DEL Boy’s three-wheeler yellow van from Only Fools & Horses has gone on sale for £18,000.
The Reliant Regal Supervan III with “Trotters Independent Trading Co” on the side was used by the characters in the first two series of the beloved BBC sitcom.
The 1972 van was one of six bought by the BBC for Only Fools & Horses.
Four decades after being used for the first two series the three wheeled motor is being sold with props from the show including a market suitcase, fluffy dice and an inflatable doll.
The van, which has a top speed of 55mph and has done 97,000 miles, was acquired by the late BBC film producer John Mansfield after it was no longer needed for filming.
It has since passed into the hands of a private collector who is selling it at Classic Car Auctions, of Ashorne, Warks, on September 28.
The van has recently had tyres fitted and its brakes overhauled so it could be used at charity events.
The vehicle featured in the famous 1982 episode “A Touch of Glass”.
In it, Rodney drives the van into the countryside where he, Del and Grandad stumble upon the lady of a nearby manor house whose car has broken down.
When Del gets into the stately home he pretends to be chandelier expert and offers to clean Lord Ridgemere’s Louis VXI chandelier with disastrous but hilarous conequences.
When the priceless piece crashes to the floor Del, Rodney and Grandad make a quick getaway in the battered-looking yellow van.
The auctioneers said it belonged in the top echelon of British TV vehicles.
A Classic Car Auctions spokesperson said: “The van was used for two series which included the famous chandelier scene.
“The little van must rank alongside Inspector Morse’s Jaguar Mk2 and Jim Bergerac’s Triumph Roadster as one of the most readily recognised vehicles on British television.
“In the TV series the Reliant Regal was owned by Trotter’s Independent Traders – aka Rodney & Del Boy Trotter.
“The grubby yellow Reliant was in effect a co-star with David Jason and Nicholas Lyndhurst.
“Serving as the Trotters’ main mode of transport, the van was used to store Trotters Independent Traders & Co stock and transport the family to several destinations.
“Only Fools & Horses remains in the hearts of so many of us with the stage musical drawing record audiences to this day and due to go on tour nationwide very soon.”
Only Fools & Horses’ first series was broadcast in 1981.
The 1996 episode ‘Time on Our Hands’ attracted a record 24.3million viewers.