Running around Twickenham every (other, ish) lunchtime means you often see some classic sights. An Aston Martin DB6 trundling along Chertsey Road, a Minor Traveller still in active service for an intrepid window cleaner, the odd Mustang.
There are also some not-so-classic sights to be seen, too, but beauty is in the eye of the beholder and all that. The T-reg Wrangler, say, with dark green body and tan roof looking ruggedly purposeful and, dare I say it, appealing. Another recent sight for sore eyes was a ratty Fiat Tempra.
I was reminded of this fleeting meeting when Admiral Insurance’s latest research into rarefied ‘bangers’ landed in my inbox, under the subject line ‘Death of the old banger’.
More on that later.
Among the list was the boxy Tempra, just inside the top 10, with supposedly just 18 remaining on the road. Designed by Ercole Spada, formerly of Zagato and he who penned the firm’s DB4GT as a mere apprentice, it was built on the Tipo platform that also hosted the Alfa Romeo 155, Spider and GTV. Yet it’s a forgotten family car of the 1990s that nobody loves, and has fallen into the category of lesser spotted and never noticed.
According to Admiral, it’s almost twice as numerous as the Vauxhall Chevette. Only 10 of those remain, supposedly, but the usual go-to place for this kind of ‘research’ and/or procrastination, howmanyleft.co.uk, cites 11 Chevettes but many more when including the various different spec levels. The same site has just eight Saab 90s, while Admiral reckons there are 13.