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1949 Rolls-Royce Silver Wraith SWB Limousine by H.J.Mulliner [WFC82]

1949 Rolls-Royce Silver Wraith [WFC82] in Britain Welcomes the President of Pakistan, Short Movie, 1966 IMDB

Class: Cars, Limousine — Model origin: UK

1949 Rolls-Royce Silver Wraith SWB Limousine by H.J.Mulliner [WFC82]

Position 00:07:07 [*][*][*] Vehicle used by a character or in a car chase

Comments about this vehicle

AuthorMessage

dsl SX

2017-03-12 01:30

I think these are all the same car on his Scottish trip
[Image: 05-14rrholyrooda.jpg] [Image: 05-14rrholyrood.jpg]

[Image: 05-14rrholyroodc06-52.jpg] [Image: 05-14rrholyroode.jpg]

[Image: 05-14rrholyroodf.jpg]

YSG 665 = Oct-Dec 1961 so too new for the car??

supcoach US

2017-03-12 01:34

A Phantom IV?? - /vehicle.php?id=1008246

dsl SX

2017-03-12 01:44

I was wondering same, but puzzled by the plate which is a complete blank when I'd expect something for a PIV.

maxp SE

2017-03-12 08:52

Silver Wraith by H.J mulliner. I think it is a 1951 design no 7071.

johnfromstaffs EN

2017-03-12 09:11

YSG was an Edinburgh series issued October to December 1961 and therefore does not match the Silver Wraith's production dates. Since this car appears to be a Silver Wraith, it would seem that the plate is a re-issue, presumably after a more "interesting" plate had been lost from the vehicle.

All of the Phantom IV cars are shown here: -

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rolls-Royce_Phantom_IV

-- Last edit: 2017-03-12 12:47:30

Ingo DE

2017-03-13 17:15

dsl wrote I think these are all the same car on his Scottish trip
[Image: 05-14rrholyrooda.jpg]


The times may come, that HRH has to make an application for a visa, when she wants to visit that location.
http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-scotland-scotland-politics-39255181

:think: But how? Is it correct, that HRH has no passport at all?

dsl SX

2017-03-13 18:25

ingo wrote Is it correct, that HRH has no passport at all?

Maybe. She can't be a subject of the United Kingdom because in some senses she is the United Kingdom (or Queendom), so can't be a part of herself. As for St Nicola the Farsighted's declaration today, a good long-term move but her timing seems totally wrong. Better to have waited for another year or two so that the vote would not be taking place in the midst of Brexit chaos. Maybe she'll prove me wrong, but looks today like A Bad Decision which will backfire messily.

johnfromstaffs EN

2017-03-13 19:09

"Caviar comes from the virgin sturgeon
Virgin sturgeon very fine fish
Virgin sturgeon need no urgin'
That's why caviar's a very rare dish."

With no reference at all to recent happenings, either in politics or on the field of play.

Link to "www.telegraph.co.uk"

-- Last edit: 2017-03-13 19:10:48

Ingo DE

2017-03-13 20:10

dsl wrote
Maybe. She can't be a subject of the United Kingdom because in some senses she is the United Kingdom (or Queendom), so can't be a part of herself. As for St Nicola the Farsighted's declaration today, a good long-term move but her timing seems totally wrong. Better to have waited for another year or two so that the vote would not be taking place in the midst of Brexit chaos. Maybe she'll prove me wrong, but looks today like A Bad Decision which will backfire messily.

What would be the advantage to wait more time? The chaos of and with the Brexiteers as already obvious.
Well, for me as a pro-EUropean these news may be a reason to open the "The Spirit of Lewis"-souvenier :miam:

dsl SX

2017-03-13 20:46

Because there'll be so much wreckage and smoke on the battlefield in 18 months/2 years time, so it'll be very unclear what sort of arena new independent Scotland could exist in when the vote takes place, so we become a ragdoll stretched between English and EU tug-of-war, and big uncertainties about what price EU would impose for membership, currency options (forced into Euro??), what economic/trade relationships we'd be allowed to have with UK and EU, etc.

So, based on 2014 experience when big questions without clear answers scared lots of folk who were willing to consider independence into voting no, the vote would again be no. But delaying things another year or two until the smoke cleared could give us voters a more solid perspective to vote from.

Ingo DE

2017-03-13 21:30

The battlefield EU shouldn't be overrated, the crucial playground is GB itself. The EUrocrats can lean back and look, what will happen.
Probable technocratic, economical and organisational needs and duties neither, that's all makeable. In the past many countries were divided or (re)unificated. That's no big thing. The main EU-internal problem will be Spain (due Catalonia) and maybe a bit Italy (due Lombardy).
The real important problems are all UK-internal, on which the other Europeans had no influence at all.

Whatever will happen, the final result is already clear, a https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6lD_VIbgEZY

P.S. One detail, not understandable for my wife and me (our dream is to emigrate to Scotland): why the f... do has the whole actual chaos absolutely no influence on the Scottish property prices? There nothing is moving at all, not even when a sale don't happen during 3,4 years.

-- Last edit: 2017-03-13 21:51:30

johnfromstaffs EN

2017-03-13 22:43

Since the greater part of most homeowners' wealth is their home, the British as a race are very reluctant to accept reductions in the apparent value of it. Estate agents have a vested interest in maintaining property values wherever they can have an effect, and finally those who are not forced by circumstance into moving house immediately will cling to their in built idea of what their home should make in the market. They may then sit in the property hoping that someone will pay whatever their inflated idea of the value might be. The current, and long time, maintenance of low interest rates also keeps prices firm.

To make this mind set even more fixed, we have in Britain a considerable shortage of family properties, which the government seems remarkably reluctant to address. Social ownership of dwellings, in the form of council houses for rent has greatly reduced, adding to the firmness of pricing expectations in most regions.

I do not think it unreasonable to say that these factors are active enough to mitigate the effects of political uncertainty but may not outweigh any forthcoming serious economic difficulties.

-- Last edit: 2017-03-13 23:03:56

robgeelen2 NL

2017-03-14 12:22

#WFC82 1949 Rolls-Royce Silver Wraith swb Limousine by H.J.Mulliner, des.7171, supplied to the Corporation of Edinburgh for the use of the Mayor with a special registration 1SF, until replaced by Phantom V Limousine by Park Ward when re-registered YSG665. Kept as reserve car after that for many years.

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