OFF the showroom floor in 1971 it cost $5400. Thirty-six years later this rumbling Ford Falcon GTHO is set to fetch $1 million.
Collector Paul Carthew has a rare unrestored 1971 Ford Falcon GTHO Phase III and is very confident he can attract the huge asking price.
"It's a collector's item and I won't budge at $1 million,'' the Sydney car-lover said.
His move is timely, following the announcement yesterday that Ford's performance vehicle division is planning a reprise of its mighty icon.
Mr Carthew, who has been collecting cars for almost 40 years, said he has already had some inquiries and two people who have shown real interest.
He bought the classic Aussie muscle car 19 years ago for $40,000. He said he was very picky at the time and spent three years searching for a one-owner, low mileage model.
The car, which was even driven on a racetrack by racing legends Peter Brock and Colin Bond during a magazine shoot, now has just over 40,000 miles (68,000km) on the clock.
"It's quite an amazing car. That's why they command this sort of money, they are the icon of Australian muscle,'' he said.
Only 300 of the Falcon GTHO Phase IIIs were built in 1971 and fewer than 150 remain.
Ford's Rod Barrett said the revival plan was ``more visionary than conceptual at this stage''.
Million dollar Oz muscle (September 2007)
Ford's legendary Falcon GT-HO is no stranger to records but until March this year, nobody had paid more than $600,000 for one
That changed when collector Daryl Mattingley parted with no less than $683,650 -- including auctioneer's fees -- for the privilege of parking a beautifully restored, bright red example of Australia's most iconic factory racer in his garage.
The figure for the 1971 Falcon was expected to instantly raise the ante on all cars produced during the supercar era of the early 1970s, including Torana XU-1 and A9X (coupe and sedan), Holden Monaro GTS 307 and GTS 350, and Chrysler's E38 and E49 Valiant Chargers.
That was in March. Now, that close-to-$700,000 figure is about to be eclipsed by a 1971 GT-HO which appeared in the last issue of Unique Cars magazine with an asking price of a cool one million dollars.
The Falcon was still available for sale when we called owner Paul Carthew for an update.
The difference here is that the Ultra White Falcon with black trim is described as unrestored and original, in the hands of its second owner and showing just 43,690 miles on the odometer.
All the original purchase documents from Mortimer Ford in Mildura in July 1991 are there, along with the revelations the car has appeared on the cover of Wheels magazine twice -- in June 1992 heralding an article titled "Time Warp" and June 2007, when it featured in the magazine's recent "Power Brokers" article.
As part of the 1992 Time Warp article, the car was driven by Peter Brock and Colin Bond for Bathurst track test stories featured in both Wheels and Street Machine magazines.
The million-dollar GT-HO is described as the "best of the best", with no expense spared maintaining that status.
The spending spree on 30 years' old Australian classics takes our home-grown products into the price region once belonging to European exotics -- somewhat ironic considering most of the local products stemmed from cars originally intended as nothing more than family transport.
And, according to the Power Brokers series of articles in Wheels magazine, they are being purchased not by your normal cashed-up lawyers, doctors and stockbrokers, but by earthier types who have achieved some measure of success and are seeking to reignite youthful memories.
Daryl Mattingley is the owner of a successful house removal business in Queensland and, at 56, belongs to the Baby Boomer generation that is generating much of the wealth behind such acquisitions.
Mattingley told Wheels magazine that the GT-HO was considered as much for its future value as for being a treasured possession. "I just think, and hope, it will be worth a million dollars." he says, "While it's a passion, it's also an investment."
Whatever it is, it's an expensive passion and an investment yet to be proven as blue-chip.
But Daryl Mattingley's outlay earlier in the year clearly set the ball rolling. The question is: Where will it stop?
EdFairmontGhia wrote:buy it, just think another 30-40 years you might get 2mil for it?
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