XJ220

What's an XJ220 worth? I can't afford one, but would like to know anyway. Average ballpark is fine. Thanks & Happy Holidays

Reply to
Almarz
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I've seen them for as low as $100,000 US

Reply to
Tod

Reply to
Almarz

Depends upon the market. 220s were never homologated for the US market, so they're fairly rare here. In the UK and on the Continent they were sold in some numbers.

220 was a total dog as far as sales were concerned, at one point (around '93) there were a great number of them laying around in a mothballed state at Browns Lane. They were sold off a fire sale prices to get them out of inventory.

It was stuff like this and Tom Walkinshaw's involvement with the Jaguar board that drove Ford's first Jaguar executives bonkers.

Reply to
SoK66

Depends what you call 'numbers'. Was it 900 or so total.

Mainly, of course, because the economy went into recession rather than any failings with the car. People couldn't afford to take up their options.

The car is the most affordable of the supercars of that era on the second hand market, however. Certainly significantly cheaper than an F40 or an F1. Around GBP 125,000 seems to be the standard asking price.

Stunningly beautiful. Main drawback in everyday use is its width, which exceeds that of traffic calming constrictions in many UK towns. Also, some people are disappointed by the relatively utilitarian noise of its race-derived turbo V6.

Nice to see Tom Walkinshaw back in business, working with GM in Australia.

David Betts ( snipped-for-privacy@motorsport.org.uk) The Classic Car Gallery:

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Reply to
David Betts

I was under the impression that it was limited to 350.

Reply to
Almarz

Reply to
Richard Wall

Only for the people that put deposits down (back in 92,93) for a new one at a locked price.

Reply to
Tod

Because they could not sell very many of them they stopped production after around 300. Even Elton John donated his XJ220 for a charity auction years later with only 800 miles on it.

Reply to
Tod

That would be right. Long time ago . They didn't build all of them because of the recession, so around 300 total.

David Betts ( snipped-for-privacy@motorsport.org.uk) The Classic Car Gallery:

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Reply to
David Betts

Thanks. That would be right.

Well, like most supercars, many of them were bought by people who treated them as sculptures or exhibits rather than motor cars. Actually, apart from the width issue the XJ220 is very driveable. There are cars out there with a cosiderable mileage on them. At least one woman (wife of a a well known Jaguar restorer) used one as her everyday car for years....and for all I know may still do so.

All the supercars of that era had problems with sales because of the recession, including the incredible McLaren F1, so you can't really knock it on those grounds. It was, for a brief period, the fastest production car in the world and it did win its class at Le Mans before a phoney rules exclusion by the French, even though it was never intended to be a racer. No argument that it isn't stunningly beautiful either.

David Betts ( snipped-for-privacy@motorsport.org.uk) The Classic Car Gallery:

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Reply to
David Betts

What was the "phony rules exclusion" they used ?

Reply to
Tod

They claimed it should have raced with catalytic convertors in place. English translation of the rules didn't appear say that. Interpretation of the somewhat ambivalent French original by the organisers was that it did. As far as I - and most neutral observers

- are concerned, it won.

David Betts ( snipped-for-privacy@motorsport.org.uk) The Classic Car Gallery:

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Reply to
David Betts

I have seen them sell in the US for well under $200,000. In fact, when priced in that neighborhood they take a LONG time to sell. I would think for a decent example, under 10,000 miles, $150,000 would be about right.

D
Reply to
Dsybok

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