| 3.8 Jaguar E-Type | |||||
| Fixed Head Coupe | |||||
| Right Hand Drive | |||||
| R77407-9 | |||||
| V3906 | |||||
| EB6684JS | |||||
| Great Britain | |||||
| 1962 | Opalescent Dark Blue | ||||
| 2026 | Red | ||||
| Rest: Concours | |||||
| |||||
|
52 more photos below ↓
Record Creation: Entered on 20 February 2026.
Database Updates: Show dataplate edits
Photos of 860906
Click slide for larger image. This car has 53 photos. (Dates are when image was uploaded.)
Exterior Photos (10)
Uploaded February 2026:
Interior Photos (3)
Uploaded February 2026:
Details Photos: Exterior (19)
Uploaded February 2026:
Uploaded June 2017:
Detail Photos: Interior (9)
Uploaded February 2026:
Detail Photos: Engine (9)
Uploaded February 2026:
Uploaded June 2017:
Detail Photos: Other (3)
Uploaded February 2026:
Comments
We now require an email address to leave a comment. Your IP will be recorded in an effort to reduce spam. (Report problem posts here.)
2014-01-30 07:45:00 | j writes:
This car is for sale at the moment in liverpool
2017-06-13 03:39:33 | pauls writes:
Some discussion about the car as it was found:
barnfinds.com/jaguar-e-type-project-find/
2026-02-20 11:51:03 | pauls writes:
Car to be at auction 3/26
www.handh.co.uk/auction/lot/lot-1962-jaguar-e-type-38-coup/
Auction description:
18th Mar, 2026 Kelham Hall, Newark, Nottinghamshire
1962 Jaguar E-Type 3.8 Coupé
Home market, matching numbers, and exhaustively professionally restored to ‘concours’ standard!
Estimate £100,000 - £120,000
Registration No: 509 TOD
Chassis No: 860906
MOT: Exempt
Highly desirable home-market example, having been supplied new via dealer H. Thorne of Dewsbury
1 of just 1,799 RHD 3.8 Fixed Head Coupés manufactured
Exhaustively restored across 18 months to a ‘concours’ standard by ASM Classics Ltd of Brands Hatch
Pleasingly boasting ‘matching numbers’ throughout
Finished in its factory colour combination of Opalescent Dark Blue paintwork with Red leather interior upholstery
Accompanied by the Jaguar Drivers' Heritage Trust Certificate
A truly excellently presenting example!
We are always pleased to welcome an E-type into one of our auctions, but especially so when that E-type has been painstakingly restored in its original colours. Even if this car had not benefited from a restoration by a marque specialist, it would still be highly desirable as it is one of the 1,799 Series I 3.8-litre Coupés built to right-hand drive specification. Manufactured on September 20th, 1962, it was originally finished in the rare combination of Opalescent Dark Blue with Red interior trim, and despatched on October 3rd, 1962, by way of Jaguar Distributors of Leeds to the dealership of H. Thorne in Dewsbury, Yorkshire. Records reveal that it originally carried the West Riding of Yorkshire registration number ‘417 CWW’ and was sold new to one J. N. Kaye.
What happened presumably after Kaye’s ownership is quite extraordinary. Bear in mind that the E-type’s universally acknowledged status as one of the greatest cars of its generation led to early examples being subject to full restorations as early as in the 1970s; enthusiasts of a certain age may well remember that a Series I Coupé starred on the front cover of the December, 1975, issue of Thoroughbred & Classic Cars magazine, alongside a Ferrari 166 Inter—a prelude to the story “Buy a second-hand E-type.” Our example, however, did not fall into the hands of quite the same type of enthusiast.
From the records available, we see that Kaye owned it until 1975. We suspect it was the second owner who customised it in the best ’70s fashion... It was painted Red and fitted with extra-wide wheel arches; the bumpers were removed, non-standard rear lights were fitted, and the standard exhaust pipes were rerouted to the sides and exited through the rear panel. It also assumed a new identity, with the Devon registration ‘509 TOD.’ In 1989, it was sold to its third owner, who proceeded to park it in a leaking garage in Liverpool where he forgot about it, until it resurfaced on eBay in 2014. The steering wheel had been replaced by a 1960s or ’70s aftermarket, small-diameter piece. The reason for its abandonment appears to have been some failure in the engine, which had been left with the cylinder head removed and the bonnet up, allowing water to ingress into the cylinders. It was, in short, a fine old mess. Nevertheless, it attracted plenty of bidders and even became a news story for the Norwegian television channel TV 2!
For whatever reason, the winning bidder only held onto the Jaguar for a year before selling it to the present owner, who fortunately was of a mind to restore it, and to restore it properly. He took the car to ASM Classics Ltd., a well-known classic Ford and Jaguar restoration specialist in Kent, near Brands Hatch. We are privileged to have another ASM restoration in this sale, the 1980 Ford Escort RS2000, but whereas that was restored to factory-correct specification, this E-type went down the bespoke tailoring route.
During the course of the eighteen-month labour of love, all the accumulated boy-racerisms were stripped away, the body shell was reduced to bare metal, and was then pleasingly pieced together again with correct replacement parts as necessary and finished in the original colour scheme. On a mechanical level, the engine was thoroughly overhauled, the suspension was renewed, brand new brake components were fitted throughout, and the electrics were completely rewired. Despite its abuses in the 1970s, the E-type had fortunately managed to hold onto its original, matching-numbers engine. The interior looks beautiful after its comprehensive retrim, and is far, far better off for the reinstatement of the factory-specification wood-rimmed steering wheel. The only readily discernible concession to modernity is the RetroSound Motor 6 radio with D.A.B. and Bluetooth, which has been so seamlessly integrated into the centre console that even the most unflinching of purists would be hard-pressed to object to it. The other upgrades include stainless steel six-inch wire wheels, electronic ignition, a high-torque starter, a dynamator charging system, an uprated cooling system and uprated brakes.
The restoration is about as fresh as they come, with the car having only covered five miles since it was completed, so it will obviously be up to the new owner to take care of the running-in.
Judged by its condition alone, this E-type is deemed a potential concours star, but we think it goes without saying that the various mechanical upgrades were all incorporated with the intention that it should be driven. With all the work it has received, we assume that it will prove to be a reliable and very rewarding machine on the road, and we are only sorry that we are not in a position ourselves to take it on a test run down to the Massif de l’Esterel and the Corniche d’Or. That pleasure will be reserved for the new owner, and if they need any encouragement, the Jaguar Drivers’ Club and the Enthusiasts’ Club offer no shortage of European excursions to enjoy during the season when the skies are blue and the ribbons of road are at their most inviting. Until such a time, of course, it will be just as delightful to use for Sunday lunch outings or British car shows on the village green. It is provided with the current V5C and a history file which makes for interesting reading, containing as it does a D.V.L.A. print-out of past owners, a Jaguar Daimler Heritage Trust certificate, and a photographic record of the restoration.
Sold for £117,000
2026-03-21 04:40:41 | Capt RD writes:
Sold for £117,000 (including buyers premium
18th Mar, 2026 Kelham Hall, Newark, Nottinghamshire
1962 Jaguar E-Type 3.8 Coupé























































