When does a banger become a classic?

When does a banger become a classic?

Author
Discussion

shed driver

Original Poster:

2,621 posts

175 months

Monday 21st April
quotequote all
Some cars seem to be destined to be a classic, not always due to original cost or rarity whereas others seem to be permanent fixtures at the festival of the unexceptional.

Any ford from the 1970s and 80s seems to be a classic. The corresponding BL or Rootes offering is overlooked.

It's not even the "my dad had one of them" thing. Is it fashion? Snobbery?

SD.

Turbobanana

7,215 posts

216 months

Monday 21st April
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I hope you like worms, OP, because I fear you have just opened a huge can of them...

aeropilot

38,273 posts

242 months

Monday 21st April
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Should have done a search beforehand, this exact question usually gets posted on here at least one every year.......

restoman

960 posts

223 months

Monday 21st April
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Yawn . . . .

T6 vanman

3,264 posts

114 months

Monday 21st April
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When KGF advertise one for x10 the value you think you'd pay for it biggrin

mac96

5,107 posts

158 months

Monday 21st April
quotequote all
I would say 70s BL and Rootes stuff are classics. Even a Marina is a classic car, just perhaps one that not everyone likes. I think the main difference is that (apart from Minis and various sports cars) BL, Rootes, and Vauxhall stuff from the 70s haven't survived in as large a number as say Ford Escorts, so they are not what people think of now if someone mentions 70s classic cars. A lot of that must be down to competition- especially Mk 1 and 2 Escorts which have retained a huge popularity in rallying. That kept them alive and kept parts supplies going!


sjabrown

2,002 posts

175 months

Monday 21st April
quotequote all
Some are predictable, some less so. The K11 generation of Micra is one model I'd consider as banger but may well become a classic. There's an oddly strong following amongst younger folk, yet 10-20 years ago they were distinctly old people's cars round here.

Escort3500

12,756 posts

160 months

Tuesday 22nd April
quotequote all
T6 vanman said:
When KGF advertise one for x10 the value you think you'd pay for it biggrin
laugh

Their website is always worth a view/laugh

GoodOlBoy

598 posts

118 months

Tuesday 22nd April
quotequote all
restoman said:
Yawn . . . .
+1

Riley Blue

22,298 posts

241 months

Tuesday 22nd April
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shout Mods! This thread, nuke it!! Nuke it NOW!!

Fast and Spurious

1,802 posts

103 months

Tuesday 22nd April
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About a year after you sell it. frown

Austin Prefect

994 posts

7 months

Tuesday 22nd April
quotequote all
I remember a letter in a motoring magazine in around 1980. The writer was bemoaning the fact that 'classic' was being overused, 'at this rate, MK1 Cortinas are going to be regarded as classics'. The point was that up till then 'classic' referred to the model, a design classic, something that in important respects has never quite been matched.

Now it just means an old car which you would normally expect to have been scrapped by now.. So the banger becomes a classic when it's condition belies it's age, when someone has been prepared to put time and money into it above what can be justified as a transport option.


Wills2

26,129 posts

190 months

Tuesday 22nd April
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I think 40 years is a good yard stick as per the VED rules, whether it's a "classic" in your mind is all down to your subjective view.




Skyedriver

20,550 posts

297 months

Tuesday 22nd April
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Fast and Spurious said:
About a year after you sell it. frown
Was about to post the same response.

//j17

4,741 posts

238 months

Tuesday 22nd April
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Actually this isn't the standard "What's a classic?" question and so slightly easier to answer.

A stops being "an old banger" and becomes "a classic" when people are willing to repair cars that are not economical to repair.

bad company

20,499 posts

281 months

Tuesday 22nd April
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restoman said:
Yawn . . . .
Ive never understood that attitude. If you don’t like the subject matter, move on.

Turbobanana

7,215 posts

216 months

Tuesday 22nd April
quotequote all
Oxford English Dictionary said:
>adjective: judged over a period of time to be of the highest quality and outstanding of its kind: 1 a classic novel, 2 a classic car

>noun: a work of art of recognized and established value: his books have become classics
As an academic I'm drawn to dictionary definitions, but this one's particularly vague. This is not helped by the likes of the press and insurance companies describing "old" cars as "classics", which have now entered the lexicon as a means describe anything with some age.

I have a hoodie that says "I'm not old, I'm classic", which just about sums it up.

I think if you can wrap your head around the fact that it means different things to different people, your life will be simpler.

ARHarh

4,739 posts

122 months

Tuesday 22nd April
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It doesn't matter.

Cars don't need a classification. If you like it, and are willing to maintain it, that's good enough.

Lotobear

7,947 posts

143 months

Tuesday 22nd April
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I've always taken the view that a classic should have been 'special' in it's day by dint of engineering excellence, performance, innovation, limited number or similar metrics.

Huzzah

28,047 posts

198 months

Tuesday 22nd April
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Cars depreciate as they age. Once they've bumped along at rock bottom for a while and start to appreciate that's the point.