Produced in Surrey between 1947 and 1956, only 1,284 AC Two-Litre, four-door saloons were ever produced and even fewer drophead coups and tourers made the production line. the AC 1991cc
The right-hand drive AC Aceca originally in Mist Green (one of only six ever finished in that colour) with a green leather interior; a three-door and very sleek fastback, was
1971 model.The concept of Italian styling coupled with American V8 horsepower was well established by the late 1960s, and no doubt influenced AC Cars decision to reconfigure its fire-breathing Cobra
The AC Ace Brooklands was launched in 1993 following two previous concept cars of 1986 and 1991, the Brooklands Ace underwent small scale production until 1997 when it received a
In time for the year’s most eagerly awaited Motor show, the British sports car specialist teamed up with fabled Italian coachbuilder, Zagato, to create the all new AC 378 GT
The Series 3 Spider underwent a major styling revamp in 1983, which saw the introduction of black rubber front and rear bumpers. The front bumper incorporated the grille and a
Revamped for the first time in 1998 (Phase 2) with main interior changes including new centre console, painted letters on skirt seals,changed controls and switches. On the exterior, main changes
The Alvis 1250 is a car introduced by British business Alvis Car and Engineering Company Ltd in 1923. It went through a series of versions, with the last ones being
The Alvis TD21 a Bitish luxury sports saloon was conceived in 1956 and was quite a departure from the lovely, but rather “post-war” TC21 however, on its arrival in dealer’s
Following the end of World War II, Alvis quickly re-emerged with a revised range of passenger cars. They had been kept busy building military vehicles during the war so were