RE: PH meets Mr Autofarm

RE: PH meets Mr Autofarm

Friday 17th August 2012

PH meets Mr Autofarm

Autofarm co-founder Josh Sadler talks classic Porsches and about his incredible barn find 911 ST



"We can take that one," suggests Josh Sadler, owner of Autofarm. He's pointing at the '74 RS 3.0 replica tucked away in the corner behind some other classic 911s. Autofarm created it for Lord Mexborough in the 1980s, built to use as a run-around instead of putting miles on his original. (Oh to have that problem... - Ed.) Fat arched - now featuring a 3.5-litre flat-six with RS cams and 311bhp - it's very tempting indeed. But there's a Blood Orange '72 S 2.4 outside that's ready to go and Josh is a busy man.

Josh's years of driving old 911s are evident
Josh's years of driving old 911s are evident
It's Josh's own car, his daily driver, and we're hear to speak to Josh, not to drive. So he takes the right hand seat, as I clamber into the left. In his herringbone jacket, burgundy tie, blue shirt and trousers Josh doesn't subscribe to the polo shirt and jeans approach of most garages today. He's old school, though the oil under his fingernails points that he remains hands-on, even if is place in the company demands he drives a desk more often than not.

 

The man at the wheel
The drive is short, though telling, Josh's smoothness and speed behind the wheel underlining his familiarity with his car and the roads that make up his daily drive. There's some attempt at conversation, but the squeaking from the rear suspension bushes - Josh admitting they're needing some lubrication - and the sound of the 2.4-litre flat-six filling the interior makes chat problematic. His daily driver is his occasional weekend racer, too, after all.

Sadler has been at the helm since 1973
Sadler has been at the helm since 1973
Through the noise Josh's potted history of the company he's been running since 1973 is fascinating. Enthusiastic clubman racers, he and friend Steve Carr were seeking ways to start a business. Working at Glacier Bearings in Wembley, Josh and Steve were helping fund their racing by, he says, "fighting over the phone on a Thursday when Exchange and Mart came out," buying up cars and sourcing parts from scrap yards.

The eureka moment came when they stumbled across a couple of written-off 911s. A '72 S which was broken for parts and a repairable '68 car which they bought and started looking for parts. Having no luck sourcing official parts from Porsche itself in the UK Josh and Steve persuaded Jack Phillips, Glacier Bearings colleague and soon to be Autofarm technician, to bring his Cortina 1500 estate and point it in the direction of Germany.

Straight to source

Autofarm's 3.7-litre Cayman
Autofarm's 3.7-litre Cayman
A visit to Porsche specialist Tebernum just over the Dutch border in northern Germany found not only the parts they were after, but a shop owner keen to try out his basic English and the spark of a business idea. Autofarm was created in 1973, finding a niche in the market in the UK for supplying used Porsche parts to a small, but enthusiastic and demanding market.

Josh admits to "having no concept of running a business in second-hand Porsche parts," adding, "we were desperately green" but the company grew, moving around the country as ever more space was needed. Buying wrecked Porsches to help fill the hole in the market, a sizeable market for replacement parts for those rallying '73 RS cars emerged too. The 80s saw a shabby, but loved, showroom at the end of the tube line at Amersham as its basis, the mad optimism of the 90s seeing Autofarm expand massively into Hertfordshire's amusingly named Cow Roast, taking on a couple of franchised dealerships. The following recession saw Autofarm contract back to its roots and focusing entirely on Porsches.

911 S Sport 'punt' a real gem
911 S Sport 'punt' a real gem
Not a bad decision wandering around the barns looking at some of the customer cars awaiting collection. Parked in Airflow cocoons is some Porsche royalty, a 3.0 RSR, 997 GT3 RS, Autofarm's 3.7-litre engined Cayman as well as a hotchpotch of other marques including an F40 and Bentley Continental. Josh's own Mini Marcos racer, which he's raced in a couple of endurance events, laughing as he describes "a couple of old boys falling over each other during driver changes," and an old Lagonda betray Josh's interests beyond Porsches.

A barn find to die for
It's not the highly polished, hermetically sealed machines that has sees Josh really animated though. Instead, what to the untrained eye looks like nothing more than an old, in need of restoration 911 is Josh's next project. It's a car he sold in the 80s, knowing then that it was a bit special, but not having taken the time to research it properly. Curiosity got the better of Josh a few years ago and he sought out the sales document and found the seller and the car was found languishing at the bottom of the garden under a tarpaulin.

Still unsure exactly what it was, Josh "took a punt," getting it out requiring the removal of a fence. It was worth the effort. The pared back trim, the lightweight door panels, lightweight carpets and tacho that reads up to 10,000rpm, along with some further research revealed it to be a 911 S Sport, sometimes referred to as an ST.

Restoration beckons
Restoration beckons
Josh's find is a car with provenance, too, having driven in the 1971 Circuit of Ireland, it is thought to be the only ST officially brought into the country. It arrived via a Northern Irish dealer and was driven by Reggie McSpadden. Some digging found its registration to be dormant, and the car was driven over to Northern Ireland to be inspected, where it was given it original registration back. It's been stripped since and awaits restoration, though with other projects are keeping him busy enough.

A garden find 911, now nestling in a barn owned by a man who farms Porsches? You couldn't make it up. And that RSR recreation? We'll take that one next time...


Photos: Max Earey










Author
Discussion

DouggyMc

Original Poster:

769 posts

163 months

Friday 17th August 2012
quotequote all
What a legend! That ST will be something special when it's restored.

Antj

1,047 posts

200 months

Friday 17th August 2012
quotequote all
a lot of barns a re boring, they somtimes store hay or Tools, Machinary or simply sheep. yes some are more exciting and store Zombies like that on the Walking Dead.

This barn it seems is the latter and appears very exciting, anyone who restores classic Porsches gets a big thumbs up from me.

The St looks very nice, I am always intrigued how a car ends up being hidden under wraps and left like that, esepcially something like a porsche etc. Strange how it goes from being a loved and cerished time to a forgotten item.

be even better to see it once restored.

Gruber

6,313 posts

214 months

Friday 17th August 2012
quotequote all
Is the PH proof reading department on holiday today? wink

Nice cars and interesting article. thumbup

vixen1700

22,861 posts

270 months

Friday 17th August 2012
quotequote all
Autofarm would be one of my destinations shortly after a lottery win. smile

JamStar

48 posts

222 months

Friday 17th August 2012
quotequote all
I love the clear covers that they're in in the later pictures. It's like a collection of full sized match box cars :-)

cybersimon

199 posts

169 months

Friday 17th August 2012
quotequote all
Gruber said:
Is the PH proof reading department on holiday today? wink

Nice cars and interesting article. thumbup
Obviously missing Riggers

stuttgartmetal

8,108 posts

216 months

Friday 17th August 2012
quotequote all
Push hard enough and you'll get your whole head up there.

Bash Brannigan

211 posts

187 months

Friday 17th August 2012
quotequote all
PLEASE make this kind of thing a regular feature! Every petrol head wants to go and poke around certain companies, but it's a bit embarrassing once you're an adult...

remoh

147 posts

264 months

Friday 17th August 2012
quotequote all
stuttgartmetal said:
Push hard enough and you'll get your whole head up there.
bit of an infomercial isnt it?

Bushi

341 posts

193 months

Friday 17th August 2012
quotequote all
Got stuck close to these guys with my old 911sc sounding pretty terminal, drove in unannounced off the street.

They stopped what they were doing sourced the issue quickly to a simple missing blanking bolt, fixed there and then and charged me around £2.00, even seemed happy to do so.


g7jhp

6,961 posts

238 months

Friday 17th August 2012
quotequote all
Makes me want to take a rough 3.2 Carrera as a project!

STiG911

1,210 posts

167 months

Saturday 18th August 2012
quotequote all
JamStar said:
I love the clear covers that they're in in the later pictures. It's like a collection of full sized match box cars :-)
thumbup

Bladedancer

1,265 posts

196 months

Monday 20th August 2012
quotequote all
They look a bit like they've been contained for biohazard threat in those plastic tents smile

Zombie Porsche plague perhaps? Restoration is like coming back from the dead after all...

RemarkLima

2,373 posts

212 months

Monday 20th August 2012
quotequote all
So:
Bash Brannigan said:
PLEASE make this kind of thing a regular feature! Every petrol head wants to go and poke around certain companies, but it's a bit embarrassing once you're an adult...
And then:

remoh said:
stuttgartmetal said:
Push hard enough and you'll get your whole head up there.
bit of an infomercial isnt it?
I guess you can't please everyone all of the time... So it'll have to be some of the people some of the time.

mat205125

17,790 posts

213 months

Monday 20th August 2012
quotequote all
This place is my first port of call when the lottery funds come rolling in.

caveyavey

1 posts

145 months

Tuesday 21st August 2012
quotequote all
I remember well the Amersham sheds. Many Rides up there on my Grifter to see the newest fibreglass kits being put on cars I'd never drive let alone own! Does anyone remember the TVR main dealer opposite Dr Challoner's?

cjb1

2,000 posts

151 months

Tuesday 21st August 2012
quotequote all
Great article, though a shame half the posters have used it to demonstrate their incredible ignorance and ill breeding (you know who you are knucklr draggers)! Autofarm are legends, they've been there for me more than once over the years with my old 911's only too happy to chat and give advice when needed.

cjb1

2,000 posts

151 months

Tuesday 21st August 2012
quotequote all
Great article, though a shame half the posters have used it to demonstrate their incredible ignorance and ill breeding (you know who you are knucklr draggers)! Autofarm are legends, they've been there for me more than once over the years with my old 911's only too happy to chat and give advice when needed.

billzeebub

3,864 posts

199 months

Tuesday 21st August 2012
quotequote all
great article, an old 911 will be my next car hopefully

anonymous-user

54 months

Tuesday 21st August 2012
quotequote all
Got a spin with Josh Sadler once; superb driver, fast as anything and very smooth. 911s? He's forgotten more about them than most people will ever know. They're not cheap for big jobs, but the work will be done right first time, and that's very important. For everyday tasks, they're good value.