Amazing collection! Metropole Classics, Druten, The Netherlands

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  • čas přidán 7. 09. 2024
  • This place absolutely blew my mind! An astonishing array of classics, from microcars to supercars, with everything in between! More Gibbs Aquadas than you'll ever have seen, more Amphicars too! A Fiat 600 Multipla taxi was a favourite. One floor is cars for sale, the other the owner's private collection. WELL worth a visit. metropoleclass...
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Komentáře • 308

  • @volvo480
    @volvo480 Před 2 lety +61

    I never knew I needed an Englishman to show me the interesting places in my own country but now I do. The next destination for my car club to meet has been sorted. 😅

    • @Nikki_Holland
      @Nikki_Holland Před 2 lety +8

      Exactly me too. Never heard of this museum but going definitely to visit

    • @HubNut
      @HubNut  Před 2 lety +13

      To be fair, I was tipped off by my Dutch friends. It hasn't been open long.

  • @unbalancedcrank
    @unbalancedcrank Před 2 lety +2

    The fact that HubNut blanks a 300SL for a Goggomobil is exactly why we love HubNut! Thoroughly enjoyed this, and I really MUST go!

  • @richardhalliday6469
    @richardhalliday6469 Před 2 lety +15

    This has got to be one of the best walk arounds yet - superb collection.

  • @gustavmeyrink_2.0
    @gustavmeyrink_2.0 Před 2 lety +10

    2:20 Not surprised you never seen a Diplomat Coupé before. They made a grand total of 374!
    It has a Chevrolet 5.4L (327) small block, a down carbed version of their race version with all forged internals (crankshaft, camshafts, connecting rods and pistons) because the standard cast version kept breaking on Autobahn runs.

  • @Howwitz
    @Howwitz Před 2 lety +19

    What an incredible collection! Never seen such variety, thanks for sharing with us!

  • @awc900
    @awc900 Před 2 lety +12

    The Cosmo was the first Mazda rotary but the lovely NSU Spider was the first production rotary car.😀

    • @robot797
      @robot797 Před 2 lety

      i have a rotary neckar jagst 2

  • @alanbellwood3902
    @alanbellwood3902 Před 2 lety +13

    Enjoying the mix of Camper, Travel Vlog (another strength of yours) as well as the usual stuff at the unit. Really like to see you do some longer documentary/ history nerdy style car history one off's as your with your magazine background and well researched articles should produce some real gems.

  • @Nikki_Holland
    @Nikki_Holland Před 2 lety +9

    I’ve never heard of this place Ian. It looks amazing and well worth a visit. As I actually live in the Netherlands I’m going to definitely take a look.

    • @Nikki_Holland
      @Nikki_Holland Před 2 lety

      @Paul Fellows That’s a great idea Paul.

  • @profrumpo
    @profrumpo Před 2 lety +4

    Brilliant work Mr. H what better way to spend a Saturday morning than having a guided tour of a remarkable collection. Much thanks!

  • @scottishcarenthusiastsandtrain

    What a impressive museum and collection, this has to be added to my list to visit one day if I am in the Netherlands, moment I saw the Fiat Taxi I thought Hubnuts new family car!
    Thanks for sharing this experience.

  • @09gearchange
    @09gearchange Před 2 lety +5

    What a great trip you have taken us on HubNut. Absolutely superb tour of rare and obscure vehicles. I must say your off the bat knowledge is astounding considering the diverse nature of cars and vans. Thank you so much.

  • @alliberto
    @alliberto Před 2 lety +4

    The reason the fiat lorry is r/h/drive is because of narrow mountain roads ,easier for driver to stay close to edge of road, my Italian uncle had one in the 60's

    • @darrendixon9534
      @darrendixon9534 Před 2 lety +1

      Yep, agree with that, heard the same reason

    • @delukxy
      @delukxy Před 2 lety +2

      @@darrendixon9534 A friend of mine's uncle had an early RHD Beetle in Switzerland for the very same reason. In the 50's road edge barriers were often minimal so it was nice to be able to see where the edge was!

  • @allareasindex7984
    @allareasindex7984 Před rokem +1

    It’s fun to see lots of vehicles never sold in the US! Greetings and many thanks from San Antonio Texas.

  • @jfv65
    @jfv65 Před 2 lety +12

    BMW 02 cabriolet was made by Karmann, the later 02 targa top was made by Baur.
    Kromhout was a Dutch company based in Amsterdam. I think the old factory building still exists but it has been converted to a restaurant. Kromhout also made ships engines and busses. They made Gardner engines under licence.

  • @pickering746
    @pickering746 Před 2 lety +5

    Love these, whether it’s a museum or a show I always find them quite relaxing to watch 👍😎

  • @CauliflowerMcPugg
    @CauliflowerMcPugg Před 2 lety +1

    Amazing place, with some amazing vehicles. Thanks for the tour 👍

  • @Nino500
    @Nino500 Před 2 lety +1

    Ahh, The 600 Jolly❤. My Parents hired one of those for a trip down the Amalfi coast when I was about 10 (about 1972). Enormous fun! I think my dad knew the owners of the hire company (he was originally from Positano and could get 'mates rates' on just about anything). What memories!

  • @jrdervish
    @jrdervish Před 2 lety +1

    At 50 minutes, I had to pace myself about 10 minutes at a time. Even so, I was sad when my visit to the museum was over. Such a found of knowledge about SO many cars, coach builders, and distinctive features. A joy to watch. An oddball, but I enjoyed the Crosley fire truck (at ~15:00, visible again later). As it happens, Cincinnati was the early hub of manufacturing fire engines. Fire departments were all volunteer, b/c nobody wanted to pay the taxes to pay for firefighters and equipment. The Chicago fire in 1871 sparked (pun intended) a change in thinking. Horse-drawn wagons were standard fare. But horses couldn't pull trailers of water up the hills in Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, etc. Ahrens-Fox Manufacturing had the bright idea to use the internal combustion engine - viola - and began manufacturing fire engines in Cincinnati in 1913. Crosley was made in Cincinnati, Ohio. The owners probably knew each other. The tiny Crosley would be useful in narrow streets of many European cities - including where this one wound up in the Netherlands. Now, back to my re-run.

  • @ColinPrince
    @ColinPrince Před 2 lety +3

    Thanks so much for the guided tour of the most magnificent car/truck museum that I've ever seen. I am a great fan of the Micro-car era including the 2CV's and I'd love to be locked in this Museum for a day. Great presentation albeit rushed for yourself, but thoroughly enjoyable.

  • @polvandennieuwenhof9137
    @polvandennieuwenhof9137 Před 2 lety +1

    I live 20 minutes away from this town and didn't know this existed. Planning a visit asap

  • @pandamator
    @pandamator Před 2 lety +2

    What a great Museum. Added to my go to list
    Looks like i need to make patios for a living though. Apparently you get really stinking rich doing that

  • @tonys1636
    @tonys1636 Před 2 lety +1

    That motercycle front end van was a BSA, very popular with local grocers and other village shops in the late 40's, early 50's for obvious reasons, driven on a M/C licence often on L plates, but no reverse gear. A step up from the trade bike for the delivery lads.
    Many Italian and French manfactures produced right hand drive trucks and cars in the days before Alpine roads had Armco barriers on mountain roads, the driver was on the drop side so it was easier to see and judge the road edge to the thousand foot plus drop. It was the late 70's and later before barriers were installed. Not that they would stop a truck from going over so are still popular today with some hauliers.

  • @ariejonker1088
    @ariejonker1088 Před 2 lety +1

    The grey 2cv could be a Belgian produced
    car for the Swiss market.
    The lights on the frontwings
    are tipical for the Swiss market.
    The Sahara was a short time ago on a French auction.
    It is really an incredible
    collection.

  • @dereksmith6126
    @dereksmith6126 Před rokem

    My dad owned a James Handyvan. He drove it from Surrey to South Devon with a calf in the back when he and my mother moved to Devon in 1951.

  • @kevbaldwin9552
    @kevbaldwin9552 Před 2 lety

    Wow what an amazing place ,thanks for taking us for a tour.

  • @richardmendham5278
    @richardmendham5278 Před rokem

    I have watched tis video when it first came out and just watched it again and it's no less fantastic! Awesome!!!

  • @carseatengineer
    @carseatengineer Před 2 lety +1

    The thing on UK plates that you said was terrifying was a Gibbs Humdinger. A big 4x4 multi person vehicle using the same principles as the Aquada. I worked on the Aquada for a couple of years.

  • @paultaylor9652
    @paultaylor9652 Před 2 lety +1

    Lovely Jubbly, what a very impressive collection of cars, thanks for highlighting so many of them Mr HubNut.

  • @andrewstones2921
    @andrewstones2921 Před 2 lety +1

    Amazing, thank you so much for this video. I just love those DAF cars, I very nearly had a Day 33 for my first ever car and I have loved them since I first rode in one. If you ever find yourself in Thailand then you must visit the Jesada Technic museum which has the worlds largest collection of microcars and just a staggering collection of cars, motorcycles, buses and planes. All owned by two brothers, its free and I was very lucky to meet one of the owners when I was there and he showed me many of the private areas and then took me out for lunch! He said he started adding microcars because kids love them, and amazingly there are many of the microcars that kids are allowed to sit in. It's on about the same scale as Metropole, but with an area for planes and a couple of helicopters also! The most popular car there seems to be a Delorean, and visitors are welcome to sit in it also.

  • @neilcobbe3632
    @neilcobbe3632 Před 2 lety +4

    "I hope it's not a fake Taxi"🤣

  • @JS-1983
    @JS-1983 Před 2 lety

    What a collection of cars, thank you for showing them for us 👍😀

  • @MrOvershoot
    @MrOvershoot Před 2 lety +1

    Bloody hell Ian I'm tired from walking round Oulton Park circuit twice today and now I'm having brain meltdown with all this lovely stuff your showing me 😀
    Another car museum for my European road trip next year 😎

  • @normanstephens5391
    @normanstephens5391 Před 2 lety

    WOW, WoW, Wow. What a fantastic place. I don't think I will ever get there in person. So thank you very much for taking me and others on your visit. Appreciated. See you in the next one. 👍👍👍👍

  • @YllaStar95970
    @YllaStar95970 Před 2 lety

    I think when you say, ' l have never seen one of those before', we have all been lucky to stumble upon this 💎.

  • @carltwidle9046
    @carltwidle9046 Před 2 lety

    A good variety of different types of cars. Some rare models on show too. I live in New Zealand. You mentioned driving a Cadillac car that is displayed in this show in New Zealand at one time. The Mercedes-Benz cars are magnificent there in the museum. Thanks for posting this. From Carl.

  • @MattBrownbill
    @MattBrownbill Před 2 lety

    Loved the square 6 door Fiat bus! Great look round that collection, thanks.

  • @icascone
    @icascone Před 2 lety

    Now because of HubNut I never thought a great a deal about pantograph wipers! ;)

  • @peterriggall8409
    @peterriggall8409 Před 2 lety

    The first thing I was amazed about was all the vast area of brick paving outside. You then said he made his money doing paving, among other things. What a gob smacking display. Thanks so much for bringing it to us Mr Hubnut and also to your friends for facilitating it. 😳

  • @davidflamee
    @davidflamee Před 2 lety

    Insanely brilliant gathering of vehicles. Particularly enjoyed the gaggle of floatables therein and the delightful commercials. A splendid treat indeed.

  • @Rico_van_Manen
    @Rico_van_Manen Před 2 lety +1

    Great! I'm dutch, and it's not that far away from where I live. I need to admin I never heard of this place. I'm gonna do a visit soon.

  • @marcelhannover3
    @marcelhannover3 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks, I never heard of this, am going to visit it soon hopefully. But visitors should beware it is only open on saturdays.

  • @xqqqme
    @xqqqme Před 2 lety +1

    About that Zundapp Janus at 06:01...if you look up the model name (the Roman god of gates, doorways, passages, beginnings and endings. etc) then you'll see the connection to this car's pushmi-pullyu, coming-and-going layout.

  • @SorryIwasntListening
    @SorryIwasntListening Před 2 lety

    There is at least 1 Mimi Contessa in a garden centre near Batley in W Yorkshire.... It's on a plinth and other micro cars and garden equipment hang from the rafters. It was a relief from the "overcrowded Christmas browsing in a drafty polytunnel" event last Dec.

  • @martinneumann7783
    @martinneumann7783 Před 2 lety

    Marvellous! 51 Minutes... running away like nothing. A really amazing spot; I have to go there when I'm in the Netherlands. Thanks for showing this to us...

  • @kimcason8764
    @kimcason8764 Před 2 lety

    Wow, had to take a Second look at the 'Janus.' (My Favourite of Roman Gods.) Two Faces. Amazing little Car..!
    In fact a Warehouse of Amazing Cars.
    Thanx for uploading this one..!! Cheers kim in Oz. 😎

  • @KiwiStag74
    @KiwiStag74 Před 2 lety

    I was enjoying the unusual variation of the vehicles on display and I was noting that there were some that you see in almost every museum or collection and some that were interesting and unique, but that never really grabbed me....and then there was a flash and hello!! There's one of my favourites of all time - an Alfa Romeo Montreal.
    I have always drooled over these beasties and on Christmas Day in 1991, I walked down to the petrol station on the corner of my street to grab a bottle of milk and while I was paying for it, just happened to glance through the open door to the workshop and saw that hooded pair of headlamps looking back at me. I couldn't stop myself and ran to look at it even before I'd asked permission! I not only looked it all over, I got to sit in it! It was a customer's car, so I could not take it for a drive, but seeing it and being able to sit in it was still the best Christmas present I'd had in a very long time.....and I still class it as one of the best. Those eyelids actually retract up inside the nose cone when the lights come on, but she definitely looks better with them down. There were very few built and I know of only 12 in this country.....and none have been at any car shows I have been to in years.
    The early Alfas, Ferraris, Jaguars and such on the top floor would be worth more than a king's ransom nowadays, let alone the up-spec late model Mercs, Grosses and the earlier roadsters. To see that he also collected Cinque Centos and Citroens and some more (now) rare "people's cars" (not just the VW), just makes the owner appear more of a genuine bloke to me. He's obviously a self-made man and would have started off with something 'generic' and so it's obvious he would still have a soft spot for them. Good on him!
    And many thanks to YOU, Ian, for taking time out to capture them all. It was a true treat. All the best.

  • @baird55aus
    @baird55aus Před 2 lety +1

    the Renault at 18 minutes is very like the one my nephew owns which was bought new by Dame Nellie Melba -I think it is an AM model but not 100% sure. he also has a Peugeot 172 Quadrilette that wouldn't look out of place in this museum.
    This is a great display of vehicles

  • @graemew7001
    @graemew7001 Před 2 lety

    What an absolutely amazing place.....and not a typewriter in sight!! It's a credit to your determination and skills in editing to make a video of that length and to keep me enthralled right until the end with that dinky bus.

  • @daniellee9015
    @daniellee9015 Před 2 lety +2

    Absolutely fantastic video Ian 👍unbelievable beautiful cars what a fantastic museum

  • @RVPartsGerald
    @RVPartsGerald Před 2 lety +1

    Ian truly a neat find. The Fiat RHD lorry you spotted was common in Italy when I passed through in the early 70's. Something to do with narrow mountain roads.

  • @domenicozagari2443
    @domenicozagari2443 Před 2 lety +1

    The fiat multipla was the grand daddy of the van.

  • @craigmclean8260
    @craigmclean8260 Před 2 lety +1

    What a fantastic tour! Many of those cars I'd never seen, nor heard of, before...The Crosley ladder truck was hilarious; the earlier Crosley cars in the States were sold in hardware stores, and powered by a flat-twin engine w/ about 14 BHP (Waukesha, I think). The four-cylinder COBRA engine was next, until they changed over to the CIBA (Cast-Iron Block Assy.) This engine went on to find applications in boat racing (44 cu. in. inboard hydroplanes), and outboard motors (Fageol, Crofton, Homelite, and Fisher-Pierce ultimately). That red 'vette is a 1974-77 "soft-tail" model; 1978-82 had a fastback...

  • @maickelwand9100
    @maickelwand9100 Před rokem

    Wow! Lots of cars coming straight from the Tintin albums. Very nice collection.

  • @andrewentwistle515
    @andrewentwistle515 Před 2 lety

    Wow what a vast array of classic cars & commercials that I have ever seen in one place & in a CZcams video. I completely agree with Ian's statement of "Mind Blown!!!". I have never seen or heard of quite a few of the cars before, but it is nice that they still exist. Yet another great video from Hubnut.

  • @danmccarthy4700
    @danmccarthy4700 Před 2 lety

    I love how 1960s Opels basically looked like miniaturized 1960s American Chevrolets.

  • @can-cruiser
    @can-cruiser Před 2 lety

    Great museum and great tour.. Many thanks.. Strange not a single Spyker in sight!!

  • @goosegog
    @goosegog Před 2 lety +1

    I was there. This was an incredible collection of cars. I don't think there's anything like this here in the UK

  • @CherylCold
    @CherylCold Před 2 lety

    Hubnut really knows his cars. Can you imagine one of the YT supercar spotters here? They would be completely lost. Edit- and bored. You completely dissed the 300sl co nvertible. This is an incredible place. Wish I was there.

  • @TimFoster
    @TimFoster Před 2 lety

    What a nice way to spend a Saturday evening - thanks Ian, much appreciated!

  • @Nino500
    @Nino500 Před 2 lety

    We used to see queues of those Fiat Multipla taxis outside Naples airport in the 60s and early 70s. Never rode in one though.

  • @jeromeemmanuel9604
    @jeromeemmanuel9604 Před 2 lety

    What a singular and varied collection! Thank you for this visit...

  • @AllThingsAlex
    @AllThingsAlex Před 2 lety

    What a mind blowing collection indeed!. Such variety and so interesting to watch. Thanks so much for recording this collection! :)

  • @eddiestevenson-kaatsch6306

    Gosh! I know that Scammel three wheeled truck. It was Mr.Jordon senior's and was parked in a shed in the old trucking park he used to run, but contained campers and caravans in storage in it'd later life. I had my Firan Raven motorhome parked there, not far from where I live in Leicestershire. I believe it was all sold off for building land, which probably explains how the truck is now in a museum?

  • @RensOtteweyn
    @RensOtteweyn Před rokem

    Loved the comment on the rubbish indicators on the AC Ace

  • @MGBetts1
    @MGBetts1 Před 2 lety +1

    The Renault Ondine was the posh spec for the Dauphine range and was offered between 1961 and 1963 - it featured a 4-speed gearbox, but I don't think it was sold in the UK. So if you wanted a 4-speed Daupine in the UK you had to opt for the Gordini.

  • @wanderinggentile
    @wanderinggentile Před 2 lety +2

    The Crosley was a genuine American rival to the Morris Minor, Austin A30, and Triumph Mayflower.
    Crosley were innovators on the world stage, but not all of the innovations were successful. The sheet-metal "CoBra (COpper BRAzed)" engine was vulnerable to electrolysis that unfortunately ate holes in the water jackets, alienating the customer base. The solid iron block was actually a brilliant spec for 1952: Overhead cam, 750 cc, capable of travel on contemporary American dual carriageway roads at a constant 50 miles per hour.
    Crosley also offered the first standard four-wheel disc brakes (I believe) in the world, a decade before the Renault 8.
    Cheers from Costa Rica!

  • @Isayso1
    @Isayso1 Před 2 lety

    The 2600 cc V8 engine in the Frua designed Glas was made out of two 1300cc engines from the 1304, which was the bigger version of the 1004 engine with the first cambelt. The belt has no spanner and the tension of the belt is regulated by shims under he cylinderhead.

  • @Thecrazyvaclav
    @Thecrazyvaclav Před 2 lety +1

    I think the inspiration for that Steyr came from Tatra ( VW nicked all the plans and engineering when they invaded Czechoslovakia and then somehow invented the beetle)
    If you’re ever in the Czech Republic Skoda and Tatra museums are well worth a visit

  • @Zeus-lz2sd
    @Zeus-lz2sd Před 2 lety

    Added my long overdue subscription to your excellent channel. I'm a big fan of late 60s/early 70s family cars, an enthusiasm kindled by a childhood spent in the back of a series of cutting edge Citroëns owned by my parents. This looks like a must see location.

  • @gg_vard
    @gg_vard Před 2 lety

    5:16 the Fuldamobil was also made under licence in Greece too, in two versions, by different companies, the Attica and the Alta

  • @martinmcdonald4207
    @martinmcdonald4207 Před 2 lety

    Nice one. That 50 minutes went by with pleasure!

  • @michaelkeen5010
    @michaelkeen5010 Před 2 lety

    What a fantastic museum, thanks for showing us the delights within. 👍

  • @thomasalbrecht5914
    @thomasalbrecht5914 Před 2 lety +1

    The Steyr 50 was already on the market when the Beetle was just commissioned (1936).

    • @HubNut
      @HubNut  Před 2 lety +1

      Interesting! Thanks. I know nothing about them but was fascinated.

  • @Oliver-l1c
    @Oliver-l1c Před 2 lety

    Does anyone remember that show You Bet? People would bet they could identify any car from seeing only the headlights etc. Ian, you would rock at that.

  • @MrButtonpresser
    @MrButtonpresser Před 2 lety

    Ian's as excited as a dog with two dinners! Great video.
    Yes, the Alfetta was rear wheel drive and rear gearbox. Lovely balanced car, drove one for years.

  • @tony-yp6qk
    @tony-yp6qk Před 2 lety

    another great video has always Ian and miss hubnut and hublets and hubmutts 👍

  • @heikkiremes5661
    @heikkiremes5661 Před 2 lety

    Ooh, seeing an unspoiled MX-6 just warms me heart. They were all tuned to hell in the mid-2000's. Great video, as usual. Yet again, some cars I've not seen before.

  • @niekgozer26
    @niekgozer26 Před 2 lety

    I live in the Netherlands and didnt know this museum. Ill hold off on watching this video so i can first go take a look myself!

  • @CUSTODIAN70
    @CUSTODIAN70 Před 2 lety

    WOOW!!!What a collection!!I'm havin' a hard time pickin' up my jaw from the floor.....Great vid,thank you.

  • @jimififul
    @jimififul Před 2 lety

    Thank you Ian. I have now found the first place I'll be going if I win the lottery. Although I may have a nose around anyway!

  • @christianronn5301
    @christianronn5301 Před 2 lety +2

    The Diplomat Coupe was, if i recall correctly, coachbuilt from sedan shells. I have a huge thing for the 5.4 liter version, using a Chevy racing engine.

    • @caw25sha
      @caw25sha Před 2 lety

      Slightly Victoresque in places. I wonder if there were any shared components.

  • @niklaswejedal463
    @niklaswejedal463 Před 2 lety

    Wow... just wow... my mind is thoroughly blown too... no words... Got to go there, some day, that's for sure!

  • @bentullett6068
    @bentullett6068 Před 2 lety

    Amazing collection of cars I like how they themed the downstairs sales hall with the Royal Dutch Shell petrol station

  • @Ayaki6166
    @Ayaki6166 Před rokem

    Yeah amazing collection.They have many fancy cars.

  • @JimGardner
    @JimGardner Před 2 lety

    This is the best video you've made so far. Even my wife enjoyed watching and she's the opposite of a car nerd. Unlike me. Fantastic stuff. Must visit myself some day. Extraordinary collection.

  • @claymore2k1T10
    @claymore2k1T10 Před 2 lety +1

    A Benz 3 wheeler replica was built by an engineering company in Yorkshire (as a side project for the staff when work was quiet) I delivered it from London to Museum in Germany in the early 1990's, I wonder if it's the same one?

  • @stephenhadfield7715
    @stephenhadfield7715 Před 2 lety

    A stunning collection. I was riveted from start to finish of the video!

  • @daviemaclean61
    @daviemaclean61 Před 2 lety +3

    What an amazing museum. It was quite funny (not in a mocking way) to hear you struggling to identify some of the models when we're used to facts and figures tripping off the tongue! I don't think I've seen such a variety - well, not since the Japan classic meet video a week ago!!! ;-)

    • @steved3702
      @steved3702 Před 2 lety +3

      The ultimate test. Ian did well, I thought.

  • @neilforbes416
    @neilforbes416 Před 2 lety +3

    The Goggomobile earned prominence in Australia through a TV ad campaign for Telstra's *Yellow Pages* business phone directory. It wasn't this van, but rather the little two-seater sports car that was the subject as the owner(played by the recently deceased Noel Dyson, a Scottish actor who has retained his accent) is searching for a part to fix the car, looks in the Yellow Pages for a likely source of the part he needs, then has to explain the make of car by spelling it out over the phone, and this bit of dialogue had become legendary as people who saw Noel Dyson in the street would echo his line in the ad..... *"That's G-O-G-G--O.......it's a wee ripper!" He later did ads for Shannon's Car Insurance here in Australia, and played the line up with the company's phone number. (6:22)

    • @caw25sha
      @caw25sha Před 2 lety

      In the UK we had a Yellow Pages TV commercial which has since become legendary. There's an elderly gentleman phoning round trying to get a copy of a book called Fly Fishing by J R Hartley.
      Spoiler alert
      At the end we find out that he is J R Hartley. (Sounds a bit boring I admit, but still considered one of the greatest ads ever.)

    • @AUmarcus
      @AUmarcus Před 2 lety

      "No, na the Dart"

    • @AUmarcus
      @AUmarcus Před 2 lety

      czcams.com/video/fk6pO7eLeiM/video.html

    • @neilforbes416
      @neilforbes416 Před 2 lety +1

      @@AUmarcus Ach it's a wee ripper! RIP Noel Dyson.

  • @cbmsysmobile
    @cbmsysmobile Před 2 lety

    Fantastic tour, thanks for showing us such an incredible collection.

  • @vitorpassos309
    @vitorpassos309 Před 2 lety

    OMG what an amazing collection.
    That Lotus Etna concept car looks so amazing.

  • @jameswoods9671
    @jameswoods9671 Před 2 lety

    Wow really great videogreat knowledge of all different vechiles keep up the great work

  • @clivenoble9662
    @clivenoble9662 Před 2 lety

    That SMIT coach manufacture was what became Berkhof in Netherlands

  • @fhwolthuis
    @fhwolthuis Před 2 lety +1

    Amazing collection, never heard about it before. Thanks!

  • @filiannuzzi5871
    @filiannuzzi5871 Před 2 lety

    Wow . I need to go there , Thanks Ian

  • @jeffreyalexander7504
    @jeffreyalexander7504 Před 2 lety

    What an enjoyable tour! Thank You so much.

  • @mattw8332
    @mattw8332 Před 2 lety +1

    I've been a big fan of the Porsche 928 since the mid 1980s aged 7 or 8 but I never paid much attention to the rear wiper. 😲 Interesting video. Loved the old Citroens as per usual.

  • @mmmmttttssssgggg
    @mmmmttttssssgggg Před 2 lety

    That Rolls-Royce Phantom Ghost look *MASSIVE* against that peel p50

  • @BurlieBull
    @BurlieBull Před 7 měsíci

    Oh wow, you're in my town in the beginning. That's bonkers xD

  • @rinkadink66
    @rinkadink66 Před 2 lety

    probably..the best video you have ever made...🙂🙂🙂🙂