Hello all, I have usually owned classic cars from the 1970s, mainly Italian or British cars, and I have owned various Betas since 2012, my current one being a 1979 1600 Coupe that is in pretty good condition. My interest in Lancias has been growing, and earlier this year I bought for the first time a car from the 1960s, a 1962 Appia Series Three. The car is the same age as I am.
This Appia appears to have been in Germany in 2011, and may have been imported to the UK about five years ago. The seller claimed that it had been in a museum, but I have no info as to this. He bought the car at an auction late last year, registered it with DVLA earlier this year, had some work done on it (not very good work) by someone claiming to be a Delta specialist near Reading, and then advertised it for sale. The car was and is in a good state in terms of bodywork and interior, both of which appear largely original, but it was in a very poor state mechanically, with everything that could perish having perished and all sorts of problems with ignition, fuel system, electrics, and brakes. It had very ancient Michelin tyres that might well be from the 60s or 70s. There is a 1970s looking Ford dealer oil change sticker on the driver's door shut.
Many days work over two months by the excellent Mark Compton, a mobile mechanic based in Gloucestershire whom I recommend highly for all old cars, have turned what was merely an ornament into a reliable and fun car.
The car now has new Pirelli Cinturatos, fresh oil in engine, gearbox and differential, and many new parts. Huge thanks to the Appia Consortium for expert advice and for rapid supply of spares, and thanks also to eBay Italia which has come up with all sorts of things. If anyone wants the old Michelins for show purposes only, please let me know.
The car has been up to an indicated 130 km/h on the M40, but is mainly used for flitting about on A and B roads in south Oxfordshire, occasionally overtaking 40 mph dawdlers.
Next in the list: an alternator, some minor paint repairs and get the original Blaupunkt radio to work.
Current fault: the driver's door has been stuck in the locked position since Saturday - serves me right. I almost never lock classic cars.
The Appia sparks joy. Pics below, and a link to a short film that my wife, a TV director, ran up on her mobile phone last weekend.
https://vimeo.com/471786165The password is Appia