Holden Torana News

First Torana A9X auction
By Chris Riley · 08 Jul 2010
To be auctioned by Shannons at Sydney's Meguiars MotorEx on July 25, the Bathurst homologation special is expected to fetch close to $300,000.  The Palais White A9X, serial number J590981, was the very first of just 100 two-door hatch and 305 four-door Torana A9X sedans built for sale to the public between August and December 1977.It was initially one of two Holden press and promotional vehicles before being acquired by leading Sydney Holden dealer and racing driver Ron Hodgson.  And it has covered just 16,000km since new in the hands of a series of careful collector/owners.Created as an improvement of the previous L34 racing Toranas, the A9X was actually a Performance Equipment Package available on a range of LX models fitted with the 5.0 litre, 308-cid engine.  It was introduced in August 1977 to ensure its eligibility for that year's Bathurst 1000 race and was priced at a now-bargain $10,600 for the four-door Sedan and $10,800 for the Hatch.Yet surprisingly the A9X was a slow seller, leading GM-H to broaden the model's colour palette to clear stocks.  While race versions were equipped with the L34 engine, T10 gearbox, roll cage, wide wheels and long-range fuel tanks, new Australian Design Rules and Emission laws dictated that all A9X Toranas rolled off the assembly line in the same, more basic specification — fitted with Holden's stock L31 5.0-litre V8.The A9X was the first Holden to be fitted standard with rear discs and its Salisbury differential also meant the extra tall 2.60:1 final drive ratio could be used to advantage on Bathurst's long Conrod straight.  The cars were clearly identified by their new rear facing, bonnet-mounted carburettor induction scoop, one of the 100 or so differences that set the A9X apart from standard LX Toranas.The rest is history.  Although failing to spoil Fords’ Moffat Dealer Team 1-2 party at Bathurst that year, the A9X went on to become the most successful , ever built by Holden.
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My 1977 Holden LX Torana
By Mark Hinchliffe · 23 Nov 2009
She drives 150 tonne trucks at an Ipswich mine and has operated the world's biggest truck, the 350 tonne Caterpillar 797 in Moura.  But the 33-year-old Mt Gravatt mining trainer/assessor and heavy vehicle operator is proudest of her 1500 horsepower supercharged 1977 LX Torana hatchback which has just taken out Street Machine magazine's Street Machine of the Year. It's the first time a woman has won the reader-voted award, but Dow is quick to credit her father, George, for most of the work.  "Dad always wanted me to be a mechanic because of his love of engines," she says.  "I'm one of three sisters, but I'm the only one who inherited the car thing from dad. He reckons I'm the son he never had.  He used to build his engines in cars and boats and when I got old enough to drive he started building engines for me." As a trainer/assessor Dow doesn't actually fit the mining machines, but she still needs to do inspections and know what components are in the machinery.  "Dad's taught me everything I know and when we put the engine in I'm always there to hand him a spanner and do the duties he sets me."  She bought her Torana 12 years ago, paying $10,000 for the rolling shell.  "It was an immaculate car with no rust in it," she says.  "We looked for close to a year to find it and it was the most superior thing we found.  We got it in Brisbane which was lucky because we had been out west and down in NSW looking at cars.  I liked the Torana because of the look. I also liked the look of the Ford Capris, but dad said there was no way I was having a Ford because he's a Chevy man." For a while she drove the car with a 500 horsepower "street engine" which they worked to more than 600hp.  "We ran it in cruises on methanol and my crew would have to follow me in a car with a 44 gallon drum of methanol," she says.  "I once took it to the Gold Coast and back for a cruise and it used over 200 litres of methanol which is actually cheaper than normal fuel." But the street engine didn't last long.  It was replaced by a small block Chevy 370 (6 litres) which has been supercharged to more than 1500hp. It cost more than $50,000 to buy and develop.  "There's too much power to dyno it so I don't know how much power and torque it actually has," she says. With the new engine on board, and keen to keep his daughter from getting into trouble on public roads, her father steered her towards drag racing as well as motor exhibitions.  "I wanted something that size that wasn't too big of a car because weight is an issue with racing," she says. Dow estimates that the car has cost her almost $200,000 including the spare engine _ an aluminium 350 (5.7-litre) Rodeck.  The total bill includes more than $5000 on interior trimming, $15,000 for the rear end and $8000 for the "Passion Purple" paint alone.  "It's a $20,000 paintjob because it's transparent and requires several layers with the colour underneath determining how dark it is," she says.  "The car took two-and-half years to rebuild and now that it's finished, we're racing it every couple of months," she says. "I've always been wanted to make it to this level and prove that I can drive it and to prove that we did it as a father-and-daughter team."  Dow has won two Pro Street Shootout events at Willowbank Raceway with a top speed of 275km/h and won her class at the Summernats in Canberra earlier this year. Dow's magazine title win reaped $15,000 in prizemoney which Dow intends to spend on a trip to the US with her father.  "It's not going back into the car. Dad and I are going to America to see some machine shops that make engine parts, tour some factories and I'd also love to go to Vegas."
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Classic car prices cooling off
By Neil McDonald · 28 Aug 2009
The heat has well and truly come out of classic prices for hyper-expensive collectible cars with prices for the famous Ford Falcon GT-HO dropping in value up to 30 per cent over the past few months. The values are a far cry from 2006 and 2007 when speculators and collectors were paying stratospheric prices of up to $800,000 for Phase III versions of the Falcon GT-HO.Prices for other proven Bathurst pedigree cars like the Holden Torana XU1 and A9X, as well as the Valiant Charger E38 and E49, grew in value because of the Phase III phenomenon. But prices for some of Australia's most collectible muscle cars are cooling as investors keep their hands in their pockets because of the global financial crisis. The decline is not just restricted to the top-end cars either.Classic retailers say that some collector cars that several years ago would have fetched $200,000 are now worth $100,000 and the impact has been felt further down the price scale.But Mike Selby, owner-operator of the Sydney-based on-line company Australian Muscle Car Sales, says even though prices have softened, a mint condition Phase III Falcon GT-HO will still fetch between $500,000 and $600,000.He says even rarer versions may command more but it's a buyers' market. "We've just sold one very good Phase III for $550,000 and we've got one we're selling for $600,000," he says. "But lesser cars without logbooks and that are not perfect will struggle."Selby says a low mileage Falcon GT-HO Phase III in exceptional condition will still command big money, particularly because very few survive. "They only build about 300," he says."There are about 180 left and of those there are probably between 12 to 20 cars with less than 50,000km on the clock. Those cars will command really big dollars."Selby says there is a distinct reason why people opt for the famous Bathurst cars like the Torana XU1, A9X, various Falcon GTs and Valiant Chargers. "They are really buying what you can't buy ever again," he says. "They were cars you could buy at your local dealer, drive to Bathurst, and win a race. That is the mystic of that era. They were factory built race cars and that has not been done since."Selby does not believe that some of the newer cars like the Group A Holdens and Fairmont Ghia ESP models will command the same respect, or prices, among collectors. "They are certainly rare cars and interesting but the reason people were buying the GTs and XU1s is because they were something very special," he says. "I think that is an era that's gone."He says as with all cycles he believes the time is right for smart buyers to re-enter the market. "The market has come down a fair way, in line with what happened in the financial world," he says. "But I think it's flattened out now and holding steady," he says "I don't see anything going up yet but there's definitely more interest now than there was before even if cars are taking longer to sell." Specialist classic seller Paul Sabine of the Brooklands Classic Car dealership in suburban Melbourne echoes Selby's view of the classic slide. Brooklands specialises in rare European vehicles and Sabine says he avoids Australian muscle cars because of the over-inflated prices."Some of the later-model Europeans like Porsches, Ferraris and Mercedes-Benz have dropped off a bit," he says. However, he says demand is still strong for low-mileage early model Europeans and finding early examples is getting harder. Demand is outstripping supply but prices for these cars haven't dropped much," he says.Sabine says one segment that has experienced substantial price plunges of up to 30 per cent are the "middle American cars". "The garden-variety Mustangs, Thunderbirds, Camaros... there are just too many out there now," he says.He says the market is awash with imported left-hand drive daily drivers with people hoping to restore them and sell them for profit. "The bottom line is that the restoration costs still keep climbing," he says. "While parts are available for Mustangs the labour costs still haven't dropped. Why would you spend $60,000 doing up a Mustang that's going to be worth $40,000 and you've also paid $15,000 or $20,000 for it?"Apart from road-registered classics, original race cars are also still commanding top prices. "There are very few around," Sabine says. The national auctions manager for classic auction house Shannons in Melbourne, Christophe Boribon, says although the Bathurst cars have dropped in value, prices for some of the European cars being auctioned have remained buoyant.But Boribon admits that even values of some of the Shannons collectibles have dropped about 10 per cent since the global financial crisis. "But unlike the muscle cars, the European cars are in a less speculative area," he says. "We sell passion and hobbie cars, we don't sell the A to B cars."Selby says the market still has some way to go before it is fully recovered. "What you'll find is that once confidence returns to real estate and sharemarket, things will pick up," he says. "The stock that is there isn't moving really quickly but it is moving." He says the only people who have survived the shakeout unscathed are seriously rich collectors who have been able to hang on to their cars. "There have not been any firesales," he says. Tomorrow's highly collectible car could be sitting in your garage. If one of the original Australian muscle cars from the 1960s or 1970s are out of reach some later model cars have collector potential. And you might already be driving around in them.Early examples of the humble Ford Fairlane, Valiant Pacer and Safari wagons and various Falcons from the early 1960s like the XK and XL are becoming more desirable. Prices can start from as low as $10,000, rising up to $30,000 low-mileage mint condition locally built Aussie cars.Even the humble Holden Torana sedan and hatch are now considered collectible with growing interest in original Torana SL and SS hatchback with its "hatchback hutch" portable tent from 1976 to 1978. Very few were made and carsguide has heard of one country NSW collector who found one in mint condition, including the tent, for $15,000.Some of the older Subarus, Mazdas and Hondas are even worth a look. Early Honda Civics are relatively cheap but if you're after the S600 or S800 sportscars - if you can find them - expect to pay top dollar. The same goes for some of the older rotary-engined Mazdas. Some of the first MX5 sportscars are now considered collectible too. Early examples of Subaru's Liberty GT, if they aren't bastardised with big wheels, garish interior gauges and oversized exhausts, plus the quirky looking SVX also have collector potential.European cars like the Saab's 900 series hatch, particularly the Aero models from the early 1990s, have strong reputations and the Pininfarina-designed Peugeot 406 coupe is something of a sleeper. Cars like the Morris Minor Traveller, Ford Capri RS3100, Datsun 240Z and 260Z and Volvo 1800ES are out there but are becoming harder to find. Various older Mercedes-Benzes, like the 1970s 280SE and the 280SL Pagoda are popular but the Pagoda is rare today and commands big prices.If all else fails early versions of the Citroen DS, Mini Cooper, Alfa Romeo GTV, MG and Triumph, some Jaguars, the BMW 2002ti and 6 Series and early E39 3 Series iS models. Shannons' Christophe Boribon reckons later model limited-edition cars like the Mitsubishi Evo, the original R32 GTR Skylines, Toyota MR2, original two-door Subaru STis and the Mazda RX7 Series 8 have potential as tomorrow's classics.Further up the scale Boribon says the Audi RS4 wagon, BMW M3 CSL and even the Mercedes-Benz AMG65 SL Black Series are likely to become more desirable as the years pass. "It really comes down to whether they're limited edition models though," he says. "It's the same for Ferraris and Lamborghinis; they have to be limited edition models."Boribon, Selby and Sabine agree that a car's rarity and its condition are paramount for true collectors. "An original condition car, whatever it is, will fetch a good price," Sabine says. There are few specifics about what will, or won't, become a collectible, he says. If very few examples of a particular model exist and its in original condition, it can be more desirable, he says."But if you absolutely like the car you're looking at then I'd say buy it," he says. "Life is an experience. "The one tip is to buy the best car you can afford, whatever it is." However, he has a word of warning for those expecting their classics to drive like a 2009 model. "They often don't have power steering, handle particularly well or have the creature comforts you get today," he says.
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Muscle car masters on video
By CarsGuide team · 26 Aug 2009
This year's Muscle Car Masters at the Sydney raceway on September 6 will celebrate the birth of one of our muscle legends: the Ford Falcon GT-HO. Allan Moffat and John French - drivers of the first ever Ford Falcon GT-HO to win a race - will be on hand to get reacquainted with the machine that brought it home for them at Sandown in 1969.They will be joined by other racing legends, including Colin Bond, Fred and Chris Gibson, Harry Firth, Leo Geoghegan, Alan Grice, Kevin Bartlett, Jim Richards, Barry and Glenn Seton, John Harvey, John Bowe, Murray Carter, Phil Brock and Bob Holden.Based on the road-going XW Ford Falcon GT, the GT-HO was released in August that year and given just one task … win Australia's most grueling touring car event, the Bathurst 500 mile production car race. It delivered the goods, and then some, winning races and championships throughout the early 1970s.The Muscle Car Masters event is a celebration of Australia's rich motoring heritage: the cars, the drivers and a whole era of motoring, Moffat says. "The 1960s and '70s were defined by cars that you could race on Sunday and buy in the showroom on the Monday - Muscle Car Masters is no different."Restored race vehicles and road registered examples will be at the event for all to see," Moffat says. The celebration at Eastern Creek Raceway will include the GT-HO's legendary rivals - the Valiant R/T Charger and Holden's Monaro, Torana XU-1 and Torana A9X, among a field of other muscle cars.The main event on the day will be an international face-off between Australian and New Zealand, while other features include the Biante Touring Car Masters, New Zealand Central Muscle Cars, Group C and Group A Bathurst touring cars and Historic Touring cars from the 1960s and '70s.The day also includes a show and shine display of Aussie muscle cars and … of course … a homage to the legendary Ford Falcon GT-HO.For further information visit www.eastern-creek-raceway.com
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My 1971 Holden LC Torana
By David Fitzsimons · 06 Aug 2009
Jackson remembers Brock's Bathurst glory days fondly and he was trackside for some of the great man's wins. So, when the chance to pick up a rare original Torana similiar to Brock's early cars came up Jackson couldn't resist the temptation. Having said that, its not exactly the same. Brock debuted a six-cylinder LC Torana at Bathurst in 1970 but it had a larger engine, a lot more tweaking and two less doors than Jackson's standard 2600 four-door sedan, but there's enough left to keep the sentiment strong. "I'm an extremely staunch Peter Brock and Torana fan" he says proudly. "I've always loved Toranas, the style, the character. They handle really well, they're comfortable and they're easy to work on." Jackson is involved with both the Lion's Pride Holden and Sydney Torana car clubs where he rubs shoulders with fellow Torana fans. The LC was the first of the Australian-designed Toranas. The earlier models were re-badged Vauxhalls from England. Nearly 75,000 LC models were made between September 1969 and early 1972. He is only the second owner of this white LC since it left the yard at Loders in Caringbah (Sydney) way back in 1971. The car stayed in the same family for nearly 40 years. Jackson bought it three years ago when old age and fading eyesight were restricting its loving owner from driving. She swapped the Torana for an electric scooter. "The lady who owned it wanted someone to look after it. She wanted the car to be kept in the original condition. "Her daughter said they had some young people come to look at it but when they asked "what are they going to do with it, they said they were going to paint it another colour and put a V8 in it." But Jackson's vow to preserve the LC won him the day. Despite its age the car has done only 61,00 miles (98,000km) on the clock and has been garaged for all of its life which accounts for it being in remarkably good original condition. "It runs beautiful," says Jackson. "It hasn't had much use." When he got the car it only needed the three-speed auto transmission serviced and the radiator core replaced. While the paintjob had some minor dents and scratches and had faded to a yellow off-white colour he didn't want to respray it. Instead he had it repaired, the scratches painted and the whole car was then buffed to bring up the colour to its original sheen. Inside the car the red upholstery is also in remarkably good order. Exposure to the sun has created some marks on top of the back seat but he has covered that up. While the car is far from concours condition it is an authentic representation of how it looked when new 38 years ago. The car is on historic vehicle plates and he only drives it to car shows. "I take it to car shows so people can enjoy it as it was." he says. "Some of them have driven similiar cars in its day or have had such cars in the family." And Jackson has even found a Holden lion mascot to go with the car to display at shows. When Brock and Co sat on the grid at Bathurst all those years ago the faithful Holden mascot, Roary the Lion, was with them to rev up Holden fans and upset Ford and Chrysler supporters. Jackson's Torana will be on display this weekend at the All-Holden Day show at the Hawkesbury Showground opposite the RAAF base at Clarendon. It starts with a swap-meet today and expands into a car display show tomorrow. Organisers say the show is one of the world's biggest displays of Holdens. Money raised will be donated to charity.
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Brock's Beast brought back
By Mark Hinchliffe · 03 Dec 2008
The latest addition to the growing memorabilia surrounding the legendary racer is a working replica of his 1971 Holden LJ Torana GTR XU-1 known as "The Beast".It has been lovingly brought to life as a tribute car by motoring enthusiasts Dale Booth and John Oost and commissioned by Peter Champion for his Champions Brock Experience museum near Yeppoon.Booth is confident the car is a 90 per cent faithful replica right down to the same wiper blades, steering wheel, seat, headrest and a V8 engine mounted in the middle of the car right next to the driver."It gets pretty hot and noisy in there," Booth said. "I drive it with a rag tied around my leg to protect it from the heat."The original Formula 5000 engine had so much torque it twisted the chassis making the doors difficult to open and close."It's the worst driving position ever; I don't know how Brock managed to drive around Bathurst with that thing next to him."Fans of the late Brock can get a close look at the Beast at 12.30pm on Saturday at Queensland Raceway when it is presented for a close inspection by Harry Firth who gave Brock his break in racing.Booth said he believed the original XU-1 no longer existed, so he sourced most of the artwork and technical details from photos, Ebay and talking with people involved in Brock's racing career."I even did all the signage with a brush not stickers like they do today," he said."We're still looking for a Speco wooden gearshift knob and a few other bits."I suppose Harry will tell us how close we are."Booth would not reveal how much the car cost to build, but said replica wheels specially made from the original moulds cost $2600.He said he had always been a Brock fan with a house and garage devoted to Brock memorabilia.Booth's next replica project is the restoration of a 1979 A9X Torana like the one in which Brock won Bathurst and set a circuit record on the final lap, despite leading by six laps.Visit: championsbrockexperience.com.au 
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Targa a treat for TV veteran
By Monique Butterworth · 30 May 2008
SHE'S one of the most enduring stars of TV. Kerri-Anne Kennerley, known to people in the industry as KAK, first appeared on the small screen in 1963.Since then she's done almost everything in entertainment, from hosting roles to a brief acting stint in the soap The Restless Years.  She has also performed as a cabaret singer, worked behind the mike as a radio announcer and even spent time in the corporate world as chief executive of Sydney radio station 2CH.But the Brisbane-born star is now best known as host of Channel 9's Mornings with Kerri-Anne.  She has plenty of motoring experiences but she rates one of the latest, a nail-biting co-driver run with Australian rally champion Simon Evans in the Targa Tasmania road race, as her favourite motoring memory.What was your first car?A second-hand beige Torana with no heating, airconditioning or radio.What do you drive now?A Toyota Kluger four-wheel drive.Do you have a favourite drive and who would you take?From Sydney to Hope Island, in Queensland, with my husband John and Harvey, my dog.On average, how far do you drive a year?I don't drive a lot, probably only a few thousand kays.Do you have a favourite motoring memory?I loved navigating in the Targa Tasmania rally with champion Simon Evans. We did 500km in a TRD Aurion Toyota. Driving at 200km/h around the mountains and roads of Tasmania was spectacular in the safe hands of Simon.What would you buy if money was no object?An Aston Martin.What music is playing in your car?Michael Buble and Christina Aguilera.How much is too much for a new car?In reality, a car is a practical purchase to give independence . . . so do not spend more than you can afford.What should be done to make driving safer?Safety should be the key and I hope one day all cars will have anti-skid brakes, ESP and airbags.Are you sponsored by a car company?I've worked with Toyota for 10 years.
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Scott's TV career finds top gear
By Stephen Downie · 16 Jan 2008
After being a smiling model on quiz shows The Price Is Right and Temptation, McGregor has landed a gig hosting the Foxtel reality show, Blood, Sweat & Gears."It was always the next step," McGregor says. "I meet people saying they love Temptation, but it's so hard to get your personality across when you're just smiling in the background."A graphic designer by trade, 26-year-old McGregor spent the past two-and-a-half years in Nine's Temptation family with Ed Phillips and Livinia Nixon.McGregor admits he's not "the craziest car fan," but didn't hesitate when it came to auditioning for BS&G."To be honest, I got a phone call from one of the guys at Foxtel asking me if I would like to audition for it," he says. "I never knock back an audition, even if I don't think I'm suited to it."He may not be a revhead, but the Aussies on the show certainly are."They're absolute nuts. It's like a religion to them. Since I have had the gig, I have had so many people come up to me and tell me a story about their cars," McGregor says.The show pits seven guys and their beloved cars against each other.The contestants are;Andrew: Japanese Import (Nissan 200SX)Andy: American Muscle(Chevy Corvette)Dave: Classic Australian(Holden LJ Torana)Dimitri: Classic Australian(Ford GT Falcon)Dominic: Performance Rotary (Mazda RX7)Jeremy: Australian Muscle (Holden Commodore VL HDT)Mohamed: High Performance European (Ferrari 350 Modena)Official judges are Ian Luff, a former race driver, and Nathan Luck, a motoring journalist. Each week, the revheads and the cars will be put through a series of tests. While the drivers will know who wins each stage, they never find out their placing on the leaderboard. McGregor says it adds to the tension."They don't know who is doing well and the challengers get a little angry and eaten up inside," he says."These guys think their car is the best. But they find out a few things about themselves as drivers - maybe they're not as good as they thought. I think it will get people into the show."While McGregor is enjoying his debut as TV host, he is unused to seeing himself as a presenter."You're always your own biggest critic and it is still kind of strange when I see myself. But I love hearing feedback, even when it's bad. It makes you better at what you do."
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Holden Torana tough love
By Ashlee Pleffer · 11 Jan 2008
For some car fanatics, it's all about building a pristine show car. For others, it is the engine and the way it performs at the track that counts. And then there are those who want a dressed-up street car. But Torana owner Ian Williams decided to cover all bases. “My favourite thing is I can actually drive it on the street and do other things with it as well,” he says. Williams has transformed a 1976 LX Holden Torana into a real beauty. His interest was sparked years ago when his sons got their licences and he bought both a Torana for about $2000 each. That began their passion for the old-school Holden and, before long, they were modifying their cars and buying more. Then Williams succumbed to the muscle-car craze. “I said, `Boy, they're nice cars, I'm going to do one up one day too',” he says. When the perfect car presented itself in 2002 Williams couldn't resist. “My wife's son in Queensland had the car we have now,” he says. “He wanted to sell it 'cause he wanted his garage space back, so my wife bought it for me for $10,000.” While the LX Holden Torana had already been modified, Williams wanted to go further. So he stripped it down, pulled out the motor and completely rebuilt the car from scratch over the next four years. “There's nothing from the original Torana other than the body, and doors. Everything else has been replaced or modified,” he says. “The whole car is pretty much a new car. If there was late technology to put in it, we did.” The 58-year-old says he always admired the A9X models but as they came out in 1977, they fell under new emission regulations. So Williams was in search of a car released prior to then to give him more freedom in what he could do to the engine. He started with the 1976 LX model and added some Bathurst heritage, with A9X character traits, as well as integrating modern motorsport technologies to make the ultimate jack-of-all-trades Torana, which now proudly wears the number plate 2TOUGH. And with a 536hp (400kW) V8 engine, Brembo brakes, 17-inch wheels, a 100-litre fuel tank and a $13,000 paint job, among many other changes, it really does live up to its name. “I wanted a car that was completely legal, so I got the engineers involved to ensure that it was,” he says. “In my younger days I used to get pulled over by the police and get defected all the time, I don't want to go through that again.” Williams says the car has had about $80,000 worth of work, including the recent replacement of the manual transmission with a four-speed automatic, improving its track time. “We think it is a bargain. It can now out perform most modern factory sports sedans, and retains the eye-catching, classic styling of what we believe is the best Bathurst muscle car ever built,” he says. Williams says you could spend your money on a new Monaro or SS Commodore, which might be as quick around the race track, but there are more benefits to owning a Torana. “Monaros are more reliable and have better fuel economy, but everybody's got one,” he says. “The A9X-looking car is rare. Everywhere you go you get looks. You don't get that in a new Monaro or SS Commodore and that's all part of the enjoyment of having a cool car.” Williams says while it can't be the best show car, race car and street car all in one package, the Torana still has “the capability to not embarrass itself” on the track and also manages to attract a whole lot of attention. And it gets the thumbs up from the previous owner, Williams' stepson. “I took him for a drive in it and he was stoked, he was really happy about it,” he says. While Williams loves his Torana and enjoys Holdens, he says he appreciates good engineering, no matter what make or model. “Cars are like people, there are a variety of cars and a variety of things people do to them, it all adds to the rich tapestry of life,” he says.
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GTS Monaro tops auction
By Staff Writers · 25 Oct 2007
A fully restored Sebring Orange 1969 Monaro GTS 350 coupe sold at auction for $200,000 this week.It was the highest price paid for the 32 cars on offer at the Shannons 2007 Australian International Motor Show Auction.Second best was a low-mileage 1972 LJ Torana XU-1 finished in Lone Orange that went for $143,000.The sales follow a similar auction in September when a record $450,000 was paid for a 37-year-old XW Ford Falcon GTHO.The V8 muscle car was bought for $4933.25 on April 24, 1970, in Mackay.When the car came up for sale again on at the Shannons Auction it was passed in at $620,000.The immaculate Monza Green 1971 XY was expected to beat the $683,650 record price, which a Queensland buyer paid for a similar car earlier this year.Owner Steve Ribarevski, 30, is still confident the muscle car classic will sell on the private market.He bought the fully-restored GTHO for $200,000 three years ago saying it was a promise he had made to himself years earlier.“I was told by everyone at the time that I was the biggest goose in town for paying that much money for the car but I had promised myself I would own one before I was 30,” he said.“I don't look that silly any more.”It could even turn up at the first Shannons auction, which is to be held at a Brisbane Motor Show next February.Shannons Queensland business development manager Philip Ross; said the auction was the beginning of what he hoped would be the first of many auctions in Queensland.“Generally speaking if a car is passed in at auction it turns up at the next one, so the GTHO could be there,” he said.“We're looking at having about 30 cars at the show."“I've been out west and had a look in some of the sheds at the stuff that may come out of the woodwork."“I'm thinking that we know there is a lot of interesting stuff in Queensland that owners weren't prepared to send to Melbourne or Sydney auctions, but may send to Brisbane because it's closer to home."“I have no idea of what we have so far, but we like to have a good cross-section of vehicles.”The auction vehicles will be on display at the show from February 1-10 with the auction at 2pm on the Sunday.The last Shannons Auction held reached a record $3.75 million with $2.64 million achieved for the 62 number plates; and more than $1.1 million paid for the eclectic mix of Australian; US muscle cars as well as American and European classics on offer.It was the best result achieved by Shannons in a combined single day sale in the company's 26-year history of classic auctions.It was beaten only by the $4.1 million achieved in last year's RTA plate auction at the 2006 Australian Internation Motor Show. The highest single sale of the auction was $245,000 paid for the right to display the early NSW number plate 78.Personalised Plates Queensland also holds an annual plate auction on the Wednesday of the Brisbane Motor Show, last year raising more than $531,000 for the Road Safety Fund of Queensland.  Does it make sense to waste your life savings on a 30-year-old car when for the same money you can buy 13 brand new Holden Barinas?   
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