Who owns the very first Land Rover?

5 years, 7 months atrás - 30 Julho 2018, auto classics
Who owns the very first Land Rover?
Exactly 70 years since JUE 477 – the first ever production Land Rover – rolled off the Solihull production line, INEOS Automotive has been confirmed as the new owner, and there's a sympathetic restoration in the works!

Following a near-secretive unveiling at the prestigious Royal Automobile Club in Pall Mall back in February, Land Rover chassis 860001 – the very first production Land Rover – has drawn worldwide interest and all manner of questions.

Where has it hidden away all this time? Why is it in such a condition? When was it last on the road? All those answers can be found here. Yet, one question has been unconfirmed – just who bought and now owns chassis 860001?

You may have heard of INEOS, a privately owned multinational chemicals company headquartered in London, as CEO and founder Jim Ratcliffe has not only been declared Britain's richest man but also waged war with Land Rover over rights to the Defender.

Unable to acquire the legal rights to continue Defender production after Solihull wrapped production in January 2016, Ratcliffe has been planning his own 4x4 – known as the Ineos Grenadier – through INEOS Automotive, established in 2016 with the aim of supplying a fresh perspective on the off-road market.

Mr Ratcliffe has been a huge Land Rover aficionado for decades. It, therefore, comes as no surprise to discover that the UK's wealthiest gentleman acquired the first production Land Rover some time ago.

Isn't HUE 166 the first Land Rover?

Rolling off the Solihull-factory production line on July 27, 1948, JUE 477 lays claim as the first production Land Rover; not to be confused with HUE 166 – Land Rover's kept 'first example'.

HUE 166 is actually the first of a batch of 48 prototypes. 'Huey' has a chassis number of LR1, but is still a test vehicle (not the first production Land Rover as popularly claimed), rolling out of the factory on March 11, 1948.

HUE 166 may be the oldest surviving Land Rover, but is not chassis number one. JUE 477 is chassis number 860001. Therefore, it's undoubtedly the oldest production Land Rover.

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