“They didn’t really need any input from me but it was great fun working with a small group of people dedicated to restoring beautiful cars. Pete in particular was able to replicate any panel.”
Mechanically, the car was restored to its original factory specification, with the 3.4-litre straight-six fully rebuilt to how it was when it left Coventry, the ultimate aim being to create a car that drove as it did when it was new.
“Braking requires some forward planning,” admits Goozée. “I resisted upgrading the brakes from the original drums to discs, but my bicycle probably has more stopping power.
“There is no power steering so it requires a bit of effort at low speeds, but once you’re on open, smooth roads it really comes into its own.
“You can hear the suck from the SU carburettors as you put your foot down, and because the windscreen is narrow and the bonnet long I often feel, rather romantically, as though I’m in the cockpit of a Spitfire.”
“The Moss gearbox lacks synchromesh so changing gear is a matter of feeling the cogs engage before committing,” he adds. “Double-declutching has become a useful habit.”
Remarkably, after collecting the XK and taking his first test drive, a bill for the work never materialised.
“Peter never charged me a penny. I eventually sat down and said: ‘Look, I’ve got to pay you for the hours of the mechanic and the painter,’ but he said no, I think because the work was spread over such a long period. He was a very, very good friend. He left us too early.
“Looking back, the only thing I regret is the colour change. If I could do it all again I would have kept it grey so it was completely original and as my grandfather knew it.
“But he was very unsentimental about his cars – they were for a purpose and nothing else. He would be horrified by how shiny the car is today!”
Gleaming in the early summer sun, Goozée’s beautiful XK looks just as immaculate as the day it rolled out of Smith & Cave’s workshops in 1994, despite some of our photoshoot marking the first time rain – and even hail – has touched its paintwork in almost three decades.
But the motorsport man is unapologetic for his car’s cosseted life, spirited drives being confined to local lanes rather than long-distance rallies.
“I’m unlike most owners because I’m just preserving it in every respect,” Goozée says. “It means so much to me, being the catalyst to an extremely fortunate career that took me from Crystal Palace, where I first saw Jack Brabham, to the British Racing Drivers’Club, where I delivered the eulogy at his memorial.”
For Goozée, his beloved Jaguar XK140 serves not only as a source of Sunday-morning thrills and an objet d’art, but as a touchstone to his past and a way of connecting with his grandfather, preserved and protected like a precious memory.
Yet that isn’t to say it’s hidden away, and it’s easy to imagine that sleek maroon bodywork and mysterious Le Mans winner’s badge inspiring another 11-year-old, as they peer through the window and ask their own grandad what the letters ‘BRDC’ stand for.
Images: Luc Lacey
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Greg MacLeman
Greg MacLeman is a contributor to and former Features Editor of Classic & Sports Car, and drives a restored and uprated 1974 Triumph 2500TC