Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Classic Cars and Coffee - Sunday 2 November 2025


I have not attended Classic Cars and Coffee since March 2025. Partly this is due to poor weather, being overseas for three months and generally because the event has become less appealing to me these days. There are simply too many modern and boring cars attending, which is frustrating as the event is already oversubscribed, resulting in long queues to enter and difficulty finding parking. That's just my opinion of course. The event remains just as popular as ever with attendees and visitors.

After returning from three months traveling the world - and given it was a beautiful spring day - I decided to take a car along.

This streamlined motorcycle sidecar drew a crowd. I'm not sure what it is. 

Lovely little Austin 7

A very big turnout from my car club: the KBG. I believe we had 13 vehicles attending.

MG A paired with an Austin-Healey

BSA 500 with enclosed two-seater sidecar. Terrific.

Skoda Octavia and Volvo

Aston-Martin DB2 coupe (for sale). This was the Earls Court exhibition car 



The Patron Citron H coffee van. It looks like the van has changed hands as there was new signage and different operators since I last saw it. Will the coffee be as good? 

Ford Le Mans

Pontiac

1947 MG TC

Alvis

A TVR leaves the scene of the crime...

A Jaguar E-Type has a little coolant mishap. 

This immaculate Porsche 964 has just come out of a long-running recommissioning that has returned it to showroom perfection.

Big dog resting in the shade. It's gonna be a hot summer ahead

Something new and unusual - a Mack truck. Congratulations to the owner for bringing it along.

As I arrived on time (8.30am) I was regulated to the far end of the car park. This is at the end of the show when most of the cars had already left, but in the background you can see a perfect example of my disillusion with this event - why are all these bog-standard modern cars allowed into the event, taking up space? This is a major frustration when the organizers let just about anything in.We know why.....

This photo was taken earlier when I first parked up. I parked with vacant spaces either side of me so the 4x4 came in after me. Well, the organizers do advertise the event as "Not Just Classic Cars and Coffee"... so there we have it. 

Next show is 7 December 2025. There is also a driving event on Sunday 16th November too. Check out their Facebook page for details.


Thursday, October 30, 2025

B-Sport Ferdinand Porsche documentary series


Ferdinand Porsche's life story has come to be totally dominated by the Volkswagen, the rear-engined German people's car. The Volkswagen is rightly a legendary vehicle, but the controversies that attach to that project and the car itself, do Porsche a great disservice. The Volkswagen was simply one of a series of vehicles he designed. It's not even the most interesting! Porsche's pre-Volkswagen career is extremely interesting. He started as a metalworker in his father's workshop, then became an itinerate tradesman, became an electrical apprentice, then electrical engineer, designed an electric vehicle motor, designed and patented the electric wheel-hub motor for the Lohner carriage company, designed military trucks and diesel-electric road trains for the Austro-Hungarian army, designed Austro-Daimler's first aero engine (that went on to become the model for Daimler-Benz and BMW aero engines in the First and Second World War), became Austro-Daimler's technical director of vehicle development, designed, built and drove racecars for Daimler, promoted the development of a budget 'people's' motorcar (at Austro-Daimler, Steyr and Daimler-Benz), designed the four and six cylinder engines used by Wanderer, worked on mid-engined racecars for Benz and Auto-Union, designed a three-wheeled delivery van for Zundapp, designed the Volkswagen and its predecessors, developed a 'people's tractor' and designed heavy tanks for the Wehrmacht. Most people don't know any of this. When you understand the full scope of his career, the fairy tales that accuse him of plagarism (of Ledwinka's or Ganz' designs) are easy to dismiss as the nonsense they are.

B-Sport channel on YouTube have done a magnificently detailed review of Ferdinand Porsche's career, from his early years in his father's metalwork shop. B-Sport have many other histories and biographies on their channel that are well worth watching. I highly recomment their content.

Porsche's early life

Revolutionary Designs at Lohner

Porsche at Austro-Daimler


More videos to follow. Subscribe to B-Sport for more content

The origin of the Volkswagen: http://heinkelscooter.blogspot.com.au/2012/03/volkswagen-world-beating-peoples-car.html
Volkswagen at War: https://heinkelscooter.blogspot.com/2014/07/volkswagen-at-war.html
The Death and Resurrection of Volkswagen: https://heinkelscooter.blogspot.com/2015/04/the-death-and-resurrection-of-volkswagen.html
The Tatra-Volkswagen lawsuit: https://tatrat600.blogspot.com/2020/09/the-tatra-versus-volkswagen-lawsuit.html