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Man Maths: Bentley Continental GT

3 weeks ago

Writer:

Wayne Bruce | Communicatons director

Date:

5 April 2025

I’m guessing there will have been at least one occasion in your life when you felt compelled to rescue a destitute-looking car. You might have pondered, maybe tracked down its owner, and then no doubt come to your senses and felt guilty every time you saw it subsequently.  Well, there’s one such stray that’s mithering me: a first-generation Bentley Continental GT.

It’s parked in a front garden, nose to the ground and bottom in the air like a dog who’s just landed a ball. But I suspect this puppy hasn’t run around in a while. I have a professional desire to rescue it, too, because it was built by the company with which I’m now happily employed. Hundreds must pass it each day and it’s not a brand billboard one would choose.  As such, I’m also lucky to work with people who designed, engineered and built it. So I know what an amazing car this could be and how deserving it is of a more loving home.

You know about the first-gen Conti GT, too. Or you will if you’ve read the excellent accounts on this site of Dr Eichhorn who was there at its inception, and Andrew Frankel who gathered all four generations together for a group test. Its interior designer, Robin Page, told me how the beautiful instrument panel was inspired by the Bentley wings. The exterior was influenced by that most graceful of Bentleys, the R-Type Continental, and 22 years on still looks crisp and elegant – even with a protective coating of moss.

The original Continental GT can be costly to repair

During its development the GT was maxed out at Ehra-Lessien near Wolfsburg at over 200mph, then spent a year in a desert to ensure nothing sagged or decomposed. So time in a Northamptonshire garden should be no hardship. It’s probably rescuable for half the price of optional carbon ceramics on the modern equivalent. But, still… better do some digging before I go knocking to find out what and, more importantly, how expensive they can go wrong.

So I called P&A Wood, a mecca for anyone who gets excited by a pre- or, in my case, post-war Bentley and, let’s be friendly, Rolls-Royce – you’re as likely to see a Camargue there as you are a Turbo R. On my last pilgrimage, though, I became very distressed by a first-gen Conti GT in the workshop with the guts of its interior exploded across the floor. What had caused the massacre? Merely a blocked drainage hole. My mechanical skills go no further than locating the bonnet release (not always easy) for adding washer fluid. Helpfully, then, the issue is spottable by damp carpets or an engine warning light caused by chaffed wiring. Less helpfully, the owner of that GT – if their car does need a new wiring loom – could be looking at, gulp, £40k to repair the damage.

If that hasn’t put you off, and it hasn’t me, there’s good news in that the W12 engine and gearbox are solid. P&A knows a car that’s done 150,000 miles and one recently popped up for sale in the US with over half a million. A full-on service will be £3500 but one only needs to find that every three years. And I’ll be bored, given my past history, by then. A handbrake thingy can crack so I will need to check that works or it’s £1000 to fix. The third brake light, the first ever to be full-width leading to a rewriting of the EU rules for such things, can suffer from interruptions, but is also fixable for, yes, another £1000.

The Continental GT is a bona fide 200mph car

I then enquired why this car was rudely raising its bottom to passers-by. Air suspension. Lovely when it works, expensive when it doesn’t, as anyone who has previously enjoyed an elderly Range Rover or Audi Allroad will know. Or indeed a Bentley, for which replacements can be £2500. Per corner. Easy to test for leakages, though. P&A says put the car in its highest ‘jack’ mode then tightly apply masking tape from tyre to bodywork and leave to simmer. And, encouragingly, my potential rescue’s doggy pose could just be due to a flat battery.

So the Man Maths is adding up. Except I already have a large-engined, large-bodied Audi of that era that hasn’t turned its polished 18 inchers since I forget when. In my defence, at least it’s living in a bubble in a warehouse rather than a front garden.

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