A super-rare 100-year-old car, that has been compared to Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, was found stashed away in a Suffolk barn.
The car was stored alongside an almost-as-rare 1952 Mercedes-Benz W187.
Despite their age, the two cars were in pretty good shape overall.
The pair of classic cars were also found with old documentation and photographs.
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The 100-year-old car looked like the one from Chitty Chitty Bang Bang
We’ve seen plenty of classic cars and vintage vehicles unearthed in barn finds, such as this treasure trove that included a 1952 Ferrari 166MM Vignale; and this achingly cool 1981 BMW M1 that was stashed away in a garage in Italy.
However, it’s rare to find cars that have earned official antique status like this 1921 Talbot-Darracq Tourer.
Rarer still is the fact that the Type 21 Open Tourer still had its original engine which, when new, could produce 16 horsepower.
Elton Murphy, from the UK Barn Finds YouTube channel, was there when the two vintage cars were removed from the barn and he couldn’t help but notice the Talbot-Darracq’s likeness to an iconic movie car.
“In the nicest way, it looks like Chitty Chitty Bang Bang with the big roof,” he pointed out.
“There can’t be many in the world with a roof in this condition.”
Both the vintage vehicles were in great condition
And he’s not wrong. Both the Talbot-Darracq and its 1952 Mercedes-Benz W187 barn-mate were in solid condition.
The Talbot-Darracq had been bought by its previous owner – who has since passed away – back in 1967 and was kept on the road until the early 1980s.
Although it spent decades parked, the owner had continued to periodically turn its engine over to keep it running.
Meanwhile, the Mercedes had been picked up by its late owner during his time serving with the British Army in Germany.
He brought the car along with him on his military career, which included stints in Cyprus and the Middle East, before returning home to Suffolk.
The cars also came with documentation, including an invoice from the 1960s and a copy of the check used to pay for the Talbot-Darracq as well as some black and white snaps of its previous owners.
A real piece of automotive history.