This just showed up at the used car dealer I work with. Low km's, 64000, and it's never seen winter. Unfortunately, like most Jag's of this vintage it's saddled with an automatic trans. It's the 6 not the V12 so at least it should be reliable, ha. Why I'm I tempted by this...must resist. What else should I be looking for, other than the standard British fluid leaks. Not sure of the year but I'm thinking late 80's???
<a href="">Jag 1
<a href="">Jag 2
Run away, run away, run away ....
I like it. I would agree to run away if it were a V12. Buy it.
I'd bet it's a 94.
I second the buy it motion. Straight six XJS coupes make amazing cars. It's the type of car you give a full Chemical Guys regimen every month, simply because you love it so much.
Looks awesome! Do it for the noise it will make at the very least.
Raze
UltraDork
8/12/15 8:10 p.m.
One of us, one of us, one of us
I thought the whole point to owning one of those was to have the V12? Personally, I'd pass on the I6.
Man do I want a V12 powered Jag....
I am appalled to say that I am very much attracted to that big cat.
plance1
SuperDork
8/12/15 9:29 p.m.
I saw one of these driving down the highway with a for sale sign. I snapped a pic of the car and called the guy. He wanted 5 or 6k and it was a V12. If I had the money I would have bought it. I agree, I would rather have the V12 but someone will surely set me straight on why exactly that is a bad idea....
It's just a base model with a I6, so you won't feel as bad when you inevitably put a LSx in it.
Here is something that at be a little telling. Of the XJS on my extended local CL the V 12 cars are in the 2500-5000 range while the I6 cars are 6500-10000
The i6 takes boost REALLY well.
Nothing to tell. They are over built motors that take boost well. Add an M90 and have fun.
Have you picked it up yet?
Not v12 not convertible - I'd keep looking.
In reply to rcutclif:
Two excellent reasons why this is the one to buy.
rustysteel wrote:
This just showed up at the used car dealer I work with. ...must resist.
Any particular reason you must resist?
If you really like it and can afford it, 'fraid I don't see a particular reason not to go for it.
In reply to erohslc: Well Chevrolet didn't run from the Jaguar six.. They bought it! (and put it in their SUV's) Yup Chevy Trail Blazer, GMC Envoy Olds and Buick also had it although I can't remember the names they used..
It's a wonderfully rugged reliable engine (GM modified out to 4.2 liters) that performs almost as well as the V12 does but gets mid 20's for Fuel mileage rather
than the High teens of the V12
The irony is GM bought the engine from Jaguar right from underneath Ford's nose. When Ford heard that Jaguar was for sale and GM was looking at it Ford rushed together a really big bid just as GM walked away with the rights and equipment for this engine..
In reply to rustysteel: Only a handful of those had the 5 speed but the parts are pretty well grabbed up by the racers. The automatic while not as macho is a decent GM transmission that seems to last forever as long as the fluid is changed regularly..
Been there, done that. Had a '88 with the 12. That one is post '90 facelift, in any case
I agree, go for the 6 instead of the 12. The 12 is just not worth the headaches. After dealing with the overheating, engine fire, byzantine vacuum systems, and requisite electrical problems, I ended up donating mine for the tax deduction.
GM'S Atlas 6 is actually a Jag? No E36 M3?
In reply to Basil Exposition: The overheating and engine fire were likely the same problem. The V12 distributor needs to be periodically oiled.. It takes maybe 30 minutes tops and if not done regularly causes all sorts of problems..
Yes there were electrical issues with Jaguar.. The fix is insanely simple.. tighten up the ground wires.. I swear the people on the assembly line were extremely limp wristed.. Nope nothing about gender preference.
The basic engine is extremely stout.. big, (you can take it over 10 liters) heavy duty and if properly maintained capable of extremely great longevity.. The Transmission is A GM turbo 400 used in tow trucks and ambulances (not the whimpy version used in cars) or later it's overdrive version..
Finally Cars of that era, any brand or make, Car-b-ques were common. Reliability was iffy. I had a Blazing Blazer that burned to sheet metal at only 55,000 miles (Chevy V6) and at least once a week I'd see the burn ring of a recent car fire (car-B-que) along side the highway.
In reply to rustysteel: More likely early to mid 90's
Someone talk me out of buying one of these...I love the looks for some reason I can't really justify replacing anything in the stable currently with one and don't have any play money left over after the last car purchase, but I am gonna start perusing CL for cheap ones anyway.