RE: PH Service History: Let Me Be Your Vantasy

RE: PH Service History: Let Me Be Your Vantasy

Sunday 16th September 2018

PH Service History: Let Me Be Your Vantasy

Vans are cool, as evinced by the Transporter used to lap the 'ring. What more excuse do we need to find some cool old ones for sale?



I don't know about you, but I've got quite the soft spot for a van. Now, of course, I'll grant you that this is probably because I don't have to spend my working day in a slightly knackered Transit that emits more black clouds than a coal-fired power station. But still, whenever I do get behind the wheel of a van, I have to admit to a childish exuberance at helming something big, clunky and - when not fully loaded - actually quite quick.

Indeed, that latter fact has been proven already, first by Sabine Schmitz lapping the Ring in a Transit a la Top Gear, and latterly by this video of touring car ace Rob Austin doing the same sort of thing in a VW Transporter. And frankly, that's all the excuse I need to go ferreting around in the classifieds for some cool vans to show you lovely people.


First up, what if I wanted to do a Nurburgring lap record of my own? Well, because I'm rubbish at driving quickly, I'd have to cheat a bit. Enter this sporty little Fiesta Sport Van. In black, and furnished with the accessory bodykit, it's already ticking my boxes, and while it isn't exactly cheap at £10,499, it's covered just 18,000 miles - which means it stands out in the usual, leggy Fiesta van crowd.

Under the skin, of course, you get the same chassis that made the Mk7 so brilliant, and a reasonably peppy 95hp engine. That's not enough, obviously - but it's only a quick chip away from 120hp or so, or if we really wanted to go all out, whap a bigger turbo and some ST suspension on there. The result should be something capable of going Bridge to Gantry in less than 10 minutes - even in the hands of a complete klutz like your humble correspondent. And, let's not forget, a deeply cool little van.


In awesome van world, mind you, it's not always about going fast. In fact, sometimes it's just about looking good. For which you'll need something like this utterly fabulous Volkswagen Type 2 splittie. Granted, you might have to do something about the current livery, if you don't want to drive around promoting the people you've bought it from, but then again there are few things cooler than a gently patinated split with a giant 'Porsche' logo emblazoned down the side of it.

Inside, it's anything but patinated, with a full retrim and some basic camping accoutrements out back; in short, this sounds like a cracking van that can double as a camper and will turn heads anywhere you take it. It's also an original right-hooker, which only adds to the appeal, plus there's a new engine with twin 40s and a selection of other knowing tweaks. The want is strong for this one.


What else is there? Ah yes, here we go. Now, rarely do the words 'cute' and 'van' go together - but I think this Mini combines them about as well as I've ever seen. I'll grant you that we've now moved rather far from the Nurburgring lapping territory from whence we came - indeed, were you to try such things in this, I suspect you'd topple over as soon as you tipped it into Tiergarten. But the Nurburgring isn't everything - and come on, who couldn't fall in love with this adorable ice cream van?

It looks to be in immaculate nick, with period-correct graphics and paint job - and under the skin it's only done 61,000 miles. Frankly, I can't imagine you'll find a cooler ice cream truck going. If that's your sort of thing. Ahem.


From one piece of British Leyland history to another. And this one's quite different - but I felt like throwing it in simply because I love a survivor. They don't come more survivor-y than this Austin Maestro van. Imagine, if you will, how few Maestro vans survive at all; how many were tools, to be used rather than cherished; how few were therefore cared for; and of the proportion that were, how many would still have fallen prey to rubbish build quality, rust, sinking values or theft.

Through all of that, this terrifically beige, achingly utilitarian 1.3L has survived. And not just survived, but done so in immaculate fettle, with just 23,000 miles on the clock. Crikey.

Obviously, an artefact like this should be preserved just-so, a piece of history the like of which you won't see again. And yet... and yet there's a little part of me that can't help but imagine it with a Rover 220 Turbo lump and diff up it, combined with proper suspension, a roll cage and a set of black Compomotive THs all round. On which note I think it's time to draw this week's installment of Service History to a close, before I get any more stupid ideas.







Author
Discussion

Johnspex

Original Poster:

4,342 posts

184 months

Sunday 16th September 2018
quotequote all
A la, whap.. Dear oh dear.
Any chance of writing in grown-up's English?

Agent57

1,655 posts

154 months

Sunday 16th September 2018
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I used to really like the old Escort van from the 1980s.

TrivsTom

129 posts

167 months

Sunday 16th September 2018
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Chap local(ish) to me has an Ital van. Very cool thing!

Nabbott

294 posts

136 months

Sunday 16th September 2018
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Jesus. The Maestro is sold.

It’s a brave soul that drops 7 bags on a Maestro Van. No further indication of “it takes all sorts” I guess.....

loose cannon

6,030 posts

241 months

Sunday 16th September 2018
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I can tell you something that maestro van at 7 grand will drive about 10 times better than that vw van and it’s probably a third of the price smile

anonymous-user

54 months

Sunday 16th September 2018
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Clio 172/182 engine and running gear swaps into the Kangoo vans can be quite amusing smile

J4CKO

41,543 posts

200 months

Sunday 16th September 2018
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That Maestro van is ace, as the article says, a piece of history and I love the fact that a few survive, thousands of Cosworths and Integrales of the period which is very nice but I love to see the more mundane stuff as well, seven grand is keen but thats an excellent point above VW buses ad vans, they go for ridiculous sums and are generally a bit st in most ways, but they have a following.

lukeyman

1,009 posts

135 months

Sunday 16th September 2018
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This is probably a daft question... but can you get normal insurance on a van/pickup? Just I've always been redirected to get commercial cover quotes for whatever reason.

ToothbrushMan

1,770 posts

125 months

Sunday 16th September 2018
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its already at terrible with a 1300 petrol but liveable with.......with the rough as a badgers bum Perkins 2.0 diesel it would be truly awful. probably one of thee noisiest diesels ever fitted to a small car/commercial. rattle is not word.

WJNB

2,637 posts

161 months

Sunday 16th September 2018
quotequote all
An old rusty van how perfect for supermarket shopping meaning you couldn't care a toss if some big arsed Yummy Mummy extracting her kiddies flings open the door of her carpeted Transit van look-a-like against it. So very liberating. Better still use it for work & stick two fingers up at the poseurs & badge snobs in the office, then if you suffer from speedsters where you live park it on the road in such away that they have to slow down & negotiate round it. They can ding it & break the mirrors to their hearts content.

MiniWhisperer1981

1 posts

67 months

Sunday 16th September 2018
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The Mini IceCream 'van' is based on a mini pick up.

MrGTI6

3,160 posts

130 months

Sunday 16th September 2018
quotequote all
charltjr said:
Clio 172/182 engine and running gear swaps into the Kangoo vans can be quite amusing smile
I think someone on here has done exactly that! I bet that would do it in under ten minutes!

sr.guiri

478 posts

89 months

Sunday 16th September 2018
quotequote all
loose cannon said:
I can tell you something that maestro van at 7 grand will drive about 10 times better than that vw van and it’s probably a third of the price smile
If you wanted something that drove well, you'd buy neither smile

JD2329

480 posts

168 months

Sunday 16th September 2018
quotequote all
sr.guiri said:
loose cannon said:
I can tell you something that maestro van at 7 grand will drive about 10 times better than that vw van and it’s probably a third of the price smile
If you wanted something that drove well, you'd buy neither smile
Alternatively get a Mk3 Mondeo estate which will drive 10 times better than either. For a tenth of the price of the Maestro smile

shortar53

548 posts

273 months

Sunday 16th September 2018
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Amazed I won the race to post this... (images and van not mine)
hahaha



AlexC1981

4,923 posts

217 months

Sunday 16th September 2018
quotequote all
ToothbrushMan said:
its already at terrible with a 1300 petrol but liveable with.......with the rough as a badgers bum Perkins 2.0 diesel it would be truly awful. probably one of thee noisiest diesels ever fitted to a small car/commercial. rattle is not word.
At least it had a little poke to it. Years ago a place I did some temping at had a Maestro van and a couple of Escort vans. I think the Maestro was a turbo diesel compared to the non-turbo Escorts, but the Maestro was always everyone's first choice as the Escorts were so slow.

MalcolmSmith

1,726 posts

75 months

Sunday 16th September 2018
quotequote all
ToothbrushMan said:
its already at terrible with a 1300 petrol but liveable with.......with the rough as a badgers bum Perkins 2.0 diesel it would be truly awful. probably one of thee noisiest diesels ever fitted to a small car/commercial. rattle is not word.
Back in the day my firm had a few of these, the Perkins was a lot better than the 1.3, suited it well. Engine noise at speed was secondary to the road noise from the rear.

jeremyh1

1,358 posts

127 months

Sunday 16th September 2018
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Had a Maestro on courier work back in the day it was very reliable !

Zad

12,698 posts

236 months

Sunday 16th September 2018
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I see your Escort Cosworth van and raise you:



That ice cream van is nowhere near as cool as the one in Scrappy Races built by the Chaos Crew. Range Rover chassis, powered by TWO V8 engines.

https://youtu.be/9HyQCdo70qw?t=40m20s


priley

504 posts

188 months

Sunday 16th September 2018
quotequote all
Maestro vans...an ex-BT one (1.3 petrol) was my first vehicle some 25+ years ago. Managed to get it to 185000 until the gearbox threw the towel in.