Diary Of A 1968 Rover P5B Coupe, BGU 122G

I bought this car on 29th March 2014, having always loved the shape of the Rover P5 and P5B, especially the Coupe. I’ve owned classic cars since I was 17 – my very first car was a Volkswagen Karmann Ghia Type 3 (which I never got to drive), then I had numerous Beetles, and two Alfa 105 Guilia Coupes, so I wasn’t completely clueless when buying the P5B. When I viewed the car it was a long-way from perfect, having had very little use for the last 20 years apart from trips to the MOT station. The car averaged only 90 miles per year over that period.

I won’t say how much I paid for the car, but with hindsight I overpaid. Well, that’s part of the ‘fun’ of buying classic cars, especially when you’re relatively new to a particular model. That’s also partly what prompted me to write a comprehensive Buyers Guide.

Whilst most things worked, and the car was usable and roadworthy (just), almost every system was corroded, seized, poorly maintained or else just untouched over this period. There is also some rust, but nothing that can’t be fixed. So I drove the car for a year, then took it off the road to renovate / re-condition it properly. Restoration would be an overstatement – I want the car to be reliable, original and presentable, but not too perfect that I worry about driving it. So thats the journey I’m on, and will be for as long as I keep the car (which is probably a long time – I’ve owned an Alfa 105 coupe since 2003, so you can see I don’t like selling cars).

The Rover P5 and Rover P5B are simple by modern standards but relatively complex compared to other cars of the period. But they’re also effectively hand-built, so many parts can be disassembled, remade or reconditioned. Let’s get going…

Motortrend.com: 1970 Rover 3.5 Litre Coupe Classic Drive

RichardAug 29, 2018

Not a recent article, but this crops-up quite regularly when I’m searching the web, so I finally thought I should share this here. The quality of the photography, in particular,…

RoverP5.com Website Re-organisation

RichardAug 27, 2018

As you browse the site you may have noticed that there’s been a bit of a re-org of the website content, and a ‘Magazine’ now features in the navigation. We’ve…

Leyland-Rover-Triumph: Winners and Losers

RichardAug 27, 2018

Leyland-Rover-Triumph: Winners and Losers Did B.L. make a fundamental error in choosing Rover as their leading brand in the early 1980’s, rather than choose Triumph? It’s an interesting question to…

RoverP5.com Review [Book]: The Strange Death of the British Motor Cycle Industry

RichardAug 20, 2018

RoverP5.com Review [Book]: The Strange Death of the British Motor Cycle Industry. This book provides a gripping description and analysis of the mis-steps and misfortunes of the British motor cycle industry,…

Rover P5B Coupe In The Nude [Part 4]: Front Bodywork

RichardAug 5, 2018

Rover P5B Coupe In The Nude [Part 4]: Front Bodywork Let’s start the next chapter in the dismantling of a Rover P5 by Cyrille, who has kindly allowed the use…