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Standard Vanguard Anyone?
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Rootes75



Joined: 30 Apr 2013
Posts: 4175
Location: The Somerset Levels

PostPosted: Fri Feb 07, 2025 10:09 am    Post subject: Standard Vanguard Anyone? Reply with quote

https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/405525999425?_skw=classic+cars&itmmeta=01JKFTAN1K75AQG2JJGY68WYQ0&hash=item5e6b3baf41:g:rw4AAOSwKBFnpTew&itmprp=enc%3AAQAJAAAA8HoV3kP08IDx%2BKZ9MfhVJKn7wKwSlVIcmUwpW4QakJAufiBeJaW5NqC9W8pwBSFKXgu0v3h%2B7la6LFXua62vRtt%2BrpOTAsPyxM812XKOgoP%2FFKdyNO396WeqMs8RKL2IJCDjUJuYJf1eIqFtGRQQjZPhOLwSVyfyepbMHNmNRKcy30stheVTkvizDoho006fmwKlX85%2Fo%2BG%2Fr0d55iqk4yPVPOL%2FyY%2BEZ62JsBMyenpI20TpXsYUterOX%2F6saqGU7B2yETjHPUw3Fk4yw3Ai%2BKtQ7bj%2FrKmSfgsi5QwrBr9LzmK5DF%2BEOPxHOF9%2BNQ5S4A%3D%3D%7Ctkp%3ABk9SR5bRqvqbZQ
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Ray White



Joined: 02 Dec 2014
Posts: 7143
Location: Derby

PostPosted: Fri Feb 07, 2025 12:01 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Pedant alert!

It is described as a phase 11 ...but I think it is actually a phase 1a.
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badhuis



Joined: 20 Aug 2008
Posts: 1469
Location: Netherlands

PostPosted: Sat Feb 08, 2025 1:10 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

These are the kind of cars that still might be picked up "for a song" (cheap).
* A long lost make. People are afraid parts are a problem. They are but can usually be found at owners clubs, facebook groups, ebay, etc. Yes it will take longer to find something.
* A four door not sporty saloon. Who would want that.

Costs are too high to aim for a full restoration, it will never be worth it. Most people would not want a car with chrome this pitted.
However if you do not care for "as new" then it is possible to drive in a car for not much money. I did this for years - picking up cars that were not popular with the greater public, and run cheaply.

However one big disadvantage for this car and many 40s and 50s cars, is that they were never really made for motorway journeys (at least 60 mph). For me that meant I could not use it as a daily driver so I dismissed most of them.
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Rootes75



Joined: 30 Apr 2013
Posts: 4175
Location: The Somerset Levels

PostPosted: Sat Feb 08, 2025 2:29 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

My thoughts when I see cars like this is oily rag it. An easy entry into the classics scene in a car that will get some talk and is not your everyday regular classic.
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Ray White



Joined: 02 Dec 2014
Posts: 7143
Location: Derby

PostPosted: Sat Feb 08, 2025 4:37 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

A little light reading about the once ubiquitous Standard Vanguard...courtesy of the Society of Automotive historians....



This Snapshot of the new Standard Vanguard was at its first motor show ? but it was not in Britain.
This picture was taken at the Brussels Salon d?Automobiles held from 14 to 25 February 1948.
There was a strong Belgian connection to the launch of the Standard Vanguard: Imp?ria of Nessonvaux were assemblers of Standard and Triumph cars under licence.
This was an important launch for Standard and they clearly made the most of it. To quote from the Motor Commerce report:

?The Vanguard made its first public appearance at Brussels, and was certainly a sight that gladdened the heart of British visitors.
Mounted on a pedestal at the corner of the Standard-Triumph-Imp?ria stand, it stood out in its ?champagne? finish, and attracted admiring crowds.
There was much publicity in Brussels for the Standard and Triumph makes during the period of the show,
and even the tramcars in the city carried, on their overhead poles, little pennants advertising them.?


The Standard Vanguard was announced in July 1947. It was completely new, with no resemblance to previous models.
It was Standard?s first post-Second World War car and intended for export around the world. It was also the first model to carry the new
Standard badge, a heavily stylised representation of the wings of a griffin.

In the wake of the Second World War, many potential customers in the UK and in English-speaking export markets had recently
experienced several years of military or naval service, and therefore the car deliberately carried a name
that would resonate strongly with potential buyers.
Vanguard came from HMS Vanguard, the last of the British Navy?s battleships, launched in 1944 amid much media attention;
permission to use the name involved Standard in extensive
negotiations with senior Royal Navy personnel.

The styling of the car was intentionally modelled on the one from the 1942 Plymouth, although in 1952 some Soviet newspapers
claimed that the vehicle?s styling was also partly inspired by the GAZ-M20 Pobeda.


The car began to roll off the assembly lines in mid-1948, but all production was destined for export.
An estate car and a utility pick-up version were announced in September, and then a 12-cwt delivery van.
For Belgium only, some convertibles were made by Imp?ria. Spats were fitted over the Vanguard?s rear wheels from September 1949.

Beneath the modern styling the chassis was conventional, with independent suspension at the front with coil springs,
and a live axle and leaf springs at the rear. The brakes were cable-operated, and column gear change made the most of the interior space.
The four-cylinder OHV 2,088cc engine was used until the appearance of the Six model in 1960.
It was essentially the same powerplant as used on the Ferguson tractor.


At first, transmission was through a three-speed gearbox with synchromesh on all forward ratios.

Laycock-de-Normanville overdrive was announced at the end of 1949 and became available in June 1950.


A sad postscript occurred in July 2021. Belgium experienced terrible weather, and the old Imp?ria factory at Nessonvaux,
still home to a small car museum, was one and a half metres under water; the building had partly collapsed, and all the doors were gone.
The collection of books, leaflets, drawings etc. of the Belgian Imp?ria brand were all lost. The fate of the test track is not recorded,
but in 2018 it still existed in part: one of only three rooftop banked test tracks in the world (the others being Lingotto in Turin and Chrysler in Buenos Aires).
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