RE: One-of-a-kind Wraith Shooting Brake for sale

RE: One-of-a-kind Wraith Shooting Brake for sale

Sunday 17th November

One-of-a-kind Wraith Shooting Brake for sale

No one makes a car stand out like Niels van Roij. Doubly so when it's the only Silver Spectre ever made


The estate car, which looked to be a dying breed just a few years ago, is staging something of a comeback. There are Touring versions of the BMW M3 (which we’ve never officially had before) and new M5 (which is making a comeback), while VW continues to offer a Golf R Estate into the new Mk8.5 generation (which you can read about in our review here). Then there’s a barmy Audi RS GT, the RS4 Competition and various offerings from Mercedes-AMG to scratch that hot wagon itch.

Manufacturers will have you believe that estate cars sell in minuscule numbers, comparatively speaking (and that’s probably true in the UK), but shooting brakes look to be back on trend for those with access to trust funds. Just look at the Brabus Rocket GTS announced a few weeks ago, which adds a clown shoe-like rear and a €1m (or £830k) to the AMG GT. And remember the Aston Martin Vanquish Zagato from a few years ago? The V12 wagon was such a show stopper that it completely overshadowed the three other uber-expensive versions Zagato built. Or how about this: the one-off Rolls-Royce Wraith Silver Spectre Shooting Brake, which happens to be for sale on PH.

If you ever need proof that every car looks better as a shooting brake, you’re looking right at it. The Wraith was an elegant-looking thing when it launched in 2013, serving as a sleek, two-door version of the ‘baby’ Ghost saloon. But a Dutch designer called Niels van Roij, who’d go on to make the Tesla Model S shooting brake and two-door Range Rover, wondered what a Wraith might look like if it were a bread van, and began sketching an all-new rear section. 

The resulting look was sympathetic to the original’s design, with the front end, suicide doors and lower rear section all carried over. And though the roofline is clearly a lot longer, it slopes downwards and tapers inwards towards the rear in a way that follows the shoulder lines. Just how much was changed over the original isn’t known, but there’s obviously a completely new roof (made by hand from carbon fibre), new tailgate, redesigned silver shroud around the windows and a much larger, leather-lined boot. The conversion was carried out by Belgian coachbuilder Carat Duchatelet between 2018 and 2020, taking over 2,500 hours to complete.

Then there are all the small touches. The headliner, for instance, mimics Rolls-Royce’s starlight liner with thousands of LEDs to give the effect of a twinkling night’s sky, and extends all the way to the back of the car. There are a smattering of small plaques, including on the door sills and in the boot, featuring the ‘Silver Spectre’ name in, er, Gold, along with Niels van Roij's company logo. Otherwise it's a standard Wraith inside and (mostly) out, which is why it looks as though it came from Goodwood’s Bespoke division.

If it had, you’d be looking at a price somewhere in the tens of millions for the Silver Spectre, especially as this is the only one in existence. That said, we don’t know how much this costs, as the seller wants you to give them a ring before it spills the beans, although going off Niels van Roij’s previous work, you’re probably looking a six-to-seven figures as opposed to eight. Which, admittedly, does make this Vanquish Zagato a highly tempting alternative…


See the original advert here

Author
Discussion

wistec1

Original Poster:

448 posts

48 months

Suicide doors and Suicide to buy it. Someone will though. Good luck mucka.

Baldchap

8,365 posts

99 months

On the face of it we all say we'd like it.

Here's a thing: By the time our old W12 Bentley Continental Supersport was eight years old, the whole thing felt *old*. It only had 10k on it when we sold it, the noise and performance were still incredible, but every interaction just felt like going back in time. Changing the suspension from hard to soft was like watching my nan use Teletext. The sat nav was like the glider scene from Escape From New York. Shouldn't matter, but it's the pinnacle of motoring or thereabouts.

I own several cars that are older, they're brilliant, but the bleeding edge of technology always ages terribly in ways that normal cars don't.

If you have never lived it, you'll tell me it doesn't matter and the engine is wonderful and the ride quality is amazing. Which it is. You'll tell me I'm wrong and that the tech doesn't matter, and it shouldn't, but the fact is, old luxury cars are ever so slightly disappointing in ways you can't imagine until you've lived them.

This car was undoubtedly amazing in 2013, it probably still is for a review or a test drive, but I bet it's a little bit annoying to live with in 2024.

Kipsrs

511 posts

56 months

Baldchap said:
On the face of it we all say we'd like it.

Here's a thing: By the time our old W12 Bentley Continental Supersport was eight years old, the whole thing felt *old*. It only had 10k on it when we sold it, the noise and performance were still incredible, but every interaction just felt like going back in time. Changing the suspension from hard to soft was like watching my nan use Teletext. The sat nav was like the glider scene from Escape From New York. Shouldn't matter, but it's the pinnacle of motoring or thereabouts.

I own several cars that are older, they're brilliant, but the bleeding edge of technology always ages terribly in ways that normal cars don't.

If you have never lived it, you'll tell me it doesn't matter and the engine is wonderful and the ride quality is amazing. Which it is. You'll tell me I'm wrong and that the tech doesn't matter, and it shouldn't, but the fact is, old luxury cars are ever so slightly disappointing in ways you can't imagine until you've lived them.

This car was undoubtedly amazing in 2013, it probably still is for a review or a test drive, but I bet it's a little bit annoying to live with in 2024.
Good points well put, the thing I noticed most was the side the steering wheel is on. . .

Jurdy

262 posts

291 months



Oh no. This is all I see but in a bad colour scheme. Even with those suicide doors.

Twinair

739 posts

149 months

Idk - either way?

One question:

What would you put in the back?

Anything other than a soft fluffy sweater would surely knacker up the ‘brake’ area in about 5 minutes… dogs - I don’t think so…?

I mean - it’s not for tip runs - is it!

What would one put in the back?


Mabbs9

1,250 posts

225 months

"Every car looks better as a Shooting Brake".

Gibbler290

672 posts

102 months

I quite like the Wraith and I like a shooting brake…but I don’t like this. Some of the elegance is lost and nothing really gained.

biggbn

24,935 posts

227 months

I think that is wonderful.

Alickadoo

2,295 posts

30 months

Baldchap said:
On the face of it we all say we'd like it.

But I wouldn't.

What would the neighbours say?

SimmoJon

39 posts

98 months

Not that I'm in the market for this, but the POA nonsense really boils my pi$$

Sporky

7,250 posts

71 months

Twinair said:
What would one put in the back?
A Smart car?

Gecko1978

10,447 posts

164 months

I sort of like it but as the cullinan exists it feels a bit pointless. It's more for someone with huge wealth who wants a 1 of 1. As someone has said driving it with old technology will feel a let down

sam.rog

905 posts

85 months

If you have enough money to buy this, then you probably have enough money to get one built to your own spec and taste.
Can’t see this being worth the millions touted. It will probably end up in some museum or private collection as a curio.

Dynamic Space Wizard

940 posts

111 months

It sold for $280,625 a few months ago, so I bet it'll be about that, or more, in Pounds now. I wouldn't buy it but I do like it.

https://rmsothebys.com/auctions/ds24/lots/r0021-20...

NumBMW

837 posts

136 months

What’s the RS GT estate mentioned in the article?

SimonTheSailor

12,702 posts

235 months

You must really like your dogs to buy that......

Forester1965

2,787 posts

10 months

Dynamic Space Wizard said:
It sold for $280,625 a few months ago, so I bet it'll be about that, or more, in Pounds now. I wouldn't buy it but I do like it.

https://rmsothebys.com/auctions/ds24/lots/r0021-20...
Good find.

I like it much more than the base car. The auction price seemed lower than I'd expect.

MDMA .

9,207 posts

108 months

Dynamic Space Wizard said:
It sold for $280,625 a few months ago, so I bet it'll be about that, or more, in Pounds now. I wouldn't buy it but I do like it.

https://rmsothebys.com/auctions/ds24/lots/r0021-20...
So £220k excluding shipping and import fees. I don’t think there’ll be VAT on it as it was an original UK car. Dealer will want £500k plus for it, probably.

el romeral

1,261 posts

144 months

Glorious!
Is that Lou's brother who is selling it?

Louis Balfour

27,671 posts

229 months

Baldchap said:
On the face of it we all say we'd like it.

Here's a thing: By the time our old W12 Bentley Continental Supersport was eight years old, the whole thing felt *old*. It only had 10k on it when we sold it, the noise and performance were still incredible, but every interaction just felt like going back in time. Changing the suspension from hard to soft was like watching my nan use Teletext. The sat nav was like the glider scene from Escape From New York. Shouldn't matter, but it's the pinnacle of motoring or thereabouts.

I own several cars that are older, they're brilliant, but the bleeding edge of technology always ages terribly in ways that normal cars don't.

If you have never lived it, you'll tell me it doesn't matter and the engine is wonderful and the ride quality is amazing. Which it is. You'll tell me I'm wrong and that the tech doesn't matter, and it shouldn't, but the fact is, old luxury cars are ever so slightly disappointing in ways you can't imagine until you've lived them.

This car was undoubtedly amazing in 2013, it probably still is for a review or a test drive, but I bet it's a little bit annoying to live with in 2024.
I know what you mean. But have you driven a current Rolls Royce? They don't exactly operate on telepathy.

When you buy any ten year old luxury car you're going to inherit some tech that probably wasn't cutting edge when it was new and which has aged horribly. It is a matter however of accepting it and working round it.

The reward is that you get a car that still drives wonderfully, probably looks better than the current model and which you can buy for a small fraction of the original price, even when the car is essentially new. It also won't depreciate horrifically.

I am a fan of buying luxury cars at four years old or so and running them until they become unreliable.