Smashed 1960 Jaguar XK150 3.8 S Drophead Coupe Is One Valuable Hunk of Junk

Never judge a book by its cover, they say. Sometimes, you shouldn’t judge even if the book has been hidden from view for more than two decades after being involved in a serious head-on collision against a tree—like this once-gorgeous Jaguar.

Not that it still needed to be said, but a car’s value is not always directly dependent on the car’s condition. As far as project cars go, or historically relevant pieces that have somehow escaped through the cracks and have suffered neglect, the real value is in these cars’ potential. Someone saw plenty of that with this 1960 Jaguar XK150 S Drophead Coupe.

We all love a good barn find story, and this is also one of those, at least partly so. This Jaguar, of which only 69 were produced in right-hand-drive during the entire series, spent the past two and a half decades in a barn, waiting for its owner to restore it. That same owner, its third until then, had crashed it on a rainy night in 1996, when he lost control on a country road and slammed head-on into a tree.

The owner survived with few injuries, and he took the mangled Jaguar into dry storage, thinking that, one day, he might bring it back to life. He never did do that, but the wreck got a new lease at life last weekend, when it was sold at auction by Bonhams. The hammer price was £90,000 ($127,500 at the current exchange rate), nine times the lowest estimate—and nearly double of what a concours-ready model fetched these days.

Bonhams said that the Jag “looks worse than it is,” but even so, the new owner will have his hands full with it.

When new, the XK150 S was a mighty impressive machine. Built between 1959 and 1960, the 3.8 S version brought several improvements to the standard XK150, including the 3.8-liter engine that developed 265 bhp when new. Back in the day, this Jaguar came with a zero to 60 (96.5 kph) time of 7.3 seconds and a top speed of 133 mph (214 kph). The XK150 was also the first to feature four-wheel disc brakes, along with several design modifications.

Related Posts

1968 Chevrolet Impala Barn Find Seeks Redemption with Encouraging News Under the Hood

A 1968 Impala that’s been sitting in a barn for God knows how long hopes to impress with an intriguing package that paves the way for complete…

Unrestored Survivor: A 1959 Chevy Impala That Deserves a Special Place, Not on the Street

Chevrolet presented the Impala as a concept in 1956, and it needed just two years to bring it to mass production. The company didn’t want to rush…

1964 Chevy Impala Forgets the Taste of Pavement, Keeps Hood Secrets Well-Guarded

With a new generation already on the radar, the 1964 Impala didn’t change much from the previous model year. It retained almost everything from the 1963 sibling, with few…

1961 Chevy Impala Revived, Yours for the Cost of an iPhone

Chevrolet Impala launched in 1958 to lead the GM brand’s efforts to get back on the map, especially after so many years of total Ford dominance. The…

Enigmatic 1958 Chevrolet Impala Convertible Appears as Barn Find Ready for Restoration

Chevrolet first presented the Impala to the world in 1956 as a concept car. The public’s response was positive, so General Motors accelerated the work on the…

Captivating 1960 Chevrolet Impala Surfaces After Extended Storage, Unveiling Some Hidden Secrets

Chevrolet Impala came to be in 1958, but the GM brand wanted to use baby steps to make sure the new nameplate made itself noticed. Impala debuted…