Jaguar C-Type follow-up car brings back racing icon from the 50s

Jaguar’s classics division has announced that it will produce eight more of the curvaceous C-Type, originally produced from 1951 to 1953.

The follow-up cars, which will converge on a special track day in 2022 to celebrate 70 years since their original release, will be the fourth of its kind for the Coventry, England-based company. Jaguar started developing Jaguar Lightweight E-Type and Jaguar XKSS follow-up cars as early as 2014; construction started in 2018 D-Type continued.

Jaguar is far from the only company cashing in on the continued business model, awarding uber-expensive, hyper-restricted new cars to affluent fans of the brand. In 2018 Aston Martin Lagonda Global Holdings Plc announced that it would make 19 new iterations of its classic DB4 Zagato GT from the 1960s and 25 continuations thereof DB5s famous for Goldfinger. In 2019, Porsche brought back a single 993 – some would say “continued it” – to aid in the launch of a new line of Porsche 911 Turbos. The original 993 line was discontinued in 1998.

covers Jaguar's latest car is actually 70 years old

The iconic Jaguar C-type won the Le Mans 24 Hours in 1951 and 1953.

Source: Jaguar

The (re) birth of the legend

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