CLASSIC OR VINTAGE
For very old vehicles, typically built before about 1930, there are clear definitions. Vintage (before 1905), Edwardian (1905 to 1918) and Veteran (1919 to
1930) all have formal, and widely accepted, definitions.
It is similar elsewhere with Classic and Full Classic in the USA.
Classic Car is widely used but a poorly understood description. Old Cars are Classics. It seems to be fully accepted that any car more than 30 years old
qualifies
as a classic. However it becomes less clear with younger models. Insurance companies (UK) tend towards using 20/25 years or
older as the qualifying age for special
classic car insurance. The UK tax authorities use 15 years as cut-off between modern
and classic cars when assessing them for taxation on benefits in kind but they also
add a current value to that judgement of £15,000 (€17,100).
In the USA authorities use an age threshold of around 15 years and require the vehicle
to be substantially in the form it was manufactured; presumably to rule out Hot Rods, Custom cars and also exclude continuation models or replicas which
are really new vehicles. All age based definitions use the age of the particular car not when
the model came into or went out of production. With the lower age definitions
it is possible for some examples of a current production car to be considered classic, although usually only for niche marquees such as Morgan.
Cars with an interesting history, even if very modern, are certainly collectible: for instance the Aston Martins that survived the filming
of the James Bond movies. They will become classics but do they qualify when only a few years old?. Rarity adds to the classic status
as long as it gets into production – there are models that never reached customers and which get forgotten
So when does a limited edition or specialist version become firstly collectible and secondly classic? In this context a limited edition might be a limited run of
a specialist version, for example: to allow the model to qualify for competition - homologation specials. The marketing “Limited Edition”
has little impact on the possible “classic” status of mass market models; these are often end of life promotions. Many manufacturers have built specials
from the original 1960s Ford GT40 to Audi Quattro in the 1980s Porsche, Aston Martin and others produce road-going but thinly disguised competition
cars; they are often bought by collectors from new. They may achieve
classic status early if particularly successful
in competition.
Is a Classic Car definition needed?.
Does it all matter?
After all, for most purposes the term “classic” is entirely arbitrary and simply reflects the fact that a car is old, out of production and some people collect
them. Eventually all cars fall into that category, even some real dogs – there are collectors and owners’ clubs for almost every car model built. So the answer
is no. Classic or not is a personal viewpoint. What is important as that both the best and worst car is part of motoring history and that examples are being
conserved. In the process a lot people gain enjoyment or a living from it.
CLASSIC & VINTAGE CARS
We import all kinds of classic cars from any country in Europe and USA. What´s the diference between vintage and classic car?.
Here you are a brief explanation about it.