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Road Test - Jaguar C-Type Continuation

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Jaguar has painstakingly recreated the car with which won the 1953 Le Mans 24 Hours and has built 16 of them.

The secret behind glory of the car we drove emerges the instant that you slow it down and press the shiny black metal middle pedal and the Jaguar C-Type decelerates with surprising strength, so effective are its discs and their Dunlop hydraulic calipers.

It was this mighty ability to shed speed that helped it to win the 1953 Le Mans 24 Hours race. Jaguar also won in 1951; and at the first time of trying, then running with drum brakes.

Jaguar has for the first time allowed a drive in one of its so-called Continuation C-Types, a 21st-century, forensic recreation of the special-bodied Competition version (hence C-Type) of the XK120 sports car.

The trigger for this new build was the 70th anniversary of that first Le Mans victory, although this recreated C-Type is far from the first Jaguar Continuation model, with new versions of the XKSS, D-Type, E-Type Lightweight and the standard E-Type, all having been produced in tiny quantities.

In the C-Type’s case, the run is of 16 cars, and if you have a loose £1.8 million you can have one of the final eight cars. It’s an absurd price on one level of course, less so if you consider that one of the original 53 cars will cost you a lot, lot more.

When you learn of the work that has gone into the recreation of this car you begin to realise how a seven-digit price tag develops. The 3.4-litre XK engine block has been retooled. The complex Dunlop disc brake system, developed out of early-1950s aviation technology, has been reverse-engineered. Intensive detail work followed the recreation of the car in digital form from original blueprints and the measurement of original cars.

As it weighs only 1063kg, this C-Type goes rather well - and feels appealingly odd, too. The oddness stems from the car’s newness. Even aboard an expensively restored old car, you’re likely to find components that hint at its age. Not so in this Jaguar, where every old-fashioned-looking item is new and consistently so. That extends to the physical experience, too, this car feeling taut, tight, strong and rattle-free, just as a new car should.

Although it isn’t quiet. The exhaust roars and occasionally pops explosively. Yet you can easily detect the XK engine’s occasional pick-up stumble, reminding you that it’s carburettor-fed.

Stumbles are more likely from you, the driver, until you’re familiar, the synchromesh-free gearbox requiring deft footwork, as does the sudden clutch.

Still, the rack-and-pinion steering is far superior to the recirculating-ball variety of the standard XK120, which feels like you’re pushing against a very heavy item of furniture. It’s much lighter in the C-Type.

This is a car that can be made to dance in four-wheel drifts, although not by this driver, despite the steering’s accuracy and the line-tightening that a closed throttle will induce. It’s three-figure brisk – and impressively stable – on the test track’s straights and quick through corners once mastered. And a track is the best place for it, not only because that’s what the original was built for but also because this 2021 C-Type can’t legally be driven on the road.

It’s (very) expensive, but as an historical track day tool or a period racer, it’s a joy – as is merely looking at it, admiring its quality and marvelling at the fact that what appears to be 70 years old is in fact new. .

Editor: Information for this story sourced from AUTOCAR

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