to meet Jost Capito, CEO and team principal of Williams F1, who is steadily reviving a team that appeared to be going down for the last time (see p57). Capito has a significan­t Autocar history: in his Ford days (while he was secretly developing the latest STS and RSS), he’d sometimes meet us on the road to view and test rival machinery. His astute observatio­ns helped both sides. Best thing at this latest meeting was his total conviction that Williams can win again.

WEDNESDAY

Only the most irrational optimist would think like this, but today’s news that July car sales collapsed another 38% because of the chip shortage makes me presume that a wonderful recovery must be coming. I mean, there’s already a strong post-pandemic rise in demand for new cars (partly fed by gotta-have-one merchants like you and me) yet now the supply is constraine­d even more; this was the worst July since 1954. Good nearly new cars are being cleared out fast as substitute­s for new ones, which can only mean there’ll be a record-breaking scramble for new metal when the brakes come off, as they eventually must. Strikes me every arm of the automotive trade will deserve many days in the sun just for managing to stay in business.

THURSDAY

There are very few experience­s in life more enjoyable than a visit to the Morgan Motor

Co, as I discovered for the umpteenth time on a mission this week to view the beginnings of the new 3 Wheeler (see News). If I tell you that 30,000 people visit every year, sometimes arriving in coachloads and paying £20 a head for a guided tour of the factory, it probably gives the wrong impression. There’s an intimacy and an appreciati­on of simple motoring enjoyment at Morgan that makes it simply magic. They’ve started holding monthly weekend meetings for enthusiast­s (bring an interestin­g car of any persuasion, grab a coffee, take a stroll, have a chat) and I can hardly think of a more welcoming destinatio­n. Details online.

FRIDAY

One thing that driving during lockdown has taught me is how much my impression­s of new cars vary according to whether I’m carrying a passenger (aka the Steering Committee) or not. Cars I appreciate for their throttle response or steering feel suddenly fall in my estimation if the ride and road noise are intrusive. Cars that seemed a bit floaty are more highly valued if a journey is effortless. Conclusion: assessing cars is notoriousl­y subjective and always will be.

 ??  ?? A110 Pure, ‘the world’s best sports car’, briefly joined Cropley’s fleet
A110 Pure, ‘the world’s best sports car’, briefly joined Cropley’s fleet
 ??  ?? Design boss Jon Wells shows Cropley the new 3 Wheeler
Design boss Jon Wells shows Cropley the new 3 Wheeler
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom