355 Miles in 31 years
Discussion
I think this is really cool, nice story behind it too!
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/200762794095
From the ad:
[quote]
Supplied new by Whadham Stringer (Devizes) Ltd KAM 229X was bought by a local man as a surprise present for his wife to replace her ageing Morris Minor. The new Ital was registered in her name on 1st August 1981 and she remains the only registered keeper today.
He had chosen the most attractive colour, Silver birch metallic, and delayed delivery until the 1st of August so that the car would be registered on the new X plate.
He thought that his wife would be delighted. Sadly though, she most certainly was not!
Not wanting to seem too ungrateful she agreed to drive the car for a while - just to see if she could get used to it after so many years in her beloved Minor.
It was not to be the case and after travelling a little over 100 miles she had to confess to her husband that it was really not the car for her, much preferring the Minor it was supposed to replace. Somewhat dejected and, perhaps, just a little out of spite her husband said “fine, then it can just stay in the garage until the Minor falls apart”
In the garage it stayed for the next 12 years or so. The husband ever hopeful and secretly willing the old Morris to, indeed, fall apart and be replaced by the ‘new’ Morris which he regularly started and ran up to warm.
The husband kept the Ital in tip top condition, taxed and M.O.T’ed in the hope that his wife would change her mind – unhappily though it was not to be the case and she never did. It was looking more like she would have to give up driving before the old Minor gave up being able to be driven.
Some old M.O.T,s are present with the car, in 1987 the mileage was 193, in 1988 223, in 1990 224 and in 91 266.
The last time the car was taxed was 30.11.1992 and by this time the standoff over whether the car should be used or not was wearing thin….. To say the least
During the following year when the wife had all but given up driving she finally won (no surprise there) her longstanding protest and with just 250 miles on the clock the car was disposed of to, of all places, a local Performance car specialist with a particular interest in Ferrari’s and other Italian thoroughbred cars.
KAM 299X was to spend the next 11 years or so as an exhibit in the Performance car specialist showroom. Strange you may think! However, their logic behind using the Ital for this purpose being that the Italian design company Ital design, from whom the car took its name, was better known for its creations designed for the Italian greats - Bugatti, Lamborghini, Maserati and Ferrari. It was a wise decision as the Ital proved a popular focal and talking point in the showroom for over a decade.
Of course in the hands of such specialists the car was properly dry stored, frequently started, run and cared for.
We first acquired this amazing Morris Ital almost 4 years ago; we were wowed by it then and we are even more so now.
We sold it to one of our longstanding clients who had bought it for pride of place in his private collection. It has travelled just 24 miles since we first sold it and during its time in his care has continued to be dry stored and cherished.
A recent sudden loss of storage has meant that we have required a number of cars from the collection and we are absolutely delighted to have The Morris back.
[/quote]
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/200762794095
From the ad:
[quote]
Supplied new by Whadham Stringer (Devizes) Ltd KAM 229X was bought by a local man as a surprise present for his wife to replace her ageing Morris Minor. The new Ital was registered in her name on 1st August 1981 and she remains the only registered keeper today.
He had chosen the most attractive colour, Silver birch metallic, and delayed delivery until the 1st of August so that the car would be registered on the new X plate.
He thought that his wife would be delighted. Sadly though, she most certainly was not!
Not wanting to seem too ungrateful she agreed to drive the car for a while - just to see if she could get used to it after so many years in her beloved Minor.
It was not to be the case and after travelling a little over 100 miles she had to confess to her husband that it was really not the car for her, much preferring the Minor it was supposed to replace. Somewhat dejected and, perhaps, just a little out of spite her husband said “fine, then it can just stay in the garage until the Minor falls apart”
In the garage it stayed for the next 12 years or so. The husband ever hopeful and secretly willing the old Morris to, indeed, fall apart and be replaced by the ‘new’ Morris which he regularly started and ran up to warm.
The husband kept the Ital in tip top condition, taxed and M.O.T’ed in the hope that his wife would change her mind – unhappily though it was not to be the case and she never did. It was looking more like she would have to give up driving before the old Minor gave up being able to be driven.
Some old M.O.T,s are present with the car, in 1987 the mileage was 193, in 1988 223, in 1990 224 and in 91 266.
The last time the car was taxed was 30.11.1992 and by this time the standoff over whether the car should be used or not was wearing thin….. To say the least
During the following year when the wife had all but given up driving she finally won (no surprise there) her longstanding protest and with just 250 miles on the clock the car was disposed of to, of all places, a local Performance car specialist with a particular interest in Ferrari’s and other Italian thoroughbred cars.
KAM 299X was to spend the next 11 years or so as an exhibit in the Performance car specialist showroom. Strange you may think! However, their logic behind using the Ital for this purpose being that the Italian design company Ital design, from whom the car took its name, was better known for its creations designed for the Italian greats - Bugatti, Lamborghini, Maserati and Ferrari. It was a wise decision as the Ital proved a popular focal and talking point in the showroom for over a decade.
Of course in the hands of such specialists the car was properly dry stored, frequently started, run and cared for.
We first acquired this amazing Morris Ital almost 4 years ago; we were wowed by it then and we are even more so now.
We sold it to one of our longstanding clients who had bought it for pride of place in his private collection. It has travelled just 24 miles since we first sold it and during its time in his care has continued to be dry stored and cherished.
A recent sudden loss of storage has meant that we have required a number of cars from the collection and we are absolutely delighted to have The Morris back.
[/quote]
Mixed feelings.
My dad had one many years ago (in white, MOC 450X), and it was a pretty hateful thing - a rehashed Marina which was by then 10 years old and was itself a bitsa of various BL bits and the venerable A-series.
However, that is the very definition of timewarp condition, and it's nice that there are conserved examples of those cars that were so common that you never see any more. There must be fewer Itals left than Marinas now...
My dad had one many years ago (in white, MOC 450X), and it was a pretty hateful thing - a rehashed Marina which was by then 10 years old and was itself a bitsa of various BL bits and the venerable A-series.
However, that is the very definition of timewarp condition, and it's nice that there are conserved examples of those cars that were so common that you never see any more. There must be fewer Itals left than Marinas now...
My Mum had the estate version of the Ital. I was too young to really remember whether the car was good or bad, all I can remember was ending up at 45-degrees when she drove it up an embankment and parked it next to a wall.
This particular example looks fantastic though - OK, so it's never going to set the world on fire but there can't be many about these days, and certainly not in that condition.
This particular example looks fantastic though - OK, so it's never going to set the world on fire but there can't be many about these days, and certainly not in that condition.
My first car was one of these... with an autobox, in hearing aid beige.
To be fair, it was my dad's car (he had a hip problem) and my mum gave it to me when he died. Couldn't complain really.
Genuinely didn't remember it being that ugly though. Oh well, rose tinted glasses and all that.
Trace
To be fair, it was my dad's car (he had a hip problem) and my mum gave it to me when he died. Couldn't complain really.Genuinely didn't remember it being that ugly though. Oh well, rose tinted glasses and all that.
Trace

Hateful hateful pile of crap someone please buy this then video it getting
run over by first a Challenger II then a Steam roller then drop the remains
into an active volcano.
They were s
t then and are s
t now we don't need reminding just how
utterly useless BLMC were at designing a car with the slightest trace
of flair or taste or performance or quality ugh spit.
nurse my pills
ETA even ITAL Design couldn't redeem it aaghh
run over by first a Challenger II then a Steam roller then drop the remains
into an active volcano.
They were s
t then and are s
t now we don't need reminding just howutterly useless BLMC were at designing a car with the slightest trace
of flair or taste or performance or quality ugh spit.
nurse my pills
ETA even ITAL Design couldn't redeem it aaghh
nice to see low mileage examples of everyday cars turn up - but really, 300 miles and it needed a new clutch and gearbox rebuild? or is that just through age/lack of use
eta: some interesting 80s bargains through this guy
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/200719788571
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/200734456295
eta: some interesting 80s bargains through this guy
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/200719788571
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/200734456295
Edited by escortwagon on Friday 18th May 22:38
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