ALL CAR NERDS are drawn to a supersaloon - and the crazier the better, whether it be Lotus Carlton or earsplitting Aussie V8s tearing up Mount Panorama - but we tend to go even more weak-kneed at the sight of an insane estate. There is an irresistible sense of two-fingered defiance in even the mere gesture of creating a bonkers family wagon: you should fear the out-and-out beefcake less than the big out-of-shape kid with the wild glint in his eye.
So, not your sporting shooting brake like a Radford DB5 or whatever, but a proper four-door, two-box tip-tripmeister. This rebellion was never better epitomised than by Rydell and Lammers racing Volvo-TWR 850 estates in the 1994 British Touring Car Championship, while Audi and Porsche established a template for all wild wagons since in the RS2... yet both were already 25 years behind the game.
If you wanted a bona fide super-estate back in the late 1960s, you could either up-engine an existing wagon (Cortina Savage Estate, for example) or estatify an existing supersaloon. And if you went for the latter option there was one stand-out candidate, the only true four-door supersaloon of the era until Jaguar put 12s in its 6s, the Mercedes-Benz 300 SEL 6.3.
Coming towards the end of Merc's most stately stackedheadlight pomp (courtesy of Paul Bracq), the 300 SEL inline-six version of the sophisticated air-suspended mid'60s W108/109 full-size saloon (for convenience's sake, we'll call it an S-Class) should have satisfied most appetites, but, if not, surely the proposed 3.5 V8 that would emerge in August 1969 would be all the continent-shrinking executive saloon that anyone could ever have wanted.
This story is from the May 2023 edition of Octane.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the May 2023 edition of Octane.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
The Pro route to faster lap times
Mercedes-AMG GT 63 Pro 4Matic+
The power to corrupt
2024 Aston Martin Vanquish
Hyperactivate!
1967 Austin-Cooper MkII 998 by Crafted Classics Tuning Glen Waddington
De Tomaso Racing Blue Blood
IF THE MARQUE De Tomaso is mainly familiar to you through cars such as the Mangusta, the Pantera, maybe the Longchamps and, if you're next-level classic car geek, racers such as the P70, then the sheer variety to be found in this mammoth tome is going to come as something of a shock. There are literally dozens profiled here, and one or two will probably be news to even the most seasoned enthusiast.
The best watch in the world
We've been here, but it bears repeating these gems will soon be cheaper than a 1st class stamp
A star is reborn
This recently revived coachbuilt beauty made the final four at the Pebble Beach concours in August
REINVENTING THE WHEEL
The gyroscopically stabilised Gyro-X blurred the line between reality and science fiction. Sam Glover takes the prototype for a spin
SAYONARA GT-R
After a remarkable 17-year career, the supercar-humbling Nissan GT-R bows out on a high
Shiro Nakamura
Nissan’s long-standing Chief Creative Officer became architect of the marque’s style-led revival… and is also known as ‘Mr GT-R’
LIGHT SPARKS
How does the electric Tesla Roadster compare today?