If there is a theme, it’s that there is no theme: nothing can prepare you for the scale and scope of the Isle of Man Motor Museum.
It’s a collection like no other, home to everything from veteran electric cars to military vehicles, from extravagant hearses to racing motorcycles, via all manner of contraptions that defy easy categorisation.
It is also a shrine to Americana, with a raft of classic cars on display that you are unlikely to encounter anywhere else, even in their homeland.
This Cadillac Fleetwood hearse is one of the many obscure vehicles in the Isle of Man Motor Museum
The purpose-built facility that accommodates this leftfield cache is vast and airy, and the winning part is that you can get right up close to the exhibits. You will want to.
The funny thing is, the collection in its original form was based in London.
Darren Cunningham, who inherited the bug from his father Denis, dreamed up the museum in order to see the entire family hoard accommodated under one roof.
“Dad started out buying cars in the 1980s,” he explains, “and the nucleus of the collection was his Jaguar XJ12 Coupé, a Rolls-Royce Corniche II and Camargue, plus various Humbers and a 1925 Cubitt.”
Clockwise from top: Darren (on left) and dad Denis Cunningham with the collection that outgrew its London home; 1970 American LaFrance, complete with sunfade; 1962 Nobel 200 microcar (on right)