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Standard Vanguard - the British 1940s car designed for the world 

idriveaclassic
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Today's video is about the Standard Vanguard phase 1 - let me know what you think and don't forget to like and subscribe for future videos on mid-century cars
Check out channel sponsor Bidding Classics to buy yourself a classic, or perhaps sell the one in your garage at home to free up the space for something new: bit.ly/BiddingClassicsIDriveAC...
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Standard Vanguard
If you’re watching this from outside the UK and know somebody who owned one or owned one yourself, I’m not entirely surprised, because the Standard Vanguard was as the marketing material said ‘Made for Britain, designed for the world’
In post-war Britain when this car came to market, life was a world away from what we know now. We still had the late Queen Elizabeth the second’s father on the throne, rationing was still in place for some items and along with that, Britain was in a period of recovery from the Second World War.
And why do I tell you this? Because this idea of global appeal was linked partially to a government policy of the post war era - steel quotas. For manufacturers to access steel, they had to pledge to sell a huge percentage of their cars abroad, I believe it was 90% or thereabouts.
With that in mind, customers in the UK would be waiting years for their cars whilst overseas relatives could access the same car much quicker. In fact, these were hard to come by in 1951 and this example we’re testing today is one of the earliest examples sold in the UK and one of The oldest survivors.
In fact, in 1948, the discerning buyer is advised the cars are for the export market only! Another interesting fact for these phase 1s is that they were a big hitter in Germany, accounting for more than 70% of sales of British cars in 1950.
Another point to note on this, is you’ll notice when we look around the inside, the dash is symmetrical either side. This has been designed with the export market in mind so it can be swapped to LHD with minimum fuss. You see this on Morris Minors too, if you want a familiar car which also employed this mindset.
Power and performance wise we talk about later on and I give you the manufacturers specs as per the literature sold with the car, but it’s worth noting you may see the top speed I give you later on argued because when it was tested by journalists of the time it only reached a max of 78.7mph.
The car was designed by Walter Belgrove, who is sometimes called the man with the magic pencil or the first real British designer. When designing the Standard Vanguard, he’d been told by his superiors to visit London and take design influence from the Plymouth. But where do you find a Plymouth in 40s Britain? The American embassy of course! Belgrove then visited the site and sketched out the Plymouth and from those sketches, the Vanguard was born.
Well loved at the time yet hardly talked about today, the Standard Vanguard was the first all new car to come from Standard after the Second World War. It deserves a lot more attention and recognition for the love and in today’s video I hope we do justice to a car which transported millions of people all over the world.

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1 апр 2023

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Комментарии : 615   
@lornablewettandlee504
@lornablewettandlee504 Год назад
I fell out of one of these in the late 50s when I was 5 or 6 years old. My dad was driving and my mum was in the passenger seat, I was in the back. No seat belts in those days! I was singing "how much is that doggie in the window" And for some reason I opened the rear door, we were doing about 25mph according to dad, in London traffic. My dad remembered seeing me in the rear view mirror bouncing down the road with cars swerving to miss me, which thay all did. I was taken to hospital with cuts and bruises and it was a week before they discovered I had a fractured arm. What should have alerted the doctors that there was something wrong was my language. I wonder where I got that from! I still remember bits of it, I shall be 70 in July.
@pip393
@pip393 5 месяцев назад
Hope you have a long wonderful life!
@johnwalker283
@johnwalker283 2 месяца назад
As a kid I remember the terrible handling.
@derekwalker3594
@derekwalker3594 Год назад
I was born in Kenya, Vanguards were very popular there, an aunt & uncle owned one which they loved so much they exported it back to England when they came home & used it to tow their caravan all over Europe. My step father had one too, a lovely car. One thing you do not mention is that it was one of the first mass produced British cars to offer overdrive as an option With this option it is well able to take modern motorways in its stride as in effect it then has a semi automatic 5 speed gearbox making it a very relaxing car to travel in, & surprisingly fuel efficient too.
@skippmclovan1135
@skippmclovan1135 Год назад
Just imagine what an engine that would have been with two extra cylinders on the end as a big six..!! It would have easily topped the BMC 'C' engine then.. : )
@merseymarineimages6283
@merseymarineimages6283 Год назад
@@skippmclovan1135 The last of the Vanguards was indeed a 6 cly in that they put the early Triumph 6cly in the car making it the Vanguard six. My father had and automatic vesion while I had a 1959 mark 3 estate with overdrive which I took to France, Spain and Portugal as well as being a daily driver until a tooth on third broke away. They were also prone to braking the back bearer as had happened to mine before I got it. The bearer had been replaced by a section of Dexion (SP) attached each sill and a section of a scaffolding running accross the car hold the back of the gearbox up. Try that these days!
@kawasaki5187
@kawasaki5187 Год назад
@@merseymarineimages6283 Great story, my Uncle was a great fan of Dexion and it brings back wonderful memories, I keep buying Meccano !
@robt2151
@robt2151 Год назад
My parents had a van version in Kenya in the early 60s, a neighbour had the estate version. I still recall the registration of ours, KAJ 912, my mother learnt to drive in it.
@leopoldonotarianni8663
@leopoldonotarianni8663 Год назад
Were Ford Zephyr, Zodiac or Consuls popular too ? In your location
@vijaymujumdar5617
@vijaymujumdar5617 Год назад
My father, a forest officer in central India owned a black Standard Vanguard in Nagpur from 1952 to 1955. I remember riding in that vehicle with parents and siblings. A beautiful car indeed. He had purchased it from a retiring British Railway Officer.
@stephenbower5394
@stephenbower5394 Год назад
😊😊
@JohnDavis-ed5sg
@JohnDavis-ed5sg Год назад
I bought one of these for £10 when I was an optimistic 14 year old. It was one owner and had been sitting in an underground garage for years. I was such an inexperienced mechanic that it took me days just to get a wheel off, and I had no tools except a Halfords screwdriver and pliers (still in my toolbox 50 years on!). Of course I spent most of the time sitting in the comfy seat pretending to drive. I never moved it so I expect it was scrapped when the garage was redeveloped. A shame as looking back I can see what a sound original car it was.
@rickshaw2779
@rickshaw2779 Год назад
The value of hind sight, I did a very similar thing with a Phase One Hillman Minx I was given. Very hard to find these days, but keeping these things just wasn't practical unfortunately.
@millbaymoll2420
@millbaymoll2420 Год назад
Same thing for me and two mates, all 15 year olds, bought a non running Austin Big 7. We traded it for a 7 Ruby Saloon which ran. We kept it in my dads garage and as we didn’t have drivers licences, almost killed ourselves with carbon monoxide when we ran the engine!
@millbaymoll2420
@millbaymoll2420 Год назад
My dads favourite. A beautiful black car, like the one in your video, followed by a grey one and then another grey one with the later notchback body. I remember the body roll on winding roads, seen also in the video. My TR4 has the same Massey Ferguson derived engine; a nice link with my dad and the old days!
@jamesdouglaswhittaker4612
@jamesdouglaswhittaker4612 Год назад
Had two of these beetle backed beauties . Thought they were wonderful . Solid as a rock , very comfortable and a great caravan tow car .
@skippmclovan1135
@skippmclovan1135 Год назад
The Standard Vanguard 2,188cc 4 cylinder engine was bullet proof as they say and with a good heft of torque. I believe they used replaceable cylinders liners, so a very long lived engine was possible, and they did a sterling job in the Fergusson 28 tractor with a smaller Zenith downdraft carburettor and with rpm governing of course. Many Fergie 28's still run perfectly on their original engines from seventy years ago..!
@outfoxthefox
@outfoxthefox Год назад
mine was 2032 cc
@davidjones332
@davidjones332 Год назад
Their only weakness is that they're a wet-liner engine, and in old age the seals tend to fail, especially on engines that have been left standing too long. However, they can be modified to eliminate the seals which should ensure they will run reliably for years.
@skippmclovan1135
@skippmclovan1135 Год назад
@@davidjones332 They were also used in the Triumph TR4A in 2138cc form i seem to recall, but i think they were 100cc less capacity in Standard Vanguard form (??) ..that engine in the Fergie 28 as we called them in the day (NZ) was a sheer delight to use..easy to maintain ..easy on fuel ..never gave any trouble whatsoever ..they just went and went and went ..for years and years, mind you that always regular pony club use, light work etc : )
@martinsmallwood9605
@martinsmallwood9605 6 месяцев назад
Best bit is you can buy new liners and all the parts because so many fergys are still around . They are all Tea 20's . What is called the 28 is the later 28 hp version with the bigger bore .
@skippmclovan1135
@skippmclovan1135 6 месяцев назад
​ @martinsmallwood9605 i loved using a low-timed red '28' during the sixties as a teenage kid for our suburb's local Meadowbank pony club on a very extensive part farmland part bush-clad area on the then outskirts of Auckland.. it was used for everything you can think of ..including pulling out smaller to mid-sized trees ..fencing ..feeding out ..grass cutting ..trenching ..transporting bales ..to fill it with petrol i took it 15mins either way on the road to the nearest BP, as it was road registered. Never missed a beat ..always started with immediate throaty vigour, and i absolutely lavished it with spark plug, HTs and contacts, filter, oil, grease, and air maintenance. it was bought for $500 in the early 60's, about the same value as a 15yr old 6 cyl family car would have been, such as Velox or a Zephyr. Good and simple days. Now gone. The contemporary stuff is now 100% 'controlled' by AI and satellite . . ? ? ? ?
@JohnSmith-yv6eq
@JohnSmith-yv6eq Год назад
I was the rear seat passenger in a Phase 2 saloon which had a crash with a 1965 Mk3 Ford Zephyr when the ladty driving drifted over the centre line and we sideswiped the Zephyr...destroying the Zephy's entire driver's side from the headlights to the taillights.....a write off...and it also deflected into the ditch on that side of the road. The Vanguard had a 2 inch area of paint rubbed off the driver's mudguard.....
@tapaskumarbanerjee6863
@tapaskumarbanerjee6863 Год назад
My grandfather bought a Standard Vanguard 1950 model from MacNeil Barry Coal Co. Before retiring, he handed over the car to my father who maintained it very nicely. Then we brothers and sisters learned to drive on It. Superb car with wonderful suspension. Had a lot of joy in driving. Miss those days very much. Nostalgic.
@iankings6405
@iankings6405 Год назад
I was privileged enough to be driving in the 50s still driving today, had so many of the old cars, best thing ever was the starting handle on a frosty day. such happy memories.
@schaumyb7445
@schaumyb7445 Год назад
This a a great review Steph! My Grandparents bought one new in Australia in 1950 as the waiting time for an Australian built Holden was too long. I think that they were partially built in Melbourne at AMI , which made many Brands from CKD kits such as Triumph, AMI Rambler and Toyota as well as others. My memory of 1960's roads around Adelaide saw many Vanguards, they seemed indestructable.
@ldnwholesale8552
@ldnwholesale8552 Год назад
I agree, fairly common in Adelaide in the 50s and 60s. Largely forgotten by the mid 70s And yes they were Australian assembled,,, back when we had a motor industry
@adow77
@adow77 Год назад
@@ldnwholesale8552 The road from Adelaide to Pt Wakefield seemed littered with rural properties with Vanos rusting away in the backyard. We used to wonder about the mythical, very persuasive Vano salesman who must have worked this patch in the 50s.
@simonblair-beal3952
@simonblair-beal3952 Год назад
I agreed, a lot have survived here in South Australia. Great torquey engine, very similar to the Fergy Tractor.
@rowejon
@rowejon Год назад
In the 1970's I had a 1953 model, with overdrive on 3rd & the optional HMV valve radio with 4 presets. It had had one owner for 21 years, 2nd owner for a few months & I was the 3rd. I loved it.
@tetchuma
@tetchuma Год назад
That car looks so stylish! I love the rear wheel skirts. Very streamlined
@caw25sha
@caw25sha Год назад
I wonder why they went out of fashion. In our efficiency obsessed modern times I'd have thought they made a worthwhile contribution to aerodynamics.
@Snaptophobic
@Snaptophobic Год назад
With Standard's links to Ferguson (of tractor fame) I believe the Vanguard was the first British car to be offered with a Diesel engine option.
@idriveaclassic
@idriveaclassic Год назад
A new fact thank you!
@ldnwholesale8552
@ldnwholesale8552 Год назад
Fergys came diesel but not to my knowledge ever in Australia. I knew of one decades ago with a 4cyl Perkins but not factory
@michaelsnaidero1671
@michaelsnaidero1671 Год назад
​​@@ldnwholesale8552 oh yes they did I own one and still use it in my vineyard, it's a 1954 built tractor and runs like a clock ,heaps of them were imported and command a premium price above the petrol and tvo models,they are a great tractor with plenty of power to accomplish all jobs on the farm especially with the Ferguson implements made exclusively for them .They have the Standard 20 C Diesel engine that went into the standard Vanguard as well .
@allenjenkins7947
@allenjenkins7947 Год назад
One of the reasons why Vanguards were popular with Australian farmers was interchangeability of engine parts with the "Grey Fergie". If you had a breakdown in the middle of planting or harvesting, you could "borrow" parts, or even a complete motor from the family car to get you back in the paddock while you waited for Ferguson parts to arrive. A particularly useful feature was the ability to pull the wet sleeves out of the Vanguard motor and give the Fergie an instant "rebore".
@peterrogers9257
@peterrogers9257 Год назад
Yes. The standard motor company designed and built the diesel engine, in the hope that Ferguson would used the engine and they could use in thier cars. I would be keen to know what was the max engine revs of the diesel engine, when fitted in the car? As the tractor max out at 2200rpm
@peterjohnson7290
@peterjohnson7290 Год назад
I had a Phase Two Vanguard in 1961 and it was Built like a Tank! If i remember correctly it was 2088 CC, Just a small point about the radio, you had a Box of Valves in between the GearBox and the Dashboard as the Transister had not been invented yet!! Your film brought back a lot of memories Thanks Very Much.
@ianbutterfield1019
@ianbutterfield1019 Год назад
Bought one of these in 1967 as my first car for £40 after passing my test and apart from the Fred Flintstone floors and 24 miles to a gallon it was a great car KDU 249 left some good memories.
@garrington120
@garrington120 Год назад
The Standard Vanguard was one of the many cars our dad had between 1954 and 1970 and was probably the favourite of us 4 children because there was plenty of room for Mum Dads and the four of us on our Sunday trips from Alton Hants to Hayling Island and West Wittering .
@ThreenaddiesRexMegistus
@ThreenaddiesRexMegistus Год назад
My father did a delivery run in 1962, Reporoa, New Zealand in a Vanguard Standard utility (pickup for US). It was exactly the same grey colour.
@SkepticalSteve01
@SkepticalSteve01 Год назад
Bought an old Phase 3 Vanguard in 1972 when my son was born, and it was quite a nice beast - “she’ll climb mountains in second gear”, one of my workmates observed correctly. It performed domestic duties for us quite well, buzzing reliably around central Auckland, New Zealand. Until one day it blew its head gasket. But I was young, borrowed a torque wrench from my father-in-law, and replaced the damn thing without much trouble. I wouldn’t dream of attempting such a thing with my Subaru today - back in those simpler times the cars seemed to be a lot more easily worked on than they are now. Standard Vanguards have completely disappeared from New Zealand roads now. After a while somebody thought it’d be a good idea to import used cars from Japan, and that’s what we’ve been doing for at least the past 50 years.
@Beanerds
@Beanerds Год назад
My Dad had one many many years ago in New Zealand , we used to call it , ' The Humpybum Vanguard ' ,, I remember as a child with my 4 brothers and sisters going on trips to the beach , visit relations etc and as I recall , none of us ever got car sick in this car , my older Brother was bad for car sickness , but the Humpybum did not . Thank you for the memories .
@albertseabra9226
@albertseabra9226 Год назад
As a child, I used to see a great deal of Vanguarda here in Portugal in the late 60s. Not brand new cars, obviously. I was inside a couple of them, owned by Friends of the Family -- quite comfy and roomy. Car design had changed dramatically. And yet the vehicles still looked OK -- most of them, very well kept. In sum, the Vanguards aged quite well. Thank you for this interesting video -- a trip down Memory Lane.
@outfoxthefox
@outfoxthefox Год назад
I had one for my first car, and what I remember most was it was exceedingly good as a courting car.
@michaeltreadwell777
@michaeltreadwell777 Год назад
That was brilliant Steph - obviously ! No idea when I last saw one of these in any guise. Over 60 years ago, I remember 3 people having these, in the Beetle Back, Booted Version and the Estate Version. They just look so solid and reliable, and as I remember, so comfortable. Thanks for sharing this Steph - what a great find. Take care 🙂
@chrissmith7655
@chrissmith7655 Год назад
Hi, my Dads mate had a Vanguard Pickupin the 60's, the only one I have ever seen. Many thanks love your presentation of all your uploads.From Nr Liverpool.
@graemeleigh
@graemeleigh Год назад
Yeah, here in OZ... my uncle had one through most of the 50s and early 60s and a bloke I surfed with in the 70s had one. Genuinely go-anywhere vehicles.
@sysmith9910
@sysmith9910 Год назад
I remember the old man, had a Vanguard, back in early sixties; a big car compared to the Morris's, Austins, other British marques, here in Oz back then. We were parked outside a shop one day, when the starter motor jammed; - Dad just got out the old crank handle & hand cranked it to start. It was fortuitous that Standard retained some of its antique features!
@NSBarnett
@NSBarnett Год назад
We had one of these when I was aged about 4 to about 7 -- seeing the ashtray in the middle of the back of the front seat (ie, for smoking rear seat passengers, or for curious kids to fiddle about with) and the catches on the quarterlights made me recall them from, what, 65, nearly 70 years ago!
@PeterBlackwood
@PeterBlackwood Год назад
A green Vanguard was our family car in Australia through most of the 50's. Looking over your car brought back many memories. Ours had a few differences, notably fold down sun visors. Also, ours had no red reflectors on the back fenders until the law required them and Dad fitted them himself.
@joesprinks4215
@joesprinks4215 Год назад
My broths law boat one when they came back from Canada many years ago was an absolute pleasure to ride in.
@robdy1386
@robdy1386 Год назад
My dad had two Standard Vanguards back in the 1960s, one was the estate version. My first car was a Citroen Traction Avant light 15,then I had two vanguards ,but they were very thirsty vehicles, never the less I loved them, All were ex army/RAF vehicles bought at auction from Ruddington.
@michaelawford7325
@michaelawford7325 Год назад
We had a Standard Vanguard from 1953 to 1960, thinking back it featured in many happy memories of that time, when having a car at all in Britain was unusual. I particularly remember touring Scotland with a caravan too small for our and my uncles's family, so my brother and me had to sleep in the car, and got into trouble for leaving the radio on and running the car battery flat.
@MrModelworx
@MrModelworx Год назад
These always remind me of a Dinky model my late Dad gave me when I was a child, it was blue and I kept it for many years, no idea where it is now mind you!. Excellent video as always Steph.
@briancritchley5295
@briancritchley5295 Год назад
I am a car nut born in 51 ( Australian) never owned one but knew people who did, they were a tough car.
@johnadams3730
@johnadams3730 Год назад
My friends dad had a Beetle back when I was a child.I owned one for a while when I was 22, brilliant car.
@mototakahe836
@mototakahe836 Год назад
Stumbled on this thank you so much . A friend of my Dads had one and I remember riding in it . I am 76.
@adamclarke7394
@adamclarke7394 Год назад
I've only just discovered your channel, and you've hooked me as a subscriber! Growing up in Tasmania, we had one of these as our family car when I was a boy. My late father fitted "winter tread" tyres on the back because we lived in an area prone to snow. Not once did it ever leave us stuck. It even showed a clean pair of heels to a few four-wheel drives. Dad sold it, and the new owner drove it until it ran out of petrol one day on his farm. It never moved under its own power again. He left it sitting there to rust away. What a waste! I just did a quick tally of the cars my parents owned from the time I was born and the time my father passed away, and I accounted for 19. The split was interesting because there were 5 each from the UK and the USA, 4 Australian, 2 from Germany, and 1 each from France, Sweden, and Korea. His taste was certainly eclectic! It will be interesting to see if you come across one of our models from Down Under, and what you make of it. Keep up the great work!
@tjm3900
@tjm3900 Год назад
Sometime around 1970 the ministry of defence sold off a bunch of these that I guess had been mothballed. It was funny to see these new looking old cars on the road.
@sidewaysid
@sidewaysid Год назад
My Uncle had one, he took his Mum, my Mum, and me to Blackpool for a day out but the big ends went on the way, we had to abandon the car and catch a train back home, he got the car collected, but it never ran again, it was plonked in his garden and stayed there, me and my mates loved it, we used to pretend we were driving it, I can still smell the interior, it stayed with me all this time from 1960
@garyfrancis6193
@garyfrancis6193 6 месяцев назад
Is this English?
@robinburn4974
@robinburn4974 5 месяцев назад
Yes ?​@@garyfrancis6193
@robertwoodliff5622
@robertwoodliff5622 26 дней назад
​@@garyfrancis6193...... very English ... Odd that .., Blackpool ...
@drwho534
@drwho534 Год назад
What a memory!...(a vague one at that) as I was only 3 when we first immigrated to Canada from Glasgow but this was dad's first car here in Canada. Thanks for another great ride and the memory!
@idriveaclassic
@idriveaclassic Год назад
Really?! That’s so cool!
@paulboyle6857
@paulboyle6857 Год назад
There was one of these racing a few years ago(yes really!!) in the HRDC series.Same colour as yours & with the moniker HMS Vanguard! Underneath,of course,it was all TR3 with about 160BHP but still with column gearchange.Don,t know who has it now but worth investigating. I have seen an estate version in the Rugby area where I live.Wonderfull looking cars.Cheers.
@Apollo949
@Apollo949 Год назад
Excellent video. I've always wanted to know more about this little beauty.
@daveleo7248
@daveleo7248 Год назад
Love your vintage car reviews. Informative and very pleasant.
@allanmollison6971
@allanmollison6971 Год назад
Very nice car and lovely paintwork, thanks again Steph 😊👍
@johneast7987
@johneast7987 Год назад
My Dad had a 1953 model (Reg MNC 843) but an estate car. It was in that colour and had the same grill but it didn't have the aerial retractor. He had a lot of problems with the gear linkage getting all crossed up so bonnet up and fiddle about with them! Being a Barry Bucknall fan he changed the trafficators for direct replacement orange flashers and fitted Irving front seat belts. Triumph TR2 engine I believe.
@les8518
@les8518 Год назад
Fantastic. Love your video. I worked for a Standard Vanguard in New Zealand. One I would like to mention. The accountant who also worked for the dealer. The gear change lever in his Vanguard was on the right hand side of the steering wheel. Not for getting that NZ drove on the left hand side the same as the UK. It was the only one that I ever saw with it.
@philipblick8887
@philipblick8887 Год назад
We had them in New Zealand (Aotearoa) my father owned one earlier than this model, his had a right hand gear-change lever and small Lucas headlights.
@paulchappell
@paulchappell Год назад
What memories your video brings! Growing up in Canada, I had a Dinky toy model of this Standard Vanguard in the early 1950s. (Might it have been a Corgi as another comment says his was?) i always thought the wheels looked too big for the body but no, they were similarly, seemingly over-big on the real car. Nevertheless I thought the car looked much like my grandfather's 1948 Plymouth Deluxe. What a shock to learn from you in the video that the design brief for the Vanguard was that model of Plymouth! Great video, Steph.
@nickhorten97
@nickhorten97 6 месяцев назад
Superb presentation. Engaging and knowledgeable. Keep up the good work!
@davidsmith5523
@davidsmith5523 Год назад
My dad had one of these. His first car was a 1927 Rover. All his cars were old when he got them by the way. The Standard Vanguard was black. I can't remember the car but my older brother can. It's nice to see this vehicle still going.
@johne6081
@johne6081 Год назад
Quite the history lesson, as well as serious attention to detail -- very informative.
@stratsw
@stratsw Год назад
Lovely Chanel, thank you so much. Just subscribed😍
@kittenmisho7744
@kittenmisho7744 Год назад
Yes indeed, you gave me great memories with this car. Thank you
@bilko529
@bilko529 Год назад
My dad was an mt driver in the raf in the early fifties and he drove one as a staff car . He spoke very fondly about it .
@leopoldonotarianni8663
@leopoldonotarianni8663 Год назад
Steph I absolutely love your presentations. You are truly talented and creative in your reviews. Entertaining and informative. You are so articulate and appreciative of vintage.
@danieleregoli812
@danieleregoli812 Год назад
What an incredible car that old Vanguard is Steph! Thank you so much!
@geoffbarnes9175
@geoffbarnes9175 Год назад
I used to live in Wauchope, NSW, Australia. There were many Vanguards sold in this district. One Vangard driven by Bill Edmunds lead the round Australia rally, in about 1955, over horrendous roads for quite a time until it broke a shock absorber or spring. We had a TEA Ferguson with a Standard 4 cyl motor. Great memories.
@profrumpo
@profrumpo Год назад
Oh fantastic I love these especially the estate version, and what a splendid example. Terrific review many thanks😊
@philipdasilva6287
@philipdasilva6287 Год назад
Great stuff. Loved cars and classics all my life. Never knew about this one. As they say, you never stop learning!
@frenchfriar
@frenchfriar Год назад
I was almost as excited to see you post a new video as you were to drive this car, Steph! What a beauty she is, too! Obviously kept immaculately well, to still run so quietly and sound so good. What a beast, too, for a British made car. Huge interior, wide, firm stance, and still a nice high one for running through muddy country roads. It looks so comfortable and well thought out. And such a delight to see you again, too, Steph.
@m1pete
@m1pete Год назад
I agree, and the cars nice as well.
@ronturner5560
@ronturner5560 Год назад
Yes, a Frenchman always recognizes beauty, albeit a man of the cloth.
@terryjacob8169
@terryjacob8169 Год назад
Loved how various forms of the Vanguard's four cylinder, push-rod, engine subsequently powered Triumph TR2 thru to TR4A sports cars, along with petrol versions of the ' little Grey' Massey-Ferguson tractor. These days, if you know your stuff, and have the money to spend, you'll get 170-180bhp in racing trim out of a vintage Standard/Triumph 2.1litre engine.
@Jaxs2
@Jaxs2 Год назад
That's a car I used to adore... never seen any for a long time ... fantastic to see one ..thank you ... appreciated Steph 🙏
@lloydbelle3406
@lloydbelle3406 Год назад
My late father had a Standard Vanguard in the West Indies (St Kitts) before he came to England in the mid-fifties. My dad never owned a car in the UK, so this video is the closest experience of my dad's car, all those years ago. Thank you.
@glen1555
@glen1555 Год назад
My dad had a Standard Vanguard when I was born in the 1950s. I nearly bought one in the mid 1970s as a project for £80
@idriveaclassic
@idriveaclassic Год назад
Gosh really?! So many people with direct memories of these
@davemiller2987
@davemiller2987 Год назад
I love this video! My family had vanguards from 1949 through to 1960 (we live in Canada). My parents had a 49, 51, 55, 56 and a 60. The 1960 was kept the longest, and I drove it for a while in the early 70s. Sad to say, our Canadian winters (namely road salt) finished it off. The motors in those cars were derived from the Ferguson tractor as you mentioned, and were practically indestructible. 20:00 They used a version of this motor in the early Triumphs and early Morgan’s. The cars were 20:00 comfortable, and would hold their own at 60mph. Good on gas, too. The heater was OK, except on the coldest days. A great car that almost nobody around here remembers.
@victorlyford-pike6100
@victorlyford-pike6100 Год назад
It was the other way round, Ferguson used a Standard Vanguard engine. My father was the Standard representative in Uruguay so we had all of them, a Standard Eight, a Standard 14, a Vanguard Phase 1, a Phase 2 and a Phase 3 so I spent all my childhood and after in Vanguards
@neodonkey
@neodonkey Год назад
Great review as always. I've probably said this before but Steph has such a great fashion sense and her outfits always complement the car she's reviewing so well. Gorgeous car, I've never seen one of these before.
@johnpritchard2772
@johnpritchard2772 Год назад
What a treat to have this car review and test drive, brilliant!! So enjoyable, remind me of the column gear change (Austin Cambridge A55) ant sound of the engine was just a pleasure to the ear.thanks Steph!!!!😁
@gryfandjane
@gryfandjane Год назад
Lovely episode, Steph! I’m looking forward to the Jowett.
@SuperHeatherMorris
@SuperHeatherMorris Год назад
My dad had one of these in the mid 1950s and I think it was true to say it wasn't his favourite car. I remember going on holiday to Cornwall with Mum, dad, my uncle and aunt and their two children (that's right seven of us) and the whole holiday being plagued with a slipping clutch which was eventually traced to a leaking rear oil seal. The problem was solved by drilling a drain hole in the bottom of the bell housing and pouring copious amounts of petrol in the top to wash out the oil which came out the bottom. Different world.
@graeme9679
@graeme9679 Год назад
When we were kids my Dad always had a Vanguard (here in Australia)plus 1 for spares. My brother and I had a Standard 10 each to drive around our property well before we were licence age.
@nudebaboon4874
@nudebaboon4874 Год назад
The way the wings, front and bonnet all join up at the front is a thing of design beauty, my father had one in the mid 60s, after his Ford V8 Pilot crapped out. Thanks Steph!
@bombadilian
@bombadilian Год назад
I love how this basically just looks like a giant mint humbug. Lovely, lovely old thing though. Great video Steph.
@TheMVberyl
@TheMVberyl Год назад
I travelled in India in the 70's - these early fifties vanguards were very popular as country taxis.
@tirumalaikamalakanthamanan4847
India had Standard Motors manufacturing Vanguards were made at Madras present Chennai, very popular in hill roads such as Ooty, Tirupathi etc. This one is with Slooping roof so nicely crafted, this was followed by Seden with bigger boot, there were later models of Std. Vanguards too. Very sturdy, reliable Cars my child hood memories of 1960's. Ananth Hyderabad India
@danielrussell446
@danielrussell446 Год назад
Well done Steph on a great video Love a beetle back vanguard which is one of my favourite cars to this day! Seeing this one reminds me of my uncle des who always spoke highly of his! It was the car that signalled in post war design and engineering with wet liner and engines, overdrive, spacious interior and a diesel option such amazing well engineered and strong cars would love one now
@davegoldspink5354
@davegoldspink5354 Год назад
Absolutely brilliant video thanks for sharing. We had Vanguards built here in Australia and my Mum and Dad owned a ‘52 followed by a ‘48 and as a baby in 1963 I travelled in a hatbox in one from the East Coast of Australia to Western Australia via the Nullarbor Plain (pre sealed road) a distance well over 4000kms. Part of my Auto apprenticeship at the beginning of the’80s was actually rebuilding one so I have a bit of a history with them so this was a great treat.
@colinfrance6926
@colinfrance6926 Год назад
Lovely video. Brings back happy memories for me as we had a new 1952 model which we kept until 1959. I was a little boy and would stand up in the back for most journeys. Solid as a rock. Wonderful times.
@stephenfoxall9655
@stephenfoxall9655 Год назад
A friend of my Dad had the van version that had a central rear seat. Compared with cars of the time it went like a bomb and this suited my Father’s friend!
@philipstrachan6212
@philipstrachan6212 Год назад
My dad had one of these. I think the seats were beige not red, but I might be wrong. Yes, lots of fond memories, especially of our camping trips to the West country. Ah, those were the days... Thank you for posting.
@graham104e
@graham104e Год назад
A delightful video. Your enthusiasm for that lovely motor shines through. Love it.
@idriveaclassic
@idriveaclassic Год назад
Thanks for watching!
@jonassamme1889
@jonassamme1889 Год назад
These were not a big hit over here in Sweden since British cars already by then had a bit of a scetchy quality reputation. However they where sold through the same dealer network as the immensly popular Ferguson tractor (That btw has the same engine as this very car). It meant if you bought a tractor you could get a hefty discount on one of these. Thus those sold mainly went to rural areas where obsolete cars tend to get put in barns (at least here in Sweden) and so quite a few has actually survived to this day. You'll always see a few on car meetings or on the summer roads. It's a very lovely car indeed!
@mettahuttravels3183
@mettahuttravels3183 Год назад
These car where very popular in NZ, they where known as the Vanguard Bumble-bee because of the refer shape of the bumble -bee. a wonderful family car powered by Massy -Ferguson tractor engine. popular with farmers, easy to maintain but one had show caution changing tyres as the vanguard weigh in at 2 ton.
@idriveaclassic
@idriveaclassic Год назад
Aw I love that. The bumble bee.
@ldnwholesale8552
@ldnwholesale8552 Год назад
Fergys used a Fergy engine, based on the Vanguard engine. Heads interchange but not the block or the crank. Rods pistons??
@geraldwalsh6489
@geraldwalsh6489 11 месяцев назад
Greetings from Ireland! Well done Steph,brilliant video. Back in the fifties,my dad had a Standard Companion in a nice wine colour....nice car!
@GSimpsonOAM
@GSimpsonOAM Год назад
There were 2 of these on our property when we bought it. (South East New Zealand) One was an estate. They were very rusty but lots of useful bits so I sold them for $2 so they went to someone that could make use of the parts.
@petesmitt
@petesmitt Год назад
NZ was the last repository of old Brit cars before second-hand Jap cars flooded the market.
@semadu6181
@semadu6181 4 месяца назад
I live in Uruguay and, thanks to my maternal grandfather who taught me with great patience, I learned to drive when I was 15 years old in a Standard Vanguard similar to the one in the video, in black and with the difference that the rear fender did not cover the wheel. . Truly a strong, spacious, comfortable and, at least here, scarce car. I haven't seen another model of this car in years, it is very rare and that makes it special. Thanks for this great video!
@MrLeedebt
@MrLeedebt Год назад
I am from Australia. A friend's parents owned a green coloured one. From memory Vanguards always sounded quite different from the noise made by most cars.
@neilsradios
@neilsradios Год назад
The Phase 1 Vanguard was the first car I ever travelled in. I don't remember the trip though as I was coming back from the hospital after I was born 🙂
@kenem1946
@kenem1946 Год назад
My first car was a 1950 Vanguard and my 2nd, bought for the engine, was a 1951 model. A pal of mine had a 1949 model with the gear lever on the right of the steering wheel. How many know about that model? Popular for young fellas in the 1960s! 😀Many years later I bought a 'grey Fergie' tractor for my hobby farm with the same wet sleeve engine as in those Vanguards. Memory lane for this 76yo Aussie.
@rogerburrows2429
@rogerburrows2429 Год назад
My neighbour had a black mk1 when l was a nipper in the early 60’s. I never forgot it. I always fancied one but never got one. This was for me,a brilliant test drive and showed me what lm missing! ❤
@nandakumara268
@nandakumara268 Год назад
I am a 65 year old from India. I do remember this car was quite popular in India and now recollect seeing quite a few on the roads in the mid sixties. Along with the Morris Minor this car was mostly owned by Doctors in our area.
@alfindigo
@alfindigo 11 месяцев назад
My Dad bought one in the mid ‘60’ for £10 with a seized engine. He rebuilt it and drive it for years. We all loved it. He sold it to one of the Standard factory test drivers. He told my Dad that when they tested them, the Speedo needles broke because it would go well over the 90mph on the speedo. They had to modify them all before they were sold. Probably why people say they won’t go much over 70!
@paulwilliams4815
@paulwilliams4815 Год назад
Thank u...bought back many memories..had a 1954 model the windows were held up with screwdrivers jammed into the door frame...as i remember 1st gear lift towards you then down .. lovely old bus.
@graemew7001
@graemew7001 Год назад
You're right, I've never seen one in the metal but this video has made me see what a lovely old car they really were, looks so easy to drive. You mentioning the Jowett will have brought out they green eyed bit in Ian as he was saying at the Birmingham show last week that he'd love to drive one lol
@andrewthompsonuk1
@andrewthompsonuk1 Год назад
I remember those cars as being common in New Zealand. In fact I knew someone with an unrestored one as an everyday car in the mid nineties. Interesting comparison with the Plymouth. I was driving a 53 Plymouth a few days ago.. It had the same horn and many similarities. The Plymouth has a side valve smooth six.
@davmar5648
@davmar5648 Год назад
Great presentation Steph.. what a super car. My mum and Dad hired one of these in the mid fifties and they skidded in the ice and turned it over... I remember my dad telling me.. They were returning from a Jazz concert at Ronnie Scott's... lol... They were all fine, not sure about the car though.. Standards had a terrific reputation back then.
@cbaboxsqueeze
@cbaboxsqueeze Год назад
The RAF seemed to have bought up the entire production of the pickup truck version of the Vanguard Phase 1. I trundled in one to various Maintenance Units in about 1959/60 it being fitted with a canvas top at the rear. Unit commanders drove about regally with fluttering pennant in Phase III estates. If very senior and thus entitled to be relieved of the chore of driving themselves then they would have a Vanguard saloon.
@michaeljohnson9421
@michaeljohnson9421 Год назад
It's fascinating to see how detailed the design is in some respects. The dash and front grille treatment are very neatly done. And yet the rear lights look like they were stuck on as an afterthought, without a plinth or recess. Even the number plate looks like it was just bunged on a bracket at the last minute. The reflectors are definitely an afterthought - they became a requirement in 1954, and slightly unusually the legislation was retrospective. All cars had to have them, even if they weren't fitted originally. This meant that many cars ended up with aftermarket reflectors, stuck on wherever there was a bit of spare space at the back end, even if the reflectors didn't face squarely to the rear.
@Richard-Bullock
@Richard-Bullock Год назад
Lovely car. I genuinely cannot remember the last time I saw one.
@allareasindex7984
@allareasindex7984 Год назад
My father had a Dodge (sibling to the Plymouth, both from Chrysler) and sure enough, it had several styling cues similar to this Vanguard. The grille and taillights in particular. It also did not have a radio, but unlike my mother’s Ford, the windshield wipers were electric. The Ford had vacuum-operated wipers which worked brilliantly at idle, but slowed or stopped when accelerating or driving uphill! Her Ford did have a radio with tubes (valves) but she refused to “play the radio”. She said when you are driving you should pay attention and besides, “we have a perfectly good radio at home.” She would have something to say about today’s distracted drivers if she was still around.
@robboles5233
@robboles5233 Год назад
What a lovely car. My dad bought the later Vanguard phase11 new in about 1955 registration RTJ 162 to replace a Standard flying 14 but sadly sold it around 1957 due to the Suez crisis which had resulted in petrol rationing and replaced it with a smaller Standard 10 which whilst more economical was not in the same league.
@idriveaclassic
@idriveaclassic Год назад
The Suez Crisis and 1960 introduction of MOTs was such a problem.
@phugemawl
@phugemawl Год назад
This was my Dad's first car, I passed my successful driver licence test on it . Bulletproof beast !
@michaelstaunton1632
@michaelstaunton1632 Год назад
A really enjoyable video well done 👍👍
@richarddavidthomas
@richarddavidthomas Год назад
Great to see this car. I remember them so well. So many were used by the Brighton Streamline Taxi Co. in Brighton (UK). They really looked the business, black with cream bonnets.
@user-wg5fk4ip7b
@user-wg5fk4ip7b Год назад
That is a great video, Steph. I come from a Vanguard family. My maternal grandfather had a new Vanguard in 1949, champagne gold in colour, in Jamaica and I remember seeing it in Nottingham, complete with Jamaican (diplomatic?)number plate, when he returned to the UK in 1951. My paternal grandfather also had a new Vanguard, light green in colour, in 1949, reg MWA 449. When he gave up driving in 1963 he gave it, by now very tatty, to me. Through my landlord in Coventry I got some maroon paint and hand painted the car. He was a dustman with Coventry Corporation and, strangely, the car ended up the same colour as the local buses. When I was a boy, my father had a grey 1949 Vanguard reg KTE 138, bought s/h in 1954 and sold in 1956, I think. I then had a phase 3 Vanguard briefly in the UK, before going to work in India in 1968. Guess what, my company car was a blue 1960 Vanguard, reg MSQ 1639 (a Madras number), complete with driver. I remember doing a two week business tour from Madras down to Cape Comorin, then up the west coast and back across to Madras. That makes five Vanguards in the family. A slight aside, my next company car in India was a Standard (yes, Standard, not Triumph) Herald saloon. Mk 3 (or was it Mk4?) with 4 doors. This was an Indian variant, never produced in the UK, Reg WBJ 1017. Lots of memories.
@oldmanfromoc7684
@oldmanfromoc7684 Год назад
Love your videos there so informative, your a good driver! From California.
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