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1967 Jensen Nova by Vignale

Updated: Mar 14, 2023

This is a 1966 Jensen Nova, a Michelotti designed one-off Vignale fibreglass body. It is a re-bodied Jensen Interceptor shown at the Geneva Motor Show in 1967. 1965 saw Vignale's first contact with the firm, giving him one of his strongest connections with the British market. Design and development manager Kevin Beattie visited Ghia, Superleggera Touring, and Vignale and asked each to submit designs for the new car. The management at Jensen was split over the replacement model for their C-V8, but it was eventually agreed that the new car should be styled and built-in Italy.


Ghia was heavily involved with Chrysler and demanded a fee to divert their efforts to Jensen. Vignale produced a rather conventional-looking design - similar to Maserati Mexico, which he had introduced at the 1965 Turin motor show, and Jensen was looking for more dramatic treatment. This came from Touring, and Jensen liked it, but the Milan firm was in such a financial pickle that Jensen had no confidence in its ability to produce the car.


Jensen bought the design outright, removed Touring's marks from the drawings but Jensen's name on them, and took them along to Vignale as representing the sort of thing they had in mind. Even if Alfredo Vignale knew or guessed that Touring was the originator, he said nothing, anxious to secure the final styling and building order. With the deal signed and the tooling arranged, it took Vignale only four months to produce a prototype car combining the proven C-V8 chassis and running gear and the new body. Within a further six months, the first Italian-bodied, American-engined, British-built Jensen Interceptor was assembled at West Bromwich - one of the fastest international model operations on record.


Vignale's part in it did not last long, however. By October 1966, when two or three trimmed and painted Interceptor bodies arrived from Turin each week, Jensen had already decided that the finish was not what they wanted and that the Vignale arrangement was financially unsound long-range for comfort and logic. Vignale was bought off, and the jigs and press tools transferred to Britain. Jensen later admitted, however, that it took their own craftsmen a long time to match the flexibility and quality of work of the Italians.


Vignale, meanwhile, maintained his styling name with design studies. Notwithstanding the untimely loss of the Jensen manufacturing contract, he showed an exquisite Interceptor-based two-seater coupe design, the Nova, at the 1967 Geneva motor show.




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