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Jaguar Series I, 4.2 Liter, E-type Fixed Head Coupe Very Straight Body. on 2040-cars

US $45,000.00
Year:1965 Mileage:67000
Location:

United States

United States

1965 E Type Coupe.
Here is a rare opportunity to own a rust free Jaguar E Type, an Arizona car that has been in storage for 26 years.
It can be finished and driven or totally restored.
Engine runs and has perfect oil pressure and temp.

This E Type has spent its life in Arizona and it shows
There is not rot you may see light surface rust in a couple of spots but that’s it.

The good stuff.
Engine completely rebuilt has a RA cylinder head ported mildly with Isky road cams.
Rebuilt su carbs polished and exhaust headers electronic ignition.
Steering and suspension rebuilt.
Brakes rebuilt.

Lightened flywheel new clutch rebuilt gearbox drive shaft and rear end.
A new 3.31 gear that  will give good economy and top end.
It has new front and rear glass the bumpers are re chromed new mufflers and 90% of the body chrome is there including lights and lenses.
A complete new set of Dayton wire wheels with new spinners $2000 right there.
The interior is older but very nice the steering wheel is excellent and has new horn push there is a new carpet set to install and new rubbers in the car along with other parts including a bonnet support should you bend the other.

Now what needs done.
There is a temporary fuel line installed
There is no radio console 
No heater assembly it is not charging
And the bonnet has scrapes and dents on the underside from curb rash.
Brakes need bleeding.

Please understand the car is old there might be other issues and parts missing but nothing major.

I am selling this for the owner who is a Jaguar enthusiast unfortunately ill health has forced him to give up his cars and hobby.
The car is in Payson AZ and will need to be picked up from there on completion of payment to the owner.
I have more pictures.

Please email with questions

Auto blog

Jaguar Land Rover says key models in short supply, some have six-month wait lists

Fri, 08 Aug 2014

Care for a bit more proof that the Jaguar Land Rover portfolio of vehicles is the best it's ever been? Well, the Indian-owned pair of brands saw a record year in 2013, while 2014 has seen a 14-percent increase in sales. The crazy thing is, though, is that figure could be even higher, provided the company had the production capacity.
JLR is running a six-month waiting list on two of its most popular models, the Range Rover Sport (above) and Range Rover. According to Mark White, the company's chief technologist for body engineering, the blame can be placed on the paint shop at the company's Solihull factory, in the UK.
"We will probably max out the paint shop before we max out the body shop. Putting the second body shop in has given us the flexibility to ebb and flow the different models that go through there and meet the capacity demands we've got," White told Automotive News. "However, you always hit a bottleneck somewhere. And the paint shop is probably going to be the next biggest obstacle."

Lightweight E-Type to show historic side of Jaguar Special Operations in Monterey

Mon, 11 Aug 2014

Jaguar has made a lot of great vehicles over the years, but as far as historians are concerned, it still very much lives in the shadow of the original E-Type, small as it was. In its image, Jaguar has made two generations of XK and the new F-Type, but what we have here is the most faithful continuation of the E-Type heritage yet.
Alongside the Range Rover Sport SVR and the F-Type Project 7 (making its US debut), Jaguar Land Rover and its new Special Operations division will roll into Pebble Beach this year with the continuation Lightweight E-Type. Of the 72,500 E-Types which Jaguar built between 1961 and 1975, only a dozen were Lightweight versions, and they remain the most coveted E-Types of all. It originally planned on building 18 examples, though, and five decades later, it's now committed to completing that original production run in faithful detail.
The Lightweight E-Type was based on the standard roadster and was homologated as such, just with some key upgrades to make it lighter and faster. The biggest change, of course, was the lightweight aluminum bodywork that cut 205 pounds off the curb weight. To replicate it, Jaguar took the last example (the only one made in 1964 after the original eleven were made in '63), scanned half its body surface, mirrored it to ensure symmetry and set about reproducing it with the same standard of materials available in the Sixties (and resisting the urge to go with more modern grades of aluminum). 75 percent of the 230 components are made in-house, with the largest stampings outsourced and built on machinery built to Jaguar's specifications off-site.

The Jaguar E-Type Lightweight is back on the prowl after a few decades away

Sun, 17 Aug 2014

Sometimes procrastination has its benefits. Jaguar originally planned to build a run of 18 E-Type Lightweights for racing in the '60s. However, it was only ever to complete 12 of them. It has taken all of the intervening decades to finally get back to the project and build the final run of new Lightweights. While Jag announced the plan recently, the first continuation model was unveiled during the Pebble Beach weekend.
Coming from Jaguar Land Rover's Special Operations unit, these cars are identical to the way they left the factory in the '60s. Jag is even using the same grade of aluminum for the bodies, and the cars are fully compliant for FIA historic racing. Power comes from an aluminum, 3.8-liter inline-six with about 300 horsepower and 280 pound-feet of torque routed through a four-speed manual gearbox. Who could guess that in 2014 someone could buy a brand new vehicle from a major manufacturer that comes with Weber carbs? Though, Lucas mechanical fuel injection is an option.
While they look old, these new E-types are also a wonder of modern technology. To get things just right, the company laser scanned an original car to create the new bodies. Check out the gallery from the unveiling to see this old cat on the prowl again.