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670047

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 1949 Pale Yellow
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 R 8099-9 
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Jaguar XK120, XK140 & XK150 photo

31 more photos below

Record Creation: Entered on 26 December 2005.

Database Updates: Show dataplate edits

 

Photos of 670047

Click slide for larger image. This car has 32 photos. (Dates are when image was uploaded.)

Exterior Photos (6)

Uploaded January 2016:

2016-01-18
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Uploaded September 2011:

2011-09-20
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Interior Photos (2)

Uploaded January 2016:

2016-01-18
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2016-01-15
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Details Photos: Exterior (12)

Uploaded January 2016:

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2016-01-15
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Detail Photos: Interior (5)

Uploaded January 2016:

2016-01-18
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Detail Photos: Engine (4)

Uploaded January 2016:

2016-01-18
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Detail Photos: Other (3)

Uploaded January 2016:

2016-01-18
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Comments

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2005-12-26 10:56:01 | pauls writes:

Car was at auction in '99
www.practicalclassics.co.uk/auctionlot/by-id/374800416/

Auction description:
Lot 022: Jaguar XK120 (1949)
Classic Cars, Christies (29th August 1999)
Lot Details
Auction Classic Cars
Christies, Pebble Beach sales centre, Pebble Beach
Type Car
Lot Number 022
Hammer Price -
Hammer Price (inc premium) $79500
Year 1949
Condition rating 2
Registration number
Mileage -
Chassis number 670047-6
Engine number W1078-8

2011-09-20 21:51:43 | pauls writes:

URL for '99 auction:
www.christies.com/LotFinder/lot_details.aspx
It would appear that Practical Classics had the venue wrong as Christies says it was in Los Angeles.

Auction description:
1950 JAGUAR XK 120 ROADSTER (ALLOY)
Price Realized $79,500 Price includes buyer's premium

Estimate $70,000 - $100,000
Sale 9130
Exceptional Motor Cars and Automotive Art
29 August 1999
Los Angeles

2014-10-26 18:26:32 | pauls writes:

Yet more description from the '99 auction:

This car, chassis number 670047, is a significant and historic sports car as it was first owned and raced by Brooks Stevens, the famous industrial designer. Stevens' sphere of influence was huge and he was responsible for many important designs of everday things, such as the Steam-O-Matic iron, Allis-Chalmers tractors, Miller High Life Soft Cross logo and the sensational 1959 Scimitar All-Purpose sedan, with Reutter body.

This XK Jaguar was bought new by him and then raced in various sports car events such as the Elkhart Lake road races held in late July during the early 1950's. The SCCA magazine of September/October 1950 shows Stevens in his XK on the first lap of the Seneca Cup race, in which he was to finish 7th.

Today the Jaguar is in lovely, original condition. It has the yellow and black colour scheme that he painted all his cars, and a red leather interior. The original mileage is just 29,300 which is quite astounding. The vendor has race videos and newspaper cuttings of the car in its early days.

An alloy bodied XK is a rare and desirable sports car. That this lovely example was owned by Brooks Stevens (who also owned such other great cars as a 2.9 Alfa Romeo MM and a Talbot Lago T150SS Teardrop Coupe) makes it a very attractive proposition for a Jaguar connoisseur.

2016-01-15 14:14:57 | Newdl writes:

Car to be offered at 2016 RM Sotheby's Scottsdale Auction

www.rmsothebys.com/az16/arizona/lots/1949-jaguar-xk-120-alloy-roadster/1078582

Lot 252

1949 Jaguar XK 120 Alloy Roadster

Chassis no. 670047
Engine no. R 8099-9 (see text)
Body no. F 1060

$350,000 - $450,000

Without Reserve

To be auctioned on Friday, January 29, 2016


265 bhp, 3,781 cc DOHC inline six-cylinder XKE motor with three SU carburetors, four-speed manual transmission, independent front suspension, live rear axle with semi-elliptical leaf springs, and four-wheel drum brakes. Wheelbase: 102 in.

•Offered from the Craig McCaw Collection
•A very early alloy XK 120; reportedly the third sold in the United States
•Purchased new and owned for 46 years by legendary designer and enthusiast Brooks Stevens
•A period competitor in SCCA events on the East Coast
•Exceptional original condition, including Stevens' "tuxedo" house livery
•Offered with its original engine


In 1982, automotive historian Richard Langworth paid tribute to his friend Brooks "Kip" Stevens with an article for the October issue of Special Interest Autos.

The piece, titled "The Seer Who Made Milwaukee Famous," does focus appropriately on Stevens' pioneering industrial design work, which included the Oscar Meyer Wienermobile, multiple important post-war Studebakers, and the Miller brewing logo. However, it is more about the man himself, "a tall, good looking man who belied his age, whose appearance and demeanor reflected accreditation to what Cole Porter would have called High Society. He was, indeed, cast in 'Colie's' image. For Stevens there was only one way to fly to Paris--Concorde--and one way to travel to England in the summertime--first class on the QE2. His personal tastes reflected similar standards, producing an effort of refined elegance. In his presence people were impressed but not overawed, because he was so completely natural and so full of courtesy and fun."

That same easy sense of high style that characterized Stevens also included his automobiles, of which there were many. His varied collection began with his first car, a Cord L-29 that he had customized to his own design, and grew to contain an example of many fine Classics, modern sports cars, and personal copies of his designs for Studebaker and Kaiser-Frazer. Here, too, Stevens' sense of sartorial splendor was in play. Open cars were all finished in two-tone black and cream; closed cars were all French Racing Blue.

It made sense that an elegant sportsman of means would be one of the first Americans to buy the hottest sports car to come out of post-war Europe, the Jaguar XK 120. Stevens purchased an early alloy-bodied example, this car, chassis number 670047, reportedly the third XK 120 in the United States, and promptly had it repainted in the "tuxedo" colors. He then set about racing it at Watkins Glen and his local circuit, Elkhart Lake in Wisconsin; the car is known to have participated in the 1950 Seneca Cup at the Glen, finishing 7th overall, as well as the Janes Hill Airport Race in 1952. One of the brass plaques still found in its interior recognizes Stevens' role as Activities Chairman for the SCCA's Milwaukee Region in 1950.

Stevens never sold the Jaguar, which he continued to bring to Midwestern concours and JCNA events until well into the early 1990s. Only following his passing in 1996, 46 years after he purchased the XK 120, was it sold by his family to well-known California enthusiast Don Sears, and in 1999, it was acquired by legendary collector Roger Morrison of Salina, Kansas. Mr. Morrison later sold the car to Craig McCaw, in whose own wonderful stable it has remained a well-maintained favorite ever since.

The delicious originality of this car cannot be overstated. Much of its paint is the original Stevens job from 1950. The red leather interior is wonderfully intact, down to the door pulls, while the original red carpeting is still found within the trunk, and the chrome is patinated beautifully. To aid the continued preservation of this car, a set of replacement seat cushions, seat backs, and even an armrest that can easily be swapped in place of the originals, accompany the sale of the car.

Looking at the untouched surfaces of the engine bay, both the chassis and body number plates are original and exactly where one would hope to find them. The car is presently powered by a 3.8-liter E-Type engine, installed as a vintage rally powerplant; the original engine, number W 1078-8, is perfectly usable and original and was simply removed from the car to save it while the XK 120 continued to be driven and enjoyed. The original engine accompanies the car along with a wonderful history file, documenting its Stevens and SCCA history as well as its subsequent ownerships. Also accompanying the car are side curtains, a tonneau cover, the convertible top with its original Alloy-specific chrome frame, a spare radiator, and a series of blown-up photographic prints from early in its life. The Stevens Alloy looks like what it is--a car that was raced and enjoyed but also taken care of by only a handful of conscientious owners in its long life.

Surely few alloy XK 120s worldwide have survived in such superb original, unrestored order. None of them carries such panache, character, and cultivated charm as this car, which is the mechanical embodiment of the well-dressed gentleman, as at home on Elkhart Lake as on a Cunard liner.

2016-01-15 21:43:48 | Anonymous writes:

it seems not original colour, not original 3.8 engine, so ???

2016-01-16 11:13:18 | Jeremy B writes:

"...in such superb original, unrestored order"...

Having squeezed a triple-carb lump into a 120 (670503) I know it takes quite a bit of modifying, hacking about even.

What egregious puff these auction houses write.

2016-01-16 19:02:33 | Jeremy B writes:

The distributor leads are wrongly routed.
The radiator cap is wrong.
The brake fluid reservoir is wrong.
The hubcaps are unpainted.
The exhaust tailpipes are quite wrong.
The interior mirror is wrong.
The boot handle is ninety degrees out.
Best of all - the rear bumpers are upside down.

I am not attacking the car, just the auctioneer's description - "exceptional original condition".

2016-01-21 16:11:46 | pauls writes:

Gearbox believed to be JH2568 or JH2569 but unclear, clarification welcomed.

2016-01-31 12:17:01 | Pekka T. writes:

Sold for $407,000

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