People often talk about cars having a difficult gestation, how delays between concept and production relegated them from ahead of the game to well behind it before they even hit the showrooms.
The thing is, people are usually talking about an 18-month or two-year hold-up. Kids’ stuff; here’s a car that took a mere 40 years to come to fruition yet still looks space-age on modern roads.
The unlikely builder was Gilbern, the Welsh company committed to Ford power and glassfibre shells that, if you squint a lot, might be mistaken for an Alfa.
That something so sleek, low and, well, pointy might come out of Pontypridd is hard to believe. Perhaps that’s why it didn’t.
The credit for building this car must go to one man just as much as it does Gilbern. He is Gordon Johnston, a Kent born-and-bred mechanic with a penchant for Volkswagens and hot rods.
You may have spotted this car in our Lost & found section in July 2007, and that was about when the trouble really began.
If you thought it had a testing time in the Gilbern days, its more recent history is a catalogue of Kafka-esque woe.