If you’ve spent any time on the PistonHeads forums over the last two and a half decades, your experience was likely shaped by Big Al. Whether he was gently steering a thread back on track, greeting a new member, or quietly cleaning up spam in the dead of night, Al was the ultimate custodian of the site.
Al passed away on Monday June 1st, 2026. True to the incredible dedication that defined his time here, his last login was recorded just the day before. Right until the very end, Al was looking out for the place he loved.
The numbers behind a PH legend
To say Al was a prolific member of the community would be an understatement. The data from his 24 years on the site paints a picture of unparalleled commitment.
- Member since: 28 October 2002
- Total Posts: 69,336 (An average of ~2,890 posts per year)
- Threads Started: 158
- The Mod Tiller: Over 46,900 posts were made in the private Moderators forum alone – meaning roughly 72% of his total activity was dedicated purely to volunteering, helping the team, and keeping the peace.
While his peak activity was between 2008 and 2012 (where he averaged up to 5,700 posts a year), he never truly slowed down. His final forum post on 9 May 2026 was in the Website Feedback forum, dutifully reporting a 403 error on the site's wiki. He was on the tools until his final days.
A TVR man through and through
When Al wasn't keeping our lovely rabble in check, he was living and breathing British sports cars. He was a TVR purist to the core, spending thousands of posts across the Chimaera (2,425 posts) and Tuscan (828 posts) forums, alongside general TVR gossip. In the early 2000s, his threads were the blueprint for what makes PistonHeads special: warm, community-driven discussions about car buying, technical fixes, and organizing local dinner parties.
Tributes
To the public, he was the firm but fair moderator. To those who worked alongside him, he was a larger-than-life character who asked for nothing in return but a well-ordered forum and the occasional Black Tie and Pie.
PetrolTed: "Big Al stepped up when I was in need of help, probably not realising he’d just taken on a role that was to last for 20+ years! The Gassing Station was alive and often kicking and corralling the members had become too much for me alone.
He gave years of his time to moderating PistonHeads, and the community ran all the better for it. Many will have viewed him with annoyance as he attempted to keep things on an even keel, but the alternatives would have been utter chaos! He did it with care and good humour, and in person he was all warmth and always a big grin. He asked for nothing in return beyond the love of the place and the occasional pie. We owe him our thanks."
RacingPete: "I always pictured Big Al as Frank Butcher from Eastenders... a larger than life character who was always very supporting and lovely. On and off throughout the 19 years I have worked on this brand, he has always been a constant, helping supporter of PH, and never afraid of asking for extra mod tools to control our lovely rabble of posters. As Ted says, the place would be chaos without his experienced hand on the mod tiller. This place is a little smaller without him operating behind the scenes – the grandfather of all the mods, he will be missed."
The man beyond the keyboard
Though Al was a private man, his professional and personal lives perfectly mirrored why he was so brilliant at anchoring our community. In his day job, Al was a health and safety professional – a man who literally went around businesses ensuring people were safe and following best practices. As Paul Garlick noted, "He was the guy who forced you to wear a Hi-Vis, and that’s why he was SO good at rule enforcement."
Away from cars and compliance, Al’s great sanctuary was a beautiful woodworking studio in his garden. He was an incredibly talented craftsman, turning raw wood into beautiful furniture and intricate carvings. It was a patient, precise passion – much like the decades of care he poured into PistonHeads.
Thank you, Big Al. PistonHeads is more than just servers and code; it is built on the character of the people who inhabit it. For nearly a quarter of a century, Al Barton was the bedrock of this community. We owe him an immeasurable debt of gratitude. The Gassing Station will keep on turning, but it will be a little quieter, and a little less bright, without our grandfather of moderation at the helm.
Rest in peace, Al. We'll keep the rabble in line for you.
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