Competition machinery, meanwhile ranged from a Seat-engined Selex single-seater to a gargantuan Paris-Dakar Unimog, plus immaculate rally-prepared versions of the Mercedes 190SL and Datsun 1200.
As ever, in addition to an extensive autojumble area and specialists’ stands there was an extensive selection of vehicles for sale at the event, spanning everything from mass-market Europeans via Detroit heavyweights to thoroughbred exotica.
Standing out from the crowd was an aggressive-looking 1991 Maserati Shamal. One of only 369 built, the 326bhp GT was being advertised at for €96,000.
More affordable was a wonderfully unmolested one-owner 1963 Renault 4 for €3000 that had been hidden away in storage for 35 years, as well as a tidy-looking metallic blue 1964 Acadian Invader. Based on the Chevrolet Chevelle, the one-owner Canadian-built four-door was on offer for €7500.
Another single-owner GM model that was up for grabs was a ’63 Chevy Impala. A V6-engined example in original unmolested condition, the Impala had been in Spain since new and its owner was asking €15k.
Seat 1430 (left) and Alpine A110 were on sale