I remember trying to encourage my grandfather to go faster around the local roundabout to see if I could slide from one side of the rear seat fully to the other. He would laugh, granny was not impressed. I was about six at the time. Holy cow, that's over half a century ago. Cripes!
Spare wheel is underslung the boot. Thus the tank is between the rear sear and boot space. Overdrive works as described. Push in to operate. Then it will engage on revs. There is a freewheel. just leave the overdrive engaged. The A1110 also had the same system. The clock is not original. maybe replaced because of non working original or change of electrical polarity. All cars had a remote servo. Repair kits in the UK are available. The biggest difference between Healy and Austin/Wolseley engine is the head. Fuel consumption is horrendous. I love cars that show there age.
My brother had a Wolseley 6/110 automatic, later on it went manual with the 4 speed and the overdrive, we found the fuel consumption was very good for a car of that size. Sounded good too with a hacked about Healey exhaust system. It didn't do so bad in a race against a 3 litre Capri on a motorway either....
Now you're talking :-) How gorgeous. The big brother to my car. Sadly, this model was not built in Sydney. BMC Aust only built the pre-Farina model between 1958 & 1959. Lovely. Cheers.
The long distance Gentlemans conveyance . Sports jacket with leather patches on the elbows,corduroy trousers and brogues are optional. Really have to like that engine.
Beautiful car! My grandfather had one and it is still a subject of frequent conversation to this day, stories of the four kids, dogs and caravan all heading off in the Westy.. Some great slides of the car in the collection, happy days :)
Thanks for an interesting review, and it brought back many memories of my 99 and 110s. The Wolseley & Austin 99s had 3 speed column change, with the 110 versions having 3 speed floor mounted gear levers. This changed to a 4 speed floor mounted lever box on the 110 mark 2, the first gear not being synchro, so always made a whining noise. The overdrive was later automatically engaged at over 30 MPH by a centrifugal switch on the transmission, which then locked the drive solid (with engine braking). Without the overdrive the car was freewheeling, which could sometimes be cause for concern if the engine stalled whilst decelerating, then you realised at the last moment you didn't have power assisted brakes!The kickdown did indeed short circuit the spark plugs for a moment, also dropping the overdrive out for quick acceleration, but would come back in again when you lifted your foot off the pedal. I removed the kickdown system off both my 110s and had a switch mounted on the column to drop out the overdrive instead.The spare wheel was lowered down from under the boot by using the starting handle.The door handles were pushed forward to open, and pulled back to lock.The engines were almost bomb proof, but in the UK it was body rot that saw most of them end up in the scrap yards before they reached 10 years old.
Just watched this and enjoyed the memories of long ago. My father and I bought a used A 105 with overdrive twin carbs went like a bat out of hell . The ride would put some of these modern cars to shame. The only problem with it was the dampers they would tend to be too soft you could get seasick if on a undulating road. Unfortunly in became a wreck after hitting a spare lorry wheel in the nearside lane of the A40 near Witney before the Bypass was built. The Wheel Landed 200 ft in a corn field found by the police the following day. I was very lucky to get out of car i one piece at 3 am just shook up as i had been doing about 70 mph just prior to this. Thanks for bringing back along lost memory.. A W ADAMS now aged 80
The A99 was never assembled in Oz and at that stage BMC Oz was always two years behind BMC UK with the A95 still in production as the Morris Marshall. The Pininfarina styling arrived with the locally made Austin Freeway and upmarket Wolseley 24/80 in 1962. The two year delay was typical at the time to Australianise UK cars for Oz conditions (stiffen the suspension, give time for local suppliers to tool up, etc).
Lovely motor. Brings back memories of the sixties and as a passenger in cars like this. Dad never had one of these but I remember the Morris Oxford, Singer Hunter, Hillman Minxes, Rover 105S, Victor 101, Sunbeam Talbot etc etc
To early for the Nelson plant, but these were assembled at the Austin Distributors Federation plant in Petone, Wellington along with the A40F, Austin Mini, Austin A60 saloon and Estate, Austin 1100 & 1300, Maxi, and all the NZ P76 models. All the Austin trucks were also built there. They did a limited build of Austin Freeways including the import licence oddity the Freeway 1800.
In 1964. My eldest brother started his mechanics apprenticeship at Magnus Motors, in those days, a big Austin dealer in Lower Hutt. Not far from the Petone Austin factory. Since the question arose in this video about where this car was built. I asked him. Do you recall if the big Austin sixes were ever assembled in NZ? He said they were. He recalled picking up a number of them directly from the Petone factory. Interestingly he also said, a few of them were Govt order cars. By 1964 - 65. The cars he picked up were the later A110 models. But you have confirmed these big Austins were built in NZ. As has my bro. So Hubnut, perhaps on balance, we just might have settled where this car was possibly built. Hence the slightly different specs to the UK models. Cheers. And thanks for the videos!
Great review, many thanks!. I was a 15 year old working as a part time cleaner in a local Austin garage when these came out. As a treat, the garage owner took his son and me out for a run in their demonstrator. About 8 miles from home, the only gear that would engage was reverse and we came home, all 8 miles, in reverse! The gearbox had to be replaced and it was the first of many as that 3-speed 'box proved to be unreliable. Hence the later A110s had a 4-speed 'box. Great cars but enjoyed a drink!
This was epic to watch. Hubnut was in Stokes Vegas, NZ for a test drive. When you drive out of stokes valley towards Upper Hutt, I was like...dad, this is the Hutt valley! It was so cool seeing you in our neighbourhood. 👍🏻 Shame you weren’t here in February when there’s a classic British and European car show in Upper Hutt. I’m not big on knowledge of old cars but it’s fun tagging along with my dad at local car shows. Best vid of yours so far for me is the southwards car museum and the horopito motors...what a place! I have to go there next summer because of your vid. Thanks for your vids hubnut. It’s nice sharing some time with my dad watching them. 😁 Hi from Whitemans Valley, Wellington. NZ
Your videos are great! My dad had an A110 and we did 110mph on the motorway once. As a five year old it was very exciting - in fact I'm still excited to this day as I think about it and I'm 53 and 3/4 now! Happy days! :)
My Dad had a 1959 Austin A95 Countryman estate car. It had the 6 cylinder engine and lovely leather interior. He sold it to the groundsman at work, who drove it for years, but I have not seen an A95 since.
My mate had a rare Mk1 in white upper and blue lower. Stupid fast. Servo stopped working though, so we had to urgently find an equivalent part fast. Not a direct replacement. Changed the master cylinder whilst we were at it. Easy car to work on. Good times. And not a single AA badge to be seen... even better.
My brother and I own a couple of restored A99s in Canada. No older car drives like a modern car, but they are a ton of fun. Disc power brakes and a peppy 6cyl engine allow them to drive around in today's traffic.
If there was ever one car I could own again it would be the Austin A40 Farina (MkII Countryman). Must be Horizon blue as well. Many happy days of taking the dog to the woods every weekend in what was a tiny little car, split tailgate, but it just fitted the wee greyhound in the back quite the thing.
Most people would not associate the Farina Westminster with motorsport, however due to their rugged construction and powerful engine, they were a favourite and much sought after in the late 70s, early 80s banger racing scene. As Neil Young once said, "It's better to burn out, than it is to rust!".
Love these old Westminsters. My Dad owned a 1962 Vanden Plas Princess Mark 2 which was based on the A110, but it had the three speed box and overdrive featured here. I remember the almighty shove in the back (for those days) it gave when he floored it in overdrive second and the box kicked down for overtaking. Many memorable trips between Birmingham and Devon in that car, in the days when the M5 finished at Gloucester!
Really enjoyed your show today Hub Nut. My dad had a 110 Westminster and also a Princess vanden plas of the same set up. My dad loved his Westminster as I can well remember. Thanking you for a great big dollop of nostalgia. Pete 🇬🇧
My father had the A95, A99, and finally the A110 as his company car. Then promotion saw him get a Princess and finally a Princess R. The last 2 had Smiths rear shelf mounted air-conditioning, that used to ice up after about 90 minutes, so was never used on long distance road trips. Thanks for the memories.
You've done well, figured out the overdrive quicker than I did when I owned one. Method, push the overdrive knob in and you get freewheel below 30 MPH and overdrive when you lift off the throttle above 30. Kick down with full throttle and you're out of overdrive. Pull the knob out to lock out overdrive and freewheel.
Truly a gorgeous classic, complete with the evocative aroma of vinyl. It really deserves an outfit in autumn colours, by Dunn & Co, not forgetting the trilby. Sadly, now only available on Ebay.
I noticed she has a tow-bar; so the old girl has probably been a work horse during some period of her life. That said, I agree that her blemishes add to the character; along with the newer add-ons she has collected through the various decades. Just a very honest, adorable car. Love it!
Thank you so much Ian. When I was just a nipper my dad had an A110, black with red leather upholstery. I loved that car so much and your vid has brought back some dear memories.
The overdrive/freewheel was fun, best combo was the engine from a later automatic coupled to the 4 speed floor change manual with o/d. I believe the cylinder head on the automatic brought power to about 130hp. They went well for the time...
This is the Farina type of Westminster - I'd forgotten all about them. The wiper action wasn't as perfect as we'd like, although (thankfully) no triangle of doom or driver's side corner of disappointment! Yeah, back in those pre-EU days, the UK were proud of their Automobile industry, great cars! 👍🏿👍🏾👍🏼
Not just pre-EEC days (fore-runner of modern-day EU), but also pre-strike days when British workers were proud of the cars they built, the management weren't acting like dicks and the bean-counters weren't in control of R&D. Add to that Britain was finally over the austerity of post-WWII and it was the golden age of cars in Blighty.
Thanks Ian.They were pretty good cars for the early 1960's. As a child, I once travelled in a new one of those, sitting on the floor, under the dashboard. There were eleven people in the car, including five children. Nobody thought anything of it being so full, since no laws were being broken. Innocent times.
These things are built like tanks, had a couple of the Wolseley versions, wish I kept them. Saw one once in a demolition derby. Not only did it win easily but it still looked like a car at the end, which can’t be said for the 80s and 90s Japanese cars which were the rest of the field.
Always sensible warming up in Ian reviews akin to his near peer Harry's Garage and respects the various owners' stipulations. This review was clearly encouraged to use the available performance and rewarded us with some mechanical music. Very tactile reviews of Lucasoid switchgear and extracting all applicable clanging of BMC doors etc. Would be nice to hear the engine going with the lid up.
I have never seen a 1960 Westminster before but it looks very similar to a Rolls Royce Vanden Plas, both of which share many features of my 1960 Austin Cambridge.
One gets the sense that she really didn't want you to take her out for a sound thrashing! Lovely example that has been cherished to survive so long in such originality. Lovely.
Great to see you in NZ. They have quite a few British cars that are still street-legal. Ever road-tested an Austin/Morris 1100/1300? They have a wonderful ride on the hydro suspension, and there were lots and lots assembled in NZ from kits. Many still exist in NZ, cos NZ don't salt the roads. ;)
Im afraid to say it , but as a child i remember cars like this syacked high in scrap yards if only I'd thought then to document them all, the smells of them inside facinated me ,so elegant compared to today !!
Excellent piece and what a car. My dad had the A110 MK2 Super Deluxe with automatic transmission on a C plate. It was royal blue, walnut fascia and matching picnic tables. I wish I had her now. The car shown started perfectly, I recall dad's taking ages to kick on choke.
We need an Austin/Morris/Triumph revival car company to make brand new battery powered versions of all of these gems from the past - probably just my nostalgia at work again. :)
What a great old girl Ian. Lovely to see one in original condition pretty much..Love the Kiwi peg on the choke. Love the sound of that six. Extra fan blades. Same thing on old BlackBerry. Thanks for a great drive.
Lovely review. It brought back memories of my fathers 1961 A99 in robins egg blue with the 3 speed borg ward automatic gearbox. Sadly my family had to abandon the car due to lack of spares (by the mid 80’s in Western Canada, nobody stocked BMC parts). I remember it as a very solid feeling car with a distinct whine from the automatic gearbox. Incidentally, the spare tire on the A99 is hidden completely in a tray underneath the trunk. To access the tire, one uses the crank from the supplied toolset to turn a worm gear that lowers the spare tire. The same crank is also used to turn the engine over. There is a spring loaded chromed chromed cover in the middle of the front bumper, which when lifted reveals a slot where the hand crank is inserted. The crank is not intended for starting the engine, but for turning the engine over to set the valves and ignition points.
Yes, that's a very nice car, much to my surprise. A few minor glitches that could probably do with a bit of tlc, but basically very sound with a good solid and powerful engine and must have been a pleasure to drive.
Love the colour. My aunty Viv had a Mini that colour back in the late '60's. She woke up.at around 3am one morning, looked out of her bedroom window just in time to see 4 blokes loading it onto a trailer. They were gone before she could get down the stairs. She never recovered it.
The mechanicals may have been a bit dated when it came out, but I can assure you the overall appearance of it was not. When I first saw these Farina designed cars in 1959 they looked very modern indeed and still looked ok as they were revised slightly into the late 60s. Don't forget that in 1959 there were still thousands of very old and archaic looking pre-war cars on the road...
Nice car. I think in those years many passenger cars still used diagonal bias ply tires which are not great for roadholding. Peugeots of that time had a reputation for good roadholding but that probably was mainly because of the Michelin X or ZX radial tires that were fitted. I bet that Austin will performer a good deal better with a set of new radial tires.
Ohhh Ian, I laughed so much ... !!! Reminds me of when I had a 1964 Cortina MkI ... The lovely character of old cars ... The lock situation is a combination of the pins in the lock getting out of position when the door is slammed ... A lock pickers version of shocking a lock when trying to get it open ... The key in the lock re-aligns the pins and allows you to re-open the door .... Ahhhh Joy of all joys .... ;-)
My Dad had an Austin Loadstar ? truck with a very simalar engine in South Australia. It was like an oven in the cab in summer and I well remember the fan noise. It would always vapourise when hay carting too.
The OZ built cars have a little map of Australia on the hub caps .The West monster in Australia looks similar but is quite different. The OZ outstation BMC ran in Sydney was pretty independent and they made their own version of the six . It was a extended version of the B series four and only ever offered in Australia . So... if that car has the truck engine it's a pommy built car not an Aussie one.
You are correct. By 1960 BMC Australia were concentrating on developing their own range of 6 cyl cars to compete with the Holden and new Aussie built Falcon. Launched in 1962 as the Austin Freeway, (they also built a Wolseley variant) and based around the Farina styled Austin - Morris A55/A60 Cambridge and Oxford cars. But smaller than the Austin A99. Previously they had badge engineered the A90 and marketed it in Aust as the Morris Marshall. So if this car isn't an English built example. I wouldn't completely rule it out as NZ assembled. Since Austin assembled cars and commercial vehicles, among them the Austin Gypsy Landrover rival, in lower Hutt (Wellington) for many years. Including, in the early to mid 70s, by then under the NZ Motor Corporation banner, the Aussie sourced Leyland p76. Ps, Morris vehicles were assembled in Newmarket Auckland by Dominion Motors Ltd. Who eventually also became part of NZMC.
Dad had two of these when I was a kid: A black A-99, eventually trading it in for a grey A-110. We put a lot of miles on them, towing a caravan from England down to the south of France every summer. Great cars, very solid and reliable. (I can't remember what I did yesterday, but curiously, I remember the licence plate of both of these cars.)
Gorgeous engine note and condition, surprising how similar the dash looks to more pedestrian Oxfords and Cambridges. Ran a '59 Cambridge for a while, fins n all, lots of fun and barrelled along quite well for its age and girth.
This is one of quite a few cars that you have introduced to me that has prompted me to search eBay to see if one available here in the US. However, the lack of garage space prevents me from clicking the “buy it now” button, if I do find one. However, do appreciate the education I’m receiving on the topic of classic English cars.
Love the looks and sheer presence of this car. The A99/110 were very much the entry level luxury car with painted dash and doors. Probably used by upper mid level civil servants, police and the fleet market.
Those manual chokes used to allow extra fuel to wash down the barrels when left warming up, not good for the engine wear, lovely sounding beast. good luck and keep well ian.
Loved the big Farina Family. My late father had the 3 litre Austin Princess, Vanden Plas, in the mid 60s and many years later I owned the 4 litre R version. Beautiful cars in their day.
I think that the sheer weight of these beasties would probably take the shine off some of the performance figures! A neighbour had an A99 which always seemed a bit stately compared to the PA Velox/Cresta. I couldn't tell the difference between Velox and Cresta, then or now!
@@ajfurrell3744 There was also a specifically Austin assembly plant in Lower Hutt (Petone Wellington area). For those who don't know the region. The Auckland factory was at Newmarket, and was operated by Dominion Motors Ltd. They assembled Morris vehicles along with some Wolseley Riley and MG models. All of them, including the Nelson factory, eventually became part of the NZ Motor Corporation.
@Leonard Carr Since watching this video. I have checked with my oldest bro, as to whether these big Austins were ever assembled in NZ. As he started his mechanics apprenticeship in 1964, at the Austin dealers, Magnus Motors in Rutherford Street Lower Hutt. He said some were. He remembered picking up 1 or 2 for Magnus from the Petone factory. He also said a number were Govt order cars. The ones he recalled were the later A110s. The Petone Austin factory also assembled Austin Gypsy 4 by 4s and both the British and Australian minis. And later the Aussie Leyland P76. I must ask him about Mokes. As an aside, i remember him saying that during the Wahine disaster in 1968. The police turned up at Magnus and asked for, ("ie requesitioned") Gypsy 4 by 4s off the yard. Some of the "poor beggars" from the Wahine had been washed up on to the beach south of Eastbourne. And were struggling to survive. While of course others didn't make it.
That's a really lovely old car and you don't see many vehicles around with "A" rego plates, I will have to keep an eye out for it. I tell ya it is still bizzare watching you drive around in Stokes Valley which is probably as obscure and far away from your part of the world as you can get, certainly in the years I have been tuning in never imagined it heh. Looking forward to the XR6 T video, shame you are not around now its back to being its pretty chirpy self..
I love the Westminster. My dad had one of the A99 and one of the A110. it’s just so lovely compared to the Farina Morris Oxford he was driving before that which was slower than molasses Great review Ian Pete 🇬🇧
Excellent drive! The C Series really does sound lovely and that overdrive in/out system was very clever. The later A110 Deluxe with the wood facia is a lovely old tank.
By the look and sound of that freewheeling overdrive unit I had a hunch that it might be the incomparable Borg Warner unit that was used in so many American vehicles of that era, and "sure enough" it was.
Care worn loveliness! I'm thinking aus built, colour combo and interior materials strike me as local market rather than longbridge produce. Top work mr hubnut!
They didn't build these cars in Australia. As the Aussies had been building a 6 cyl car they called the Morris Marshall. Based on the previous Austin A90 cars. And they were also working on a smaller 6 cyl car derived from the Austin A60/Morris Oxford Farina models. It was called the Austin Freeway. There was also a Wolseley version. If this car was not British built. Then it is most likely a New Zealand assembled car.
That brings back memories. A friend of my father's had a grey A99. I remember trips in it. Five of us kids (me, my sister and his three) all in the back seat. Great car.
IN 1961/2 my dad had an A105 Westminster, the predecessor of this car. That also had the Borg-Warner overdrive on its 4-speed box (floor change, incidentally, which some 95s and 105s did have). You had to kick down on the accelerator to get it to shift out of overdrive and it would drop back into overdrive when you took your foot off the throttle. When you kicked down, the spark plugs were short-circuited for 4 engine revolutions, I think, to reduce the shock loading on the transmission caused by the down shift.
This was the base model of the range also stepping up to the Wolesley 6/110 and the Vanden Plas Princess 3 litre (later with the 4 litre Rolls Royce engine).
Cant beleive youjust drove past my house.just randomly watched.newly subscibed as i miss my old British gems
Plenty of British gems left in New Zealand!
I remember trying to encourage my grandfather to go faster around the local roundabout to see if I could slide from one side of the rear seat fully to the other. He would laugh, granny was not impressed. I was about six at the time. Holy cow, that's over half a century ago. Cripes!
I'm with you there in memories :) and age :(
We all getting old ha
And back then you heard elders saying that lifes short etc and you think they're mad til the reality of that kicks in too lol 🙂
I can remember sliding around on the back seat of a schoolfriend's father's car when cornering when I was about six - mind, it was a Citroen ID...
In Australia the vinyl seat was not only slippery but also the temperature only slightly cooler than the sun in Summer
Evil Banger oval track champion. No wrap round screen, and it had a wonderfull elastic Ç series engine.
Spare wheel is underslung the boot. Thus the tank is between the rear sear and boot space.
Overdrive works as described. Push in to operate. Then it will engage on revs. There is a freewheel. just leave the overdrive engaged. The A1110 also had the same system.
The clock is not original. maybe replaced because of non working original or change of electrical polarity.
All cars had a remote servo. Repair kits in the UK are available.
The biggest difference between Healy and Austin/Wolseley engine is the head.
Fuel consumption is horrendous.
I love cars that show there age.
My brother had a Wolseley 6/110 automatic, later on it went manual with the 4 speed and the overdrive, we found the fuel consumption was very good for a car of that size. Sounded good too with a hacked about Healey exhaust system. It didn't do so bad in a race against a 3 litre Capri on a motorway either....
The simple joy of rediscovery watching your outstanding videos. Very easy and pleasing to watch.
Now you're talking :-) How gorgeous. The big brother to my car. Sadly, this model was not built in Sydney. BMC Aust only built the pre-Farina model between 1958 & 1959. Lovely. Cheers.
The long distance Gentlemans conveyance . Sports jacket with leather patches on the elbows,corduroy trousers and brogues are optional. Really have to like that engine.
Beautiful car! My grandfather had one and it is still a subject of frequent conversation to this day, stories of the four kids, dogs and caravan all heading off in the Westy.. Some great slides of the car in the collection, happy days :)
Thanks for an interesting review, and it brought back many memories of my 99 and 110s. The Wolseley & Austin 99s had 3 speed column change, with the 110 versions having 3 speed floor mounted gear levers. This changed to a 4 speed floor mounted lever box on the 110 mark 2, the first gear not being synchro, so always made a whining noise. The overdrive was later automatically engaged at over 30 MPH by a centrifugal switch on the transmission, which then locked the drive solid (with engine braking). Without the overdrive the car was freewheeling, which could sometimes be cause for concern if the engine stalled whilst decelerating, then you realised at the last moment you didn't have power assisted brakes!The kickdown did indeed short circuit the spark plugs for a moment, also dropping the overdrive out for quick acceleration, but would come back in again when you lifted your foot off the pedal. I removed the kickdown system off both my 110s and had a switch mounted on the column to drop out the overdrive instead.The spare wheel was lowered down from under the boot by using the starting handle.The door handles were pushed forward to open, and pulled back to lock.The engines were almost bomb proof, but in the UK it was body rot that saw most of them end up in the scrap yards before they reached 10 years old.
Just watched this and enjoyed the memories of long ago. My father and I bought a used A 105 with overdrive
twin carbs went like a bat out of hell . The ride would put some of these modern cars to shame. The only problem
with it was the dampers they would tend to be too soft you could get seasick if on a undulating road. Unfortunly
in became a wreck after hitting a spare lorry wheel in the nearside lane of the A40 near Witney before the Bypass
was built. The Wheel Landed 200 ft in a corn field found by the police the following day. I was very lucky to get
out of car i one piece at 3 am just shook up as i had been doing about 70 mph just prior to this.
Thanks for bringing back along lost memory.. A W ADAMS now aged 80
The A99 was never assembled in Oz and at that stage BMC Oz was always two years behind BMC UK with the A95 still in production as the Morris Marshall. The Pininfarina styling arrived with the locally made Austin Freeway and upmarket Wolseley 24/80 in 1962. The two year delay was typical at the time to Australianise UK cars for Oz conditions (stiffen the suspension, give time for local suppliers to tool up, etc).
Lovely motor. Brings back memories of the sixties and as a passenger in cars like this. Dad never had one of these but I remember the Morris Oxford, Singer Hunter, Hillman Minxes, Rover 105S, Victor 101, Sunbeam Talbot etc etc
To early for the Nelson plant, but these were assembled at the Austin Distributors Federation plant in Petone, Wellington along with the A40F, Austin Mini, Austin A60 saloon and Estate, Austin 1100 & 1300, Maxi, and all the NZ P76 models. All the Austin trucks were also built there. They did a limited build of Austin Freeways including the import licence oddity the Freeway 1800.
In 1964. My eldest brother started his mechanics apprenticeship at Magnus Motors, in those days, a big Austin dealer in Lower Hutt. Not far from the Petone Austin factory. Since the question arose in this video about where this car was built. I asked him. Do you recall if the big Austin sixes were ever assembled in NZ? He said they were. He recalled picking up a number of them directly from the Petone factory. Interestingly he also said, a few of them were Govt order cars. By 1964 - 65. The cars he picked up were the later A110 models. But you have confirmed these big Austins were built in NZ. As has my bro. So Hubnut, perhaps on balance, we just might have settled where this car was possibly built. Hence the slightly different specs to the UK models. Cheers. And thanks for the videos!
Had a 1961 A99 the exact same colour in high school in Edmonton Alberta Canada ! The sound of that engine brings back memories !
A lovely car. Full of character. A great car for car club outings. Lucky person that owns that. Great review Ian.
Great review, many thanks!. I was a 15 year old working as a part time cleaner in a local Austin garage when these came out. As a treat, the garage owner took his son and me out for a run in their demonstrator. About 8 miles from home, the only gear that would engage was reverse and we came home, all 8 miles, in reverse! The gearbox had to be replaced and it was the first of many as that 3-speed 'box proved to be unreliable. Hence the later A110s had a 4-speed 'box. Great cars but enjoyed a drink!
This was epic to watch. Hubnut was in Stokes Vegas, NZ for a test drive. When you drive out of stokes valley towards Upper Hutt, I was like...dad, this is the Hutt valley! It was so cool seeing you in our neighbourhood. 👍🏻 Shame you weren’t here in February when there’s a classic British and European car show in Upper Hutt. I’m not big on knowledge of old cars but it’s fun tagging along with my dad at local car shows. Best vid of yours so far for me is the southwards car museum and the horopito motors...what a place! I have to go there next summer because of your vid. Thanks for your vids hubnut. It’s nice sharing some time with my dad watching them. 😁
Hi from Whitemans Valley, Wellington. NZ
Your videos are great! My dad had an A110 and we did 110mph on the motorway once. As a five year old it was very exciting - in fact I'm still excited to this day as I think about it and I'm 53 and 3/4 now! Happy days! :)
My Dad had a 1959 Austin A95 Countryman estate car. It had the 6 cylinder engine and lovely leather interior. He sold it to the groundsman at work, who drove it for years, but I have not seen an A95 since.
My mate had a rare Mk1 in white upper and blue lower. Stupid fast. Servo stopped working though, so we had to urgently find an equivalent part fast. Not a direct replacement. Changed the master cylinder whilst we were at it. Easy car to work on. Good times. And not a single AA badge to be seen... even better.
My brother and I own a couple of restored A99s in Canada. No older car drives like a modern car, but they are a ton of fun. Disc power brakes and a peppy 6cyl engine allow them to drive around in today's traffic.
Great vlog Ian, Jools Holland has got or had one of these, and I remember him being very pleased that he'd driven his Westminster in Westminster! 😊
That horn is fantastic. (The whole CAR is fantastic. :) )
I'm having another "Blimey" moment. It's decades since I last saw one of those, not least one in excellent condition.
Blimey!
If there was ever one car I could own again it would be the Austin A40 Farina (MkII Countryman). Must be Horizon blue as well. Many happy days of taking the dog to the woods every weekend in what was a tiny little car, split tailgate, but it just fitted the wee greyhound in the back quite the thing.
Totally expected to hear a rattle from a old 4 cylinder motor when you turned the key...but what a pleasant surprise to hear that smooth inline Six 😯
Most people would not associate the Farina Westminster with motorsport, however due to their rugged construction and powerful engine, they were a favourite and much sought after in the late 70s, early 80s banger racing scene. As Neil Young once said, "It's better to burn out, than it is to rust!".
Of course, this means that there's probably very few examples left. I'm seriously considering importing one of these into the U.S.
Love these old Westminsters. My Dad owned a 1962 Vanden Plas Princess Mark 2 which was based on the A110, but it had the three speed box and overdrive featured here. I remember the almighty shove in the back (for those days) it gave when he floored it in overdrive second and the box kicked down for overtaking. Many memorable trips between Birmingham and Devon in that car, in the days when the M5 finished at Gloucester!
A friend of mine had one back in 1974 . It was very strong, very dependable, economical, great gas mileage.
Really enjoyed your show today Hub Nut. My dad had a 110 Westminster and also a Princess vanden plas of the same set up. My dad loved his Westminster as I can well remember. Thanking you for a great big dollop of nostalgia. Pete 🇬🇧
My father had the A95, A99, and finally the A110 as his company car. Then promotion saw him get a Princess and finally a Princess R. The last 2 had Smiths rear shelf mounted air-conditioning, that used to ice up after about 90 minutes, so was never used on long distance road trips. Thanks for the memories.
You've done well, figured out the overdrive quicker than I did when I owned one. Method, push the overdrive knob in and you get freewheel below 30 MPH and overdrive when you lift off the throttle above 30.
Kick down with full throttle and you're out of overdrive. Pull the knob out to lock out overdrive and freewheel.
Truly a gorgeous classic, complete with the evocative aroma of vinyl. It really deserves an outfit in autumn colours, by Dunn & Co, not forgetting the trilby. Sadly, now only available on Ebay.
My dad had several of these when he was a oil salesman to Austin in the 60s. He was very fond of them. Pete 🇬🇧
I noticed she has a tow-bar; so the old girl has probably been a work horse during some period of her life. That said, I agree that her blemishes add to the character; along with the newer add-ons she has collected through the various decades. Just a very honest, adorable car. Love it!
Nearly all older NZ cars have towbars
The styling on these old Austin cars is lovely. It's got a bit of Americana styling and British styling.
What a lovely, honest, old Farina. Had a Wolseley 16/60 for a while, loved the whole range. Wonderful cars.Many thanks for sharing.
Thank you so much Ian. When I was just a nipper my dad had an A110, black with red leather upholstery. I loved that car so much and your vid has brought back some dear memories.
What a spiffing happy yet purposeful exhaust note ...
I have many subs on youtube. but your channel is always the one I save for last as the best treat. you're basically pudding. :) :)
The overdrive/freewheel was fun, best combo was the engine from a later automatic coupled to the 4 speed floor change manual with o/d. I believe the cylinder head on the automatic brought power to about 130hp. They went well for the time...
This is the Farina type of Westminster - I'd forgotten all about them. The wiper action wasn't as perfect as we'd like, although (thankfully) no triangle of doom or driver's side corner of disappointment! Yeah, back in those pre-EU days, the UK were proud of their Automobile industry, great cars! 👍🏿👍🏾👍🏼
Not just pre-EEC days (fore-runner of modern-day EU), but also pre-strike days when British workers were proud of the cars they built, the management weren't acting like dicks and the bean-counters weren't in control of R&D. Add to that Britain was finally over the austerity of post-WWII and it was the golden age of cars in Blighty.
Thanks Ian.They were pretty good cars for the early 1960's. As a child, I once travelled in a new one of those, sitting on the floor, under the dashboard. There were eleven people in the car, including five children. Nobody thought anything of it being so full, since no laws were being broken. Innocent times.
These things are built like tanks, had a couple of the Wolseley versions, wish I kept them. Saw one once in a demolition derby. Not only did it win easily but it still looked like a car at the end, which can’t be said for the 80s and 90s Japanese cars which were the rest of the field.
Your car reviews are brilliant. You don’t just drive them, you bring out the character and personality of them. I love that Westminster 👍
Always sensible warming up in Ian reviews akin to his near peer Harry's Garage and respects the various owners' stipulations. This review was clearly encouraged to use the available performance and rewarded us with some mechanical music. Very tactile reviews of Lucasoid switchgear and extracting all applicable clanging of BMC doors etc. Would be nice to hear the engine going with the lid up.
Considering it's not been restored it's not in bad condition,I didn't see any rust at all !
I have never seen a 1960 Westminster before but it looks very similar to a Rolls Royce Vanden Plas, both of which share many features of my 1960 Austin Cambridge.
Sadly in Britain a lot of these big Austins ended up in banger/ stock car and grass track racing competitions 😦
One gets the sense that she really didn't want you to take her out for a sound thrashing! Lovely example that has been cherished to survive so long in such originality. Lovely.
Nice you drove past my house at the start..it's fun seeing NZ in your clips.
Great to see you in NZ. They have quite a few British cars that are still street-legal. Ever road-tested an Austin/Morris 1100/1300? They have a wonderful ride on the hydro suspension, and there were lots and lots assembled in NZ from kits. Many still exist in NZ, cos NZ don't salt the roads. ;)
Whereabouts on the north island was it?
Wow...what a rarity, always liked these, especially the vanden plas version...👍
What a wonderful old car, useable too, easily able to keep up with modern traffic. I'd never noticed the A40 lights before until I saw this one.
Im afraid to say it , but as a child i remember cars like this syacked high in scrap yards if only I'd thought then to document them all, the smells of them inside facinated me ,so elegant compared to today !!
My first car was the Austin Freeway... And this Westminster reminds me of it.. For all it's drawbacks, I loved it
A real HubNut car. Nice to see something that is very rare nowadays
Love that straight 6 twin carb engine! Beautiful low rubble sound!!
Excellent piece and what a car. My dad had the A110 MK2 Super Deluxe with automatic transmission on a C plate. It was royal blue, walnut fascia and matching picnic tables. I wish I had her now. The car shown started perfectly, I recall dad's taking ages to kick on choke.
We need an Austin/Morris/Triumph revival car company to make brand new battery powered versions of all of these gems from the past - probably just my nostalgia at work again. :)
Wonderful nostalgia thanks we had a A 40
What a great old girl Ian. Lovely to see one in original condition pretty much..Love the Kiwi peg on the choke. Love the sound of that six. Extra fan blades. Same thing on old BlackBerry. Thanks for a great drive.
Lovely review. It brought back memories of my fathers 1961 A99 in robins egg blue with the 3 speed borg ward automatic gearbox. Sadly my family had to abandon the car due to lack of spares (by the mid 80’s in Western Canada, nobody stocked BMC parts). I remember it as a very solid feeling car with a distinct whine from the automatic gearbox.
Incidentally, the spare tire on the A99 is hidden completely in a tray underneath the trunk. To access the tire, one uses the crank from the supplied toolset to turn a worm gear that lowers the spare tire. The same crank is also used to turn the engine over. There is a spring loaded chromed chromed cover in the middle of the front bumper, which when lifted reveals a slot where the hand crank is inserted. The crank is not intended for starting the engine, but for turning the engine over to set the valves and ignition points.
Yes, that's a very nice car, much to my surprise. A few minor glitches that could probably do with a bit of tlc, but basically very sound with a good solid and powerful engine and must have been a pleasure to drive.
Love the colour. My aunty Viv had a Mini that colour back in the late '60's. She woke up.at around 3am one morning, looked out of her bedroom window just in time to see 4 blokes loading it onto a trailer. They were gone before she could get down the stairs. She never recovered it.
The mechanicals may have been a bit dated when it came out, but I can assure you the overall appearance of it was not. When I first saw these Farina designed cars in 1959 they looked very modern indeed and still looked ok as they were revised slightly into the late 60s. Don't forget that in 1959 there were still thousands of very old and archaic looking pre-war cars on the road...
Nice car. I think in those years many passenger cars still used diagonal bias ply tires which are not great for roadholding. Peugeots of that time had a reputation for good roadholding but that probably was mainly because of the Michelin X or ZX radial tires that were fitted. I bet that Austin will performer a good deal better with a set of new radial tires.
Handling is about more than grip. These roll a bit too much and the suspension geometry definitely isn't set for sporty.
Very nice! She hums along pretty well , seems very quiet. Will miss you on our shores!
I was starting to complain that we saw more UK cars reviews in NZ than more local cars... But then I enjoyed the video as always lol
From the side the back is as big as the front just like an old aunt LOL nice to see one been driven and not in a museum
That peg on the choke took me back.
Ohhh Ian, I laughed so much ... !!! Reminds me of when I had a 1964 Cortina MkI ... The lovely character of old cars ...
The lock situation is a combination of the pins in the lock getting out of position when the door is slammed ... A lock pickers version of shocking a lock when trying to get it open ... The key in the lock re-aligns the pins and allows you to re-open the door .... Ahhhh Joy of all joys .... ;-)
My Dad had an Austin Loadstar ? truck with a very simalar engine in South Australia. It was like an oven in the cab in summer and I well remember the fan noise. It would always vapourise when hay carting too.
A truly gorgeous six clynder sound plenty of grunt ..amazing ..
Love these old Austins, a lot of taste and stance in the styling. Lovely video, hope you come across more examples like this on your travels
i can remember coming down long steep hills, many years ago. At the top of one in particular it had a No frewheeling sign as you started the descent.
The OZ built cars have a little map of Australia on the hub caps .The West monster in Australia looks similar but is quite different. The OZ outstation BMC ran in Sydney was pretty independent and they made their own version of the six . It was a extended version of the B series four and only ever offered in Australia . So... if that car has the truck engine it's a pommy built car not an Aussie one.
The B-Series Six, or Blue Streak, was only used in the smaller Farina body - as you say, unique to Aus.
You are correct. By 1960 BMC Australia were concentrating on developing their own range of 6 cyl cars to compete with the Holden and new Aussie built Falcon. Launched in 1962 as the Austin Freeway, (they also built a Wolseley variant) and based around the Farina styled Austin - Morris A55/A60 Cambridge and Oxford cars. But smaller than the Austin A99. Previously they had badge engineered the A90 and marketed it in Aust as the Morris Marshall. So if this car isn't an English built example. I wouldn't completely rule it out as NZ assembled. Since Austin assembled cars and commercial vehicles, among them the Austin Gypsy Landrover rival, in lower Hutt (Wellington) for many years. Including, in the early to mid 70s, by then under the NZ Motor Corporation banner, the Aussie sourced Leyland p76. Ps, Morris vehicles were assembled in Newmarket Auckland by Dominion Motors Ltd. Who eventually also became part of NZMC.
Dad had two of these when I was a kid: A black A-99, eventually trading it in for a grey A-110. We put a lot of miles on them, towing a caravan from England down to the south of France every summer. Great cars, very solid and reliable. (I can't remember what I did yesterday, but curiously, I remember the licence plate of both of these cars.)
Passing my test in 1970 theses cars were the norm...and car clocks and radios were sheer luxury
Gorgeous engine note and condition, surprising how similar the dash looks to more pedestrian Oxfords and Cambridges. Ran a '59 Cambridge for a while, fins n all, lots of fun and barrelled along quite well for its age and girth.
What a lovely car . Originality only happens once , the patina is part of the mojo 👌
This is one of quite a few cars that you have introduced to me that has prompted me to search eBay to see if one available here in the US. However, the lack of garage space prevents me from clicking the “buy it now” button, if I do find one. However, do appreciate the education I’m receiving on the topic of classic English cars.
Love the looks and sheer presence of this car. The A99/110 were very much the entry level luxury car with painted dash and doors. Probably used by upper mid level civil servants, police and the fleet market.
Those manual chokes used to allow extra fuel to wash down the barrels when left warming up, not good for the engine wear, lovely sounding beast. good luck and keep well ian.
Ian, this car just suits you. This car was made for you. You can tell by the grin on your face whilst vlogging.
Must get my hearing retested, I had to replay 'Oo that's a smashing arse' three times before I got 'oo that's a smash and a half'
You got more than I did. I replayed it and got "oh that's a smash arse"
Brilliant. Some lovely old engine and gear box sounds there!
Loved the big Farina Family. My late father had the 3 litre Austin Princess, Vanden Plas, in the mid 60s and many years later I owned the 4 litre R version. Beautiful cars in their day.
I think that the sheer weight of these beasties would probably take the shine off some of the performance figures!
A neighbour had an A99 which always seemed a bit stately compared to the PA Velox/Cresta. I couldn't tell the difference between Velox and Cresta, then or now!
The paint colour and trim look like a NZ assembled car, note it is fitted with A95 wheels not A99, the alternator is also a modification.
I don't believe these were assembled in NZ, but I could be wrong. It is indeed on A95 wheels.
@@HubNut there was a big BL factory in Nelson which may explain the original dealer sticker. There was also a BL factory in Auckland.
@@ajfurrell3744 There was also a specifically Austin assembly plant in Lower Hutt (Petone Wellington area). For those who don't know the region. The Auckland factory was at Newmarket, and was operated by Dominion Motors Ltd. They assembled Morris vehicles along with some Wolseley Riley and MG models. All of them, including the Nelson factory, eventually became part of the NZ Motor Corporation.
@Leonard Carr Since watching this video. I have checked with my oldest bro, as to whether these big Austins were ever assembled in NZ. As he started his mechanics apprenticeship in 1964, at the Austin dealers, Magnus Motors in Rutherford Street Lower Hutt. He said some were. He remembered picking up 1 or 2 for Magnus from the Petone factory. He also said a number were Govt order cars. The ones he recalled were the later A110s. The Petone Austin factory also assembled Austin Gypsy 4 by 4s and both the British and Australian minis. And later the Aussie Leyland P76. I must ask him about Mokes. As an aside, i remember him saying that during the Wahine disaster in 1968. The police turned up at Magnus and asked for, ("ie requesitioned") Gypsy 4 by 4s off the yard. Some of the "poor beggars" from the Wahine had been washed up on to the beach south of Eastbourne. And were struggling to survive. While of course others didn't make it.
That's a really lovely old car and you don't see many vehicles around with "A" rego plates, I will have to keep an eye out for it. I tell ya it is still bizzare watching you drive around in Stokes Valley which is probably as obscure and far away from your part of the world as you can get, certainly in the years I have been tuning in never imagined it heh. Looking forward to the XR6 T video, shame you are not around now its back to being its pretty chirpy self..
I love the Westminster. My dad had one of the A99 and one of the A110. it’s just so lovely compared to the Farina Morris Oxford he was driving before that which was slower than molasses Great review Ian Pete 🇬🇧
The Jeco clock is out of a 1980's Mark 2 Toyota Celica---I have one myself which naturally still works great.
Its amazing the variety of cars you're finding out there!
Posh 'farinas are a mix of ordinary and aspirational that is most engaging. The duck egg colour is spot on.
Excellent drive! The C Series really does sound lovely and that overdrive in/out system was very clever. The later A110 Deluxe with the wood facia is a lovely old tank.
Thank you, Ian - it's a real 'looker'; very nice indeed.
What a lovely car and the colour is adorable. Great video Ian!
By the look and sound of that freewheeling overdrive unit I had a hunch that it might be the incomparable Borg Warner unit that was used in so many American vehicles of that era, and "sure enough" it was.
Care worn loveliness! I'm thinking aus built, colour combo and interior materials strike me as local market rather than longbridge produce. Top work mr hubnut!
They didn't build these cars in Australia. As the Aussies had been building a 6 cyl car they called the Morris Marshall. Based on the previous Austin A90 cars. And they were also working on a smaller 6 cyl car derived from the Austin A60/Morris Oxford Farina models. It was called the Austin Freeway. There was also a Wolseley version. If this car was not British built. Then it is most likely a New Zealand assembled car.
That brings back memories. A friend of my father's had a grey A99. I remember trips in it. Five of us kids (me, my sister and his three) all in the back seat. Great car.
IN 1961/2 my dad had an A105 Westminster, the predecessor of this car. That also had the Borg-Warner overdrive on its 4-speed box (floor change, incidentally, which some 95s and 105s did have). You had to kick down on the accelerator to get it to shift out of overdrive and it would drop back into overdrive when you took your foot off the throttle. When you kicked down, the spark plugs were short-circuited for 4 engine revolutions, I think, to reduce the shock loading on the transmission caused by the down shift.
This was the base model of the range also stepping up to the Wolesley 6/110 and the Vanden Plas Princess 3 litre (later with the 4 litre Rolls Royce engine).