The well-to-do lady or gentleman driver of the late 1960s had a
wealth of options when it came to stylish, high-performance grand
tourers. Aston Martin, Ferrari, or Maserati were obvious choices,
but required specialized and costly maintenance. For some, a Jaguar
was too commonplace, a Rolls-Royce too ostentatious, and a Citroen
SM too avant-garde. But quietly in the middle was Jensen's handsome
Italian designed, American powered, and British
engineeredInterceptor. Succeeding the fiberglass-bodied CV-8, the
Interceptor was redesigned with stylish new steel bodywork designed
by Carrozzeria Touring. Jensen continued using bomb-proof Chrysler
V8 engines (the 360 at first, later the 440) which delivered exotic
car performance, locomotive-like torque, with excellent
serviceability and reliability. While body was designed in Italy,
they were all built by Jensen in their West Bromwich factory.
Initially offered as a 2+2 'saloon' with its distinctive fish-bowl
rear hatch, a convertible followed in 1974, and the distinctive
hardtop Coupe in 1975. Regardless of body style, Jensen
Interceptors were lavishly appointed with leather upholstery, wool
carpet, wood trim, and plenty of luxury equipment.
As Interceptor production reached the mid-1970s, effects from the
fuel crisis had put Jensen in financial distress. Company owner
Kjell Qvale wanted something different to offer American buyers,
but without funding, options were limited. The engineering team
devised a new hardtop coupe which debuted in prototype form at the
1975 Earls Court Motor Show. Based on an Interceptor convertible
shell, the coupe was adapted with a permanent hard top
distinguished by a targa bar and padded vinyl to appeal to American
tastes. Jensen subcontracted production of the tops to Panther
cars, where final assembly took place. In these latter days of
Jensen Cars, record-keeping was spotty at best, but marque expert
Richard Calver's extensive research uncovered 46 known examples
built between 1975 and 1976, making them among the rarest of all
Interceptor variants.
This 1976 Interceptor III Coupe is likely one of the best surviving
examples of this rare variant we have encountered. As a Series III
model, this car benefits from many improvements including revised
seats, re-designed front end, factory air conditioning, GKN alloy
wheels, and Chrysler's mighty 440 cubic-inch V8, backed by a
Torqueflite automatic transmission. Information from the Jensen
Owner's Club suggests this car was originally finished in white
over black upholstery, though it has been restored in this
attractive, factory-offered shade of Aruba Red over a lovely
biscuit leather interior.
The hand-built nature of the Interceptor can make them particularly
challenging and quite costly to restore, but it is clear that this
car has had cost-no-object care lavished upon it. The body is
straight and crisp, as are the bumpers, sill trims, and factory
alloy wheels. The unique Coupe hard top retains the correct factory
trim and is correctly finished with black vinyl.
With the Interceptor, Jensen had arguably the best interior
accommodations this side of a Rolls-Royce. Spacious, sublimely
comfortable, and covered in swaths of leather and wood in the
finest English tradition, it is a wonderful place to spend a long
day behind the wheel. This car exemplifies 70s Grand Touring with
its beautiful biscuit leather covering the front and rear seats,
door cards, kick panels, console, dash, and even the headlining.
Beige wool carpets are tidy, and the wood veneer dash is in good
condition, housing Jaeger instruments and aircraft-inspired
switchgear. This car has been tastefully updated with a wood-rimmed
Nardi steering wheel and a modern Pioneer stereo head unit with a
flip-out screen.
Under the bonnet, Chrysler's 440 cubic-inch V8 is tidy and
well-detailed with an honest, usable appearance that points to
quality care and maintenance. It is equipped with a single 4-bbl
carburetor, power steering, the original-type air conditioning
compressor, and factory "Jensen" fluted valve covers.
The rare and distinctive Interceptor III Coupe may represent a
small footnote in Jensen history, but it is nevertheless a stylish,
interesting, and highly capable GT. This beautifully presented car
would undoubtedly garner plenty of attention in casual shows and
regional concours settings, but it will truly shine when you load
your bags, set your driving playlist on the stereo, and waft off
into the countryside for a weekend of touring - cosseted in
distinctly British luxury, and with the assured, effortless
performance of a big American V8 engine.
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