The Vauxhall Viscount (1966-’72) is perhaps the definitive British barge, a large six-cylinder car of low birth built for impressing the neighbours of people who had ascended the summit of the greasy pole of ’60s corporate success.
It looked slightly American – but not too much – had a lazy, bigger-than-average 3.3-litre engine and every conceivable ’60s luxury on anything this side of a Rolls-Royce: automatic transmission, power steering, leather seats and the almost unimaginable decadence of electric windows.
It was, I believe, the first British mass-production car to have them as standard. It may also have been the first UK vehicle to have a vinyl roof and it certainly had one of the largest boots you could find in any European-built car.